Ozzy Osbourne is ready for his slippers 2007-09-23 13:50:00 Ozzy Osbourne
is ready
for his slippers The years of drug abuse, alcoholism and bat-chewing - not to mention the 2003 quad-bike accident that almost cost him his life - have clearly taken their toll on Ozzy Osbourne
: the figure on stage in his home town, the heartland of heavy metal, was a pale and rather pathetic shadow of the man who used to be the charismatic frontman of the world's most awesome heavy metal band, Black Sabbath. Once upon a time, Osbourne used to channel the ferocity of his band's dark riffery like a maestro of malevolence; here, he had about as much charisma as Timmy Mallett, and walked the stage with the shuffling gait, familiar to viewers of The Osbournes, of someone who has lost a great many neurons. "Are you ready to go crazy? Come on then, let's go crazy," he yelled at the crowd at the start of the Birmingham leg of his world tour. The crowd went a little bit wild for a while, but although Osbourne kept shouting at us, with incre
Eve sentenced to probation 2007-09-23 13:49:00 Eve sentenced to probation Eve was arrested back in April after she was apprehended after her gold Maserati hit a road center divider which caused damage to her car.In a court room last Thursday, the singer/actress pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor of drunk driving where her alcohol blood level was recorded at an amount above 0.08 percent.As her punishment she was ordered to wear a SCRAM alcohol monitoring ankle bracelet for 45 days.She was also order to enroll and attend a three month first offender alcohol education program, attend at least ten Alcoholics Anonymous meetings.Her probation will last for about 36 month where she will have a set of laws she must follow but does not have to report to a parole officer.Not that she has enough as a punishment as a first time offender but of course she had to be fine as well at an amount of $1,400.The performer, whose full name is Eve Jihan Jeffers, was not injured during the April accident, in which she drove her c
Pop music veterans The Bats return 2007-09-23 13:48:00 Pop music veterans The Bats return VETERAN music group The Bats will present a lively show at the Vodacom Amphitheatre at The Boardwalk on Sunday. The Bats' brand new two-hour "loudly South African" show promises to take audiences on a taxi ride from the Cape to the Townships, from the 1950s to the present and guarantees laughter and hair-raising moments. Originally formed in 1964, The Bats became South Africa's answer to The Beatles. Some of the members of this legendary group are still well-known in South Africa's entertainment circles. Popular South African comedian and actor Eddie Eckstein is the band's drummer and provides vocals, while guitarist, vocalist, keyboard and bass player Paul Ditchfield, recently acted in the remake of The Flight of the Phoenix. The other two band members are guitarist Pete Clifford and newcomer Derek Gordon. In the early 1970s, the band won a Sarie Award for their single, Who's that Girl. In the 1980s, The Bats release
My Chemical Romance - The Black Parade 2007-09-23 13:41:00 Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine @ allmusic.comAt the heart of My Chemical Romance
lore is the story of lead singer/songwriter/mouthpiece Gerard Way, an animator who decided to abandon illustrations and do "something with his life" in the wake of 9/11. Needless to say, that "important" thing was My Chemical Romance
, which quickly rose to prominence among the emo and neo-punk bands that cluttered the rock landscape of the 2000s thanks in large part to "I'm Not OK (I Promise)," a surging piece of emo pop with a hook as ridiculously catchy as its title was ridiculous. It deservedly became a hit on both sides of the Atlantic in 2005, dragging its accompanying album -- 2004's Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge, the group's second -- along for the ride, turning MCR into stars, at least in modern rock circles, but anybody who didn't follow the fashions of emo and punk closely might have ignored the group's tragic, romant Read more: Black
, Parade
Tool - 10,000 Days 2007-09-23 13:35:00 Review by Rob Theakston @ allmusic.comIn an age where major labels dictate that new releases from bands appear on record store shelves every 18 months or so, rare is the artist given freedom and ability to reflect and stretch out to explore creative evolution and release music as an artist, rather than the prepackaged predictability of an entertainer. Thankfully, Tool has somehow managed to circumvent these rituals, releasing a record every four to five years as they so feel the need. This ability to patiently craft their musical direction has paid off for not only the band, but for listeners, as they've been able to expand their musical vocabulary from album to album with great precision, all the while remaining true to the foundations that built such a loyal, if not cult-like, following. But with this absence comes changes to the popular music landscape, as new bands and sounds (as well as a new generation of hea
