Lady Gaga has been challenged to a televised sing-off by Los Angeles artist Alisa Apps, with the winner taking home a cash prize at least $1 million. The competition would take place at New York's Madison Square Garden or London's O2 Arena, with each singer performing a series of songs.
"I feel sorry for Lady Gaga -- she's just a plastic doll generated by the music money marketing machine," Apps states in a release. "This contest gives people a chance to choose which they prefer -- plastic or real."
Lady Gaga has not responded to the challenge thus far. While Apps has yet to a release her debut album, a clip of the singer performing her track "How Do I Make Right" has earned 1.2 million views on YouTube.
Source
Jason Derulo was just another artist on MySpace.
Until he was discovered by power producer J. R. Rotem a few years ago and skyrocketed into pop fame. Rotem is behind hits by Rihanna, Beyoncé and Sean Kingston.
Since then, Derulo has been writing for such heavyweights as Lil Wayne and opening for Lady Gaga and the Black Eyed Peas. His music is a staple on Top 40 radio, with his single "Whatcha Say" peaking at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.
Derulo, 21, is currently on a solo tour. He plays Seattle on Wednesday at the Moore Theatre. On his stop in Detroit, the Miami native talked by phone about his passions and his hopes.
Q: How would you describe your sound and style?
A: It's an integration of a lot of music. I've studied all kinds ... rock music, neo-soul, jazz, musical theater. When I tried to figure out who I was, I realized I didn't have to choose. I just go to the [recording] booth and let it rip.
Q: What about your Auto-Tuned work? (Auto-Tune is an electronic pitch-correction program.)
A: Only two of my four singles have Auto-Tune. I think it's a problem only if used as a crutch. If used tastefully, then it's really cool. It's the ear candy of the future.
Q: You sing a lot about romancing — what's your dream girl like?
A: My dream girl would have the biggest heart in the world. Well, my mom has the biggest heart, so this girl would have the second biggest. ... I want her to be somebody giving, somebody that matches me in terms of philanthropy and caring for others.
Q: You're close to your mom?
A: I try to bring her out on the road at least once a month. She loves it.
Q: What's your goal?
A: I just want to continue on the same path with my work ethic. I don't want to be complacent with the amount of success. I have so many dreams and aspirations. ... I just want to continue on the same path of hunger.
Source
POP or ROCK MUSIC
Favorite Male Artist
- Justin Bieber
- Eminem
- Usher
Favorite Female Artist
- Ke$ha
- Katy Perry
- Lady Gaga
Favorite Band, Duo or Group
- The Black Eyed Peas
- Lady Antebellum
- Train
Favorite Album
- Justin Bieber - My World 2.0
- Eminem - Recovery
- Katy Perry - Teenage Dream
COUNTRY MUSIC
Favorite Male Artist
- Jason Aldean
- Luke Bryan
- Brad Paisley
Favorite Female Artist
- Miranda Lambert
- Taylor Swift
- Carrie Underwood
Favorite Band, Duo or Group
- Zac Brown Band
- Lady Antebellum
- Rascal Flatts
Favorite Album
- Jason Aldean - Wide Open
- Lady Antebellum - Need You Now
- Carrie Underwood - Play On
RAP/HIP-HOP MUSIC
Favorite Male Artist
Favorite Album
- B.o.B. - B.o.B. Presents
- Drake - Thank Me Later
- Eminem - Recovery
SOUL/RHYTHM & BLUES MUSIC
Favorite Male Artist
- Chris Brown
- Trey Songz
- Usher
Favorite Female Artist
Favorite Album
- Alicia Keys - The Element of Freedom
- Sade - Soldier of Love
- Usher - Raymond v. Raymond
SOUNDTRACKS
Favorite Album
- AC/DC - Iron Man 2
- Glee: The Music, Volume 3 "Showstoppers"
- The Twilight Saga: Eclipse
ALTERNATIVE ROCK MUSIC
Favorite Artist
- Muse
- Phoenix
- Vampire Weekend
ADULT CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
Favorite Artist
- Michael Buble
- Lady Antebellum
- Train
LATIN MUSIC
Favorite Artist
- Daddy Yankee
- Enrique Iglesias
- Shakira
Favorite Artist
- Casting Crowns
- MercyMe
- TobyMac
ARTIST OF THE YEAR
- Justin Bieber
- Eminem
- Ke$ha
- Lady Gaga
- Katy Perry
T-Mobile Breakthrough Artist Nominations
- B.o.B
- Justin Bieber
- Taio Cruz
- Jason Derulo
- Ke$ha
- Lady Antebellum
- Travie McCoy
- Mike Posner
Beyoncé is reportedly in talks to headline next year's Glastonbury Festival.
According to the Daily Star, Queen B is said to have spoken with Glasto event boss, Michael Eavis, to discuss the possibility of performing at the festival in June 2011.
If Eavis strikes up a deal with the Single Ladies singer, Knowles will follow hubby Jay-Z, who performed at the prestigious festival in 2008.
A source told the newspaper: "After all the furore over Jay-Z playing Glasto, it went off brilliantly and he had a wonderful time."
"Beyoncé was, of course, in the wings soaking up the atmosphere and told everyone how happy she was at Worthy Farm."
They added: "Getting her to perform in her own right seems the ideal next step."
Meanwhile, Beyoncé has been crowned pop music's Sexiest Video Hottie in a poll by US cable giant, Fuse TV.
Knowles beat the likes of Katy Perry, Britney Spears and Lady GaGa to the title, after the sexy outfits and raunchy dance routine in her Sweet Dreams promo pipped them to the post.
