Whoever is doing Sesame Street’s social media and videos are doing it better than any other company right now. What do you think Cookie Monster will find in his lunchbox? Watch and find out.
Shania Twain Sets Out On 1st North American Tour In Over A Decade
One of the world’s best-selling female artist in history, Shania Twain, has announced her first North American tour in more than 11 years entitled ROCK THIS COUNTRY. The 48 date run comes hot on the heels of her hit two-year residency in Las Vegas at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace.
Shania’s tour kicks off in North America on June 5 in Seattle, WA where she will perform her extensive catalog of iconic hits in a brand new production for fans coast to coast in major US cities such as New York, Washington DC, Los Angeles, and Chicago, among others. Additionally, the tour will hit Canadian cities including Toronto, Vancouver, Edmonton, and Montreal, presented by AEG Live. American Express® Card Members can purchase tickets through Front Of The Line for the Canadian shows only before the general public beginning Tuesday, March 10th at 10am through Thursday, March 12 at 10pm local time, with the public on-sale for most North American shows beginning Friday, March 13 at 10:00 am local on axs.com. Exceptions noted below. ShaniaTwain.com presale begins Tuesday, March 10 at 10am local time through Thursday, March 12 at 10pm local time.
A limited number of exclusive VIP Packages also will be available. Theses offers can include premium reserved tickets, access to Shania Twain’s preshow VIP sound check, exclusive merchandise and much more. A $1.00 donation from each ticket purchased will go to the Shania Kids Can Foundation. Opening acts include Canadian musician and actor Wes Mack from June 5 – June 28, and Grammy Award nominated singer/songwriter Gavin DeGraw from June 30 – August 23.
“This is a celebration tour. It’s party time! The ROCK THIS COUNTRY tour will have a different spirit than my past tours,” said Twain. “It’s a Shania they’ve never seen before. A lot of years have gone by and I’ve got a lot more to share.”
Beloved by millions worldwide, Shania has multi-platinum album sales in 32 countries with over 75 million albums sold, and 17 top 10 singles. Three of Shania’s albums (The Woman In Me, Come On Over, Up! ) reached Diamond certification, making her the only artist to have three consecutive albums sell more than 10 million copies in the US.
Rising to fame with her debut album Shania Twain (1993), Shania became a worldwide phenomenon with the release of Come On Over (1997), which became the best-selling country album of all time, and the best-selling album released by a female artist. Most recently, Shania performed 105 shows during her two-year Las Vegas residency, Shania: Still The One, beginning on December 1, 2012 at The Colosseum at Ceasars Palace and wrapping in December of 2014. The show garnered rave reviews throughout its tenure.
Shania Twain 2015 Summer Tour
Opening acts include Wes Mack from June 5 – June 28, and Gavin DeGraw from June 30 – August 23
Jun 5 | Seattle, WA | KeyArena at Seattle Center |
Jun 7 | Vancouver, BC | Pepsi Live! At Rogers Arena |
Jun 9 | Vancouver, BC | Pepsi Live! At Rogers Arena |
Jun 11 | Edmonton, AB | Rexall Place |
Jun 12 | Edmonton, AB | Rexall Place |
Jun 14 | Saskatoon, SK | SaskTel Centre |
Jun 15 | Winnipeg, MB | MTS Centre |
Jun 19 | London, ON | Budweiser Gardens |
Jun 20 | London, ON | Budweiser Gardens |
Jun 22 | Hamilton, ON | FirstOntario Centre |
Jun 24 | Toronto, ON | Air Canada Centre |
Jun 25 | Toronto, ON | Air Canada Centre |
Jun 27 | Ottawa, ON | Wesley Clover Parks **** |
Jun 28 | Montreal, QC | Bell Centre * |
Jun 30 | New York, NY | Madison Square Garden |
Jul 1 | Long Island, NY | Nassau Coliseum |
Jul 3 | Uncasville, CT | Mohegan Sun Arena ** |
Jul 7 | Newark, NJ | Prudential Center |
Jul 8 | Boston, MA | TD Garden |
Jul 10 | Pittsburgh, PA | CONSOL Energy Center |
Jul 11 | Grand Rapids, MI | Van Andel Arena |
Jul 13 | Indianapolis, IN | Bankers Life Fieldhouse ** |
Jul 15 | Jacksonville, FL | Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena |
Jul 16 | Miami, FL | AmericanAirlines Arena |
Jul 18 | Greenville, SC | Bon Secours Wellness Arena |
Jul 19 | Charlotte, NC | Time Warner Cable Arena |
Jul 21 | Washington, DC | Verizon Center |
Jul 22 | Philadelphia, PA | Wells Fargo Center |
Jul 25 | Auburn Hills, MI | Palace of Auburn Hills |
Jul 26 | Moline, IL | iWireless Center |
Jul 28 | Minneapolis, MN | Target Center |
Jul 29 | Rosemont, IL | Allstate Arena |
Jul 31 | Nashville, TN | Bridgestone Arena |
Aug 1 | Atlanta, GA | Philips Arena |
Aug 3 | Louisville, KY | KFC Yum! Center |
Aug 4 | St. Louis, MO | Scottrade Center |
Aug 6 | Des Moines, IA | Wells Fargo Arena |
Aug 7 | Kansas City, MO | Sprint Center |
Aug 9 | Austin, TX | Frank Erwin Center |
Aug 10 | Dallas, TX | American Airlines Center |
Aug 12 | Oklahoma City, OK | Chesapeake Energy Arena |
Aug 14 | Denver, CO | Pepsi Center *** |
Aug 15 | Salt Lake City, UT | EnergySolutions Arena |
Aug 17 | San Jose, CA | SAP Center at San Jose |
Aug 19 | Anaheim, CA | Honda Center |
Aug 20 | Los Angeles, CA | STAPLES Center |
Aug 22 | San Diego, CA | Valley View Casino Center |
Aug 23 | Fresno, CA | Save Mart Center |
* On sale Saturday March 21
** On sale Friday March 20
*** On sale Friday March 27
**** Festival date with The Doobie Brothers also performing
The Tea Party: “We had to do a lot of soul-searching, but now the bond between the three of us is stronger.”
