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Joe Jonas & Ciara Can Do That

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I CAN DO THAT! -- "Untitled" Episode 101 -- Pictured: (l-r) Joe Jonas, Ciara, Marlon Wayans -- (Photo by: Tyler Golden/NBC)

I CAN DO THAT! — “Untitled” Episode 101 — Pictured: (l-r) Joe Jonas, Ciara, Marlon Wayans — (Photo by: Tyler Golden/NBC)

Joe Jonas & Ciara

Can Do That

by Ruth Bekele

I Can Do That debuts on NBC, Tuesday May 26th at 10 PM with host Marlon Wayans. Six celebrity contestants – Cheryl Burke, Ciara, Joe Jonas, Nicole Scherzinger, Jeff Dye and Alan Ritchson – will be put to the test each week as they are presented with different acts to choose from in which they have to master in order to perform in front of an audience.

The acts that come on to the show each week vary from entertainment to magic to so much more. The contestants will pair up and work for five days in order to perfect their performance. They will learn new skills and be able to develop them throughout the training and the show, along with discovering skills that they never knew they had. After each act the contestants will be ranked on a scoreboard. No judges and no eliminations will give the contestants a chance to redeem themselves during their next performance. After six weeks one celebrity contestant will be named the ultimate entertainer.

We recently got to chat with two of the contestants on the show – Joe Jonas and Ciara – along with the executive producer of the show Audrey Morrissey. Jonas and Ciara both talked about their experiences on the series – learning the new skills, working with each other and the other contestants, using strategies to help them, their favorite experiences while doing this show, and even some new music from them both in the near future.

I CAN DO THAT! -- Season: 1 -- Pictured: Joe Jonas -- (Photo by: Paul Drinkwater/NBC)

I CAN DO THAT! — Season: 1 — Pictured: Joe Jonas — (Photo by: Paul Drinkwater/NBC)

Can you talk about why you decided to do this show?

Joe Jonas: The reason I decided to do this show was probably the fact that when I sat with Audrey and we talked the concepts. It was something that I never heard anyone has really done. It was bringing all of my favorite shows together. You have little pieces of The Voice; you have America’s Got Talent. The cast is really fun and new friends of mine. Being thrown into situations that you wouldn’t do unless there was a camera in the audience. Saying all right, I have a week to learn this stuff and conquer them. I really enjoyed the challenge.

Do you guys have favorite parts about being on a show like this one?

Ciara: As an entertainer, I like being able to dive in other worlds that allow people to also to see what you really are capable of as a performer. Shows like this… to me it’s like one of the coolest platforms that do that. You’re really able to show… sometimes as an artist, people don’t really get to know you beyond your song and your video and interviews here and there. We’re pretty straightforward when it comes to the artist/entertainer/singer/dancer part of it all. What I love about shows like this [is that it] also it allows people to see you as a person. Outside of the actual challenges there are a lot of funny moments. People get to see how you don’t take yourself so serious. I think they expect us as singers to always be one way. They see you always so high-powered, doing high-powered performances on stage all the time. People could probably see you in one light. Shows like this allow people to get to see you honestly, at some of the rawest moments and realist moments that you could have. That’s what I personally took from my experience and really loved about doing the show.

Joe Jonas: Similar for me too. Doing the show, behind the camera was always really fun with us. There are some shows that can be a job for people every day showing up for us. We were hanging out backstage. We were hanging out in dressing rooms. We were talking and we became all close. Sitting on those couches were the funniest few hours of our day, just whether it was teasing each other or catching up. Even with a live audience, having fun with them too. It was really exciting.

I CAN DO THAT! -- Season: 1 -- Pictured: Ciara -- (Photo by: Paul Drinkwater/NBC)

I CAN DO THAT! — Season: 1 — Pictured: Ciara — (Photo by: Paul Drinkwater/NBC)

Can you guys talk about your strategy behind selecting the challenges you took on throughout the season?

Ciara: I can say, for me, I just really, really wanted to do things outside of what people I think would expect for me. Or myself, things that I just really would like to [do], just really close to my work. I was like I don’t want to do that because I don’t think it’s fair. I can definitely say that that’s how I chose my challenges.

Joe Jonas: I would agree. There were probably situations that both of us have gone into where we had last minute performances – whether it’s award shows or you hop up on stage and perform. You have to be ready in general. I think great artists are able to just get up there and sing and dance and perform on the dot for people. We’ve had to do that for a long time in our careers. So doing this for the show, even if it was just a week, that was definitely helpful walking into it.

Was there anything on the show that you did that you thought would be easy that turned out to be harder than you thought? Was there something you thought  would be harder that turned out to be easier than you thought?

Joe Jonas: I think there wasn’t really anything that we were approached that was easy. Even if it was… say something that was singing or dancing… it was different than what we’ve known. I don’t want to speak for you Ciara, but I think for us, it’s something that we would be able to figure out. Or you go, “Okay, I can do this in a week.” Then by day two, your body is falling apart; you’re freaking and you’re like, “Can we actually do this?” It was definitely a learning curve.

Ciara: Absolutely. I can agree with Joe. Yes, I agree with him 100%. Every week it really was challenging. There’s some things that look fun, but you can tell it actually looks as hard as it really is. What I got to learn in the process is no matter how fun it looks, it still is super challenging. Again, we’re all still stepping into territories that aren’t familiar, that we don’t do every day. I can’t give it all away, but there was one of my performances that I did that it looks like so much fun, but my legs really felt like I couldn’t even [walk]… I was holding onto the wall to move through my house when I leave from work. Or when I had to get in my car to drive home, it was like I had to take baby steps. The actual things that I was doing were so much fun and so cute. But it’s very painful, you know. It could have looked easy, but really everything is really challenging in its own way.

icandothatNUP_167949_0973

Can you talk about what your favorite skill that you got to perform was?

Joe Jonas: This show threw me into situations I really never thought I would do. I was able to learn quite a bit of stuff. For me personally, I’ve worked on some aerial stuff that was mind blowing and painful. That probably was one of my favorites.

Of all of the new skills that you’ve learned during the process of filming this show, are any of them things that you can use for future performances or in your career that you were excited about?

Ciara: There were definitely quite a few moments that pretty much in a sense every moment was outside of my comfort. There were some things that the idea of doing them was familiar because it’s a part of performing. But with this show what I really wanted to do was I wanted to do things that I felt would be challenging. They all are challenging as they come on the stage but there are some things where it’s really its way more closer to what I do as a performer. And I want to challenge myself. I think that’s what made it so much more exciting in the process. I really did walk away from this experience feeling like I grew. I walked away… I don’t want to say a whole new person, but there was definitely a whole new layer added to me. To how I look at things now. How I approach things. It really is a mental thing when you think about it. In my world as a performer, we don’t really have to express, beyond our music. We do interviews here and there and our songs kind of speak for us. In this case, we’re very vulnerable. You get to see us mess up. Try to kind of figure something out. You get to see how we really are just like everyone else, because we do get challenged. You see our flaws in the process. For me, I really took away a very cool feeling personally. It was like I really thought I grew from everything that we did.

icandothatNUP_168113_0373

Joe Jonas: Yes. It’s funny, a lot of the musicians on the show, we’ve been talking about how we’re going to incorporate things we’ve learned into live concerts or award shows; things like that. Some, I would say, [of the] magic stuff that I learned on the show I think visually would be really exciting to put into a performance.

Ciara: Yes, I definitely can say that I was very super inspired. Leaving this show, I have to say first we’re very blessed. I have to say a big thanks to the whole NBC Team, because we’re all so very spoiled in the sense with the production and stuff that was happening. To me I was like, “You walked away with…” I’ve always been a big dreamer, but my dreams were even bigger after leaving this show. Now you really get to see a whole level of production that you don’t see every day in all of our performances, doing our shows here and there around the world. It’s such a high level of production that you do walk away as a performer like, “Okay, I want to be swinging from this part of the stage to this and this.” It definitely makes my brain turn a lot for sure. Honestly it was the coolest experience. I’m truly so glad that I pushed myself and I actually got to be a part of it. I do believe as an artist, it also allowed me to grow; as an entertainer, it allowed me to grow. I walked away like, “Wow, I do now know [what] I can do.” I’ve always believed in myself but you do know like you can pretty much do almost anything. At least that’s how you feel leaving the show.

Ciara

Ciara

What’s it like working with each other and some of your other costars?

Ciara: It’s so much fun. The cool thing is – I can say for myself – I think maybe a few people on the cast actually didn’t work with each other on other stuff, but for me I never work with anyone that I worked with during the season. It really was fun. It was also a cool discovery. You get to learn. I think when you get to meet people, you know their work but you don’t really get to know them, but then when you get together you have such a great time. You get to see what cool people they are. Like Joe and I, we like joke about it, but we really are friends beyond the show. That’s so amazing about experiences like this, you get to grow within your own world of what you do, but you also get to meet really amazing people that could inspire you. You also become support for one another in what you do in different fields. Honestly, it’s experiences like this, I really took it all the way in and for every aspect of what it was beyond my personal part of just my challenges as an entertainer. The friendships that I was able to build were really awesome. It added to the experience and made it that much cooler.

When can your fans expect new music from both of you?

Ciara: Well, I can just say right now, my current song, “I Bet,” is out. Thank God, it’s going along very well. Actually Joe joined me on the remix of that song, which I might as well take the moment to say that it’s on the Deluxe Version of my album titled Jackie. That’s out now. Definitely for me, there will be a new song coming soon as well. I can just say get ready to dance; dance, dance, dance away. Joe… I just want to say I got to hear some of his music and it’s really amazing. Joe, I don’t know if you want to tell them about your music.

Joe Jonas

Joe Jonas

Joe Jonas: Sure. Yes, well becoming friends on the show, she asked me to be a part of her song so I’m thrilled to be a part of it. I love that song and I was fan of the song already. We were just singing it backstage and then it turned into a remix of the song. I love that. Also I love all of her new music. So it’s really awesome; it’s on repeat. And my stuff? I’m just really writing/recording right now. I have been in and out of the studio and taking my time, so hopefully you’ll hear something soon from me.

And for all you Camp Rock fans out there, when asked about Mitchie and Shane, Jonas responded with “In some universe, in some Disney universe, they’re together.”

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: May 25, 2015.

Photos ©2015.  Courtesy of NBC/Universal.  All rights reserved.

 



Walking on Sunshine (A PopEntertainment.com Movie Review)

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Walking on Sunshine

Walking on Sunshine

WALKING ON SUNSHINE (2015)

Starring Annabel Scholey, Hannah Arterton, Giulio Berruti, Leona Lewis, Greg Wise, Katy Brand, Danny Kirrane, Giulio Corso, Mariola Jaworska, Joelle Koissi, Anabel Kutay, Laura Hydari, Susan Fordham, Michael Chapman, Amy Clare Beales and Adrian Quinton.

Screenplay by Joshua St Johnston.

Directed by Max Giwa & Dania Pasquini.

Distributed by Phase4 Films.  97 minutes.  Not Rated.

If you love the movie Grease, give Walking on Sunshine a try. It’s the perfect summer flick.

Funny, light, and a little ridiculous, Walking On Sunshine is a great modern day twist on a classic romance. The British film, starring Hannah Arterton and Giulio Berruti as its main couple, plays out the story of their seemingly ill-fated romance. It is a love that was, but can no longer be.

Along the way, hilarity ensues, as well as covers of various popular 80’s songs to match the story line.