Good Night Electric 2007-09-23 13:34:00 Good Night
Electric
Goodnight Electric formed by Henry Foundation right at the end of 2003 in Jakarta. A concept of music concentrated in synthpop genre. Inspired by musician in the early 80’s and 90’s such as Depeche Mode, Yazoo, The cure, Belle and Sebastian and The Lightning Seeds. Goodnight Electric combines elements from electro, pop and new wave using synthesizer and computer as the main tools. At first Goodnight Electric live performance supported by Bondi Goodboy and Oomleo, then evolves as a solid line up of trio dance group. Goodnight Electric released their debut album “Love and Turbo Action” at the end of 2004 under independent label HFMF records with singles “Am I Robot?” and “Rocket Ship Goes By” which claimed appreciation and nods amongst the music heads, especially around the youth of Jakarta. Goodnight Electric performed in more than 100 stages between late 2004 to 2006, whether it’s in a club, live outdoors, college and indie events.T
The Postal Service - Give Up 2007-09-23 13:32:00 Review by Heather Phares @ allmusic.comComing off their work on Dntel's beautiful This Is the Dream of Evan and Chan, Jimmy Tamborello and Death Cab for Cutie's Ben Gibbard team up again for their full-length debut as Postal
Service
, Give Up. Instead of covering that EP's territory again, with this album the duo crafts a poppier, new wave-inflected sound that recalls Tamborello's work with Figurine more than Dntel's lovely subtlety. However, Ben Gibbard's famously bittersweet vocals and sharp, sensitive lyrics imbue Give Up with more emotional heft than you might expect from a synth pop album, especially one by a side project from musicians as busy as Tamborello and Gibbard are. The album exploits the contrast between the cool, clean synths and Gibbard's all-too-human voice to poignant and playful effect, particularly on Give Up's first two tracks. "The District Sleeps Alone" bears Gibbard's trademark songwriting, augmented by glitchy electronics and sl
Mozez 2007-09-23 13:31:00 Review by Rick Anderson @ allmusic.comAlthough this is his debut solo album, Mozez (aka Osmond Wright) has been singing professionally since 1994, when he was half of a successful gospel duo called Spirits. Following a stint as singer for Zero 7, he put out this strikingly unusual album, one that sets out a dreamy, almost gauzy, and deeply personal vision of modern R&B. Opening with a lovely 6/8 number titled "Feel Free," So Still then floats and bobs on a warm and gentle (but not always sweet or musically obvious) tide of downtempo beats, electronic burblings, acoustic strings, live trumpet, and even a vocoder. Mozez's voice falls somewhere between Aaron Neville's ethereal treble and Terence Trent d'Arby's muscular falsetto, and it sounds best on the gorgeous acousto-electro soul of "Somehow Now" and the sweetly catchy "Spinning Top." "Venus Rise" suffers from silly lyrics ("On the plains of Egypt, with the pharaohs/You used to play mind games") and an almost complete lack of
Fiona Apple - Extraordinary Machine 2007-09-23 13:29:00 Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine @ allmusic.comLike Wilco's Yankee Hotel Foxtrot before it, Fiona
Apple
's third album, Extraordinary
Machine
, turned into an Internet legend as fans leaked the unreleased record as labels left it on the shelves. Since Wilco's album notoriously remained unreleased because their label deemed it uncommercial, Apple fans who were patiently waiting a long, long time for new material were convinced that her label, Epic, was withholding a masterpiece because they also thought it was uncommercial. And, based on the version of Extraordinary Machine
that was widely leaked on the internets in early 2005, if Epic indeed harbored suspicions that the album was uncommercial, they were not wrong -- although Apple reunited with her When the Pawn producer, Jon Brion, for Extraordinary Machine, the original sessions for the album found the singer/songwriter and producer both indulging in their worst tendencies, creating deliberately difficult, o Read more: Fiona Apple
