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Posts Tagged ‘Rich’

James Cameron tops Hollywood rich list

James CameronAcclaimed filmmaker James Cameron has reportedly topped a list of Hollywood’s top earners of 2010 after taking home a staggering $257 million last year. The “Avatar” director earned the estimated figure for writing, producing and directing the 3-D blockbuster, reports contactmusic.com. Actor Johnny Depp followed with earnings of $100 million. Steven Spielberg is third with [...]

The coal boom: Burning ambitions

What is good news for miners is bad news for the environment

IN RICH countries, where people worry about air quality and debate ways of pricing carbon emissions, coal is deeply unfashionable. Elsewhere demand for the dirty rocks has never been stronger. The International Energy Agency (IEA) reckons world consumption will increase by a fifth over the next 25 years, assuming governments stick to their current climate-change policies. A new age of coal is upon us.

The IEA estimates that China, which generates more than 70% of its electricity with coal, will build 600 gigawatts (GW) of coal-fired power capacity in the next quarter-century—as much as is currently generated with coal in America, Japan and the European Union put together. Nomura, a Japanese bank, thinks that may be an underestimate. It reckons China will add some 500GW of coal-fired power by as early as 2015, and will more than double its current generating capacity by 2020. It expects Indian coal-fired power generation to grow too—though more slowly. …

15 Fortunes Lost to Drugs

Rich people often turn to drugs to get their thrills. Some can’t restrain themselves and literally blow millions … throwing their fortunes away. Check out the list here: 15 Fortunes Lost to Drugs.

Brothers Past Release Third Volume of Digital Box Set

LIVE IN WINSTON SALEM, NC ON MARCH. 20, 2003


Everything Must Go Volume 3

Brothers Past have released
the third installment in their tenth anniversary digital box set, entitled Everything Must Go. This
release dates back to March. 20, 2003, from a live performance at Rubber Soul in Winston Salem,
NC.

Says the band, “Some of us were into it because of the Beatles reference. It
was a small turnout that night, but one of the people in attendance was Rich Steele, who happens to do
sound for
the band these days. Rich made a multitrack recording of the show and that’s what’s being released. The show is
notable for a couple of reasons, including the legendary “dub” Crutch, which Clay Parnell has referred to as
the first
time the band played something approaching authentic dub.”

The album is available for free stream or purchase at http://downlow.brotherspast.com/.

Brothers Past
Tour Dates

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Brothers Past News
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Brothers Past
Concert
Reviews


Rich Arabs, Israelis bought Serbs’ organs

Serbian War Crimes Prosecution’s information shows that organs removed from civilians kidnapped in Kosovo were sent to rich countries, daily Politika reports.

According to the daily, the organs were delivered to Germany, Scandinavia, the U.S., Israel, Great Britain and other rich countries.

Sumitomo Trust unit buys DBS asset to tap Asia’s rich: Update

Sumitomo Trust & Banking Co.’s Nikko Asset Management Co. unit agreed to buy DBS Asset Management from DBS Group Holdings for $137 million to tap business from the expanding ranks of wealthy Asians.

Under the accord, DBS will also take a 7.25% stake in Nikko Asset and the combined firm’s managed assets will total more than $150 billion, the companies said in a joint statement filed to the Singapore stock exchange today.

Read more…

Sumitomo Trust unit buys DBS Asset to tap Asia’s rich: Update

Sumitomo Trust & Banking Co.’s Nikko Asset Management Co. unit agreed to buy DBS Asset Management from DBS Group Holdings for $137 million to tap business from the expanding ranks of wealthy Asians.

Under the accord, DBS Asset will also take a 7.25% stake in Nikko Asset and the combined firm’s managed assets will total more than US$150 billion ($195.5 billion), the companies said in a joint statement filed to the Singapore stock exchange today.

Read more…

Minister denies new “rich tax” is in works

Finance Minister Diana Dragutinović has denied that her department is drafting new legislation aimed at taxing the rich. She stated in Belgrade on Thursday that the ministry was merely preparing changes to existing laws regulating this area.

