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3_6_5_PQ365 NEWS

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Beyonce logged a fourth week atop the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart Friday, while near-record digital sales drove dance-pop singer Lady GaGa to the No. 2 slot.

Beyonce\’s \”Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It),\” a track from her chart-topping album \”I Am … Sasha Fierce,\” sold a massive 382,000 downloads last week according to Nielsen SoundScan, a 157% increase.

But Lady GaGa\’s Grammy-nominated \”Just Dance\” featuring Colby O\’Donis sold 419,000 downloads, the second biggest single-week sum of all time behind Flo Rida\’s 467,000 from the same week last year. It rose one spot from the previous week, swapping places with T.I.\’s \”Live Your Life\” featuring Rihanna.

Kanye West\’s \”Heartless\” held at No. 4, and Taylor Swift\’s \”Love Story\” rose two to No. 5. Katy Perry\’s \”Hot N Cold\” remained at No. 6, and Britney Spears\’ \”Womanizer\” fell two to No. 7.

Rounding out the top portion of the Hot 100, West\’s \”Love Lockdown,\” T.I.\’s \”Whatever You Like\” and Beyonce\’s \”If I Were a Boy\” were are unchanged at Nos. 8-10.

Nickelodeon star Miranda Cosgrove\’s cover of Sugababes\’ \”About You Now\” was the top debut at No. 51. The song was released last June on the \”iCarly\” soundtrack but is now doing strong digital business after a performance on Macy\’s Thanksgiving Day parade; it sold 74,000 copies last week.

(China Daily/Agencies January 4, 2009)

A promotional photo of Jolin Tsai. [File Photo: cnsphoto] 

Jolin Tsai plans to transfer to Warner Music after her upcoming Guangzhou concert on December 13.

As Jolin\’s contract with the record label Gold Typhoon has expired, the Taiwan top-selling diva has finally decided to sign with Warner Music for some 30 millon yuan, or more than 4 million US dollars, according to news released on Thursday

A grand signing ceremony will be held on December 16 in Beijing\’s National Aquatics Centre, or the Olympic \”Water Cube\”, the Information Times reported.

\”Everything for the ceremony is now in preparation,\” the newspaper quotes a Warner Music worker, whose name was not given, as saying.

Jolin\’s new album, which as the singer revealed earlier has completed production, is expected to be released after the Chinese lunar New Year.

(CRI December 8, 2008)

Chris Martin has denied that Coldplay will split up in two years\’ time.

Earlier quotes attributed to the singer suggested that the rock band will soon part ways.

\”I\’m 31 now and I don\’t think bands should keep going past 33,\” he told BANG Showbiz.

However, in a new interview with Rolling Stone, Martin explained that he expects Coldplay to continue for some time.

\”We\’re proceeding as if it\’s our last because it\’s the only way to proceed,\” he said of plans to record a follow-up to Viva La Vida.

\”You\’ve got to have deadlines, you know. What that means is we\’re going to pour everything we can into next year and not think beyond that. We always say that and we always mean it. But every time we say it, someone writes that it\’s over.

\”I don\’t think we\’ll ever split up but we have to do a lot before we\’re 33.\”

(Agencies/China Daily December 5, 2008)

In this Oct. 6, 2008 photo, Jennifer Hudson poses at the premiere of the film \'The Secret Life of Bees\' at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Beverly Hills, Calif. Hudson says she\'s honored to be a Grammy nominee.

In this Oct. 6, 2008 photo, Jennifer Hudson poses at the premiere of the film \”The Secret Life of Bees\” at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Beverly Hills, Calif. Hudson says she\’s honored to be a Grammy nominee.[Agencies] 

Jennifer Hudson says she\’s honored to be a Grammy nominee. The Oscar-winning actress and singer, who has been in seclusion since the killings of her mother, brother and nephew, was nominated Wednesday for four Grammy awards for her self-titled debut album.