The arrival of the venerable Canadian exotic rock trio’s highly anticipated new studio album, The Ocean At The End, marks the official end of the 10-year vacuum of fresh The Tea Party original material. “The Black Sea,” a stellar track from the 11-song-deep effort and the electrifying tandem of Jeff Martin (vocals, guitars, producer, songwriter); Stuart Chatwood (bass, keyboards) and Jeff Burrows (drums, percussion), completes the band’s cycle of resurrection, some of the first new music we’ve heard from them since 2004’s Seven Circles and the first project since the double-disc Live From Australia: The Reformation Tour 2012.
“The three of us probably never thought we’d be sitting here right now,” admits Martin, whose booming baritone, emotionally candid and mystical songwriting and string-bending guitar prowess has served as the creative catalyst for eight platinum and gold studio albums, one EP, one greatest hits collection, a live disc and over 2 million in global album sales.
“It’s a testament to the strength of the music that we’ve created in the past and a testament to the friendship that exists between the three of us. We had to do a lot of soul-searching, but now the bond between the three of us is stronger.”
It’s what Jeff Burrows calls, simply, “a rebirth.”
Eric: This is a band I could safely say would have never come back again. What happened?
Jeff Martin: It’s deep, it’s complicated but if you want to distill it down to a simple answer, we just missed each other too much.
Eric: I love that answer. If you still want to do it, then you should have every reason to do it.
Jeff: I can speak for myself, I kind of loss the passion for it towards the end. The Tea Party, in the best of our days, we always had this firewall. The firewall was our management Steve Hoffman. Keeping the industry and the record company away from us so we could just be who we needed to be. To make the record, once it’s done, here you go. No other cooks in the kitchen. Too many got in towards the end. Steve got sick and had to fight for his life and he couldn’t fight for us anymore. There was just too much pressure. It wasn’t the band anymore. So I had to go away, just figure myself out and find that passion for making music again. I tried many things, which I’m proud of, but as time went on one thing became clearer and clearer to me. That nothing could compare to being with my two best friends again and making that magic. So when the phone call came, back in 2010 I was game.
Eric: Who called?
Jeff: It was management that called. Our agent had been telling us we’d been getting offers every year for the band to reform.
Eric: How did that make you feel? Did you care at that point in the beginning when those calls were coming through?
Jeff: The serendipity of that phone call was I was ready to care again. Here we are. Obviously when we got back together there were some hurdles that we needed to pass. The music was always there, even the first rehearsal when we got back together. It was pure magic. The Tea Party is much more than that, it’s a trust. A friendship that goes back longer than most. So we had to get that back again, and once we did and we did it in spades. It’s stronger than ever. That’s when the new music started to come.
Eric: When you look back at when you were each doing your own projects, did you are about what the audience had to say about you doing a solo album, and not work through any problems with the band? Were there signpoints in your life that you felt you had to continue your own road?
Jeff: I’m pretty certain there would have been trepidation. How do you really – just as an individual, how do you stand up to that? The legacy of what the band is and will be. I agree with you, it’s more or less, for my personal journey anyway, it was just signposts as you said and moments – different collectives that came together, different people but it was moving me back to the band again. Moving me back to having that passion again, for the band. There’s just a lot i had to go through personally to get back there so that I could come back to Jeff and Stewart and be the captain of the ship again.
Eric: Did everyone fall easily back into their respective roles for the band?
