Showing posts with label Barry Manilow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barry Manilow. Show all posts

Monday, February 6, 2012

One Hit Wonder Cee-Lo Green Thinks Vegas Tourists Give A Flip

Cee-Lo Green's plum-shaped body isn't the only thing that's large about the hip-hop artist. Apparently, he has a big head, too. With only three solo albums to his name—none of them gold selling—the one-hit wonder of 2011's "Fuck You!" believes he has the catalog... and the following... to launch a Las Vegas residency, a la Celine Dion, Elton John, Prince, Barry Manilow or Bette Midler.

Pardon me... Haha hahaha ha haha hahaha hahaha hahaha...

Rolling Stone has confirmed that the former duet partner in one-hit wonder Gnarls Barkley (2006's "Crazy") will launch a "theatrical-style show" called “Loberace,” this year—after reports in The New York Times last December said he was already confirmed at Planet Hollywood, "so he can perform to fans without traveling and aggravating a slipped disc in his back."

Man, I feel sorry for the buffet business in Las Vegas. *

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Barry Manilow Issues Unreleased Sheena Easton Duet!

For the first time ever, a song recorded by Grammy, Tony, and Emmy Award-winning Barry Manilow and Sheena Easton for the 1995 animated film "The Pebble and the Penguin," is being released on CD. The movie soundtrack, produced by Manilow, has long been out of print.

"Duets" will be released May 3 through Arista/Legacy, comprising 15 duets, including: "You've Got a Friend" with Melissa Manchester, "Hey Mambo" with Kid Creole & the Coconuts, "Cherish/Windy" with The Association, "Islands in the Stream" with Reba McEntire, "On A Slow Boat To China" with Bette Midler, "Run To Me" with Dionne Warwick, "Blue" with Sarah Vaughan and "I Won't Be the One To Let Go" with Barbra Streisand.

"I'm very proud of this album," Manilow said. "Recording each song was a thrill because these singers are so great, but listening to all of the cuts back-to-back was an overwhelming experience."

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Happy Birthday Barry Manilow!

The beloved, enduring singer/songwriter is 67 today...Billboard profile, Nov. 22, 2008... Love this guy. (Click "profile" for original link or image for larger view)

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Barry Manilow: No, No, No!

I love Barry Manilow. I have loved Barry Manilow since I was a wee teen. "Trying To Get the Feeling Again," "I Write the Songs," "Even Now," "Copacabana," "Let's Hang On," "It's A Miracle," "The Old Songs," "Ready To Take A Chance Again," "Somewhere Down the Road"... his duet with Sheena Easton, "Now and Forever." The good ones go on and on.

I have met Barry Manilow, and interviewed him nearly a half-dozen times for Billboard. He is delightful—more serious than you might expect—but charming, with absolute self-awareness of how critics have massacred him through the ages, while persevering nonetheless, most recently with a five-year sell-out stint at the Las Vegas Hilton (which I saw, in addition to gigs at Lincoln Center and Radio City). He has just signed another long-term contract at the Paris resort in Vegas. There's no stopping Mr. Manilow—and believe me, he sings with the same precision at age 63 as he did at 23.My point is, I would never malign Barry Manilow. I couldn't. So I will just offer this, his latest album cover, with a simple question mark. "?" There. What happened? Didn't he learn anything from Kenny Rogers' surgeon? Shh, I'll stop now.With Perry Payne, circa 1998.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Greatest Week In Pop Music History

May 2, 1981... Sheena Easton leaps to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. For all the passionate connections I felt with artists through my early years—The Partridge Family, Carpenters, Barry Manilow, Olivia Newton-John and disco—something inexplicable happened the first time I heard "Morning Train" in March 1981, sitting in a friend's dorm room as a freshman in college, literally writing down the week'hits from "American Top 40 with Casey Kasem." It was an instant connection, an adoration for the song and artist, and a real sense of ownership in her success.

The next day, the 45 was mine. Ah, those precious times when you could own your favorite song and appreciate it not only aurally but as a tactile experience. Anyone else old enough to remember the smell of opening a vinyl album? Heavenly. I bought Billboard magazine on the newsstand, not yet knowing that it was carried in the student union every week... and I hung that precious poster-size Hot 100 on my dorm wall for a year. (see pic, no mustache snickering, please).

It's around this time that I founded my own weekly countdown, the TTT (Taylor Top Ten, then Twenty, then Thirty, then the simplified Taylor Top Tunes once I reached Forty). This went on through the mid-1990s, every week, without exception, producing my own annual top 100 that to this day, I conveniently utilize to catalog my iTunes by year. That year, "Morning Train" tied for the No. 1 of 1981 with Kim Carnes' "Bette Davis Eyes." No. 2 was "For Your Eyes Only" by Sheena, No. 3 "Modern Girl" by Sheena. Guess who had my No. 1 album of the year? I remember watching the Grammys in February 1982, and when Sheena won Best New Artist, I quietly cried. No, really. What's perhaps more ridiculous, all of my friends watching the telecast with me got it. They understood that Sheena and I were forever intertwined. (Click at left to see my No. 1s through the first half of 1981.)