John Ottman - Superman Returns 2007-09-23 13:29:00 Review by James Christopher Monger @ allmusic.comDirector Bryan Singer and composer John Ottman's take on the world's most recognizable superhero is one of deep reverence. Like Steven Spielberg and John Williams, the two have found their muse in each other, especially after their success with the second installment of the X-Men series, but what sets them apart from other iconic director/composer pairings is Ottman's co-role as an editor -- he showed his musicality in the editing room on X2 with an exhilarating opening ballet of violence set to Mozart's Requiem. Ottman and Singer are well aware that Williams' original score for Richard Donner's 1978 depiction of the man of steel is as etched into the character's mythology as the "S" on his chest, so they built the new score around it. The new themes are deep and resonant with a Copland-esque tinge of sepia-toned Americana that never descends into unnecessary melodrama -- think Michael Kamen's Band of Brot Read more: Superman
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Limp Bizkit - Results May Vary 2007-09-23 13:28:00 Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine @ allmusic.comIt took a long, long time for Limp Bizkit to get their follow-up to Chocolate Starfish and the Hotdog Flavored Water into the stores. First, guitarist Wes Borland, generally regarded as the band's musical force, up and left the band, and it took a long, long time to find a replacement guitarist. After a national talent search performed at Guitar Center stores, where candidates had to sign contracts that gave up their rights to anything original they played at their audition, Limp Bizkit settled on former Snot guitarist Mike Smith and recorded an album. Then scrapped it. Then they recorded another album. Then scrapped it. They were going through album titles, too -- it was called Bipolar then, charmingly, Panty Sniffer. Finally, all the sessions and the turmoil was whittled down into one very long, very bad album called Results May Vary
Jeny Lewis And The Watson Twins - Rabbit Fur Coat 2007-09-23 13:27:00 Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine @ allmusic.comThe story line on Rabbit
Fur Coat is this: for her first venture outside of celebrated indie sensations Rilo Kiley, singer/songwriter Jenny Lewis
has made a "white soul" album, along the lines of Dusty Springfield or Laura Nyro. Which is why, of course, she brought in Kentucky duo the Watson
Twins
to provide bluegrass harmonies for the entire record. Which is to say that Rabbit Fur Coat doesn't quite live up to its billing -- especially when compared to The Greatest, Cat Power's genuine white-soul album that hit the stores the week after Lewis' solo affair. What Rabbit Fur Coat brings to mind is not Laura Nyro but, perhaps inevitably, Neko Case and the stark, arty Americana intimacy of her breakthrough, Furnace Room Lullaby. Not that Lewis has Case's throaty voice or commanding presence -- she can growl and slide into notes, but at her core she has a small, fragile
arious Artists - Marie Antoniette 2007-09-23 13:25:00 Review by Heather Phares @ allmusic.comThe way the visuals and music clashed in the first round of trailers for Marie
Antoinette, in which the teenage Queen of France and her powdered wig- and silk brocade-wearing courtiers frolicked in the garden and played dice to the strains of New Order's "Ceremony," fell somewhere between being exciting and contrived. The full soundtrack to the movie -- all two discs and 90-odd minutes of it -- keeps this bold contrast, but gives it more nuance. In fact, its mix of new wave, post-punk, dream pop, electronica, and classical pieces really sells Sofia Coppola's vision of Marie Antoinette as an innocent young girl, transformed into her era's version of a hipster fashionista, who gets in way over (and ultimately loses) her head. The size of the soundtrack suggests the decadence of her times, but the way the music is actually used is far from indulgent. Disc one relies on new wave to illustrate the giddy rush of her rise, whil Read more: Artists
Sum 41 - Chuck 2007-09-23 13:24:00 Review by Johnny Loftus @ allmusic.comIn June 2004, Sum 41 was in Congo filming a documentary for charity when they found themselves caught in the midst of the country's ongoing hostilities. But a UN aid worker named Chuck
Pelletier was instrumental in getting the band to safety, and a grateful Sum 41 named their fourth album in his honor. As they say in their liners, "Without him, we'd be dead. Chuck rules!" The experience also seems to have mellowed the group's sarcastic streak. From its aggressive metal and hardcore overtones to lyrics that rail against societal ignorance and a world gone wrong, Chuck is a few steps ahead of the smirking, jocular anthems that populated Sum 41's previous output. This suddenly sober outlook hasn't lessened the rock power, though. "Why is there no reason we all can't change?" Deryck Whibley wonders in "No Reason," but the cut also binds the rapid-fire pace of hardcore to a great chorus hook. Lead single "We're All to Blam