Stuart Chapman: I think the roles evolved. We were happy – Jeff mentioned having to prove himself to us, we were happy – I don’t want to say give him another shot, but we were happy for him to regain control of the band with regard to production in the studio. It worked out great. Jeff had mentioned before, how Jeff and myself had recorded so many things in the interim that we brought a lot more to the table and took a lot of pressure off him. To produce, sing, play guitar, overdub to do all these things he was taking on, it’s a lot of pressure.
Eric: How many of the new songs were created after the band got together? Were there any you had on the solo back burner?
Jeff: Only two songs really come to mind. “Submission” and “The Water’s On Fire.” I had those as demos. I made those as demos when I knew the band was getting back together. The rest of the record was just the three of us, just like the old days in Windsor. Writing in a room, jamming being a great hard rock band. No bells, no whistles, no toys. Just plug the guitar in, let’s rock.
Eric: Sadly missed since you’ve been gone, but now you’re back. How cool is it that you get to be in a band now, again with your friends at your age?
Jeff: What do you mean, my age? [laughs]
Eric: 29. The same age as I am.
Jeff: Riiiiight.
An Astronaut’s Guide to Optimism Starring Canadian Astronaut Chris Hadfield
Our world is not as bad a place as we often feel it to be. It is easy to look to the future and lament how far there is left to go, but sometimes it is helpful to stop and reflect on just how far we’ve come.
Jim Henson’s Muppets perform on The Ed Sullivan Show for the first time in 1966
The popularity of garage rock starts here. Garage rock and Muppet history was made on September 18, 1966 as this date marked the first television appearance on CBS-TV’s The Ed Sullivan Show of Jim Henson’s Muppets. For this first appearance, Henson chose a 1966 garage rock song called “Rock It To Me” by a teen band called The Bruthers.
http://youtu.be/nH9k6nDZLcM
The Greatest Story About A Musician I’ve Ever Heard, As Told By Brian Eno
The April 25, 2011 issue of the New Yorker contained a fascinating article about David Eagleman, the celebrated neuroscientist and director of the Laboratory for Perception and Action at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. A number of professional drummers, invited by Brian Eno and from some of the biggest bands in the world, allowed Eagleman to observe them. They were outfitted with EEG units on their heads in special workstations for the data collection. The tests were conducted on a laptop. A software program asked the drummers to do four things: Keep a steady beat; compare the length of two tones; synchronize a beat to an image and compare different rhythms to one another.
“I was working with Larry Mullen, Jr., on one of the U2 albums,” Eno told me. “ ‘All That You Don’t Leave Behind,’ or whatever it’s called.” Mullen was playing drums over a recording of the band and a click track—a computer-generated beat that was meant to keep all the overdubbed parts in synch. In this case, however, Mullen thought that the click track was slightly off: it was a fraction of a beat behind the rest of the band. “I said, ‘No, that can’t be so, Larry,’ ” Eno recalled. “ ‘We’ve all worked to that track, so it must be right.’ But he said, ‘Sorry, I just can’t play to it.’ ”
Eno eventually adjusted the click to Mullen’s satisfaction, but he was just humoring him. It was only later, after the drummer had left, that Eno checked the original track again and realized that Mullen was right: the click was off by six milliseconds. “The thing is,” Eno told me, “when we were adjusting it I once had it two milliseconds to the wrong side of the beat, and he said, ‘No, you’ve got to come back a bit.’ Which I think is absolutely staggering.”
Via Dangerous Minds
Early Videos Of John Belushi at Second City in 1972
After starting his own comedy troupe, The West Compass Trio, with Tino Insana and Steve Beshekas, in 1971 John Belushi was asked to join the cast of The Second City. At Second City, he met and began working with Harold Ramis.
In the below sketch “Funeral,” John Belushi plays the humiliated son of a father who died a less-than-respectable death alongside ensemble performers Joe Flaherty, Harold Ramis, Jim Fisher, Judy Morgan, and Eugenie Ross-Leming as his grieving friends and family.
http://youtu.be/3vMrhu5-3Xo
Here’s a Second City clip featuring Belushi showing off his Truman Capote impersonation that he would later bring to his run on SNL.
http://youtu.be/kGC7v0PNCLI
Vince Vaughn and Co-stars Pose for Stock Photos You Can Use for Free
I don’t really know much about the new Vince Vaughn movie Unfinished Business, which comes out Friday, except the promtoional blub reads “What began as a routine business trip goes off the rails in every imaginable—and unimaginable—way, including unplanned stops at a massive sex fetish event and a global economic summit.” Sounds good so far, right? But if it’s anything like this pre-buzz campaign, it’s a winner. Twentieth Century Fox has teamed up with iStock by Getty Images to create a set of stock photos featuring Vaughn along with co-stars Tom Wilkinson, Dave Franco and others.
Via AdWeek
On International Ear Care Day, Watch A Girl Hear Music For The First Time
On International Ear Care Day, watch this video to know how important your hearing is. After activating her cochlear implant, this girl is able not only to hear music properly for the first time, but to make it.