The Roc will be in the building at Rihanna’s “LOUD” tour. J. Cole has been added as an opening act for the singer’s upcoming North American trek.
The pop princess made the announcement on Twitter. “J.Cole will be joining me to hit the road in N.America and Canada this SUMMER #LOUDtour,” she tweeted to her 4.1 million followers.
Rihanna is managed by Jay-Z’s Roc Nation and Cole is signed to the label. The North Carolina rapper released a remix to RiRi’s raunchy hit “S&M” and shared his admiration for her in a previous interview with Rap-Up.com. “I’m a Rihanna fan. She’s really dope,” he said.
The Roc stars will hit the road, along with previously announced supporting act Cee Lo Green, starting June 4 in Baltimore, traveling to Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, Atlanta, and more, before wrapping in late July.
Source
Friday, March 25, 2011
‘S&M’: Rihanna’s 14th #1 Dance/Club Play Song
As “S&M” rebounds 4-3 as the Hot 100′s Airplay Gainer for a second consecutive week, the track also marks Rihanna’s 14th No. 1 on Dance/Club Play Songs, where it rises 2-1.
The coronation ties Rihanna with Beyonce for fifth place among artists with the chart’s most leaders. Here is a look at the acts with the most No. 1s since Dance/Club Play Songs launched as a national survey the week of Aug. 28, 1976:
Total No. 1s, Artist
40, Madonna
19, Janet Jackson
15, Mariah Carey
15, Kristine W
14, Rihanna
14, Beyonce
Congratulations, RiRi!
Source
The coronation ties Rihanna with Beyonce for fifth place among artists with the chart’s most leaders. Here is a look at the acts with the most No. 1s since Dance/Club Play Songs launched as a national survey the week of Aug. 28, 1976:
Total No. 1s, Artist
40, Madonna
19, Janet Jackson
15, Mariah Carey
15, Kristine W
14, Rihanna
14, Beyonce
Congratulations, RiRi!
Source
Did Rebecca Black really make $1 million from "Friday"?
The Rebecca Black saga in brief: Parents hire company to produce two cheesy pop songs and one cheesy video for 13-year-old daughter. Self-described "music factory" writes song including explanation of order of days of week. Daughter sings song. Producers auto-tune the bejesus out of it. "Music factory" unleashes song and promo on unsuspecting world. Video goes viral when critics trash it as "the most appalling thing on the Internet." Girl complains of "cyber-bullying." Then comes vindication. Gaga says she is a genius. Forbes declares her a millionaire.
Britney Spears's Secret Is Out: She'll Perform in Vegas Tonight
She's baaaack!
Britney Spears is headed to Las Vegas Friday to perform a mini concert at Palms Casino Resort's Rain Nightclub, which will be filmed for an upcoming MTV special.
Spears, 29, took to Twitter Friday morning to confirm the rumors that she'll indeed be onstage in Sin City.
"Looks like my little secret isn't a secret anymore," Spears Tweeted, before asking who of her more than 7 million Twitter followers will be attending. "You're all invited. Be there or be square bitch!"
Hotel and nightclub executives have been tightlipped about what the show will entail, but PEOPLE has learned that Spears will take to the stage twice Friday – once at 8 p.m. in a ticketed event, then again at midnight for a performance that will be open to the public.
The appearance in Sin City comes just days before the release of Spear's new studio album, Femme Fatale, which will debut Tuesday.
Source
Britney Spears is headed to Las Vegas Friday to perform a mini concert at Palms Casino Resort's Rain Nightclub, which will be filmed for an upcoming MTV special.
Spears, 29, took to Twitter Friday morning to confirm the rumors that she'll indeed be onstage in Sin City.
"Looks like my little secret isn't a secret anymore," Spears Tweeted, before asking who of her more than 7 million Twitter followers will be attending. "You're all invited. Be there or be square bitch!"
Hotel and nightclub executives have been tightlipped about what the show will entail, but PEOPLE has learned that Spears will take to the stage twice Friday – once at 8 p.m. in a ticketed event, then again at midnight for a performance that will be open to the public.
The appearance in Sin City comes just days before the release of Spear's new studio album, Femme Fatale, which will debut Tuesday.
Source
Rebecca Black Gets Career Boost From Ryan Seacrest
13-year-old Rebecca Black -- the phenom behind that "Friday" song -- has a good mentor, as in Ryan Seacrest ... because R.S. just helped Rebecca sign with a big music manager.
Rebecca did Ryan's radio show on Thursday, and afterward Ryan realized Rebecca and her mom were overwhelmed by the sudden burst of attention.
Sources tell us ... Ryan hooked Rebecca up with Debra Baum, a manager with DB Entertainment.
Rebecca has now signed with DB.
Source
Rebecca did Ryan's radio show on Thursday, and afterward Ryan realized Rebecca and her mom were overwhelmed by the sudden burst of attention.