Ministry prepares new “taxes for rich”

Serbia is drafting new legislation that would tax extremely wealthy citizens, especially those who list offshore islands as their places of residence.
Economists do not believe these announcements would help fill the state budget, but concede the changes could lead to a “more just” tax system.

“Rich should give away some of their wealth”

Boris Tadić says he believes the richest people in Serbia should think about a way in which they would give part of their wealth away to the state and citizens. “If that applies to the United States and European Union, it applies also to Serbia,” the Serbian president said in his response to the statement by businessman Milan Beko.

Conspirator Fall/Winter Run

ALL SHOWS FEATURING CHRIS MICHETTI;
DEITCH, AUCOIN, & MORE TO
GUEST ON SELECT DATES


Conspirator

Conspirator have lined up a
few tour dates, starting November 20 in West Chester, PA before heading over to Raleigh, Athens, Richmond, Boston,
Milford, and Brooklyn. All information is available below.

TOUR DATES

11/20 – West Chester, PA – The Note – AAA

12/16 – Raleigh, NC – Lincoln Theatre – AD
12/17 – Athens, GA – New Earth Music Hall – AD
12/18 – Rich., VA – Hat Factory – AD
1/6 – Boston, MA – Royale – KJS
1/7 – Milford, CT – Daniel Street – LS
1/8 – Brooklyn Bowl – LS


ALL SHOWS FEAT. Chris Michetti
AAA = Allen Aucoin of The Disco Biscuits
AD = Adam Deitch
KJS = KJ SAWKA

LS = William Lane Shaw

Conspirator
Tour Dates

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Conspirator News
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Conspirator
Concert
Reviews


The Black Crowes: Welcome To The Good Times

By: Dennis Cook

The Black Crowes

The Black Crowes have never been a band overly obsessed with their past, resistant to endlessly sifting through the rubble to make sense of what’s been or refute claims about the band. For this long-lived bunch, the road ahead, the next curve, the next sunrise and song have always been the marks on the horizon that kept them moving. However, as they hit their 20th anniversary in 2010, the Crowes are explicitly examining what it means to be this band and no other.

Croweology (released August 3 on the band’s own Silver Arrow Records) culls 20 cuts from their voluminous catalog and gives them often radical acoustic reworkings. It’s a joyful reminder of what a rich songbook they’ve composed and a showcase for the chops and ingenuity of the lineup that’s gelled over the past three years – Chris Robinsion (vocals, guitar, songwriting), Rich Robinson (guitar, vocals, songwriting), Steve Gorman (drums, percussion), Sven Pipien (bass, vocals), Luther Dickinson (guitar) and Adam MacDougall (keys, vocals). This fall they’ve embarked on a lengthy, arduous live schedule, cheekily dubbed the “Say Goodnight To The Bad Guys Tour,” where they’re diggin’ into anything & everything in their repertoire and playing an acoustic set followed by an electric set most nights. After the tour culminates in a six-night run at The Fillmore in San Francisco in December, The Black Crowes are going on an indefinite hiatus.

So, how’s it feel knowing this is last haul for a spell?

“I feel great about it, but I’m probably the most adapted to The Great Unknown [laughs]. The abyss doesn’t scare me,” says Chris Robinson. “If anything, it adds to a focus and dynamics for the shows. I don’t think the band is going to go away forever or break up or anything, but there’s not going to be any new Black Crowes music out there for a time and we don’t have any plans to get back together. So, I think it’s just about enjoying this tour and having our moment of accomplishment for being just warped enough to stick around for 20 years and get into this music and celebrate it. Face it, it’s not about anything else but that.”

“[Greater perspective on our history] would require some sort of group Gestalt therapy [laughs]. We can go to Esalen and get into a hot tub and figure it out,” quips Chris. “Maybe it’s different for everyone else, but I’m having fun. If it was tedious I don’t think we’d have bitten off such a big piece [this fall]. No matter what our internal problems may look like or seem, we want to play music and we want to have the best shows we can. Within that, everyone is on the same page. Our musical brotherhood is pretty tight, and I know you don’t just walk away from this group, these songs or this mythology now. But, taking a vacation from it is just pragmatism at its finest.”