The cast gives lively performances full of energy throughout, and the film gains traction as it goes on. It starts out a little rough, overdramatic and full of awkward moments, but once the musical numbers start the film lightens up and finds its niche.

The film has a fabulous supporting cast who have wonderful chemistry with each other and the main stars. Pop star Leona Lewis (who had a huge hit with the 2007 ballad “Bleeding Love”) is among the many actors who bring great voices to crazy numbers that are choreographed excellently.

Anyone who has ever had dance lessons knows it is difficult to make a group of people with varying levels of coordination dance well and in synch. This movie succeeds with clever choreography that works well with each scene and doesn’t feel forced.

Katy Brand plays Lil, friend of both sisters involved in quite the love triangle, and shines with her performance as an overtly sexual and silly addition.

Though most of the cast does well with both their singing and acting, one cast member falls short – Giulio Berruti is unconvincing and awkward and lacks the vocal strength that the other members provide. Greg Wise also gives a not-so-stellar vocal performance, but makes up for it in the acting department, unlike Berruti.

Though the 80’s themed musical might not be for everyone, it was a cute, family-friendly feel-good movie full of life, which should do well in smaller markets. Maybe not on the big screen, but it should definitely find its niche. It plays to its strengths well with catchy music and funny jokes that distract from what’s a bit of an over-dramatic storyline.

Overall, it’s lighthearted and cute, and will make any day brighter (Get it? Because it’s… Walking on Sunshine!)

Ally Abramson

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: May 27, 2015.

 


Love & Mercy (A PopEntertainment.com Movie Review)

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Love & Mercy

Love & Mercy

LOVE & MERCY (2015)

Starring John Cusack, Paul Dano, Elizabeth Banks, Paul Giamatti, Brett Davern, Kenny Wormald, Jake Abel, Graham Rogers, Bill Camp, Erin Darke, Diana Maria Riva, Joanna Going, Dee Wallace, Max Schneider, Jeff Meacham, Johnny Sneed and Brian Wilson.

Screenplay by Oren Moverman and Michael A. Lerner.

Directed by Bill Pohlad.

Distributed by Roadside Attractions.  120 minutes.  Rated PG-13.

It is not a subject for debate.  Brian Wilson is both a musical genius and a deeply troubled man.

As the main songwriter and creative force behind The Beach Boys, Wilson is responsible for some of the finest, most complex music of the last century – though his abusive father Murry and later cousin Beach Boy co-hort Mike Love would try to claim credit for the sound that was not deserved.

However, the brilliant mind that created the “pocket symphonies” that jettisoned The Beach Boys to popular and critical success – songs like “California Girls,” “God Only Knows,” “Good Vibrations,” “I Get Around,” “Caroline, No” and many, many others – did not just hear beautiful music.  From a very young age, Wilson was beset with undiagnosed mental illness, hearing voices in his head, behaving erratically, alternating between euphoria and deep depression, paranoia and pathos.

It did not help matters that he was severely mistreated by the two father figures in his life.  The first of these was indeed his actual father, Murry, an abusive and frustrated music business wannabe who saw his three sons’ band as his ticket into the big time.  Murry was the epitome of the stage parent nightmare – Joe Jackson with a flattop and big, bulky glasses – and he wielded his love like a sword.

Years later, Wilson fell in with another user, Dr. Eugene Landy, a psychiatric “specialist” who saw Wilson as his meal ticket.  In the guise of “treating” Wilson’s paranoid schizophrenia (a diagnosis that was years later disproven), Landy kept Wilson highly medicated and underfed and quickly took complete control over his life.  Landy took legal guardianship of the musician, cut him off from family and friends, controlled his lifestyle, his diet, his social life and even his new music.

You know that a man has had it tough in life when Mike Love is only the third biggest asshole he knows.

Love & Mercy takes a look at Wilson in both of these points in his life.  He is played as a brilliantly troubled young man at the height of his career in the 1960s by Paul Dano.  Later scenes have John Cusack capture him in the midst of the Landy years of the 1980s, a well-meaning but (prescription) drug-addled and dependent has-been.

The movie flips back and forth between these two time periods, with the early scenes showing Wilson coming unraveled even as he is creating some of the finest music of his time.  The later scenes show a kinder, gentler Wilson, slightly bemused at his fame and trying to find love again with a beautiful car saleswoman (Elizabeth Banks) at the same time that he tries to deal with his mental illness and escape from the untenable situation he has found himself locked into.

Over the years, music bio-films have settled into something of a tried and true formula – musician fights the odds to get noticed, becoming a star, getting involved in drugs and excess that nearly destroy their career and their relationships, and finally a triumphant comeback.  While occasionally Love & Mercy slips into these formulaic moves, for the most part the movie is as offbeat and complicated as its subject.

For one thing, Love & Mercy does something that is very hard to do on screen – the film captures the pure euphoria of creating art and the beauty of artistic experimentation.  The scenes in which Wilson creates the legendary album Pet Sounds and the later aborted tapes for the long-delayed masterwork SMiLE with the studio musicians The Wrecking Crew are both fascinating and educational.  Those alone make Love & Mercy worth seeing.

Luckily, there are many more reasons than that to see the film.  Love & Mercy is the best music bio since Walk the Line or Ray, and it is arguably even better than those films.  However, fair warning, despite the fact that much of Wilson’s music is sweet and happy, this is not a light film, though it has some lighthearted parts.  It’s dark and disturbing and sweet and garish and sad and strangely beautiful.  Just like the music of the man it portrays.

Jay S. Jacobs

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: June 5, 2015.


Coco Jones Is a Real Life Hannah Montana

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Coco Jones

Coco Jones

Coco Jones

A Real Life Hannah Montana

by Sami Spiess

Coco Jones is the real life Hannah Montana.  She is a normal kid with a pop-star life.  Jones has done it all.  The very talented singer/songwriter/actress has been in films, television shows, modeled… and the most noteworthy thing is that she has a beautiful singing voice.

Starting at a very young age, Jones was performing live and making records.  You can catch some adorable videos of her National Anthem performances at NFL games on YouTube.  You can also check out one of her past videos like “Holla at the DJ.”

In 2006, Jones hit the small screen on the Disney network’s TV show N.B.T, where she became known for performing the song “Real You.”  This helped launch her career.  She then landed a lead role in the Disney comedy Let It Shine in 2012.  Let It Shine turned out to be the most watched Disney comedy and movie of the year!

Recently we chatted with Coco Jones about life, graduating from high school, her career paths and dropping a song promoting self empowerment.  She’ll also be hitting the road this summer so you might just have a chance to see this young artist first hand!

Sami Speiss, Coco Jones and Alli Simpson in Malibu, CA 2014.

Sami Speiss, Coco Jones and Alli Simpson in Malibu, CA 2014.

We met last year in Malibu at a Pastry photoshoot.

What!!??

Yeah! I was there for Journey of a Lifetime, and it was pretty cool.  We talked and it was a blast.

Oh my gosh!  I remember you!  There was another girl too.  Like two people won the contest and then they got to come and take pictures, right?

Yes!  It was a lot of fun.  Speaking of Pastry, are you still involved with Pastry Shoes?

I am still working on something with Pastry, but now I work with other shoes as well.  I am still looking into a deal with them though.

Are you still involved with the others who are with the brand? (i.e. Mattison Pettis, Cody Simpson, Alli Simpson, Jessica Jarrell)

Oh yeah definitely!  We all keep in contact.  When I’m at events with them, I try and see what’s up.  I make sure I see them.  Yeah we are still cool.

Coco Jones

Coco Jones

Do you think you are going to work with any of them, as far as music?

You never know!  I would work with any of them.  They are all super talented.  Just has to be the right place right time.

Tell us about yourself at the moment: what your plans are, what you are doing.

Right now on my regular lifestyle, I am graduating.  I am super proud of that.  It is a huge accomplishment.  I am working on my music, of course.  About to go on tour this summer.  I know I have some dates lined up which you can check out on my Twitter, @TheRealCocoJ, because I do not remember them right now.  But I am definitely going to keep you guys updated on my story.

Will you be opening for some bands?  Or be a headliner?

Well, the shows I have lined up right now, I am headlining.  But I am definitely looking into opening for either Austin [Mahone] or Cody [Simpson].  I am not sure.

Coco Jones

Coco Jones

You mentioned that you are graduating this year, congratulations!  Along the lines of high school, have you attended any proms this year?

I actually did go to prom with a group of my friends.  When I am here in Tennessee, my life is really normal.  I get to go to basketball games, pep rallies, stuff like that.  All of my friends were going together as a group.  I was like “let me get in this!”  So we all went together as a group.

Was it a fun event?

Oh!  It was so much fun.  I really appreciate getting to have that normal part of my life.  I feel like as you get into the business, it all kind of leaves the picture.  I am glad I get to keep in touch with all of my friends.  It was so much fun.  We danced the whole night.  It was awesome.

Did they make you sing at the prom?

No!  Oh my gosh no.  When I am in Tennessee, they know that I am just regular life.  It would be weird, me performing at prom.  Like come on, that’s not normal. (laughs) 

Coco Jones

Coco Jones

 

You are like a Hannah Montana.

Yeah!  I really am!!!

So your name, Coco, is that a stage name or a birth name?

It is definitely a stage name.  My real name is not as fabulous as Coco.  My real name is Courtney.  My mom would call me Coco as I was younger.  As I got into music, my father had played professional football (ed. note: Mike Jones, who played nine seasons with the Cardinals, Patriots, Rams and Titans), so they knew that they did not want all of the contracts and legal stuff attached to my birth name.  So they gave me Coco as a stage name.  So I really am like a Hannah Montana, like for real.

Is it difficult to date with your career?

I think, it is difficult to date, in general.  Just because I think it is so much drama and unneeded confusion.  So for me, I really don’t make dating a priority.  I have goals that I want to accomplish.  I have my girlfriends, I have things that I enjoy to do.  Maybe when I am older and everyone is on the same level of maturity.  But right now I don’t feel like it should be a part of my life.

Your Sia cover was wonderful. Do you admire Sia? Is she one of the artists that you like?

I really do admire her. I think she is very creative and she really goes against the grain of whatever artists typically are supposed to be.  She is exactly who she wants to be, and no one really knows it.  It is really cool that she has taken that route.  She is very individual.

Coco Jones

Coco Jones

Who are some of your favorite artists?

I really like Selena Gomez, Tinashe, Demi Lovato…  I just really like people who have not been changed by this industry.  Also people that can write about topics that I can relate to.  I feel like Taylor Swift is a perfect one for that, she’s like reading from her diary and I really love that originality.  I also really love, of course, Beyonce.  Oh really love her hard work ethic.  People like that, who work hard and I can relate to.

Do you write your own music?

I do.  I try to write a lot of my own music.  Just because I want it to seem like it is from me.  I have to sing it, I have to perform it, and I want it to seem like it is from me.  I never really like people who are told who they have to be and what they have to sing.  I always try to have my personal style on everything that I do.  As well as for my fans who listen to it.  I feel like we can all relate to it.  Something that I have been through or they have been through.

You have done so much in your 17 years. Everything from television to movies to music, what are you most proud of?

Hmm, that is a great question.  I really can’t say that I am more proud of one thing than anything.  Just because I know where I have come from.  My whole career has come from all of the success that I have had.  I deserve to be proud of it all since I have worked really hard for it all.  I cannot say I am proud of just one thing.  Everything that I have done, even little things, I am proud of and grateful for.

Coco Jones

Coco Jones

Is there a direction you would prefer to go professionally?

