Monday, November 28, 2011

Taylor Swift Forced to Cancel Shows Due To Illness

Taylor SwiftIt's a disappointing day for Taylor Swift fans. The teen queen was forced to cancel the next three shows on her Speak Now World Tour, slotted for this weekend. The Friday evening show in Charlotte, North Carolina and both Saturday and Sunday stints in Atlanta, Georgia are postponed until the Fall.


The singer-songwriter is battling bronchitis, and her physician has advised her to cancel her upcoming performances in order to rest.

"It breaks my heart to miss out on this weekend's shows with my friends in Charlotte and Atlanta," Swift says. "I would never cancel if I thought I was physically able to perform these shows. I am so sorry to the fans, but I look forward to seeing you when we come back through your towns, which we will do."

The Charlotte stop has been rescheduled for November 16, while the Atlanta shows will be moved to October 1 & 2. Taylor will resume her performance schedule July 14 in Montreal, Canada.

Last week, the 21-year-old had to postpone her her July 2 stop in Louisville, Ky. for the same reason. The show, which has been moved to October 11, marked the first time ever in her career that the 'Mean' singer has had to cancel.

"Louisville, I so sorry to have to postpone this show to Oct. 11," Swift posted on her Twitter page. "This is my first time having to do this. I'm so, so sorry.

Young Jeezy Brings Hustlerz Ambition to 'RapFix Live'


The Snowman will join Sway on 'RapFix Live' Wednesday at 4 p.m. ET on MTV.com


It's been almost three years in the making, but on December 20, Young Jeezy will finally be releasing his long-awaited TM: 103 Hustlerz Ambition. And on Wednesday, the Snowman will be coming to "RapFix Live" to chop it up with Sway about his upcoming release. Not only that, but Young has also given RapFix an exclusive clip from the album's accompanying film.

The album boasts appearances from Lil Wayne, T.I., Jill Scott, Snoop Dogg and Devin the Dude. Last week, "I Do," a tongue-in-cheek love song featuring Jay-Z and Andre 3000, hit the Net to rave reviews. On it, Jeezy professes his love for hustling, while Jay cleverly raps about his marriage to the streets, though at times sounds like he is dedicating his bars to wifey Beyoncé.
Next week's edition of "RapFix Live" will also celebrate MTV2's upcoming Sucker Free Awards, as well the return of "Yo! MTV Raps," with a special episode dubbed "Classic Cuts." Both shows will premiere on MTV2 on December 4, and "RapFix Live" has exclusive behind-the-scenes looks.
Held at Miami's Club LIV, the Sucker Free Awards will celebrate the year in hip-hop, giving out statues for Best Crew of 2011, Rookie of the Year and the Must-Follow Person of 2011. Rick Ross, Meek Mill, DJ Khaled, Red Café and Ace Hood were all on hand as well as Birdman and his YMCMB family.
Young Jeezy"Yo! MTV Raps: Classic Cuts" will profile three artists and their classic tracks: A Tribe Called Quest's "Scenario," Geto Boys' "My Mind's Playing Tricks on Me," and Ice Cube's "It Was a Good Day."
The special will feature discussions from former hosts Fab 5 Freddy, Ed Lover and Dr. Dre, as well as some of rap's generational heavyweights. The special will explore the way each song revolutionized the genre and impacted generations to come. In addition to the three classic cuts, the special will also feature a long list of current hip-hop artists from Common to Wiz Khalifa and Fat Joe.
Catch Young Jeezy on "RapFix Live" Wednesday at 4 p.m. ET on MTV.com, and be sure to join the Twitter conversation using the hashtag #RapFixLive. And send your questions for Young Jeezy to @MTVRapFiX

The Maccabees: 'Our new album proves people who slagged us off wrong'

Photo: Photo: Dan Dennison/NME 
Photo Gallery: The Maccabees
Photo: Dan Dennison/NME
The Maccabees have revealed that they feel their new album 'Given To The Wild' will prove the people who "slagged" them off wrong.

The Brighton-based band release the LP, which is their third studio effort, on January 9, and in an interview with Fake DIY, they said that they believed they had started to repay the faith shown to them by their fans.

Talking about the new record, guitarist Felix White said:
It's like, we're proving something to the people that slagged us off on the basis of the first album, for those people that saw something in the band.

He went on to reveal that the band had changed their approach in the recording studio, adding: "It's definitely an ambitious album. With the last record, while we were writing it, we'd look to play a few songs to people, just sort of gauge it.

"And with this one we didn't do that, we just ploughed through and concentrated on it, but with enough of a view to how it would translate."

Last week, The Maccabees unveiled their new single 'Pelican', which is the first track to be taken from 'Given To The Wild'. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen.