It’s heartening to find the band in such a positive place, which clearly hasn’t always been the case with the Crowes. This break emerges in striking contrast to the last time the group went on hiatus in 2002, which occurred under heavy emotional & creative stress. This time, the pause after the December shows at The Fillmore in San Francisco seems natural and necessary for the Crowes’ long term potential.

Rich Robinson by Josh Miller

“I think we’ve had a pretty interesting career. To do the things we’ve done and gone the places we’ve gone has really been a cool thing. I’ve really been very interested in looking at that. It hasn’t been just a flat fuckin’ line,” offers Rich Robinson. “We’ve made some tough decisions and stuck with it and it’s been pretty cool overall.”

Based on the evidence of Warpaint, Before The FrostÂ…Until The Freeze, Croweology and a slew of officially released live material, the previous three year hiatus was nothing but ultimately positive for the band in creative terms. While it took a few years to shake things down to present circumstances, it’s clear to serious longtime fans that the Crowes have never been happier or more consistent in their music making than this current chapter.

“The last few years, especially since Adam and Luther joined, have been SO progressive and SO fulfilling in so many ways. The last three records, to me, are as strong as anything we recorded at any time,” says Chris. “Adam and Luther come into the situation without any weird ego or resentments. It’s all out in the open and it’s about this musical conversation instead of this other bullshit. In those terms, it’s been the best. These last three albums were the best studio sessions we’ve ever had.”

“I think we’re ourselves for the first time ever in the past three years,” observes Steve Gorman. “Everyone was finally ready to say, ‘Fuck it,’ and embrace who we are and what we are. Everyone’s been there at different levels at times but we’ve never all been there at the same time before. This is the most cohesive this band has ever been, onstage and off. It’s a time in the band’s arc where things are more in sync than I would have thought possible even five years ago. This is as good as it’s ever been. I’m such a sports, team-minded person and there’s nothing better than playing together with one mind. That’s how you get something done. You don’t have to always see eye-to-eye, you just have to be able to look out in the same direction and say, ‘Let’s go there.’”

Steve Gorman by Josh Miller

“Personally, I play better with this band [today] than I’ve ever played because I’m able to. I couldn’t listen and play and predict and feel in the moment in 1997 the way that I can now. It’s night and day. I couldn’t give that band half of what I’m able to now, just as a musician,” says Gorman. “There’s a lot that goes into that. It’s not just Luther’s better than Marc or anything like that, it’s that everybody onstage is dialed in with everybody else onstage in a way we never were before.”

Stripped of the majority of its hindering baggage these days, the Crowes’ focus remains resolutely on the music they make together, with the songs and their care being the central hub. Independence from record labels, industry suits and the like has done nothing but firm up their always-independent streak, with the result being one of the richest, most extended stretches of growth in the group’s history.

“I feel everyone has reached a place where we just kind of accept each other. That’s really what it is,” says Rich. “It’s been tumultuous [since we returned from the hiatus] but I think it’s been cool. We’ve gotten to focus on who we are. After 20 years you have to ask, ‘Who are we?’ Are we jam band? A classic rock ‘n’ roll band?’ No, we’re really just The Black Crowes. It’s really hard to be individual in rock, and a lot of the time we didn’t make the easiest decisions for our success. But we are the way are because of that. Although we had huge success when we were young, we’ve always had an independent spirit that really came more from an alternative headspace than anything.”

Today, The Black Crowes give off a distinct sense of pleasure in simply making music that permeates every note, as obvious in the studio as it is in the flesh.

“I couldn’t agree more,” says Chris. “Why force your hand? A snake can’t crawl on glass. You know what I mean?”