Well, I like acting, but singing is my passion.  It’s my number one thing that I love.  Something I will always continue to do.  Even if I stop acting, or I am not doing that as much, I am always creating.  It is like second nature.  So singing is my number one passion.

Have you taken any lessons or were you involved in any theater schools?  Or was this all natural?

I did take lessons for a little while I was younger.  But, my mom said that it was starting to change the way that I sang.  She said that was the one thing that she did not want to do. So I stopped for a long time.  Actually, now I do take singing lessons just to keep my voice strong.  Especially when I am not touring, you are not using your voice as much.  It is really important to keep those muscles strong and to keep using them.  I do take lessons with this guy.  I am always looking forward to taking lessons and learning as much as I can.

So, tell us about your song “Let ‘Em Know.”

I really wanted to put a song out there that everyone was itching for.  Everyone was looking for some new music from me.  I wanted to have a summer song that everyone could jam to, something fun and energetic.  I really like the message of the song, “Let ‘Em Know” because I kind of think of it as two ways.  One way is saying let the guy know that you like him.  But, I feel like I can relate to it by letting the guy know that you do not like him.  When a guy is trying to make it more than friends, sometimes you have to just “Let ‘Em Know” that it is not the way that it is going to be.

Will there be an EP or album coming up?

I have a lot of music in my pocket right now, a lot of songs that I created.  A lot more that I have got to work on.  It just has to be the right place right time.  I want my music to be the best that it can be.  So just put something out there, I don’t know if I would regret it later because it would have been rushed.  I really want to take my time with it.  Now being older, there is a lot more that I have learned and a lot of more that I have to say.  So you never know.

What genre do you feel more comfortable in? How would you categorize your music?

I would say that my genre is more pop.  But I like to stay in touch with my urban side.  I never would like to get rid of that.  So a balance I would say.

Where do you see yourself in five years?

I would love to go on a world tour.  I think going and traveling to all of these crazy beautiful places because of your music and the people that love your music is amazing.  I would love to have a #1 debut album because that is a HUGE accomplishment.  Those are the things that I know for sure I probably won’t change my mind on. The other things, I might change my mind.

Do you have any backup plans in case the music does not work out how you like?

Yes. I am actually going to a music school to work on getting my degree in production.  I really do enjoy that side of creating the music more than just singing it.  So I think that if it didn’t work out I would go into making music.  I really enjoy it and I am good at it too.

You’re in Tennessee so you are right in the center of all of that.

Right now I am in Tennessee, yes.  I might move to California to go to a school out there. Of course they have great music schools here it is just wherever my path takes me.

What do your parents think of your career?  Do they support it?

Oh yeah, my whole family is super supportive.  Like I said, my father played professional football.  He knows what it feels like to wake up and do something that you love and have a passion for.  That’s the one thing they wish for, for all of their kids.  So they stand by all of us, I’m one of four.  They sit down with us and try to make it happen.

So you are one of four, where do you fit in the birth order?

I am the second oldest.  My older brother is adopted.  He was adopted when he was fourteen. He just turned thirty so I am second oldest but I would rather think like I am the oldest.

Are any of your siblings musically talented?

I mean all of them can sing, except for my dad and my older brother.  They have their own paths that they want to do.  My youngest sister loves volleyball.  My youngest brother loves football and he is going to be a football star, obviously.  But we all have our own paths.  Everyone can kind of sing though.

Is there anything else you would like to add?

Just that I would like to keep you updated.  My social media is @TheRealCocoJ, my Instagram is @CocoJones.  I would like to say to anyone who is reading this, if you guys have any questions or would just like to say hey, I love to comment back on my Twitter!

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: June 5, 2015.

Photos ©2015.  Courtesy of Coco Jones.  All rights reserved.

Except for photo #2 Copyright ©2014 Danielle Speiss.  All rights reserved.


KaiL Baxley – A Light That Never Dies (A PopEntertainment.com Music Review)

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KaiL Baxley - A Light That Never Dies

KaiL Baxley – A Light That Never Dies

KaiL Baxley – A Light That Never Dies (Forty Below)

Over the years, soul music has become a territory for beats and bass, so it’s always a bit of a shock when a real old school soul man shows up on the scene.

Cue up “Tell the Falling Sun,” the third and most spectacular track on KaiL Baxley’s uniformly terrific second album A Light That Never Dies, and you’ll know what I mean.  A husky-voiced rhythm and bluesman in the mold of Ray Charles and Otis Redding, Baxley’s music succeeds at the tricky job of sounds gloriously retro and yet somehow current.

From the yearning “Morning Light” to the pop-laced and yet foreboding “Mirrors of Paradise,” Baxley’s music never ceases intriguing.  Baxley’s southern roots shine through on these eleven songs, which hang together stylistically at the same time as pushing into different styles and genres like the sweet piano instrumental “Still Wonder (Interlude)” and the boho-rock inflected “Mr. Downtown.”

Then, when Baxley cries out “There ain’t no mercy for you” in the otherwise rather upbeat horn-laced mid-tempo stomper “The Ballad of Johnny Steel,” you can hear the hellhounds nipping at his heels.  At the same time, he can be gorgeously introspective in the folky “Chasing James Dean.”

A Light That Never Dies is a surprisingly rich motherlode of soulful goodness that feels like a lost classic from the 60s or 70s.  And here’s hoping that eventually Baxley releases his recent stunning cover of Van Morrison’s “Crazy Love” which is on YouTube.  The addition of that song would have made A Light That Never Dies damn near perfect.

Jay S. Jacobs

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: June 10, 2015.


Live From New York! (A PopEntertainment.com Movie Review)

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Live From New York!

Live From New York!

LIVE FROM NEW YORK! (2015)

Featuring Dan Aykroyd, Alec Baldwin, John Belushi, Candice Bergen, Dana Carvey, Chevy Chase, Billy Crystal, Jane Curtin, Jimmy Fallon, Will Ferrell, Tina Fey, Al Franken, Bill Hader, Darrell Hammond, Steve Martin, Lorne Michaels, Seth Meyers, Garrett Morris, Laraine Newman, Amy Poehler, Chris Rock, Fred Armisen, Al Gore, Rudolph Giuliani, Ralph Nader, Tom Brokaw, Paul Simon, Adam “Ad-Rock” Horovitz, Maya Rudolph, Andy Samberg, Bill O’Reilly, Fran Lebowitz, Anne Beatty, John Goodman, Leslie Jones, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Andy Samberg, Molly Shannon and Kenan Thompson.

Directed by Bao Nguyen.

Distributed by Abramorama.  82 minutes.  Not Rated.

It’s really hard to condense a series that has had 40 seasons, well over 700 episodes, approximately 50,000 hours of footage and 100s of cast members into an 82 minute long documentary.

Director Bao Nguyen does his best with this well-meaning documentary, but while it is consistently entertaining, it’s really just skimming the surface of the story.  Live From New York comes off more like an hour-and-a-half long tribute special to the show than an in-depth examination of a pop culture touchstone.

Saturday Night Live has had a long and winding road over the years, or as comedienne Amy Poehler puts it in Live From New York!: “SNL, the show that your parents used to have sex to, that you now watch on the computer during the day.”

Live From New York! the movie is more built for the byte-sized YouTube attention span, giving little slivers of some brilliant comedy and music but often leaving the audience wanting for more.

As is I suppose inevitable with a crash course in SNL history like this, some of the biggest names in the show’s history are barely mentioned.  Eddie Murphy is just mentioned in passing, Adam Sandler not at all.  Bill Murray is only shown in a few clips.  The failed all-star cast (which included Anthony Michael Hall, Robert Downey Jr, Christopher Guest, Harry Shearer, Billy Crystal and Martin Short) after the original cast bolted is barely acknowledged and none of those names are spoken.

Of course late cast members like John Belushi, Gilda Radner, Phil Hartman and Chris Farley are shown in some clips, but their deaths are not mentioned, much less discussed.  Recent breakouts like Kristin Wiig and Bill Hader also are barely there.

Instead, Live From New York tries to trace the show’s timeline in history, which is occasionally well done – the show’s importance in the Bush-Gore election is slightly harrowing and it’s always fun to see Tina Fey’s version of Sarah Palin again.

On the other hand, a long and necessary look at the tragic events of September 11, 2001 and SNL‘s need to bring humor to a shell-shocked city is hijacked by a self-congratulatory Rudy Giuliani yet again using the World Trade Center tragedy as an excuse for his otherwise horrible stint as mayor.  (At one point, he actually refers to a period in NY history as “pre-Giuliani New York.”)

Still, even if Live From New York! occasionally takes on the feel of an E! television special, there is just so much classic comedy and enough smart anecdotes from the people who were there to make the film necessary viewing.  I just wish they had dug a little deeper.

Jay S. Jacobs

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: June 12, 2015.


Hayes Grier – DigiFest!

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Our Isadora sat down with Hayes Grier to catch up and see what he’s been doing since we last talked a few months ago!


Project Almanac (A PopEntertainment.com Movie Review)

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Project Almanac

Project Almanac

PROJECT ALMANAC (2015)

Starring Jonny Weston, Sofia Black-D’Elia, Virginia Gardner, Allen Evangelista, Amy Landecker, Sam Lerner, Gary Weeks, Gary Grubbs, Macsen Lintz, Michelle DeFraites, Curry Stone, Jamila Thompson, Katie Garfield, Hillary Harley, Courtney Bowers and Imagine Dragons.

Screenplay by Andrew Deutschman and Jason Pagan.

Directed by Dean Israelite.

Distributed by Paramount Pictures.  106 minutes.  Rated PG-13.

I am often on the record of saying that time travel is one of the nearly foolproof storylines.  The multitude of possibilities, the dramatic physical and philosophical quandaries, the life and death situations, the ability to fix past mistakes….  It is almost impossible to make an uninteresting film on the subject.

Project Almanac gave that theory a run for the money.  While it is periodically enthralling, it is much more often just kinda there.

Too bad, because it started with a pretty cool idea.  David (Jonny Weston) is a smart inventor who has just been accepted into college at MIT.  When he and his cute younger sister Christina (played by our old friend Ginny Gardner, using her full name Virginia Gardner here) are exploring their attic they run across their late dad’s old video camera.  In the camera was a video of David’s seventh birthday party – the last time they saw their father, who died in a suspicious automobile accident that very day.  While watching the footage of themselves as young children, they suddenly notice a fully-grown David skulking in the background.

Now that’s a pretty good hook.  Too bad the rest of the film does not really live up to it.

Part of the problem is that the movie is shot in the way-overdone found-footage shaky-cam style, making what little story is here hard to track.  Also, these characters seem – or at least act – reckless and stupid.

For example, David and Christina and their friends,  who include Jessie, the cute girl David has a crush on (Sofia Black-D’Elia) and his meathead buddies (Sam Lerner and Allen Evangelista) discuss the importance of not in any way doing something which may change history.  Then they buy used press passes from the recent Lollapalooza and go back in time two weeks – existing in two places on Earth at one time and taking a huge opportunity of affecting the space/time continuum, just to party while rocking out to Imagine Dragons.  People this stupid almost deserve to be erased from history.

However, Project Almanac plays fast and loose with the idea of time travel.  In fact, they simply ignore a huge, huge plot hole in the climactic sequence.  In his final trip to the past, the hero does something which by all logic would have made it impossible for him to return to the present.

I can’t imagine that the screenwriters did not realize that.  It appears that they just didn’t care, or at the very least they hoped that no one would notice.  Guess what, guys?  We did.

Jay S. Jacobs

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: June 9, 2015.