Sean Paul - The Trinity 2007-09-23 13:23:00 Review by Tim Sendra @ allmusic.comSean Paul
took the pop world by storm in 2003 with the release of the dancehall pop smash Dutty Rock, placing songs at the top of the charts, videos in heavy rotation, and his face all over the place. He took his time releasing the follow-up, 2005's Trinity
, and rather than going even further pop, Paul heads toward a harder, more aggressive sound. The songs sound tailored for dancefloors with little concern for pop airplay and little concern for melody or hooks. This approach works for a song or two, but sooner rather than later the record begins to wear on the listener. Don't bother waiting for a song that isn't hyper-sexualized, tough, and semi-raw or a song that has some of the lightness and space of "Bubble," "Gimme the Light," or "I'm Still in Love with You," because you won't find it. Some of this may come from the shift in producers from big names with poppier backgrounds like Sly & Robbie, the Neptunes, and Ste
Peter Tosh - Super Hits 2007-09-23 13:21:00 Review by Jo-Ann Greene @ allmusic.comWhatever were they thinking calling this parsimonious collection Super
Hits, when the set brazenly omits Peter
Tosh's two actual hits -- 1978's "(You Gotta Walk) Don't Look Back" and 1981's "Johnny B. Goode," both of which broke the U.K. Top 50 and the U.S. Top 100? That takes real chutzpah. However, if one were going to come up with a ten-song list beyond that pair of heavy-hitters, this is what most selectors would choose. Of course, real fans might also want to hear the likes of "Magadog," "Ketchy Shuby," "Buk-In-Hamm Palace," "I'm the Toughest," "Reggaemylitis," and "Mama Africa." And why should they be deprived of that pleasure? The whole point of CDs is that they hold more music than vinyl, and the idea that in the 21st century fans are being subjected to the limits left behind in the 20th is just unacceptable. This Scrooge-like compilation, besides its inept title, is so obviously a ripoff that from his grave Tos
Thievery Corporation - Mirror Conspiracy (Mp3 Download) 2007-09-23 13:20:00 Review by John Bush @ allmusic.comLike their debut album, Thievery
Corporation
's second, The Mirror Conspiracy
, is a pleasant album of sublime mid-tempo trip-hop, reminiscent of easy listening groove music, and continually referencing the breezier, atmospheric side of Brazilian, Jamaican, French, and Indian forms. The nocturnal dub-poetry of "Treasures" sets a tone for the bruising basslines and echoey keys throughout the album, and "Lebanese Blonde" is another early highlight, with the graceful vocalese of Pam Bricker framing live sitar by Rob Myers and a Jamaican-style horn section. Brazil represents with a triple-shot of "Air Batucada," "So Com Voce" (with vocals from Bebel Gilberto), and "Samba Tranquille." French chanteuse Lou Lou adds a bit of downtempo continental flair on "Le Monde" and "Shadows of Ourselves," and Thievery Corporation
even samples Ella Fitzgerald on the ambient-jungle closer "Tomorrow." As on their first LP, Garza and Hilton occasionall Read more: Download
The Darkness - One Way Ticket To Hell...And Back 2007-09-23 13:16:00 Review by Heather Phares @ allmusic.comFrom the moment the pan flute fanfare on "One Way Ticket
" kicks off One Way Ticket to Hell...and Back, it's clear that the Darkness
still believes that more is more. If anything, the band believes that even more is even better: with the help of producer Roy Thomas Baker, they make their second album incredibly glossy and expensive-sounding, with layers of sitars, marching drums, bagpipes, and tubular bells on top of their already-powerful guitars, drums, and keyboards (and, of course, Justin Hawkins' formidable falsetto). But while the band's excess succeeded on Permission to Land, it loses some of its potency here: nothing on One Way Ticket to Hell...and Back is as immediate as "I Believe in a Thing Called Love." The band's debut celebrated and inflated the rock clichés of sex, drugs, and partying; this album's best songs are about longterm relationships, getting clean, and balding. The soaring power ballad "Dinner L
Dresden Dolls 2007-09-23 13:15:00 The Dresden
Dolls