Continue reading for thoughts on the current tour …

Bad Guys On The Trail

Chris & Rich Robinson by Josh Miller

One clear sign that the Crowes aren’t content to rest on their laurels after two decades is the challenging course they’ve set for this final tour before the hiatus. With most headlining shows clocking in around three hours, they are actively challenging themselves to push into every aspect of their musicianship and material.

“Everybody in a band has their list of what they’d like to see happen, and it’s a matter of how much each person can get of their wish list. Saying that, I couldn’t ask for more [right now] because I know what the reality of what could happen is, which is my may of saying, ‘The shows are going great,’” chuckles Gorman. “Physically, it’s not a challenge. The acoustic set just slides by. It’s physically very easy, and if anything, it’s tough to be restrained, which comes back to the mental thing. I have to be so completely present but it does fly by. What I’m doing back there on the drum kit sets the dynamic way more in an acoustic set than an electric set. So, the acoustic set ends, you take a quick break, feel totally refreshed, do the electric set, and the show ends and I feel fine until 5 minutes later when my brain just shuts down. It’s that sort of exhaustion.”

The current tour reflects the Crowes’ enormous range, as well as showing off the dividends of their lengthy, intense sound checks where they hash out details, add filigree and otherwise thoughtfully tweak things. Their legacy seems important to them now in a way it may not have been in years past, and their dedication to high-level craftsmanship supercedes any lesser concerns in 2010.

“It’s going really well. It took a few shows to really figure out pacing and things like that. It’s a great way to build a show. The setlists have been really great. We’re trying to touch on everything, so we’re not shying away from old, new, unreleased songs, anything, ” says Rich. “It’s funny but we’re so kind of insular that we don’t really see what’s going on beyond us. We’ve always been on our own island but even more so these days.”

Chris Robinson by Josh Miller

“At the double shows, I feel a serious level of excitement, not just from us but from the audience. It just adds to the texture and dynamic of what we can do,” says Chris. “It highlights the musicianship and capabilities of this band, and it gives the songs a different space to mean something different – same melody, same lyrics, same key but a different exploration, if you will, a different feel. But of course, if we were in showbiz I guess we’d try to replicate the same thing for 20 years. When we set up everyday and fire up the electricity, it could be the best show you’ve ever been to that night with that given set of people and our set of electronic circumstance. You never know what’s gonna happen, and that’s the adventure that’s still relevant to us.”

“There’s still little things that happen on a very regular basis for the first time in this band, a certain turnaround or something that nobody else notices but we do, and it gets us off big time,” says Gorman. “Saying that we’re taking a break has also taken off a lot of pressure. Everyone’s enjoying their time onstage more than in years. We know we’re in a good place, and by design this [current] tour acknowledges that.”

“Chris voice is so, so, so strong right now. It’s like 1993 onstage these days,” says Gorman. “We did ‘Morning Song’ one night and when it hit the big rave-up he let a scream go that, honest to God, I haven’t heard in 15 years. When I came over, I told him, ‘Nice scream.’ And he said, ‘Oh really. You liked that?’ I joked, ‘I thought you twisted your ankle or something.’ Then later we did ‘Seeing Things’ and he did another one and looked back at me and winked. I thought, ‘You gotta be fucking kidding me.’”

Continue reading for thoughts on the group’s coming hiatus…

The Pause That Refreshes

The Black Crowes by Josh Miller

Inevitably, it’s nervous making for anyone’s favorite band to stop, even for a spell. It raises a huge question mark over the future and leaves fan appetites for new music unsatisfied. But, these are human beings and like any of us, a break from one’s daily grind is always invigorating, often in unpredictable ways. Where the sudden stomp on the brakes in 2002 came as a shock, the coming hiatus, announced long in advance, seems like the healthiest, smartest choice the band could make after one of the busiest, most productive stretches they’ve ever known.