Says Hudson: \”It\’s been a childhood dream of mine to release an album, so to receive four Grammy nominations is truly a blessing. I am extremely honored and humbled by the nominations.\”

The nominations came a day after her estranged brother-in-law, William Balfour, was formally charged with murder in the killings of Hudson\’s mother, Darnell Donerson; her brother, Jason Hudson; and her 7-year-old nephew, Julian King.

Hudson has declined through a spokeswoman to speak about the arrest.

(Agencies/China Daily December 5, 2008)

DJ Sasha performs in New York on November 7, 2008.

DJ Sasha performs in New York on November 7, 2008. [djsasha.com/Ahmed Klink] 

Legendary DJ Sasha is returning to Shanghai with his latest album \”Invol2ver\” to perform at Club JJ2 in the city center on Saturday.

The Welsh DJ/producer is best known for his contribution to the evolution of progressive trance and house music. He has been voted in the top 10 DJs in the world by readers of DJ Magazine every year since 1997, placing first in 2000.

Released in September, \”Invol2ver\”, the sequel to Sasha\’s highly acclaimed 2004 album \”Involver\”, was one of the most anticipated albums in the electronic music scene in years.

Featuring 13 tracks, the progressive house and breaks mix continued Sasha\’s innovative approach to music. Apart from original material, he also included a diverse collection of his favorite tracks by other artists such as Apparat and Thom Yorke, picking them apart then weaving them back into his own interpretations.

He also applied elements such as post rock and electro pop to these latest works.

Much loved by Chinese fans, the busy DJ visits China almost annually as part of the hectic globetrotting tour schedule he maintains performing at large dance venues around the world.

The Shanghai party will be warmed up by promising Chinese DJ duo John and Kaka and veteran British DJ Tim Crouch.

The organizer, www.udancecn.com, China\’s first and only 24-hour nonstop Internet radio station playing electronic dance music, will broadcast Saturday\’s show live.

Ten VIP tickets will also be given away. Log on to the Web site for more information.

Date: December 6, 10 p.m.

Venue: Club JJ2, 1123 Yan\’an Rd M., Shanghai

Tickets: 200 yuan (US$29) for presale, at door price to be confirmed.

Tel: 400-620-6006

(Shanghai Daily December 3, 2008)

Coldplay

Coldplay 

Coldplay was the hottest iTunes album download this year: Its \”Viva la Vida\” was crowned the best-selling album of 2008, while Leona Lewis\’s \”Bleeding Love\” was named the top-selling single.

Coldplay\’s CD has sold more than 2 million copies since its release in June, and has sold more than 500,000 copies digitally — most of which was through iTunes, according to the band\’s representative. ITunes does not release its sales figures, its spokesman said in releasing its list on Monday.

Jack Johnson\’s \”Sleep Through the Static\” was the No. 2 selling album, while the soundtrack to the film \”Juno,\” Lil Wayne\’s \”Tha Carter III\” and Sara Bareilles\’ \”Little Voice\” rounded out the iTunes top 5. Two more film soundtracks were in the top ten — \”Once\” and \”Across the Universe\” — while Jason Mraz\’ \”We Sing. We Dance. We Steal Things,\” OneRepublic\’s \”Dreaming Out Loud\” and Leona Lewis\’ \”Spirit\” rounded it out.

Leona Lewis

Leona Lewis 

Lewis\’ \”Bleeding Love\” sold 3.2 million digitally, according to her label, J Records. According to iTunes, the title track of Coldplay\’s album was its No. 2 most downloaded track, followed by \”Low\” by Flo Rida (featuring T-Pain), Katy Perry\’s \”I Kissed a Girl\” and Rihanna\’s \”Disturbia.\”

Rihanna also made the top 10 singles with \”Don\’t Stop the Music,\” while \”Lollipop\” by Lil Wayne and Static Major, \”No Air\” by Jordin Sparks and Chris Brown, Sara Bareilles\’ \”Love Song\” and Natasha Bedingfield\’s \”Pocketful of Sunshine\” also made iTunes top 10 downloaded singles list.