Firefly Music Festival 2015

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From June 18th to the 21st Popentertainment covered it all from the thicket to the last beat drop of Zedd at the 2015 Firefly Music Festival. Here is a recap of the Firefly experience.


John Fogerty – The Mann Center for the Performing Arts – Philadelphia, PA – June 27, 2015 (A PopEntertainment.com Concert Review)

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John Fogerty – The Mann Center for the Performing Arts – Philadelphia, PA – June 27, 2015 - Photo copyright ©2015 Steve Furco. Courtesy of Mad Ink PR. All rights reserved.

John Fogerty – The Mann Center for the Performing Arts – Philadelphia, PA – June 27, 2015 – Photo copyright ©2015 Steve Furco. Courtesy of Mad Ink PR. All rights reserved.

John Fogerty – The Mann Center for the Performing Arts – Philadelphia, PA – June 27, 2015

1969 was a huge year for John Fogerty.  His old band Creedence Clearwater Revival exploded that year, releasing three albums with eight top forty hits, performing on The Ed Sullivan Show and at Woodstock, touring the world and becoming superstars.  Therefore, it is no real surprise that on his latest tour Fogerty decided that he wanted to celebrate that seminal year.

The 1969 Tour shows start with a 20-minute long introductory film, featuring a history of the year, other artists’ hit singles from the era, film and photos of Creedence and the world in the hippie age.  At the end, there is a vintage film of Fogerty and Creedence launching into the first verse of the early single “Born on the Bayou.”  As that song plays, Fogerty’s current band slips onto the darkened stage and as the first verse ends Fogerty appears center stage and does a duet with his younger self.

Not that it is that much of a change.  The 70-year-old rocker is abnormally youthful looking.  He could easily pass for his 40s or 50s.  His strong rock voice shows no age as well, nor does his guitar playing.  The only time you are reminded that this is a younger man is when you notice his stage jumps and gyrations are not quite as animated as the younger members of his band, sons, Tyler and look-alike Shane.

John Fogerty – The Mann Center for the Performing Arts – Philadelphia, PA – June 27, 2015 - Photo copyright ©2015 Steve Furco. Courtesy of Mad Ink PR. All rights reserved.

John Fogerty – The Mann Center for the Performing Arts – Philadelphia, PA – June 27, 2015 – Photo copyright ©2015 Steve Furco. Courtesy of Mad Ink PR. All rights reserved.

After “Bayou” Fogerty and band ripped into a generous helping of five straight Creedence classics from the year: “Traveling Band,” “Up Around the Bend,” “Who’ll Stop the Rain?,” “Looking Out My Back Door” and “Sweet Hitch-hiker.”  It was a good half hour into the show before he hit upon his first newer solo song, and even that was special, “Joy of My Life,” the sweet love song to his long-time wife Julie.

Fogerty was also a good-natured and funny host, telling stories from his career and life to preview his upcoming autobiography.  Probably the best was the funny story of Creedence’s legendary botched appearance at Woodstock, when they were supposed to go onstage at 9:00 Saturday night and due to lax scheduling by the time they actually hit the stage at 2:30 in the morning the entire crowd of half a million had been put to sleep by the Grateful Dead.

John Fogerty – The Mann Center for the Performing Arts – Philadelphia, PA – June 27, 2015 - Photo copyright ©2015 Steve Furco. Courtesy of Mad Ink PR. All rights reserved.

John Fogerty – The Mann Center for the Performing Arts – Philadelphia, PA – June 27, 2015 – Photo copyright ©2015 Steve Furco. Courtesy of Mad Ink PR. All rights reserved.

“You may have noticed that not all of these songs are from 1969.  Don’t worry about it,” Fogerty said before launching into a lengthy jam of “Ramble Tamble” from the 1970 album Cosmo’s Factory.  He slipped between album tracks and fan favorites before riding the night out with another brace of stone cold classics: “Have You Ever Seen the Rain?,” “Down On the Corner,” his 80s comeback singles “Centerfield” and “The Old Man Down the Road,” “Fortunate Son” and a three-song encore with included “Bad Moon Rising” before inevitably finishing off with “Proud Mary.”

The only song I can even think of that they skipped over was their first hit single, a cover of Dale Hawkins’ “Suzie Q” that was recorded in 1968 but did not become a hit until early 1969.  Before you speculate that it was because it was not an original song, the new band did do other Creedence hit covers of Leadbelly’s “The Midnight Special” and their extended rocking up of Marvin Gaye’s “I Heard It Through the Grapevine” (which was not a hit until 1971) as well as little snippets of Jerry Lee Lewis’ “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On” and Huey “Piano” Smith’s “Rockin’ Pneumonia (and the Boogie Woogie Flu).”

John Fogerty – The Mann Center for the Performing Arts – Philadelphia, PA – June 27, 2015 - Photo copyright ©2015 Steve Furco. Courtesy of Mad Ink PR. All rights reserved.

John Fogerty – The Mann Center for the Performing Arts – Philadelphia, PA – June 27, 2015 – Photo copyright ©2015 Steve Furco. Courtesy of Mad Ink PR. All rights reserved.

For decades Fogerty refused to play his own Creedence hits due to a feud over songwriting rights with his old label boss Saul Zaentz.  It has only been in the last decade or so that he has started playing these songs again, after the Fantasy Records songbook was bought by jazz label Concord and Fogerty’s songwriting rights were restored.

It’s sad, the decades of great shows that were missed due to a legal fight, but finally, decades after the year that is celebrated in this tour, a true John Fogerty concert is possible.  Don’t miss it.

Jay S. Jacobs

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: June 30, 2015.

Photos copyright ©2015 Steve Furco. Courtesy of Mad Ink PR. All rights reserved. 


Show of the Summer – Shawn Mendes, Fifth Harmony, R5, Jack & Jack, Jacob Whitesides & Sabrina Carpenter – Hersheypark Stadium – Hershey, Pennsylvania – June 28, 2015 (A PopEntertainment.com Concert Review)

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Sabrina Carpenter at the Show of the Summer in Hershey, PA.

Sabrina Carpenter at the Show of the Summer in Hershey, PA.

Show of the Summer – Shawn Mendes, Fifth Harmony, R5, Jack & Jack, Jacob Whitesides & Sabrina Carpenter – Hersheypark Stadium – Hershey, Pennsylvania – June 28, 2015

Summer is the ideal time for outdoor music festivals.  When warm breezes meet bright sunny skies and then turn into clear, starry nights, the music can be magical.

Last weekend’s Show of the Summer in Hershey, PA was just that for easily ten thousand screaming fans, mostly ranging in age from eight to 18.  The SOTS’s lineup was packed with some of the hottest young acts of today: six acts including Sabrina Carpenter, Jacob Whitesides, R5, Jack and Jack and headliners Fifth Harmony and Shawn Mendes heated up Hershey Stadium and rocked until late in the night.

Taking time off of her hit TV show Girl Meets World, Disney Channel’s sixteen year old Sabrina Carpenter (she plays Maya Hart) flew in from LA to opened the show, performing songs from her debut album Eyes Wide Open. The crowd obviously loved her and her set, which included her band and her sister on backup vocals.  It was interesting seeing Carpenter in a new light beyond actress.

Jacob Whitesides at the Show of the Summer in Hershey, PA.

Jacob Whitesides at the Show of the Summer in Hershey, PA.

Jacob Whitesides took the stage next.  His career has exploded since we first interviewed him last summer.  He has gone from a teenage YouTuber making videos in his bedroom to an emerging musical artist.  Whitesides recently released his sophomore EP containing all original material.  Sunday night, Whitesides and his guitar did not disappoint his fans, wooing them with his growing repertoire of original music including “Let’s Be Birds.”  Logging countless miles, Whitesides has been touring a lot lately, he recently completed an opening gig for fellow SOTS talent Fifth Harmony’s Reflection Tour.  All this experience is apparent in Whitesides’ performance, which has a fresh maturity level and comfort that was apparent in his set.

Jack and Jack at the Show of the Summer in Hershey, PA.

Jack and Jack at the Show of the Summer in Hershey, PA.

After chatting with us backstage about their career, their fans and their goals, (check out our new interview coming soon) internet sensations Jack and Jack – a.k.a. Jack Johnson and Jack Gilinsky – hit the stage to deafening screams.  Performing their rap/pop/hip-hop style songs like “Groove,” “Wildlife,” “Like That” and debuting their latest, “Shallow Love,” the best friends from Nebraska seemed to enjoy the experience as much as their fans.  With millions of followers on social media, Jack and Jack have built a following enviable to any performer with a lot more time in the business.  Their music was well received by their fans, who bounced and jumped to the music.  Quite frankly, I think they would have been thrilled if the two popular boys could have stood there doing just about anything.

Ross Lynch of R5 at the Show of the Summer in Hershey, PA.

Ross Lynch of R5 at the Show of the Summer in Hershey, PA.

The four “R” siblings – Ross (actor from Disney Channel’s Austin and Ally), Riker (Dancing With the Stars), Ryder and Rocky Lynch – along with their friend/bandmate Ellington Radcliff, rocked the stage next!  Their pop/rock band R5 put on an awesome set for concert goers of all ages.  Even parents seemed to enjoy and know their music.  The group – who play all their own instruments – rocked a mixture of their past music and new songs from their upcoming album.  “Cali Girls” and “Feel Good” were two of their songs receiving the biggest applauds and screams.

Fifth Harmony at the Show of the Summer in Hershey, PA.

Fifth Harmony at the Show of the Summer in Hershey, PA.

The all-girl supergroup Fifth Harmony was by far the hottest act of the night!  As always, the girls of 5H gave their all to their set with an energetic performance.  While belting out their hits like “Sledgehammer” and “Worth It,” Camila, Lauren, Ally, Dinah and Normani connected to the audience with their girl-power messages and sexy dance moves, hair flips and booty shakes.  Their appearance at SOTS was a perfect culmination for a huge week for the girls of 5H, who were announced this week as the new face of the Candie’s Clothing’s fall line.  I dare say that many of the teens/tweens who clung to their every note Sunday night will be first in line at Kohl’s when the new clothing line is released.

Shawn Mendes at the Show of the Summer in Hershey, PA.

Shawn Mendes at the Show of the Summer in Hershey, PA.

By the time that Shawn Mendes walked on stage to close out the night, you could probably hear the screams and shrieks two states over.  Having interviewed Shawn twice in the past year, we know he is talented, sweet and generally shy seeming, nice guy.  However it was really awesome to see what an amazing performer he is growing into and the way his voice and performance skills have grown.  His maturation as an artist was apparent in many ways, including the one-on-one interaction with his fans.  He owned the stage while performing his hits like “Life of the Party,” “Aftertaste” and “Something Big.”

All and all, the promoters should be happy with the Show of the Summer and its lineup, performances and response from the fans.  As with all concerts these days, selling VIP undoubtedly made them a ton of extra money as nearly five hundred thrilled fans paid an additional $150.00 for a meet and greet experience with one or two of the performers.  These experiences make the concert hours longer, but so much more special for the fans.

Deborah Wagner

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: July 1, 2015.

Photos by Rachel Disipio © 2015


Glen Campbell – I’ll Be Me (A PopEntertainment.com Movie Review)

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Glen Campbell - I'll Be Me

Glen Campbell – I’ll Be Me

GLEN CAMPBELL – I’LL BE ME (2015)

Featuring Glen Campbell, Kim Campbell, Ashley Campbell, Cal Campbell, Shannon Campbell, T.J. Kuenster, Ry Jarred, Siggy Sjursen, Kiefo Nilsson, Ronald Petersen, Bobbie Gale, Jay Leno, Jimmy Webb, Bruce Springsteen, The Edge, Paul McCartney, Blake Shelton, Sheryl Crow, Keith Urban, Brad Paisley, Taylor Swift, Steve Martin, Chad Smith, Kathy Mattea, Vince Gill, The Band Perry, Clancy Fraser, Bill Maclay, John Carter Cash, Joe Osborne, Hal Blaine, Don Randi, Nancy Pelosi, John Boehner and President Bill Clinton.