“I can’t wait to get my hands into some other stuff,” says Chris. “To me, it’s about writing and my energy for that remains at a certain intense level. If I’m not sitting on six or seven new pieces at a time I’m little wigged out. Right now, I have about 15 new songs, which starts to look like a meaty thing to get into while the band takes time off. Knowing that we have this break coming does give a cult-focus to what we’re doing now in the band.”

“I’m gonna try and produce and hopefully get back into scoring again, which is what I’d love to be doing more than anything,” says Rich. “And possibly make another solo record. Not sure about that one. I like the music on Paper, but I’ve learned a lot about singing since then. I think I bit off a lot producing, writing, singing and all that shit. But it was worth it for what I learned. If I did something now, I think I’d understand it a lot better.”

Rich Robinson by Josh Miller

“Chris really wants me to sing. He really pushes me to do it, and I’m happy to oblige,” says Rich, who’s really shined on some of the Grateful Dead tunes the band has tackled in recent years. “I think there’s a vulnerability to Jerry’s voice that people have told me I have, too. I don’t know. Andy from Jellyfish told me that I sound like Gram Parsons sometimes. I think it’s really just that vulnerability present in my voice. Chris has such an amazing voice that it’s a good juxtaposition. Having both of us sing just gives us more layers.”

Layers are fundamental to this band. More than ever, today’s Black Crowes reflect a real understanding of the history of rock ‘n’ roll and it’s fundamental roots in country, blues, folk and jazz. In their own creations and smart cover choices, the Crowes represent the best that this gutbucket melange has to offer by being wide-eyed and nakedly passionate about music in the broadest, lustiest sense. For this band, Moby Grape, Skip James and Django Reinhardt are living influences, seemingly disparate forces that somehow find common ground in the Crowes.

Chris Robinson by Josh Miller

“If you listen from Southern Harmony to Amorica to Three Snakes it’s all over the map, but we’ve still maintained our sound, and that’s because of Chris voice, the way I play guitar and write songs and the way Steve plays drums. The three of us have such a thing together that’s really kind of unique to us,” says Rich. “And I think Sven is the same way. He’s been there with us all along, even if he wasn’t in the band for the first 10 years. His approach to music is pretty unique as well.”

“Since we were growing up in the same household, Chris has always been the catalyst for new music. He’s the one who’s delved deep in the past,” says Rich. “He’ll bring things in and I’ll like some things but not others. But, the ones I do like I get into SO much and absorb myself into the music and the process of it. He’s encyclopedic in his music knowledge and he really brings it around and it’s great. He really is responsible for shaping a lot of the music I’ve learned and loved.”

One of the sad facts of modern culture is a seemingly relentless need to make hierarchies and dissect every detail of art in a way that assumes too much, gripes about facts that can’t be changed and otherwise refuses to embrace a thing as it is in favor of what it was or might be. Few bands know the ass-end of such thinking like The Black Crowes, whose every lineup shift, careless word and internal drama has been blown up and mulled over in our increasingly catty-chatty Internet culture.

“You’re missing a good story, you’re missing a good show if you’re doing that,” says Gorman. “For people that can take The Black Crowes for what they are in 2010, I think they’ll be pretty sated. For people harping on the old days, go put on a DVD or video. This is what’s going on right now. And five years from now those same people will realize what they’re missing out on. That’s their right. It’s not my job to straighten them out. It just seems sad that they’re going to miss this because they can’t get their head around it.”

The Black Crowes Tour Dates :: The Black Crowes News :: The Black Crowes Concert Reviews

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Richard Hilfiger — Son Of Designer Tommy Hilfiger — Skates On Drug Charge

Only in Cali! The son of fashion designer Tommy Hilfiger has escaped prosecution on drug charges after cops decided against trying to convict him on drug dealing charges following his summer arrest. Aspiring hip-hopster Richard “Young Rich” Hilfiger, 20, was pulled over in Hollywood Aug. 1 and taken into custody after officers allegedly found two [...]

Max Weinberg Leaves Conan; Jimmy Vivino New Bandleader

STEPPING DOWN FROM THE DRUM STOOL AFTER 17 YEARS


Max Weinberg

Max Weinberg has
confirmed that he will not be joining Conan O’Brien when Conan debuts on November 8.