(Agencies/China Daily December 2, 2008)

Supprisingly, Austin, Texas, was once considered the biggest live music town in the USA. But times have changed, much to the angst of locals now determined to rejuvenate the past.

Thriving nightclubs, popular festivals and favorite sons like Willie Nelson and Stevie Ray Vaughan have given Austin a well-deserved, if boastful, moniker: \”Live Music Capital of the World.\”

But the world has gotten a lot bigger since the days of the Armadillo World Headquarters, when hippies and cowboys joined together in musical harmony, in the capital of Texas, and everybody got to park for free.

Back then, to hear the old-timers tell it, nobody worried much about health insurance or affordable housing, and noise complaints were considered welcome attention.

Today, Austin, is defined as much by its high-tech industry as its live music scene.

Some say the once laid-back college town is in danger of losing its stage presence. That\’s why city leaders are welcoming a plan to promote Austin\’s rhythmic heritage, ease the struggles of performing artists and make the town a true music incubator.

\”We\’re kind of at this pinnacle moment, where we can either continue the status quo and watch a dilution of the music scene, or we can value it and recognize that it\’s part of the fabric of who we are as a city,\” says Paul Oveisi, an Austin club owner who helped compile a recent series of recommendations about promoting the live music scene.

The task force that Oveisi heads up is pushing the creation of a city music department, the development of more music venues, an aggressive marketing campaign and incentives designed to lure music industry components such as publishing houses, managers, record labels and digital distributors.

City leaders, who received the report from the panel last week, say there\’s good reason to protect Austin\’s status as a live music hub.

Live music and related industries have an estimated US$1 billion economic impact on Austin, whose cultural sector generates about US$2.3 billion in yearly economic activity. There are an estimated 8,000 working musicians in Austin.

The pulsating music scene has helped give Austin its enduring reputation as a youthfully hip, fun town. It was here, at the old Armadillo World Headquarters in the early 1970s, that Willie Nelson\’s brand of outlaw country was born.

Years later, at the famed Antone\’s nightclub, blues guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan roared into the city\’s musical conscience.

Since then, internationally acclaimed musical festivals like South By Southwest and Austin City Limits have lured thousands, and thriving venues °?- like Antone\’s, The Broken Spoke, Momo\’s, the Continental Club, Stubbs, La Zona Rosa, The Hole in the Wall °?- continue to draw big acts and large crowds.

\”Live music is a defining characteristic of Austin,\” says Austin mayor Will Wynn. \”Many people consider it to be the heart and soul of what makes Austin such a desirable city in which to live, work and play.\”

But members of the task force say the city\’s rapid expansion, rising health care costs, expensive real estate and even difficulty in find a car parking space have made Austin an increasingly tough place to make a living as a performer.

\”It\’s tough when your take home pay is 100 bucks and 20 of it is going to pay for the valet guy who parked your car, or 15 of it is going to pay the parking ticket,\” said Brandon Aghamalian, one of the 15 task force panelists.

Their report recommends that the city give parking vouchers to \”certified musicians\” in entertainment districts and create loading and unloading areas specifically reserved for them.

It also urges the city to pool public and private funds to help provide affordable housing and bolster health care services for performers, including the possible creation of a musician-only health clinic similar to the one in New Orleans.

Promoting the entertainment business at a time of national economic decline might be a tough sell, but task force members and city leaders alike say Austin\’s music scene is a vital job-creating engine that will pay long-term dividends.

Guitar guru Carlos Santana, who just opened a new restaurant and live music venue in Austin called Maria Maria, says the economic distress will soon seem like \”a bad dream that you won\’t even remember.\”

Santana says Austin\’s musical heritage won\’t fade because it flows naturally from the musical legends and fans who found their vibe amid the city\’s limestone cliffs, adding: \”There is something really special about Austin.\”

(Shanghai Daily November 27, 2008)

The Saturdays have denied they are a manufactured band, insisting \”you can\’t manufacture talent\”.