Directed by James Keach.

Distributed by Virgil Films/PCH Films.  105 minutes.  Rated PG.

Glen Campbell was one of the greatest guitarists of the 20th century.  He was never flashy or edgy and sometimes was underestimated as just a good-natured, middle-of-the-road country singer, but that was only the tip of the iceberg when it came to Campbell’s skills.

Long before he became a solo singing star, Campbell was a standing member of the legendary studio posse the Wrecking Crew, the musical engine behind many of the biggest hits of 1960s and 1970s.  Campbell’s deceptively complex guitar lines (though best known as a country singer, Campbell was weaned on jazz piano) anchored some of the biggest hits of the era.  Campbell took Brian Wilson’s place touring in the Beach Boys when Wilson decided he no longer wanted to tour, but wanted to concentrate on studio albums Pet Sounds and Smile.

By the late sixties, Campbell was a superstar himself.  Blessed with a supple, unassuming voice to go with his guitar prowess, he had a long line of classic hit singles (often recorded with songwriter/producer Jimmy Webb) which included “Wichita Lineman,” “Gentle on My Mind,” “Galveston,” “By the Time I Get To Phoenix” and many more.  He had a popular TV variety show (The Glen Campbell Good Time Hour) and even made a series of movies, making the biggest splash playing opposite John Wayne in the classic True Grit.

However, by the late 70s, despite a few slightly cheesy comeback hits like “Rhinestone Cowboy” and “Southern Nights,” Campbell’s life and career were in a bit of a free fall.  He had an ugly celeb breakup (with singer Tanya Tucker), a bad drinking and drug problem and even got caught in one of the first crazy-looking celeb mug shots.

Still, quietly Campbell pieced his life and career back together, marrying his fourth (and final) wife Kim, kicking his addictions and returning to the road.  For years he was forgotten in the recording studios, but in 2008 his back-to-basics comeback album Meet Glen Campbell brought him back to critical acclaim.  As he was starting recording his follow-up album Ghost on the Canvas, family and friends started noticing that Campbell was becoming very forgetful.  While working on the album, he was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease.

Campbell and his family decided to do one last tour, while he was still able to do so.  I’ll Be Me, directed by actor James Keach, is a look at that final tour – but it is so much more.  Campbell, his family and friends gave the filmmakers total access, showing the good, bad and ugly of this difficult time in their lives.  Luckily for the most part Campbell is still a good-natured and generally happy man.  His doctors say that the music has actually been something of a saving grace for the man, his brain is so hard-wired to perform that it helps him fight the evil disease that is ravaging the man.

Still, for all the good, it is rather shocking to see Campbell like this, a smart and talented man who has now been reduced to wracking his brains to remember his children’s names.

A truly heartbreaking moment, one of several in this clear-eyed look at the man, the disease and all it has taken from him, has Glen Campbell and his band taking the stage at the historic Ryman Auditorium in Nashville (former home of the Grand Ol’ Opry).  Campbell takes the stage playing the opening chords of one of his classics, “Gentle on My Mind,” a song the man has undoubtedly played thousands of times throughout his career.  However he can barely make it through a single line before he has to stop playing.  A teleprompter, which gave the song lyrics and guitar chords of the song, had gone down, and in his condition he could not remember the lyrics of one of his defining songs.

The teleprompter is quickly fixed and the singer is able to continue the song, but this short lived glitch is an eye-opener, a glimpse behind the curtain of a disease that robs a human of most of what makes them vital.

However, it also becomes obvious that the adulation of the audience was able to give Campbell moments of clarity and beauty as he fought for control of his own mind.  Eventually, as the tour stretched out over two years and 150 shows, the disease gets more and more of a foothold until it is impossible to continue.

It’s a sad and tragic thing, but at least Campbell was afforded one last go around and the opportunity to remind us of his great skill one last time.

I’ll Be Me is a depressing film in many ways, obviously, because the audience is watching a very smart, talented man losing his skills.  But it is also a celebration of Campbell’s life and the great love he brought to performing and to life.  We’ll always have the memories of his old performances, and through I’ll Be Me we will also have a bit more understanding of his life, particularly the tragic final act.

Jay S. Jacobs

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: July 3, 2015.


Taylor Swift, Shawn Mendes & Vance Joy – Lincoln Financial Field – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – June 12, 2015 (A PopEntertainment.com Concert Review)

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Taylor Swift at Lincoln Financial Field.

Taylor Swift at Lincoln Financial Field.

Taylor Swift, Shawn Mendes & Vance Joy – Lincoln Financial Field – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – June 12, 2015

“I feel like I have the best home town of all time” Taylor Swift said during her June 12th show in the City of Brotherly Love. Swift is currently traveling on her 1989 World Tour, playing stadiums across the globe spreading positive messages to fans of all ages.

Going into the show we were handed white wristbands which we were told to wear. Even though the concept seemed a little strange, we put them on and continued to our seats.

Taylor Swift at Lincoln Financial Field.

Taylor Swift at Lincoln Financial Field.

Due to the fact I had never previously attended a Taylor Swift concert, I truly didn’t know what to expect. I was surprised beyond belief when we were walking in the arena and saw fans dressed in flamboyant costumes consisting of tutus, pom-poms, suspenders, and fluorescent lights.

As we got to our seats, about a half an hour before the first opening act was scheduled to perform, we were pleasantly taken aback to see videos of Swift connecting with her fans. She did this by sending them Christmas gifts, as well as inviting them into her home while presenting her admirers with fresh baked cookies she had prepared for them.

Taylor Swift at Lincoln Financial Field.

Taylor Swift at Lincoln Financial Field.

The concert began with two great performances. The first was by up-and-coming teen singing sensation Shawn Mendes, who has over 3 million followers on Twitter. Next up was Australian indie pop artist Vance Joy, known for his hit song “Riptide.” The audience fed off the energy these two artists possessed and both did an amazing job at getting the crowd ready for Taylor to take the stage.

When the clock hit 9, the lights dimmed. It was time for Taylor’s set to begin. The crowd erupted in screams. To our surprise, the wristbands which we were instructed to wear on entering the arena began to flash colors in a synchronized fashion to the beat of Taylor’s first song of the night, “Welcome to New York.”

Taylor Swift at Lincoln Financial Field.

Taylor Swift at Lincoln Financial Field.

Throughout the entirety of the show Swift didn’t disappoint. She had a three surprise guests accompany her on stage: popular group Echosmith (who sang their chart-topping hit “Cool Kids” with Swift), runaway model/actress Cara Delevingne, and actress Mariska Hargitay from the iconic television series Law and Order: Special Victims Unit.

Swift had a total of ten outfit changes and sang an amazing 19 songs, ranging from “Love Story” off her 2008 album Fearless to “We are Never Ever Getting Back Together” from Taylor’s 2012 album Red. Top charters from this year, like “Style” and “Blank Space,” excited the 50,000 fans in attendance.

Taylor Swift at Lincoln Financial Field.

Taylor Swift at Lincoln Financial Field.

The show ended in a spectacular fireworks display as Swift sang two of her most famous songs that the crowd loved: “Shake it Off” and “Out of the Woods.”

Coming into this show I didn’t know what to expect. If you are a fan of music, surprise guests, and an overall fun time, the next time Taylor Swift is in town be sure to check it out. I can promise that it will not disappoint.

Rachel Disipio

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: July 8, 2015.

Photos by Maggie Mitchell © 2015


Rachel Platten – Fight Song EP (A PopEntertainment.com Music Review)

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Rachel Platten - Fight Song

Rachel Platten – Fight Song

Rachel Platten – Fight Song EP (Columbia)

I first ran across Rachel Platten back in 2008.  She was opening a club show at New York’s Canal Room which also featured Lucy Woodward and Toby Lightman.  While I was familiar with the other two artists’ work, I didn’t know anything about Platten.  I sat in the back of the club with Jim, our photographer, neither of us expecting much of this unknown who was barely even mentioned in the promotion of the show.  We figured she was a local artist brought in to keep people in line until the headliners showed up.  (I later found out she was actually from Boston.)

We weren’t paying that much attention when Platten sat down at the piano bench.  But then a funny thing happened.  Platten’s music grabbed us.  We started watching her more intently.  Jim pulled out the camera and started taking pictures.  It was a shortish set, but we were pretty mesmerized.  This was a singer who was going places.

In the years since, we’ve seen her a couple more times (in fact we’ll be seeing her tomorrow night with Colbie Caillat and Christina Perri), always opening for other acts and often upstaging them.  I bought a few of her indie releases.  However, she never quite caught on as we expected.

That was before Taylor Swift.

Apparently the multi-platinum selling artist heard Platten performing and flipped, just like we did seven years ago.  She started Tweeting about Platten’s music, telling her multitudes of fans to check her out.  Swift also recently brought Platten out on stage to perform in front of 50,000 people at a recent Philadelphia concert stop – a far cry from Platten’s club gigs.

Between Swift’s championing the singer and a nearly ubiquitous Ford commercial that includes the title track, Platten’s finally capturing the attention she so justly deserves.  Twelve years on from releasing her first album, she is finally on a major label, Columbia.  (Not that being on a major label is always that great a thing at this point in music history.)  “Fight Song” is currently the #2 single on iTunes and the EP is in the top 100 album downloads chart.

So Platten has put in the hard work.  Is her breakout EP with the wait?

Hells to the yes.

“Fight Song” is a gorgeous ballad of self-empowerment, a smart and musically complex song which feels like a slightly more nuanced version of a Katy Perry smash.  The playful pop of “Lone Ranger,” complete with a fun teasing “na-na-na-na” interlude would make a hell of a follow-up single.  “Beating Me Up” has a propulsive pop-dance beat which belies the heartbroken lyrics.  Then the album closes out with the sultry R&B vibe of “Congratulations,” which Beyonce should cover like right now.

Fight Song is a damn good introduction to an artist who has been toiling in obscurity for way too long.  I hope that she strikes while the iron is hot and goes back into the studio soon to get a full-length album out.  Four songs is just not enough Rachel Platten.

Jay S. Jacobs

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: July 10, 2015.


Micky Dolenz Monkees Around In Career-Spanning Show

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Micky Dolenz

Micky Dolenz

Micky Dolenz 

Monkees Around In Career-Spanning Show

by Brad Balfour

For another 70-year old, kicking it out on stage for three July nights at 54 Below under the banner of A Little Bit Broadway, A Little Bit Rock ‘n’ Roll might seem like a daunting task. Yet given Micky Dolenz’s uncanny history, it’s not surprising.  Produced by label exec Van Dean — directed by Dean and Dolenz — and under Michael J. Moritz, Jr.’s music direction, this show demonstrates a love for both Broadway stylizations and rock ‘n’ roll without compromising either form.

In three intimate concerts, the singer and multi-instrumentalist includes some of Dolenz’ band The Monkees’ greatest hits and rarities he’s rarely performed before from musicals he loves. Having seen an intimate rehearsal before a small audience, the raw performances — with an insider’s look at the process of refinement — suggests that A Little Bit Broadway, A Little Bit Rock ‘n’ Roll will more than please. It should arouse a demand for it to be extended here and beyond New York.