Says O’brien, “Max has been a huge part of my life for the past 17 years and he is an incredible band leader and
musician. I hope he can find time to stop by the new show, sit in with the band, and pretend to find my monologue
funny.

A statement from Weinberg reads, “17 years — a lifetime on TV. Conan and I met on a New York City street
corner in the Spring of 1993 and my association with Conan, his staff, and crew has been a deeply rewarding
experience for me. And, making music with Jimmy Vivino, Mark Pender, La Bamba, Jerry Vivino, Scott Healey, Mike
Merritt, and percussionist James Wormsworth enabled me to become a better musician and bandleader. I thank
them for their first rate work on the bandstand. I wish Conan and his show the best and I do look forward to
dropping by.

Guitarist Jimmy Vivino confirmed in an interview with The
Riverfront
Times of St. Louis
that he would be replacing Weinberg as bandleader. Said Vivino, “‘ll be leading the band,
and James Wormworth will be playing drums now. He played half of The Tonight Shows and a good quarter of the
Late Night shows.”

Regarding Weinberg’s future plans, Vivino said, “Max has his big band out there that has been his dream all his life,
kind of a Buddy Rich band. And there’s a kid in Jersey that works with him occasionally. A singer-songwriter!
[Laughs] Some guy that’s got some hope over there!”


Danielle Staub Range Rover Repossessed

It looks like unstable reality star Danielle Staub roved way out of her range when she plopped down fistfuls of cash on her her luxury whip.The former star of Bravo’s The Real Housewives of New Jersey rose to a rude awakening earlier this month when baliffs in NJ turned up at her Franklin Lakes home [...]

Evening Crunch Crumbs

-Here’s a sneak peek at Kanye West’s forthcoming short film “Runaway.” The 40-minute epic is on course to replace Michael Jackson’s “Ghost” as the Guinness World Record Holder for “Longest Music Video” when it is released sometime in the next few weeks… -The bedbugs have taken over Niketown! -Lady Gaga, Twilight, and Mad Men as college classes [...]

Danielle Staub Will Host Wealth TV Reality Show “Social!”

You can’t keep a wackadoodle down! Danielle Staub — the recently fired star of The Real Housewives of New Jersey — has been cast as the new host of Social!, a Wealth TV reality series described as a modern-day revival of Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous. (Although with Prostitution Whore herself hosting, Lifestyles of [...]

Rich Cronin, LFO Singer, Dead At 35

Listen up, ’90s Pop Fans, we’ve got a bit of sad news to report on the musical front: Rich Cronin, who fronted the ’90s boy band LFO, died Wednesday following a lengthy battle against leukemia. He was 35.The “Girl on TV” crooner, a native of suburban Massachusetts, died in a hospital near his hometown of Kingston, [...]

INSIDE MOBILE: The Looming Rich Media Wars: Apple vs. the World

There are huge shifts going on in media distribution, as the new Apple TV is allowing users to rent rich media. We’re moving from a buy model to a rental model, with local ownership via downloading being replaced by remote access content rental via streaming. Here, Knowledge Center mobile and wireless analyst J. Gerry Purdy discusses this entirely new way for users to enjoy their rich media. – Apple made a ton of announcements last week, including a new iPod Nano, iPod Shuffle, iPod Touch and Apple TV, as well as new versions of iOS and iTunes. These are all interesting new products but, in my mind, the new Apple TV stands out from all the others because of its potential future impact to …


Cosco flat, pares gains; Valuations rich: Nomura

Cosco (F83.SG) pares early gains, flat at $1.61 in thin trade vs $1.63 earlier, with interest subdued after yesterday’s run-up to 4-week high.

“While we believe Cosco deserves a premium for its SOE (state-owned enterprise) status and offshore capabilities, prevailing valuations appear rich relative to peers,” says Nomura, notes stock trades at 20x FY11 P/E.

Read more…