March 14, 2006

Courtney Love Plans To Sell Nirvana Stake

According to NME.com Courtney Love has said she is preparing to sell a share of her rights to the Nirvana back catalogue.

Love has been in London over the last week. While in the UK she’s had meetings about a new record deal, making a TV documentary, taking a theatre role in the West End, and been to various gigs.

“I have decided that I need some co-management and a strategic partner [to help me] as it’s such a huge responsibility,” Love told NME.COM of her Nirvana plans. “This is the right thing to do for my family…whoever I do this deal with, I really have to like.”

Love is also quoted in the Sunday Mirror (March 12) as saying that she’s thinking about selling “25 per cent of the catalogue for quite a lot of money.”

Love was married to Nirvana singer Kurt Cobain prior to his suicide in 1994.

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Black Sabbath, Blondie Enter Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

Between an ugly feud among Blondie members spilling over onstage and a rancorous letter from the absent Sex Pistols, the latest Rock and Roll Hall of Fame class did not enter quietly on Monday.

The animosity even made Ozzy Osbourne, inducted with Black Sabbath, seem sedate.

As midnight arrived under the chandeliers of the Waldorf-Astoria’s grand ballroom, Lynyrd Skynyrd was performing the song that launched countless cigarette lighters, “Free Bird,” to celebrate their own induction. Famed jazz trumpeter Miles Davis completed the honorees.

When Blondie, the most commercially successful band to emerge from a fertile New York rock scene that also produced Talking Heads and the Ramones, reformed after 15 years, they didn’t include former members Frank Infante and Nigel Harrison. They sued unsuccessfully to join.

Infante, Harrison and Gary Valentine, another former member left behind in a business dispute, were barely acknowledged by former chums Deborah Harry, Chris Stein and Clem Burke as they received their awards.

Infante begged to perform with the band.

“Debbie, are we allowed?” he pleaded before Blondie performed their hits “Heart of Glass,” “Rapture” and “Call Me.”

“Can’t you see my band is up there?” Harry replied. The three rejected members walked offstage, but not before Infante groaned into the microphone.

Punk rockers the Sex Pistols had turned down the honor in a profane letter that compared the hall to “urine in wine.” Rolling Stone magazine founder Jann Wenner read the letter, and invited the band to pick up their trophies at the rock hall in Cleveland.

“If they want to smash them into bits, they can do that, too,” Wenner said.

Behind the unnerving stare of singer Johnny Rotten and the lacerating lyrics of “God Save the Queen” and “Pretty Vacant,” the Sex Pistols appeared the most shocking of the first punk-rock generation in the mid-1970s. The Pistols imploded after one album, with Rotten saying, “ever get the feeling you’ve been cheated?” before walking offstage after their last show for decades.

Osbourne may be better known now as an addled reality TV star, but his musical legacy with Black Sabbath got its due with the band’s induction.

Osbourne has badmouthed the hall of fame for waiting a decade to induct Sabbath, a cause taken up by Metallica member Lars Ulrich in his induction. Metallica guitarist James Hetfield and Ulrich both said their band would not exist without the example of Black Sabbath.

“If there was no Black Sabbath, I could still possibly be a morning newspaper delivery boy,” Ulrich said. “No fun.”

Osbourne, Geezer Butler, Tony Iommi and Bill Ward did not perform, but Metallica rattled the walls with versions of “Iron Man” and “Hole in the Sky.”

To read more visit yahoo.com.

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Lucero Re-issuing ‘The Attic Tapes’ On CD And Vinyl

Lucero is set to release a re-issue of The Attic Tapes on CD and vinyl April 11th on the band’s Liberty & Lament label, thru East West. It’s a re-release of their first EP which was originally co-released by Soul Is Cheap and Lucero guitarist Brian Venable’s own label.

Alternative Press once named The Attic Tapes “One of the top 5 home recordings EVER.” The recordings capture the sound of the band at its inception better than anything else currently in print. The re-issue includes 5 bonus tracks, including the original 7″ recording of “My Best Girl” and its b-side, a cover of Jawbreaker’s “Kiss The Bottle”. The latter has become a Lucero live staple. The limited edition LP version will feature a collectable re-pressing of the band’s first “My Best Girl/Kiss The Bottle” 7″ inserted inside the vinyl album.

To celebrate this reissue, as well as to road test new material, Lucero hits the road in March for SXSW and then 3 weeks of touring in April with Langhorne Slim supporting. The band are set to enter the studio in May with producer David Lowery at Sound of Music studios in Richmond VA to record the follow up to 2005’s Nobody’s Darlings.

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Matisyahu Breaches Contract With Non-Profit Label JDub Records

Just a week after the new album, Youth was released, The New York Times reported today that Matisyahu has breached his contract with JDub Records (with a term of three years remaining), and dropped the non-profit independent label which gave the artist his start and supported his remarkable rise to stardom.

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As Matisyahu’s love for hip-hop and his dedication to Orthodox Judaism grew, he hit the clubs in a black suit, hat and full beard, and with JDub behind him made one of the most unlikely rises in pop music history. He is surely the only Hasidic reggae singer to sell out 2,000-to-3,000-seat concert halls regularly around the country, and last week he released “Youth” (JDub/Or/Epic), his major label debut, which is widely expected to make it high in the Top 10 when the charts are compiled later this week.

But a few days before “Youth” was released, Mr. Bisman and his partner, Jacob Harris, received an unexpected phone call from their prize talent, telling them their management services were no longer required. “He was in Kansas,” Mr. Bisman said. “He said, ‘I don’t know if you guys are old enough or have enough experience.’ ”

For Mr. Bisman, 25, and Mr. Harris, 26, it was a shock from an old friend and a potential blow to their business. They had shepherded Matisyahu through his early career, setting up gigs and handing out fliers and the like

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