This eternal Californian has the experience having starred as a kid in the television series  Circus Boy, as well as being the drummer and singer of the hugely successful rock ‘n’ roll band The Monkees, which originated from the classic ’60s TV show of the same name. It debuted on NBC to incredible success and ratings remained high for two seasons. Then Micky and the band starred in their own feature film, Head, a 1968 psychedelic romp co-written by a young Jack Nicholson, which became a cult classic.

Ultimately, The Monkees sold over 65 million records, toured the US and much of the world many times. Dolenz has also starred in musicals on Broadway, the West End, and in national tours. These include: Disney’s AIDA (Broadway), Pippin, Hairspray (West End), Grease, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, Tom Sawyer and more. He has also released two solo albums (Remember and King For A Day) and a memoir. Dolenz recently appeared in the world premiere of the new play Comedy Is Hard (Ivoryton Playhouse) by four time Emmy winner Mike Reiss (The Simpsons).

After all this, the eternal Monkee has the endurance to not only survive being a rock star — a mega-pop star at a time when excess and self-destruction was the norm — but proven to be an incredible multi-hyphenate in ways that few singers or actors rarely are. The veteran Californian has had a comprehensive career encompassing not only a range of musical styles, but creative activities as including directing, writing, producing, and a bit of design and furniture making as well.

Of course being best known as a Monkee — transforming the faux band into a crack quartet capable of world tours performed as well as the studio musicians who initially backed them on their songs — raises all sorts of good questions. When you’ve had such a remarkable career as Dolenz has had, while remaining a friendly, and thankfully for this interviewer, open subject, it garners great Q&A material. It didn’t hurt that we discussed it all in such a fine restaurant as Midtown’s Palm.

Micky Dolenz

Micky Dolenz

If all these digital tools had been available to you when you did the band, how different would it have made things? Are you glad that you came out of a world that had that sort of naive experience of rock and roll? 

That’s a good point. I suspect at the time there was somebody that would ask me, “Can you imagine what it was like when there was no recording, or you were recording on a wire recorder or a wax cylinder?” Up until the ’50s there was only mono [monaural]. My first tape recorder was mono. I remember when stereo came along, and the first stereo albums [came out]. I remember clearly my father saying, “This is [in] stereo,” and I said, “What do you mean?” He put it on our home system, a big vinyl thing. It was a sound effects kind of album, and it had a train going from left to right. We were like, “Ohhh, wow….” You could hear the bass over here and the guitar on the right.

So the recording process was much more difficult [then] than it is today. It was expensive. It took a long time. You didn’t have the options. You didn’t have the editing [available]. You had to do all your work before you got to the session. That’s why the musicians like the Wrecking Crew, who of course you must have heard of — have you seen the documentary [The Wrecking Crew, about all-star studio musicians of the 50s and 60s]? You should, I’m in it. Denny [Tedesco], the guy that made it, his father was Tommy Tedesco, the guitar player. [ed note: We actually have an interview with Denny Tedesco and a couple of members of The Wrecking Crew about the film.] He has taken 20 years to get that thing off.

I am so glad they finally got the recognition that they deserve. Because everybody, as you probably have heard by now, used the Wrecking Crew — the Byrds, the  Beach Boys, the Mamas and the Papas, the Association — everybody. The reason was not that these people couldn’t play. Playing live, and playing in a very, very — as I said — expensive, now rather primitive environment, was a very different gig. These studio [cats], that’s all they did. They could keep the dynamics the same. They could read the charts and just knock it out in one or two takes. These people also never went on stage. They never played live, except for, I guess, Glen Campbell, who is the only one I can think of.

They never toured. 

Oh, no. They’re not live performers. When you are onstage live, you’ve got to perform. They were not performers. They sat there like this [demonstrates] and played. They read the docs and played.

Has anybody ever proposed making  — not so much a documentary but a feature film — like this Beach Boys movie, Love & Mercy, about the Monkees? The Monkees story is so unique. It’s fascinating how ubiquitous the name “Monkees” is no matter what generation someone if from. A lot of people don’t really get the uniqueness of the story. In those days they would create a manufactured band, but the people were interchangeable. Here was a created band that actually became an organic whole; no one ever thought was possible.

Mike Nesmith used to say it was like Pinocchio becoming a real little boy. Well, at the time, nothing like that had happened. Now, of course, you have it happen frequently. I think the closest thing that has come along in years is Glee. They go on and perform, but it was a TV show about an imaginary glee club. And The Monkees was a TV show about an imaginary band.

You guys got to contribute and take it even further because you actually put your own wacky personalities to work in it. Would you want to have a movie like this made?

Well, there actually have been a couple of little things, television things. VH1 did one years ago called Daydream Believer. Not bad, not a bad film. There has been talk about it. You know, I am so close to it. I’m probably not the person to ask, because I am too close to it, really.

It’s also interesting how most of you stayed in touch. You had that group with Davy Jones and have toured with Peter Tork…

Well, we had our own solo careers, but it does tend to always come back to that, yeah.

Like seeing you and Peter playing together at the Rockers On Broadway.

A two-dog monkee.

Micky Dolenz

Micky Dolenz

In this current show, you revisit your own personal history and reflect on it with this musical expression. What led to doing it?

I was asked. (laughs). The Broadway producer Van Dean, who also owns Broadway Records, resurrected that. We met a couple of years ago. He is from Connecticut and he was doing a benefit for Sandy Hook, for the kids. He got in touch with me and knew I had done some Broadway stuff. I did the benefit for him, sang a few songs. Then about a year or so ago, he got in touch with me and said, “There’s this club called 54 Below, and we have recorded a few acts there for the record company. We’d be interested in talking to you about it.” He had come up with the idea, he knew I had done Broadway, and of course, knew I had done rock and roll.

He said there was a Monkee tune Neil Diamond wrote for us called, “Little Bit Me Little Bit You”. So he said, “We’ll play off of that and call it, Little Bit of Broadway, Little Bit Rock and Roll. It intrigued me. I said I could really be into that. I had been doing a lot of theater, and of course I had had all those hits. It took us about a year to pull it together, just to get the dates from 54 Below. And to get the band, and [musical director] Michael Moritz, and VMD to get his band available.

So that’s the regular band he works with?

Yeah. He has lots of musicians that he works with, and these are, I think, [the] core people. Really that’s how it happened. I wasn’t available last year. Then this year, he said “Can you do it in July?” I said “Yeah.” We wanted more than one date because if you are going to record a CD, too risky. So we waited until 54 Below came up with three dates, and here we are. Simple as that.

It was brilliant that you invited people to your rehearsal the other night, having an audience there. Did that help you in certain ways?

Yeah, it’s why I requested it. It was my idea. I could not have gone onstage cold and never having sung these songs [before an audience]. Not the Monkee songs, because all the Monkee songs and those stories I have done a million times. It was the half-a-dozen [or so] Broadway tunes, most of which I had never sung before in front of an audience, ever. Ever. No, I would say out of all those Broadway tunes, there is only one that I have sung. That’s “GW Washburn,” because it was a Monkee hit and that’s the cross-over tune. All those other songs, I’ve sung around the house. I’ve sung at auditions, like “Don’t Be the Bunny”, which I mention. But no, I have never sung them before an audience before, or told any stories about them in front of an audience.

So when we started rehearsing, I said, “I can’t go onstage at 54 Below on opening night never having performed these songs. So that’s what that rehearsal was last night, and tonight is just to get me comfortable with singing those songs and telling those stories in front of strangers. I told some of them in front of my family, but I have never sung any of those songs in front of [strangers]. Last night was the first time I have sung “Pure Imagination”, “Don’t Be the Bunny” or “Mr. Cellophane.”

Obviously, it was very effective. It has a complete freshness. It’s interesting to think of these choices you made, and also to hear you sing in these different voices — to see how someone who sings rock and roll can re-interpret a Broadway song, or how you use your Broadway background. I loved you singing your mother singing Billie Holliday — that was great. 

You talk about being a public person and a private person. Where the lines are between public and private. When you are exposing yourself. But rock and roll is hyper-intensive. Even when you are interpreting someone else’s song, you have to throw yourself into it in a physical way that is not like a Broadway song.

If you hadn’t been a Monkee, would you have still gone into rock and roll, or music, or would you have been an architect like you had originally planned after you had been a child star — in the TV series Circus Boy

If I hadn’t gone into that audition [for The Monkees], I would probably be an architect, and we wouldn’t be sitting here.

Micky Dolenz

Micky Dolenz

Or you would have invented some kind of technology. 

I don’t know. It’s a good question. It’s kind of moot, unless you believe in parallel universes. Like the thing I mentioned last night [at the rehearsal]. The showbiz thing has always [been in my life], but there’s the showbiz, and there’s my real life. I got it from my parents, who were also like that. My father was an actor. He was off the boat from Italy. We never lived in the Hollywood-Beverly Hills-showbiz-y kind of world, ever. No friends from that world, really. We lived out in little ranchettes in the [San Fernando] Valley and had horses, chickens, all that. So it was like, daddy went to work, and came home and cleaned the pool. I would win my first series, Circus Boy. I would go do Circus Boy, come home and clean the pool. So I’ve got to credit them mostly with — as much as you can have in a showbiz world — a very down-to-earth family life. Very down-to-earth, very no-nonsense. They never pushed me into the business. Never like the traditional stage mom type, “Eyes and teeth, honey, eyes and teeth.”

They did just by virtue of the way they acted. I noticed very early on that there is a difference between the person and the persona. I don’t remember them saying this to me in so many words. But I remember when I was ten years old, I saw my father on the set playing an evil Mexican general killing people. He would come home and tickle me on the living room floor. So even from very, very early on, I got that that was the character, that was the act. [Otherwise,] I am a very private person. When I’m home, I’m in my shop — I have a workshop, a wood shop. I have a business. My daughter and I have a family business called Dolenz & Daughter’s Fine Furniture. We make heirloom furniture. So I have always had that side of me.

Do you think that helped you in maintaining your sense of authenticity?

It must have, I guess. One of the things they did I think was very smart was after Circus Boy. It was a big show, a very popular network prime time show. I was 12 or 13, so they took me out of the business entirely. Back to school, public school. No showbiz, no acting. So I missed that whole post-childhood success craziness. The disappointment, “They don’t love me anymore, Mommy.” Growing up and going through puberty is tough enough. Having that “You’re a has-been at 13″ is what I believe messes up kids like that and has done in the past. We have even seen it recently, with the kid from Star Wars — the little kid [Jake Lloyd] who played Anakin Skywalker. You don’t know who you are. You don’t know what happened. All of a sudden you’re a has-been at 13. My parents wisely took me out of the business entirely. I really didn’t get back into it until The Monkees, ten years later.

So with this process of putting this show together, and these different lives, do you have any reflections? 

Yeah. Finding and choosing the songs for the Broadway section was really an interesting process. I had assumed that this started with songs that I had sung in a show like [A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the] ForumGrease, Aida, Hairspray, Pippin — we could have started with those. But none of them worked. None of them worked because most songs in a Broadway show are part of the narrative of the show. That’s why they are a Broadway show. You have to be in the show.

So their integrity lies in the context.

Absolutely. That’s what Broadway shows are. All the dramatic moments don’t turn on dialogue, they turn on a song. Like the old saying: in a Broadway show you talk and talk and talk until you can’t talk anymore, and then you sing. Those big moments, dramatic moments or comedy moments or whatever, turn on a song. That’s what makes them Broadway shows. The downside, if you are trying to find material, then [you have to] do songs out of Broadway shows that stand alone. We can count on a couple of hands how many songs?