Of course, since, the Sheena ranks have held hands with other pop divas—Celine Dion, Tina Arena, Delta Goodrem and a host of others that have charged my passion. And yet when it comes to reminiscing about the best times of my early adult youth, Sheena remains tops. So when I arrived at Billboard in the fall of 1995, it happened that Sheena was starring on "Broadway" in "Grease." My co-worker and now dear friend Alex and I made it our holy grail to get backstage to meet her... for the first time. I'll never forget standing there as she entered the room, glancing down at my khakis and realizing that you could actually see my legs trembling through my britches. I was terrified... and fulfilling a life's dream. Afterward, Sheena agreed to an interview for Billboard on "a pop star thriving after the hits stop." We went to dinner at Motown Cafe and I asked her questions with so much minutia that she realized I wasn't the average reporter who had glanced over the Billboard charts.

Years later, Sheena has become a friend, or at least a precious acquaintance. Alex, our fellow Sheena buddy Evelien (and pal Andy, when his wife allows him a night away from the kids) and I have seen her 15-20 times whenever she grazes New York (hell, we've traveled to Vegas any number of times, too) and she always, always indulges us with dinner, time and wonderfully bawdy conversation. For Sheena's rep as the girl next door in her 1980's heyday, we were delighted to find that she is a broad—in the best sense—and some of the conversations we've had are not the kind of things I'd tell my mammer about... So as I sit here and close up shop at Billboard, I'm obviously flooded with such magic memories. What times I've had.

I suspect that when I'm in the nursing home being spoon fed mashed carrots, I'll ask the nurse to pop "The Lover In Me" or "Telefone" in my brain chip. And even though I won't recall my own name, somehow I'll quietly gum the words aloud. What a sweet thought, eh?(Click on chart, cool cats, to see the whole Hot 100.)

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Diary Of A Layoff/Post One

The Holmes and Rahe stress scale lists some three-dozen major traumatic life events. Thank god I am not dealing with the death of a spouse, jail term or personal injury. Shucks, I merely rank at No. 7, with “loss of a job.”

On Wednesday, after 14 years with Billboard, I was one of around 10 staffers laid off at Nielsen. I’m actually on the payroll for sister Radio & Records, the pub that did the dirty deed, so all of my duties for Billboard—as senior correspondent/pop and single reviews editor—were more or less delivered gratis... and willingly so.

So here’s what came down last week: R&R staffers were informed of a mandatory “Town Hall” on Wednesday. There was little doubt that the ultimate result would be layoffs. Like most trade publications, the weekly print model has suffered over the past year from a lack of ad support—not to mention its reporting of an industry—terrestrial radio—that has done everything in its power to demonize itself among consumers, advertisers and Wall Street.

At 4 p.m. Wednesday, the publisher of Billboard/R&R led a phone call, informing staff that the business model has been challenged, times are tough and “today is going to be a very difficult day for R&R” and—ready for this?—please return to your desk and wait for the phone to ring to discover your fate. Did I think I would be among the sacrificed? Based on what I competently deliver on a weekly basis to the magazine, no. Based upon R&R's hierarchy, which is based on the West Coast, I was not as confident.

Ring! It was my editor Paul on the phone, asking me to join him with a human resources rep. My fate was obvious before I even entered the room. “Your position has been eliminated. Just know that this has nothing to do with your performance.” My first thought is, “Damn straight.” The HR rep starts her routine and at one point, I said, “Is all this written down somewhere, because I’m hearing about half of what you’re saying to me.” She's saying things like "reduction, salary continuation, transition, Cobra," and I'm hearing, "layoff, layoff, layoff, layoff."

At this point, Nielsen has its layoffs down with a genuine sense of elegance. I was axed as of Feb. 25, and remain on payroll through March 25. No security guard standing by my desk to escort me out, my e-mail remains active, allowing me the opportunity to contact my allies. I have time to (toss out and) pack up so many years of crap. And because I have been with the company as long, I have severance.

Okay, at last, let's address the stuff I really want to talk about: the emotions behind all of this.

• First, I hated walking out of the HR rep's office, knowing my co-workers were eyeing each of us as that door cracked open. It’s like a cancer: the fear that being laid off might be contagious. But I was greeted with so much love, gracious spirit, true generosity… I am so fond of my co-workers and they would come out of our hugs with tears in their eyes! I was the one reassuring them that I am okay.

• More than anything else I feel, I’ve had a wild, wonderful ride here and truly have no regrets. After 14 years, it’s appropriate for me to turn the page. Let the new kids live their dream now. I could ask for nothing more from this experience.