could never be accused of being shy and retiring, but on their second full-length, Yes, Virginia..., they sound more confident than ever, igniting their cabaret-rock with more crazed inventiveness and you-are-there immediacy. While there's nothing as instantly captivating as their first album's winsome "Coin-Operated Boy" or the defiant "Girl Anachronism," Yes, Virginia... is a more powerful and consistent set of songs overall, moving from musically and emotionally complex ballads like "Delilah" and the album closer, "Sing," to shouty, forceful numbers such as "Necessary Evil" and "Sex Changes." Sean Slade and Paul Kolderie's production adds to the bigger, more rock-inspired sound of the album, which invigorates Amanda Palmer's character sketches. While the highly theatrical, stylized sound of the Dresden Dolls might seem to be the substance of their music -- and, admittedly, it does draw the listener in right away -- it's the strong songwr
bout 70s Orgasm Club 2007-09-23 13:12:00 ..This profile was edited with Edit Your MySpace Ant (vox/guitar) is a die-hard Jimi Hendrix fan. When he heard Hendrix on his uncle's vinyl when he was 10, it really blew his mind. Hendrix is the reason he plays guitar and sings. Later he discovered that Hendrix's rock n roll its not just regular rock n' roll. There is a lot of black traditional music mixed in there, such as classic soul/funk and blues. That's why Ant decided to step on to a higher, wilder and deeper journey to the roots of Hendrix's rock n roll music. 60s soul/70s funk. He fell in love with soul and funk and that's why he asked Rio (bass) - whos crazy about The Jackson 5, Ben Folds Five and The Temptations - and Echo (drums) a man who loves 70s reggae. And so 70s Orgasm Club is born. A funky, bluesy, soulful, psychedelic Rock n' Roll is on!http://my.yahoo.com
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MUCK 2007-09-23 13:10:00 Begin with these two brothers, Myo and Ducktoi who's responsible in forming in the middle of 1994. The band, first started as a side-project & now becoming a serious band after playing in lot of shows and gigs all over Malaysia since it formation. After 8 years being active in the Malaysian indie music scene with various changes of line-up, Kujoy has join in permanently on guitar. With Feroz on board (after the absent of Aie & Par) & officially filling the bass department. MUCK have evolved from a simple indie rock band to become more experimental with their music. Hence, MUCK have succeed in creating their own sound and style, and at the same time attracting more people becoming their followers due to their new, fresh & interesting sound.For those of you who are unfamiliar and didn't have a chance to listen to MUCK before this, MUCK sounds can be describes as an experimental 80's american indie rock/lo-fi to noise pop. Among the bands
THE UPSTAIRS 2007-09-23 13:07:00 sept, 2007 Jimi Multhazam (vocals)Kubil Idris (guitar)Beni Adhiantoro (drums)Alfi Chaniago (bass & keyboards)Elta Emanuella (keyboards & synths)Dian Maryana (backing vocal)Home-grown new wave rock group The Upstairs, have been doing just that - creating waves and in the process, proving that Indonesias underground music scene is alive and well.The lead singer and driving force behind The Upstairs Jimi Multhazam is a charismatic cat. Hes been captivating audiences with his on-stage theatrics and electric energy, mimicking 70s punk rock legend Iggy Pop as he prances around the stage wearing white sunglasses and extra-tight black & white striped pants sporting a Mick Jagger hairdo.Seeing the band kitted out in their chinos, spangly shirts and, pop art prints and white sneakers, you could hardly miss their retro credentials. Says Jimi, when the group was formed back in October 2001 we were heavily influenced by overseas bands like A Flock of S
Sajama Cut 2007-09-23 13:06:00 sept, 2007 "Sajama Cut is part of the blossoming indie-music scene inhabited by bands such as The Brandals, Sore and The Upstairs. They cut 11 tracks for this impressive debut in January 2005 and the album's release has coincided with the growing popularity of local bands. The band's country sound in the debut album The Osaka Journals has little connection with the less-than-interesting mainstream music-scene in the country.If only more local bands honed their songwriting craft to conceive a polished, radio-friendly songs, Peterpan and Dewa for example -- Sajama Cut's music has a wonderfully loose charm, out-of-tune vocals and undecipherable image-rich lyrics, mostly in English.The band's signature is the warm sound of jangling guitar, reminiscent of Peter Buck's sound in R.E.M's early days. Another strong point is the eerie vocals of singer Marcel Thee, which are at times muffled deep in the mix. Aside from R.E.M, the band admitted that indie p
The Super Insurgent Group of Intemperance Talent(The SIGIT) 2007-09-23 13:00:00 sept, 2007 The Super
Insurgent Group
of Intemperance Talent