The group – comprising Frankie Sandford, Rochelle Wiseman, Vanessa White, Mollie King and Una Healy – shot to fame with their debut single \”If This Is Love\” and are determined not to be a one-hit wonder.

Una said: \”I think that we came along at the right time. People have a negative thing about bands who are put together – they think we are told what to sing and what to wear. They say that we are manufactured, but you can\’t manufacture talent.\”

Rochelle – who was a member of S Club Juniors with Frankie – added: \”Frankie and I started, pop was very cheesy. Now it has more of an edge, and that\’s refreshing.\”

The group also denied there were any problems between them and chart rivals Girls Aloud when they supported the \”Love Machine\” singers on their \”Tangled Up\” Tour.

Mollie said: \”People will want to hear that there was rivalry between us. But there wasn\’t any. On the first night, Cheryl Cole and Kimberley Walsh came into our dressing room to wish us luck. They also spoke to us over dinner. They went out of their way to be nice to us.\”

(China Daily/Agencies January 4, 2009)

The godfathers of Canadian punk are on their way to Beijing.

Hailed as the \”founders\” of Canadian hardcore punk, D.O.A. will stop in the capital during their 30th anniversary tour. They are set to belt out their classic anthems as well as new punk ballads from their recent album Northern Avenger.

They will be joined by fellow punk rockers SUBS and Demerit, two of China\’s finest hardcore outfits.

With three decades of punk performances under his studded belt, band founder Joe Keithley – known for his slogan \”Talk-Action=O\” – shows no signs of slowing down. He\’s kept his sense of adrenaline-drenched musicality in shape by running Sudden Death Records.

The pioneering hardcore unit is currently between records.

\”If you play punk rock, you\’ve got to have conviction … you\’ve got to call it like it is,\” Keithley says.

\”The thing that I don\’t think people understand about punk rock today is that you may have a loud, obnoxious band with a really loud guitar and play really fast, but if it says nothing, and you\’re still only singing about cars and girls, then it\’s really like pop music dressed up in a really loud suit,\” he says.

Keithley says it didn\’t matter how loud and angst-ridden a band played on stage; if songs said nothing or did not contribute to people\’s thinking, it was useless.

\”It\’s just serving the same needs that pop music always has done forever and always will do for people,\” he says.

The album, I, Shithead chronicles Keithley\’s recollections of a punk rock life.

It starts with a crew of kids in Burnaby who are transfixed on the erupting punk movement and traverses a generation disillusioned with the status quo. It\’s riddled with tales of riots, drinking, traveling, playing and conquering all manner of obstacles through sheer determination.

It\’s a befitting contribution from a band credited with creating the hardcore scene alongside outfits such as Black Flag, Minor Threat and the Cro-Mags. Henry Rollins, acclaimed American punk singer-songwriter and spoken-word artist, called them \”one of the best live bands ever\”, adding, \”the band is legendary\”.

9 pm-12 pm at Mao Livehouse 111 Gulou Dongdajie, Gulou, 6402-5080

(China Daily January 4, 2009)

The Eighth Music Festival of the Central Conservatory of Music opened on the weekend, featuring American conductor Steven Davis, Chinese violinist Liu Xiao (pictured) and the China Youth Symphony Orchestra, who premiered American-Chinese composer Chen Yi\’s Violin Concerto and American composer Steven Stucky\’s Son et Lumire.

The festival will present 16 concerts at the concert halls of the conservatory, its attached middle school, and the National Center for the Performing Arts, until Jan 3.

Besides students of the conservatory, a number of established musicians from the conservatory\’s faculty will also perform at the festival, including violinist Xu Weiling, soprano Ke Luwa and pianist Sheng Yuan.

More information is available at the website of the Central Conservatory of Music: www.ccom.edu.cn.

(China Daily December 24, 2008)

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