The Maccabees will tour the UK in January in support of the album, playing five shows, these kick off in Glasgow at Queen Margaret's Union on January 23 and run until January 28, when the band will play Manchester's HMV Ritz.
You can watch a video interview with The Maccabees discussing 'Given To The Wild' at this summer's Bestival by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

Read more

  • Hear The Maccabees' comeback single 'Pelican' on NME.COM – audio
  • The Maccabees: ''Given To The Wild' is the first time we've sounded like we want to on record'
  • Tickets for The Maccabees' January UK tour onsale today - ticket details

Inside Darren Criss' Team StarKid: From 'A Very Potter Musical' to SPACE Tour

Lauren Thompson

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As Team StarKid took the stage Saturday night (Nov. 26) at Irving Plaza, they did so in a cheeky parody of 'N Sync's second-ever American tour -- something many fans in the room were too young to remember. On that tour 'N Sync entered in slow motion and wearing space helmets -- as did StarKid Saturday evening, complete with rolling fog and a slow reveal of the seven troupe members finishing their month-long trek across the country.

It's not unrealistic to compare Team StarKid to the first iterations of the iconic boyband, who in 1998, when 'N Sync was pulling the spaceman stunt, was not an album-selling, pop-culture phenomenon just yet. They were, however, a cult hit among young people, part of a mass wave of new pop coming to surface after the grunge era of the early '90s, poised to take over the musical landscape. They were undeniable, and the masses of fans that similarly support StarKid might enable the group to shake up the pop culture map in a huge way.

StarKid isn't a boyband, or even close to it, but they're on the same precipice as the boybands of yesteryear, tapped into a hyper-connected youth culture and a tad confusing to the adults in the room. The group defies easy explanation, the kind of thing you often have to fall head-first into to actually get their appeal. At the base, they're a performance troupe that specializes in pop-culture reference laden, emotional musicals, who springboarded to fame from a viral video hit with their "A Very Potter Musical" in 2009 to expand to fully original works and a spiraling fandom that supports the group and individual members' projects. One co-founder, Darren Criss, who is best known now as Blaine Anderson on " Glee," was first known to his loyal following as Harry Potter. Criss' success may have brought them to greater national attention, but those in the know understand that Criss is just one moving part of the great StarKid machine, and have been tracking the StarKid triumphs across a variety of creative avenues with a fanatical pitch not easily matched, except perhaps by the StarKid performers themselves, who mirror back that enthusiasm with intensity and hold their fans above all else. (Instead of partying with his costars and celebrating two successful New York shows, Joey Richter, who played Ron Weasley in the "Potter" musicals, left the double-header show with his visiting parents in tow to surprise a young fan at her birthday party in the area Saturday night. That's not unusual for the StarKids -- last year Criss flew across the country in the midst of Golden Globes weekend to sing for a teen fan's celebration.)

Darren Criss: The Billboard Cover Story

To love a StarKid is to be a StarKid, and one of the key aspects of the troupe is that the performers on stage are not the only ones considered StarKids, but the entire audience is made up of them as well. That sort of inclusively is what sets the group apart and makes them ripe for fame in our digital age. Criss described the tour as "a celebration of the franchise, both fans and people in the show. Somebody said to us that the cool thing is it's not us versus you, there's no kind of separation. It's a big ole party for anyone who's been involved in anything StarKid, whether you're very familiar or vaguely familiar."

Fellow StarKid Joe Walker likened the experience to being a DJ, and the collective nature of their performances were often the crowd drowns out the StarKids on stage.  "We are up there, and everyone is singing," he explained. "Yeah, we're singing, but they're singing too."

Without those singing fans, Team StarKid might have never fully existed. Ever since "A Very Potter Musical," originally performed at the University of Michigan and put online in what was supposed to be an easy way to share the production with friends, exploded into a worldwide phenomenon, things haven't slowed down for StarKid. Since then they formed their production company, their videos have accumulated more than 100 million views on YouTube, and two of their five albums have charted on Billboard, including the first-ever appearance of a student-produced college musical on the Billboard Top 100 Cast Albums. Previously they've performed small, one-off reviews at Harry Potter fan events or standing shows in their home-base of Chicago, but the S.P.A.C.E. Tour was their first national run, and a chance to connect with their numerous fans offline, performing 21 times in 16 cites in November.

"It's great to see people who have experienced us on the Internet being able to experience it in person, it's really invaluable," Criss told Billboard.com before the afternoon New York show. "I think the tour is an absolutely necessary step in our progression as a performing entity. We're basically a band with four or five albums that never toured. And the purpose of tours is to promote and to reach out and spread the fanbase, which I think we have. This was the first tour and it's been a success."