• Billboard has given me the best, always. I discovered the magazine in the student union during my freshman year at college and from that moment on, dreamed of one day working here. More than a decade later, in 1995, I received a call from managing editor Ken Schlager inviting me to interview for the position of radio editor. Since I was hired and moved from D.C. to NYC in October 1995, I’ve lived every imaginable dream in larger-than-life living color. At Billboard in the mid-1990s I covered the consummate teen pop era that was just ahead. As radio editor, I founded my own column, where I interviewed a hit artist of my choice every week. In its day, mine was the third-best-read column in the magazine.

• In my time here, I did more than interview my idols: I dined with and spent quality time with Sheena Easton, Celine Dion, Olivia Newton-John, Jon Secada, Darren Hayes, Delta Goodrem, Jim Brickman, Debbie Gibson, Jessica Simpson, Darren Hayes and Clint Black. I curled up on a sofa with Jewel. I spoke with Britney, Justin and Hanson, know the Backstreet Boys and BBMak, had a blast with about every ‘80’s star I admired previous to arriving at Billboard: Human League, Air Supply, Toto, Lionel Richie, Roxette, Belinda Carlisle, Erasure, Phil Collins, Bette Midler, Barry Manilow. I met Mary Tyler Moore, Meryl Streep, Tony Bennett, Elvis Costello. In all, I interviewed more than 300 artists. What more could I ask for?

• The last two years as senior editor at R&R have been like coasting on a bike with worn-out brakes—working for a pub that I am certain will retreat to an online-only model by year end, if it survives at all. The majority of the staff, from the top down, are challenged to put two sentences together with words in order… But the point of that mag was never about editorial integrity—to the point that there is literally a mandate that forbids editing the columnists. It's simply about filling pages with words to sell ads against. What could I miss about that?

• Ironically, about a month ago, I wrote a major feature for R&R about “surviving a layoff.” Boy, I learned a lot. I am certainly Everyman, so am prepared for all stages ahead: numbness, a little anger, acceptance, the future, and then actively moving forward…

• My fellow co-worker A who was laid off alongside me said that the night of our exit, she was updating her resume and looking for jobs online. I told her to stop it: Exhale, take a breath, panicking is not the proper first reaction. Take time to accept before even considering what’s next. I truly believe it’s essential to take a moment to chill.

• My friend E, who was laid off years ago, offered the best advice I’ve heard. She said, “Enjoy the silence.” Look at your future as an empty box, not an obligation to rush back to the first job that comes along. She wrote a novel in her time off, which was not only published (and is a fucking marvel), but it provided her income long past her months of unemployment. And you know what? I am a master storyteller. I’m not a fiction writer, but boy, I could sit down with someone for three months, collect their history and write a brilliant biography. Hello, words neatly arranged! Next stop: New York Times best-seller. Pulitzer? Oh, stop it, you're embarrassing me.

• I am thankful that I don’t work for General Motors, where, when the assembly line shuts down, I am helpless with the tools I need to do my job. I don’t sell medical supplies, I don’t work at retail. I am fortunate that my life’s work is “talent.” All I need is a pen in hand. A blessing.

• After so many hugs at work, one of my co-workers said Friday, “The fact you seem so positive is making us feel better.” Honestly, I feel right good. More than anything, I will miss daily contact with so many co-workers who are persistently amusing and inspiring… and god knows I love the East Village—but it’s all just a train ride away. I can still hop the subway and buy my toothpaste at Kmart, you know. And then... there's Lunasa every Friday. Yeah, man, my rock.

• I am surprised that being laid off is as all-consuming in my head as it is. Every other thought seems to have something to do with this evolution, whether considering health insurance, direct deposit, my pre-tax subway card… All of the logistical factors are beginning to sink in alongside the emotional revelations. I was walking down the street Sunday realizing that it’s on the verge of exhausting. But I suppose, all part of the process.

• And that, cool cats, is where I am five days in. Stay tuned for weekly updates.

Friday, December 5, 2008

This Is Why They Call Me Billboard's POP Correspondent


BARRY MANILOW
The Greatest Hits of the Eighties
Producers: Barry Manilow, Clive Davis, Scott Erickson, Michael Lloyd
Release Date: Nov. 24
Arista

With a Christmas single on the AC singles chart for the second year in a row and a fifth sold-out year of live shows beginning in Las Vegas, Barry Manilow’s millennial presence continues to dazzle. Following “The Greatest Hits of the Fifties” (No. 1 debut, 2006), “Sixties” (No. 2, 2006) and “Seventies” (No. 4, 2007), “Eighties” is already off to a merry start with a No. 14 debut this week. Manilow’s gleeful duet with Reba McEntire on “Islands in the Stream” proves what a master arranger/interpreter he is, taking an overtly familiar hit and recasting it honorably. The same holds true for “Right Here Waiting” and “Have I Told You Lately.” Most surprising are “I Just Called to Say I Love You,” now a lite rhumba, and “Never Gonna Give You Up,” where Manilow busts a groove. There’s a lot of uncertainty in the world at large, but “Eighties” is one sure thing.—CT