Robyn has announced that her next single will be 'Indestructible'.
The original orchestral edit of the song appears on the singer's recent Body Talk Pt.2 album, but a reworked production - described in a press release as a "pulsating full-power version" - will be released as a single on November 22.
The new version of 'Indestructible' will appear on what is being billed as the "complete Body Talk album", which will combine five songs apiece from June's Body Talk Pt. 1 and September's Body Talk Pt. 2 with five brand new tracks.
Its release will follow the single on November 29.
Beforehand, Robyn kicks off a four-date UK tour at Glasgow's ABC on October 18.
Source
In 2004, Jin Au-Yeung had the world in his hands.
The Queens-bred hip-hop artist, then 20, shot to fame after back-to-back wins on "Freestyle Friday" on BET's "106 & Park." A coveted record deal with Ruff Ryders came next.
At the time, it seemed as if the Chinese-American performer, endorsed by Wyclef Jean himself, would become the first big Asian-American musical star. With lots of promise and hype, he was poised to shatter stereotypes.
That never happened.
"It wasn't more difficult to market me, but definitely more of a challenge," he says of his debut album. "It may have taken a bit more effort because no one's tried to market an Asian or a high-profile Asian before."
Six years later, Jin relocated to Hong Kong, where he's made it as a popular Cantonese-spitting rapper. Christianity has become a new focal point in his music.
Though Jin felt the sting six years ago, today there's a new world for Asian-American musical acts.
The No. 1 and 2 songs on the top 10 singles on the Billboard charts are by Asian-American artists: Bruno Mars ("Just the Way You Are") and Far East Movement ("Like a G6"). Until last week, "Like a G6" was the No. 1 most downloaded single on iTunes.
For Far East Movement, a band born and bred in L.A.'s Koreatown, it's a historic moment. The party-music quartet -- whose debut album from Interscope hits stores today -- is the first Asian-American group to break into the mainstream.
"It's been a long time coming," says Kev Nish (aka Kevin Nishimura). Currently touring the country with Mike Posner, they'll perform Tuesday night at Irving Plaza. "It's hard for us to believe. When we go to different cities and hear it on radio stations, it really, really trips us out."
The band -- Nishimura, James (Prohgress) Roh, Jae (J-Splif) Choung and Virman (DJ Virman) Coquia -- have been marketing themselves online for the past few years, chatting with fans into the night after their shows.
That connection to social media has been instrumental in their success.
"Far East Movement and Bruno Mars didn't come just out of nowhere," says Oliver Wang, an associate professor of sociology at California State University-Long Beach. "There's been a slow push to make it happen through social media. It's finally hit that tipping point."
Still, without a historical precedent, music insiders are hesitant to declare Asian-American mainstream music an actual trend.
"American pop music has for decades been white and black pop stars," says Michael Endelman, senior editor at Rolling Stone. "Generally, Asian-Americans haven't been in the music industry in a significant way. You go back to the great pop and rock in the first wave of the great labels of the '50s, '60s, '70s and '80s -- there's just no history to it."
That's not to say many haven't tried. Two American-bred artists, Coco Lee in 2000 and Utada Hikaru in 2004, who made it big in Asia, have failed to succeed in the U.S.
Even Charice Pempengco, the pop star who recently joined the cast of TV's "Glee," doesn't believe Asian-Americans or Asian crossovers will make it. When asked by the Daily News in May if she expected her album to become a big seller, the 17-year-old sounded defeated.
"It's really hard to go international, so that's why I'm not expecting it right now. I love the record, but I don't know if it will go far," she said. (It peaked at No. 8 on the Billboard 200 albums chart.)
Jin Young Park, CEO of South Korean record label JYP Entertainment, is trying to change all this. Park is the mastermind behind global sensation Rain and the bubblegum pop band Wonder Girls, who toured with the Jonas Brothers last summer.
With 31 No. 1 hits in South Korea under his belt (and writing credits for the Wonder Girls single "Nobody," which charted on the Billboard Hot 100), Park wants to create the next global star.
"We're two steps from finally doing it," he says from his music studio in Manhattan. "Far East Movement has made a huge step for Asian-Americans. Now we need an Asian crossover to break through for that other step."
The Wonder Girls' first full-length English album debuts in the spring, and Park believes they'll be the first.
Asian-American and crossover acts have a champion in MTV veejay Suchin Pak, who says she's been waiting for years to interview an Asian-American during prime time.
What's exciting about bands like Far East Movement's success, she believes, is that they made it on the merits of the music.
"The Far East Movement guys would tell you that they never -- or hardly ever - claim their Asian identity is a boost or an obstacle," she says. "For them, they finally found the right sound, they finally gelled as a group after 10 years. I think it's less and less about the race and ethnicity nowadays."
"For me, the social specifics trail far behind the music as far as importance," agrees Dart Parker, director of artists and repertoire at Shady Records. "All music- industry folks care about is personality, look and style, but I don't think that has anything to do with ethnicity. If an act's got it, they've got it."
Far East Movement's album, "Free-Wired," which drops Tuesday, features collaborations with the likes of Keri Hilson, Snoop Dogg, Ryan Tedder, Bruno Mars and others. It's possible Far East Movement has got what it takes to be the first Asian-Americans to top the charts.
"People are discovering our music maybe on a blog, or they heard it on the radio once, then they heard it on a TV show, and then they hear it in the club, and then finally they go, 'Oh! They're Asian,'" says Nishimura. "And they don't really care."
Source