Cabaret is one of the few.

One of the few. The Beatles did “Til There Was You” — I mean, very few, because they are part of a narrative. Doing a show like this, that was the problem we ran into. They are great songs. I wanted to do a song out of Aida.

Micky Dolenz

Micky Dolenz

Now that you mention it, I notice you didn’t do any songs from the shows you were in.

None. Not a one. We found songs that are stand-alone. But do they also speak to my narrative? “Mr. Cellophane” [from Chicago] is a good example. We set it up with that story about sometimes you’d like to be invisible. It worked. That was an interesting challenge, trying to find these songs. It took me about a year.

How did you go about finding them?

A lot of them recommended by Michael. Two of them came out of my childhood: “Some Enchanted Evening” and “But Not for Me,” [thanks to] my mom. Actually, a couple I had been working on over the years as audition pieces. “Don’t Be the Bunny” got me three shows.

Do you ever find it ironic that you did Pippin and then in the recently closed revival version — which is now on the road — incorporated that circus element?

I haven’t seen that version. I hear it’s really good.

You did an album of non-Monkee songs, right?

Yeah, a guy in England came out with [one]. He compiled all these obscure tunes from the ’70s that I did post-Monkees on MGM. I totally forgot I had even done them.

That’s interesting timing, that it is coming out now in light of you reviewing your history. 

It’s not a one-man show or anything like that. I’m not that interested in myself. I do love the fact that it is incorporating the two things I love most in music, which is rock and roll and Broadway.

What did you learn about yourself as a singer or performer in terms of how you interpret Broadway or rock and roll?

I learned that many years ago, when I started doing shows. Like I mentioned last night, The Monkees was a little bit like Broadway on television. A little bit like musical theater on TV. Like an old Marx Brothers movie. After we were cast, they screened Marx Brothers movies for us, Laurel & Hardy, the Beatle movies. I remember it was heavily weighted towards that Marx Brothers idea. Not the Three Stooges, we never beat each other up. [It was] One for all, all for one. There’s an interesting book called The Politics of Ecstasy, written by Timothy Leary. When you go back, you will find almost a chapter devoted to The Monkees. Whatever you think of Timothy Leary, I don’t know, but…

Oh, I love Timothy Leary. 

He got it. He mentions things like that. I don’t remember his words — the irreverent, psycho-something jello — but basically what he said was, the Monkees brought long hair into the living room. Before that, the only time you ever saw young people with long hair on television, it would be an arrest. It made it okay to have long hair and wear bell bottoms. I mean, the kids said “See, Mommy, the Monkees don’t commit crimes against nature, and they’re just having a good time.” [He sings] “We don’t want to put anybody down.” In a very similar way, I realized years later that Henry Winkler did it with the Fonz, in making it okay to wear a black leather jacket. Until then, we were outlaws. We were Marlon Brando and The Wild [Ones]. You were a motorcycle gang thug. You had your hair like that with a motorcycle jacket. In another similar way, I thought, was the way that Will Smith made it okay to be a young black guy [doing] rap music in The Fresh Prince of Bel Air. The Monkees did that for the hippie generation.

Micky Dolenz and Meredith

Micky Dolenz and Meredith

In some ways, in hip hop and motorcycle gangs there always was a level of not the noble outlaw, but the bad outlaw. The hippie thing was never meant to be outlaw.

No — well, not outlaw, but [the show] was never anti-Establishment. We still couldn’t do or say anything about the war. We couldn’t talk about anything controversial. The NBC censors were very, very strict. In fact, there is a great story. There was one episode called “The Devil and Peter Tork.” It [was based on] the Faustian legend. Peter wants to learn how to play the harp, and says, “I’d give anything to be able to play the harp.” The devil appears and says, “Would you really?” He says, “Sign here.” Peter then suddenly can play the harp. He comes back to the beach house and says, “Hey, guys, I can play the harp!” “How did you do that?” And he said, “Well, I had to just sign this…” I say something to the effect of, “Peter! You’ve signed your soul to the devil, which means when you die you will go to hell!” This is in the script. They sent it to NBC, to the censors, before we were shooting. The censors came back and said, “You can’t say that on network television at 7:30 at night. You cannot use the word ‘hell’.” 1967. Well, we didn’t say it. [Series creator] Bob Rafelson fought tooth and nail — he said, “It’s FAUST!”

They probably said you can’t say that, either.

“Who’s this Faust guy? You send him over here.” So Bob Rafelson fights tooth and nail to get the word “hell” into the script. They said no, absolutely not. So if you watch the episode, when that scene comes around, I say something to the effect of “Well Peter, you sold your soul to the devil, and that means when you die, you will go to that place we can’t mention on network television.”

It’s amazing what you got away with then.

We slipped some zingers in there, but it was tough. It had to go under the radar.

The great thing was that you had all those layers, and the characters were unrealistic. 

You understand that The Monkees was not a band. It was a television show about a band. An imaginary band. On a set.

An imaginary band that had no real connection to the real world. Where was the beach house, by the way?

Malibu. Which begs the question: how could we have afforded it? We had a beach house, and we never worked.

It was this absurdist show. That is what was so great about it. 

Yes, imaginary. It was a set — Stage 7 at Screen Gems. There were two or three other shows that were trying to be high level that year — music shows. I was up for them. There was one about surfing Beach Boys kind of thing. There was one like Peter, Paul and Mary — that actually did go to pilot, it was called The Happeners. Then there was another show that had a whole big family thing in a bus, like the New Christy Minstrels kind of thing — A Mighty Wind. That became The Partridge Family years later, I think.

The thing about The Monkees was the amazing, unique combination of forces that made the show — you guys, Bob Rafelson, who later on made a movie like Head, with Jim Frawley directing. 

Paul Mazursky wrote the pilot, with Larry Tucker, his partner. You know Bob and Bert [Schneider] produced Easy Rider. I’m in that book, also: Easy Riders, Raging Bulls [How the Sex-Drugs-And Rock ‘N Roll Generation Saved Hollywood by Peter Biskind]. They used Monkee money to make Easy Rider.

I don’t think that confluence of forces could ever come together again. That’s what made the show transcend its origins.

That’s what makes any show transcend, if you look at any show, or movie, or album. It’s just that what happens is the whole becomes greater than the sum of its parts. Bob Rafelson, years later, even said, “We caught lightning in a bottle.” You can look at any show — like Star Trek. You can’t hang the success of the show on any one thing, like William Shatner, or Gene Roddenberry, or Leonard Nimoy, or the sets or the dialogue or the costumes. It doesn’t work like that. You can’t reduce that stuff down in any real scientific sense. You can’t take it apart.

People ask me this all the time, and as a scientist — and I consider myself a scientist — you can’t take it apart. It’s like taking a watch apart to see how it works. It won’t work anymore if you take it apart. Even with The Monkees, I get asked, “Are you really like that?” No, I don’t run around, twice the speed of a human, backwards. There were elements of me in that character. But they didn’t want to hire pure Actors, to Play A Part. Bob Rafelson and Bert Schneider knew that to grab those kids, they had to have something [else] — that’s why they used our real names.

Do you ever want to direct films?

I did. Nothing you heard of — it was all in England. The one film I did here was a movie of the week for Lifetime, starring Stephanie Zimbalist, actually. A typical Lifetime movie, female in jeopardy, called Malpractice. Over here I directed TV. I directed Boy Meets World, Pacific Blue… But I did a lot of stuff in England. I had been there for 15 years.

Any regrets that those projects didn’t get seen here?

It wasn’t really my call. They were owned by BBC and LWT. I tried to get a couple a change of format versions over here, but they were very British shows, so I’m not sure they would have translated. Some would, but there are not that many shows that have made it over here. A little more these days, but back then it was very unusual.

Besides your daughter that you are working with, you have how many other kids?

Three other — four daughters altogether. Ami — who is an actress, and she still does a little bit — has now taken to what she always wanted to do, which is illustration. Children’s books illustration. Even before she was an actress, that was what she wanted to do. She is doing quite well. She lives in Canada, Vancouver. She is studying at Emily Carr Art School, which is the famous Canadian art institute. Getting a certificate in illustrating children’s books. We are going to write a book together and she is going to illustrate it. Then my next oldest, Charlotte, just got married to a lovely guy. They are living in Vienna, Austria. He’s been posted there — he works in the State Department, and he is there for a couple of years. She works for the Clinton Foundation, CHIA, she’s a malaria officer for five African countries. From what I gather, they advise the local governments how to combat malaria in their particular region. The next one is a preschool teacher and photographer. The youngest one, Georgia, is the one that I have the furniture business with. They are all doing quite well. A couple of production companies have approached us about doing a show. But we’ll see.

What more do you want to do?

I would love to do more musical theater. I’d love to be on Broadway.

Writing your own?

No, not necessarily. Just some great part. I have a wish list of parts that I would love to do. I’d love to do Thénardier in Les Miz. I’d love to do the Wizard in Wicked, I’d like to do Amos in Chicago. I’d love to do Wilbur in Hairspray, if that ever comes again. I just did that in the West End for about a year, in London. I was offered shows that I couldn’t do for one reason or another. I was offered Drowsy Chaperone. There was another show, a national tour, and I couldn’t do it.

You are in good shape. What do you do?

No sex, no drugs, no rock and roll.

And don’t eat…

Both halves of this Philly cheese steak. No, I’m pretty active. I have a good metabolism. Frankly, working in the shop — it’s not running a marathon, but we’re on our feet sometimes eight hours a day, handling lumber and machine tools. I have a full-blown machine shop.

Do you have accounts, or does someone hire you to design their living room?

No, it’s all handmade for orders that are on the website. It’s specific heirloom pieces — a coffee table, a hope chest, sitting bench seat… We have one line which is Shabby Chic stuff — we have three items in that line. Then we have three items in this redwood line, and there’s a cedar heirloom hope chest with brass fittings. We’re just coming out with a chess set next week that I designed. It’s all hand-carved, hand made, we sign everything and number it and brand it.

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: July 5, 2015.

Photos ©2015 Brad Balfour. All rights reserved.



Meet Viv & the Revival

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Pop Entertainment’s own Sami, Ali and Rachel talked to Viv and the Revival about life, performing, and everything in between… Find out what he had to say at Firefly Music Festival here!


Teen Beach (A PopEntertainment.com Video Review)

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Teen Beach 2

Teen Beach 2

TEEN BEACH 2 (2015)

Starring Maia Mitchell, Grace Phipps, Ross Lynch, Garrett Clayton, Mollee Gray, John DeLuca, Chrissie Fit, Ross Butler, Piper Curda, Jordan Fisher, Jessica Lee Keller, Kent Boyd, Mónica López, Raymond Alexander Cham Jr., Kayla Radomski, Kc Monnie, Tyler Mizak, William T. Loftis, Morgan Larson and Jazmín Caratini..

Screenplay by Billy Eddy &Matt Eddy.

Directed by Jeffrey Hornaday.

Distributed by Disney Channel.  104 minutes.  Rated TV-G.

Who knew that the most anticipated summer movie for teens and tweens would be Teen Beach 2, a Disney Channel made-for-TV sequel to the 2013 hit Teen Beach movie.

Hitting the beach again are Brady (Ross Lynch – Austin and Ally) and Mack (Maia Mitchell – The Fosters) and their fun loving surfer and biker pals from Brady’s favorite 60’s film Wet Side Story. (Yes, that’s right.)