Sources tell us ... Ryan hooked Rebecca up with Debra Baum, a manager with DB Entertainment.
Rebecca has now signed with DB.
Source
Why Do Radiohead Fans Insist There'll be a Sequel to 'The King of Limbs'?
Ever since Radiohead's eighth album The King of Limbs was released in February, a significant number of the band's fans have insisted that the eight-song record was the first part of a larger work or series of EPs. One website, The King of Limbs Part 2, is devoted to proving that a follow-up is in the pipeline. This is very odd, as the band have said absolutely nothing to support this theory and have consistently advertised The King of Limbs as a complete, discrete work.
It's easy to see why fans would believe more Radiohead music is on the way. The band set a precedent a decade ago by releasing Kid A and Amnesiac, two albums recorded during the same sessions, less than a year apart in 2000 and 2001. Members of the group have also talked about transitioning into abandoning the album format in favor of releasing EPs and singles in various interviews over the past few years.
The band clearly has an open mind about atypical releases and very well could put out more music in the near future. The peculiar thing is that so many fans are insisting that the 37-minute, 29-second-long album is not, in fact, an album at all, despite the band labeling it as such.
It could be that fans are disappointed that The King of Limbs is a relatively brief work, particularly after waiting four years since the group's previous record In Rainbows. Others may be let down by the muted, arty music (even compared to their experimental Kid A) on Limbs, and are eager to fit the record into a larger career narrative. Strangely, it could be that many people have forgotten that albums can be brief or contain a relatively small number of compositions after decades of track listings bloated by the expansive constraints of CDs.
In the vinyl era, it was not unusual at all for albums to have eight songs or fewer. Led Zeppelin's IV, Television's Marquee Moon, Patti Smith's Horses and Roxy Music's For Your Pleasure also contain 8 tracks. Steely Dan's Aja, Kraftwerk's Trans Europe Express, Can's Tago Mago, Pink Floyd's Wish You Were Here and the Velvet Underground's White Light/White Heat all have fewer tracks.
In terms of album length, 37:29 is longer than a host of classic albums including the Beatles' Revolver, the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds, Nick Drake's Pink Moon, Joni Mitchell's Blue, Dusty Springfield's Dusty in Memphis, Wire's Pink Flag, Slayer's Reign in Blood and Sleater-Kinney's Dig Me Out.
It's not even usual for recent records to be so brief. Joanna Newsom's acclaimed album Ys has five tracks, while Sleigh Bells' celebrated debut Treats from last year clocks in at a lean 32:04.
Though many of Radiohead's fans are old-school obsessives who are willing to pore over the band's website and artwork searching for clues that may lead to new music, a lot of them seem to have very rigid notions of what an album can be.
Source
It's easy to see why fans would believe more Radiohead music is on the way. The band set a precedent a decade ago by releasing Kid A and Amnesiac, two albums recorded during the same sessions, less than a year apart in 2000 and 2001. Members of the group have also talked about transitioning into abandoning the album format in favor of releasing EPs and singles in various interviews over the past few years.
The band clearly has an open mind about atypical releases and very well could put out more music in the near future. The peculiar thing is that so many fans are insisting that the 37-minute, 29-second-long album is not, in fact, an album at all, despite the band labeling it as such.
It could be that fans are disappointed that The King of Limbs is a relatively brief work, particularly after waiting four years since the group's previous record In Rainbows. Others may be let down by the muted, arty music (even compared to their experimental Kid A) on Limbs, and are eager to fit the record into a larger career narrative. Strangely, it could be that many people have forgotten that albums can be brief or contain a relatively small number of compositions after decades of track listings bloated by the expansive constraints of CDs.
In the vinyl era, it was not unusual at all for albums to have eight songs or fewer. Led Zeppelin's IV, Television's Marquee Moon, Patti Smith's Horses and Roxy Music's For Your Pleasure also contain 8 tracks. Steely Dan's Aja, Kraftwerk's Trans Europe Express, Can's Tago Mago, Pink Floyd's Wish You Were Here and the Velvet Underground's White Light/White Heat all have fewer tracks.
In terms of album length, 37:29 is longer than a host of classic albums including the Beatles' Revolver, the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds, Nick Drake's Pink Moon, Joni Mitchell's Blue, Dusty Springfield's Dusty in Memphis, Wire's Pink Flag, Slayer's Reign in Blood and Sleater-Kinney's Dig Me Out.
It's not even usual for recent records to be so brief. Joanna Newsom's acclaimed album Ys has five tracks, while Sleigh Bells' celebrated debut Treats from last year clocks in at a lean 32:04.
Though many of Radiohead's fans are old-school obsessives who are willing to pore over the band's website and artwork searching for clues that may lead to new music, a lot of them seem to have very rigid notions of what an album can be.
Source
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