Before Team StarKid took the stage in New York for the second time ever, fellow Michigan alumnus Charlene Kaye opened, playing mostly selections from her forthcoming Kickstarter-funded new album, but also left room for fan favorites like "Dress and Tie," a duet that features Criss. His appearance on stage, the first glimpse of him for the night and only fourth show of the tour he'd been able to make due to "Glee" commitments, drew the first truly ear-shattering screams and crowd surge. Kaye and Criss spent a lot of time building grassroots fanbases touring together before Criss' put his solo career on the back-burner for television, and that musical synchronicity shows in their ease together. Even without Criss on stage the crowd clapped and sang along for Kaye, especially on the earworming title tracks from the in-production "Animal Love." But the crowd's enthusiasm for Kaye was just a warm-up for the main event: StarKid's grand 'N Sync entrance and first songs, a selection of tracks from their most recent musical, "Starship," back to the two "Potter" productions.

The setlist for these final shows included a few adjustments thanks to the arrival of Criss, who slotted in seamlessly with the group, who often joked about his arrival changing things or playfully suggesting they go on with the original plan and completely ignore his presence. Criss, of course, wouldn't be ignored. Nor would the crowd let him be, surging forward en mass at this first arrival on stage, and screaming out their love for him on his few solo numbers, most notably "Home," a Potter song he dedicates to his mother in the audience.

Criss wasn't the only StarKid to shine, or to attract screaming fans. Each performer had their share, with Richter and Lauren Lopez performing the fan-favorite duet "Granger Danger," and while many of Dylan Saunders' solos were reappropriated by Criss for that evening's show, his duet with Joe Walker stood out for both as solid numbers. Those duets in particular, and their surrounding banter, received an interestingly queer reading thanks to the lack of costuming on tour (Walker and Lopez both play opposite of their gender in the Potter StarKid productions). Jamie Lyn Beatty was the most rubber-faced of the girls, her expressiveness shining on tunes like "No Way." Brian Holden may be the best dancer on the StarKid tour, providing moves for Walker's performance of "Stutter," as well as his own featured vocals on various numbers. Meredith Stepien riled the crowd up with some stand-up and discussion of Criss' newfound fame status (he doesn't travel by limo, he's still riding via dragon like always, she joked) before singing "Coolest Girl," a song sung by Hermione Granger in the plays, and something of an anthem for the predominantly female fanbase.

All-in-all, the troupe barreled through 21 of their numbers, most of which were performed in a group setting complete with dance moves, jazz hands and charm, the latter of which is their greatest weapon. The only group-favorite tracks StarKid left off their setlist were some from "Me and My Dick," the most adult-oriented of their musicals -- since the shows were all-ages, they opted to keep things as PG as StarKid gets. Overall, the performance was both loose and well-rehearsed, with stage banter filling time as the StarKids set or strike their own equipment, keeping in tune with their DIY ethos.

Watching StarKid on stage, especially for theater geeks, is a little like witnessing what you and your friends would find fun on a lazy childhood afternoon, putting together musical numbers and dances, only with more polish. The group numbers were some of the night's best, including the upbeat "Days of Summer" from "A Very Potter Sequel," the kind of production number that could easily translate to the charts as a pop single akin to Godspell's "Day by Day." That transitioned to their calling-card number, "Goin' Back To Hogwarts," the track that is performed in the first minutes of their first viral video. The fans singing along easily pitched above the StarKids on stage, and by the end it was more pure singalong than performance, capped with confetti cannons and a massive crush of seemingly anyone and everyone in New York that night who'd touched StarKid during its evolution, all crowding on stage for a bow.

There are still kinks to be ironed out in the transition from full productions to a revue-style event. Sometimes pacing was off, and a intermission performance by half the StarKids as their side-project Jim and the Povolos was sweet, but slightly out of place. Not that the throngs of young adults in the audience were complaining -- they're insatiably thirsty for anything and everything StarKid, which leaves the group cautious about setting any future plans in stone.

"We're really reluctant to say what we're doing next because our fans will be mad if we don't follow through," said Criss while the rest of the StarKids chimed in with increasingly absurd theoretical plans (Richter: "Maybe a performance of 'Doubt'." Walker: "We're going to release the iPhone 5.") The only consensus among the group: Rest.

As for more tours are in their future, Walker was optimistic. "This is the first time we've done it, so it was an experiment in a way and we're learning a lot," he said. "But now it's a totally viable option. Now we can do musicals and tours, because those are things we know how to do. We'll continue to expand our repertoire."