As with most good Disney movies, TB2 offers singing, cute characters, boyfriend / girlfriend relationships, friendship and some fun dance numbers which are reminiscent of Annette Funicello and Frankie Avalon’s 60’s beach classics.  Though the film basically starts where the other left off, there is definitely more drama for Mack and Brady as the surfing duo heads back to school.

When Lela (Grace Phipps) finds the necklace she gave Mack, she and Tanner (Garrett Clayton) head out into the ocean to find their friends.  Unlike the first movie, this time they end up in the present day and they stick out big time!  The remainder of the film is filled with Brady and Mack trying to hide their friends identities (which eventually includes the whole crew of bikers and surfers) from the real world and get them back to their own world before they disappear.

TB2 turns out to be cute and extremely enjoyable for the Disney crowd, many of whom have already watched it over and over in the first two days.  As with all Disney films – there are important lessons to be learned and like so many Disney films before, it’s all about friendship and self confidence.

Teen Beach 2 was also released on DVD and offers extras including a free replica of Lela’s friendship necklace from Mack and never before seen bonus rehearsal footage.

Deborah Wagner

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: July 5, 2015.


#WhoIsTOPLINE ?

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TOPLINE

TOPLINE

#WhoIsTOPLINE

There’s a new boy band coming to town and it’s impressive lineup contains…  Oh yeah!  We don’t know!!

It’s not a first, though.  Have you ever heard of Klaatu?  Nope?  Ask your parents.  Maybe even your grandparents.  In the 1970s a mysterious band named after an old sci-fi movie (The Day the Earth Stood Still) released a whole album with no band member names, no pictures or faces, just a mystery band.

Quickly the album became a hit, with the public coming up with the idea that The Beatles, who had broken up several years before, were recording again as Klaatu.  Turns out it wasn’t the Fab Four, but their debut Klaatu became a surprise cult classic.

That brings us to the case with the new mysterious boy band – TOPLINE.  Based out of LA, TOPLINE is gaining lots of excitement and buzz online in addition to growing a pretty loyal fans who call themselves TOPLINERS.  The mysterious bunch has already racked up an impressive 69K Twitter followers (@therealTOPLINE) though, did we mention they don’t know who they are yet?!

Promoters continue to tease TOPLINE’S new single titled “We Love It” using the hashtag #whoisTOPLINE with some mysterious hints like an audio clip and promo pic with no faces showing of course.

We’re hoping that with all the buzz they’re seeing on social media, TOPLINE might give their fans and us some more hints, and even just go ahead and spill the beans as to who makes up this mysterious new trio!  Or are they a quartet?  A quintet?!?!

So what do you think?  Who is TOPLINE?  We can safely say they are not The Beatles, but who?  Any ideas?  Get out there and spread the word about #whoisTOPLINE and maybe, just maybe they’ll give us the answer a little sooner!!

Deborah Wagner

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: July 5, 2015.

 


Christina Perri & Colbie Caillat – The Mann Center for the Performing Arts – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – July 11, 2015 (A PopEntertainment.com Concert Review)

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Christina Perri at the Mann Center for the Performing Arts - July 11, 2015.  Photo copyright 2015 Jim Rinaldi.

Christina Perri at the Mann Center for the Performing Arts – July 11, 2015. Photo copyright 2015 Jim Rinaldi.

Christina Perri & Colbie Caillat – The Mann Center for the Performing Arts – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – July 11, 2015

The name of the tour is “Girls Night Out… and the Boys Can Come, Too!” and that pretty much sums up the recent dual tour appearance by Colbie Caillat and Christina Perri.  The estrogen level may have been a touch high in the Mann for this summer night, but that doesn’t mean it wasn’t a terrifically enjoyable show.  Sort of like a mini-Lilith Fair for a new millennium, the show was not just a girl-power treatise.  It was also a good example of the complexity of intriguing female artists, ones who have some similarities and many more differences, even if both are considered mellow love music specialists.

One girl who didn’t come too was opening buzz act Rachel Platten.  The Taylor Swift-approved singer, just now taking off with her hit “Fight Song” after years in the music biz clubs and trenches, is the official opening act for the tour.  However, she had to miss this one single stop on the tour because of a previous commitment to a Minnesota music festival.  It was a bit of a disappointment to miss her – I’ve been a fan since catching her in a small New York club in 2008 – but a Philadelphia group called Peter & the Wolf (despite the name, the group has a female lead singer, so it worked with the “girls night out” vibe) gave a pleasant, unflashy opening set.

Colbie Caillat at the Mann Center for the Performing Arts - July 11, 2015.  Photo copyright 2015 Jim Rinaldi.

Colbie Caillat at the Mann Center for the Performing Arts – July 11, 2015. Photo copyright 2015 Jim Rinaldi.

Then Colbie Caillat brought her gorgeous Cali acoustic surf sound to the house.  Her playlist was a sweet and sultry mix of hits and album tracks.  From the upbeat strummed bliss of “Fallin’ For You” to the more desolate meditation on love and loss “I Never Told You,” Caillat was in fine voice and had the crowd in her hand.  She sat at the front of the stage to share the lesser known aching devotional “In Love Again,” then later showed her more ecstatic self in the dazzlingly optimistic “Brighter Than the Sun.”

Her more sultry side came out with the recent Babyface collaboration “Try” and the surprisingly complex vocal dynamics of “Hold On.”  She also did duets with videos of Jason Mraz in the sweet love devotional “Lucky” and rapper Common in the more uncommon (at least for her) hip-hop jam “Favorite Song.”

Mann Center for the Performing Arts - July 11, 2015.  Photo copyright 2015 Jim Rinaldi.

Mann Center for the Performing Arts – July 11, 2015. Photo copyright 2015 Jim Rinaldi.

As her set wound down, she reminisced on writing her first huge hit, the charming look at love called “Bubbly” – though she readily admitted that at the time she recorded the song she had never actually experienced that emotion.  The song still, seven years later, exudes the perky innocence that makes Caillat’s music so lovable.

Local girl Perri got the closing set in her hometown.  Perri grew up in the Philly suburb of Bensalem and was obviously thrilled to be playing at the Mann, where she had seen shows as she grew up.  She joked that she had about 300 family members in the crowded shed, and at one point asked the crowd if anyone would run out to a local Wawa (food market) to get her a meatball sub and flavored coffee.

Christina Perri at the Mann Center for the Performing Arts - July 11, 2015.  Photo copyright 2015 Jim Rinaldi.

Christina Perri at the Mann Center for the Performing Arts – July 11, 2015. Photo copyright 2015 Jim Rinaldi.

While she was having a great time, Perri’s musical style is significantly darker – if no less beautiful – than Caillat’s.  In fact, she at one point good naturedly warned the crowd that the song “Burning Gold” was going to be abnormally upbeat for her.  However, from the time she entered with “Shot Me In the Heart,” Perri had her hometown fans in her pocket.  From the lovely devotional “Arms” to the arrestingly delicate emoting of “The Words,” Perri was in the zone.  Treading the boards – even occasionally taking a catwalk into the front rows of fans – she exuded confidence that these were her people and she knew what they wanted.

The ballad-heavy setlist never waned, skirting from lesser-known but well received album tracks like “One Night” and “Tragedy” to the set-closing smash “Human.”  Then, back for encore, Perri closed out with the morosely stunning one-two punch of her magnificent love ballads “Jar of Hearts” and “A Thousand Years.”

In theory, Christina Perri and Colbie Caillat seemed like a bit of an odd couple for a tour, but their music actually meshed stunningly.

Jay S. Jacobs

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: July 14, 2015.

Photos by Jim Rinaldi © 2015 


Stealing a Dance with Milky Chance

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Milky Chance

Milky Chance

Stealing a Dance with Milky Chance

by Ally Abramson

Milky Chance is a German duo consisting of Clemens Rehbein and Philipp Dausch. The band has a unique sound that combines a smooth singer-songwriter sound with jagged, upbeat tones of electronic music.

Their song “Stolen Dance” has blown up the music scene over the past year. It currently has over 160 million views on YouTube. You most likely have heard the song playing on the radio recently, or in stores near you.

The band is currently venturing across North American on tour, stopping at the Skyline Stage at the Mann in Philadelphia on July 28. Then, after the road trip, Milky Chance hopes to put out a new album sometime next year.

Recently, we hooked up with lead singer Reihben, who talked with us about the bands’ experiences and goals.

I wanted to ask about your band name. It’s obviously very unique. How did you come up with it?

I came up with that name when I was younger. When I was starting songwriting – about the age of fourteen or fifteen or something. Really, there’s no meaning in the band name. It’s very different from when it began. It just sounds really weird.

Milky Chance

Milky Chance

How would you describe your music?

I think we’d call it “danceable melancholy.” That kind of consumes it all. It is different sides of music, but it works. It’s a lot of singer/songwriter stuff mixed with electronic beats. Danceable melancholy is a bit more lyrical and this combination, I like it a lot.

Obviously your song “Stolen Dance” has become pretty popular. What can you tell me about it?

It took me two and a half years to write that song and finish it. It took a while to polish it up – the chorus and pretty much all of it, actually. These words were always stuck in my head and so I decided to work with them again two years later. It’s about a mixture of being young and naive and getting a lesson, really knowing about things, relationships and people. The verse is about getting older and knowing people. The chorus is about being naive.

What’s next for you guys?

Well we’ve got our upcoming North American tour now, so it’ll be a lot of on the road this year. Then we’ll take a break. Calm down and have some privacy, do some other stuff. We want to record new stuff in winter. About January, I guess. I finished writing new songs with my guitar. Then we’re  releasing a second album next year. I don’t know exactly when it’ll be, but that’s the plan for now.

Milky Chance

Milky Chance

You talked about touring. What would you say is the best part about touring for you?

Being on the road, the feeling that you’re on the move and able to see the world. It’s always felt very free. The feeling of being free, not having the life where you wake up in the morning, go to work, get home in the evening and then you watch TV or something. When you do shows you have a team. You go and do concerts all the time in the evening and the night. You really do have this really cool feeling.

It sounds cool. What would you say is the best place that you’ve ever played?

Oh man, it’s hard to pick favorites. We’ve played so many different countries, so many different concert venues for different people. There are always so many wonderful people with wonderful natures. Every place seems amazing.

Obviously you have collaborative partners in the creative process. What is that like for you?

For me and Philipp it was very easy because we both know each other very well. We know what each of us can do and what we can’t do. We have our roles. I do the songwriting because that’s what I always did. We also work together. We produce the songs together. We have the same taste in music and the same ears. If someone has an idea, it’s like, “Oh yeah, that’s exactly what I was thinking!” It’s always very coincidental. We have something that’s very comfortable and really very useful. It can also be very complicated too.

Milky Chance

Milky Chance

How do you think social media helps you reach out to fans?

It’s very important nowadays. It’s the main media that we use. YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter: we use all of them to inform and connect with fans and the people who pay attention to us. It’s very important to communicate with people and we can do that there.

Who would you say inspires you as artists?

A lot of different artists of course, but also our friends. We have a lot of friends who play instruments and are very interested in music. We both had a great education. We learned all about music history, so I guess all the people that we have gotten to know by now have been an inspiration of sorts. We also get inspiration from older stuff. We play some Ray Charles and stuff like Duke Ellington, but also newer stuff – especially singer songwriters, and electronic music. There’s a big electronic music scene in Germany that we really like.

Copyright ©2015 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: July 22, 2015.

Photos ©2015. Courtesy of Republic Records. All rights reserved.


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