(The SIGIT)1994-2002Period of formation. In this period, they met each other, played and hung up toghether, fought each other, rehearsed a lot, and wrote their song.2002-2004In 2004, The S.I.G.I.T. signed to Spills Records and released their self titled debut mini album (EP) and performed many bar gigs and venue. Their first single, Soul Sister soon became a local radio hits in Bandung and Jakarta, made reputated on MTV Trax Magazine as "The Hottest Rock N Roll Band".By contributing on movie soundtrack for Catatan Akhir Sekolah (CAS), their fanbase grow rapidly. Did I Ask Your Opinion, which appeared as OST on former movie, finally became their first single to be broadcasted on MTV-I.After leaving Spills Records, they begun to spread their stage performance to bigger venue and region...2005-...Their name appeared on NME's Stereo (30 July)See and read the scanned page Here"The S.I.G.I.T. - Bla
bout ROCKET ROCKERS 2007-09-23 12:58:00 It was all started in 1998. Our strongest line up are: Al Kautsar (vocal), Aska Pratama (guitar/vocal), Bisma Aria Nugraha (bass), Rizky Fadli (guitar), Khrisna a.k.a Ozom (Drums). First was our all time favorites; the 80s new wave acts; The Cure, Alphaville, OMD, Nena, Culture Club, Cyndi Lauper, Duran-Duran, The Police, Joy Division etc. Second were what in our CD player recently; Pulley, Lagwagon, Weezer, Pearl Jam, NOFX, Pennywise, Reggie & The Full Effects, etc. We have 8 compilations and 2 full albums, now were preparing for our 3rd album. Our first album Soundtrack For Your Life was putting out by Off The Records (an independent label from our hometownBandung) which has been sold more than 20.000 copies, and our 2nd album (Ras Bebas) now in major debut with Sony/BMG Indonesia and recently it was sold about 45.000 copies.Weve been on skatepark tour all year with VOLCOM Indonesia, and play high school/college shows as many as possible. Weve also opened Skin Of Tears show (punk
Rascal Flatts - Still Feels Goo 2007-09-24 07:47:00 Rascal Flatts - Still Feels
Good [Retail]Rascal Flatts have been around since 2000 when they dropped thier self-titeld debut album. Well now seven years later 4 albums later there one of the biggest country acts around. Now thier on thier fifth studio album which happends to be the first album I listend to in it's entirety. I'm not really a country music fan but I'm growing to really enjoy it. The album is filled with some great songs ballads & uptempos. I'm sure thier fans will not be disappointed with this one. So everyone be sure to check it out now and BUY YOUR COPY SEPTEMBER 25TH!!1. Take Me There2. Here3. Bob That Head4. Help Me Remember5. Still Feels Good6. Winner At A Losing Game7. No Reins8. Every Day9. Secret Smile10. Better Now11. She Goes All The Way12. How Strong Are You Now13. It's Not Supposed To Go Like Thathttp://my.yahoo.com
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Jamelia bans Pussycat Dolls music in her house 2007-10-28 10:44:00 A careful and celebrity mother, the singer Jamelia
has banned the Pussycat
Dolls
music from being played in her house. All good parents around the world know why. Jamelia believes the raunchy band are a bad influence on her daughters, the six-year-old Teja and two-year-old Tiani. Although Jamelia admits she is a huge fan of the group she is afraid that her daughters might be influenced by their provocative lyrics and image. In other Celebrity news, Jamelia was extremely happy to announce her engagement to British soccer star Darren Byfield. My confession is that I’m a huge, huge, huge Pussycat Dolls
fan. But the Pussycat Dolls are actually banned in my house, because I don’t want my daughters to be like them. But I absolutely love them, and think they are great. I just don’t want my daughters singing their songs or writhing around like burlesque dancers!- Jamelia said -http://my.yahoo.com
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Christina Aguilera and Aretha Franklin working on a duet 2007-10-28 10:43:00 According to press, pop Celebrity Christina
Aguilera
and soul legend Aretha Franklin
are set to record a duet. It seems DJ Premier, who worked on Aguilera’s Back To Basics album, confirmed the collaboration but also the two stars have been seen together at Aretha Franklin’s most recent studio work. DJ Premier will also be a small part of this collaboration as Christina got back at him due this upcoming duet with Aretha Franklin which is to be featured on Aretha’s winter release album, “Jewels in the Crown: All Star Duets with the Queen”, In other Celebrity news, Christina Aguilera
is expecting a baby with her husband Jordan Bratman and her latest passion is baby shopping. Also the singer is said to be working
on a baby shower registry. http://my.yahoo.com
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