And while they'd love to take a musical on tour, Criss pointed out that such an endeavor requires many more moving parts than a revue-style production like S.P.A.C.E. tour. "Having a show tour requires so many other things to happen, while this tour is all about us," he explained. "The fans want to know the people themselves, whereas a show would be something to develop over time and really nail it to a place where we're really happy with it continuously running."

For fans who didn't get the chance to attend this go-around, Lopez told us they're hopeful about releasing a DVD of the experience, and Holden promised behind-the-scenes footage they've been capturing along the way. In the meantime, the group noted that fans have taken the burden of documenting the tour for them. Despite an announcement barring video recording, arms were aloft all night capturing clips, and videos were uploaded and transformed into .gifs before the StarKids had a chance to escape the venue for the evening. There's perhaps more documentation of the StarKid tour on the Internet than tickets they could physically sell, but the fans and Team StarKid wouldn't have it any other way.

Justin Bieber Camp Waiting for Mariah Yeater to Bring in Baby for Paternity Test, Report Says


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As Justin Bieber fever grips New York, sources close to the star say they doubt Mariah Yeater, who claimed he was the father of her 4-month-old baby, will do her part now that he’s taken a paternity test. 
After teen-dream Justin, who appears on “Today” this morning, took the test Friday, a source close to him said, “Now Yeater has to offer up the baby for DNA testing, which will prove once and for all that Justin is not the father. But we don’t expect her to be in a rush to do that.” 
Yeater, 21, had claimed she slept with Bieber after a concert in October 2010, that they didn’t use protection and nine months later Tristyn was born. But she dropped her lawsuit last week. 
So while Bieber’s legal team awaits Yeater’s next move, they’re plotting how to pursue her or her lawyers for making the false claim. 
While his reps declined to comment, Bieber tells David Letterman on his CBS show tonight, “I think I can smell a weasel, too, a little bit . . . I know, it’s pretty crazy . . . People make up false accusations.”

Lady Gaga Releases Holiday EP

http://www.billboard.com/photos/stylus/1268329-lady-gaga-india-617-409.jpg
Amid her fashion-forward outfits and hyper-choreographed videos, it's easy to forget Lady Gaga's a singer, too. But Mother Monster will have the chance to show off her vocals on a jazzy new holiday EP, "A Very Gaga Holiday," which Gaga released digitally on Wednesday.

The new release includes the Gaga take on "White Christmas" and Nat King Cole classic "Orange Colored Sky," but there's no standard safe in Gaga's hands: her "White Christmas" adds an original verse and finds the singer joking, "O.K., I suppose it's not very white outside yet."

The EP culls from performances from "A Very Gaga Thanksgiving," her new TV special. The 90-minute special, which Gaga herself directed, airs at 9:30 p.m. ET on ABC on Thursday.

Longtime Boyfriend


sugarland's Jennifer Nettles celebrated more than just Thanksgiving this past weekend: the country star tied the knot with longtime beau Justin Miller.

According to People, the 37-year-old singer married Miller in a Tennessee chapel on Saturday (Nov. 26). Kristian Bush, Nettles' Sugarland band mate, was reportedly in attendance at the intimate ceremony.

Nettles and Miller had been dating for over two years. The former model appeared in the music video for the band's 2006 single, "Want To."

Sugarland will perform at the "Grammy Nominations Concert Live!" ceremony on Wednesday (Nov. 30) and host the CMA Country Christmas special on Thursday. Sugarland was recently named in a lawsuit filed by survivors of the Indiana State Fair stage collapse in August, which seeks unspecified damages for breach of reasonable care to the victims of the tragedy.

Focus on 'Transition'


justin Bieber's growing up, but vocal producer Kuk Harrell says he's not ready for "the adult game" just yet.



"The only conversation we've had about Justin's album that we're about to do is it's really important that it's the proper transition because we've seen him [with] 'Baby,' now we're watching him grow up," he told MTV News. "There's a record in between."



However, he said the 17-year-old star's current release -- the Christmas album "Under the Mistletoe," which bowed at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 -- is an "important" preview of what fans can expect from the next album.



"It gave everybody the opportunity to hear him, see him and get used to his voice changing," Harrell said. "That was a huge thing going into this album. We were able to get a running start on where he's at vocally 'cause it's a natural thing. When his proper album comes out, everybody's going to really be looking at that."



Bieber's next album, dubbed "Believe," is expected next summer. His manager, Scooter Braun, told the Hollywood Reporter last month that the teen star would be taking a hands-on approach to his new material.



"He's pretty adamant about writing a lot of [the album]," Braun said. "And he played me some stuff that he's been doing on his own. He wrote this amazing song that sounds like a Jodeci record. I'm really excited for him. This kid can sing his ass off. He's coming into his own."

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