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Monday, December 14, 2009

20-Year-Old Fogy Cedes Audience to 15-Year-Old; Idols Barely Noticed



Source: The New York Times reviews the Z100 Jingle Ball.

Not frailty of voice nor cast on leg nor uncomfortably tall duet partners could keep Justin Bieber, the pint-size, swoosh-haired 15-year-old pop moppet from Stratford, Ontario — that’s Canada, people — from his appointed duty at Madison Square Garden on Friday night: decimating the larynxes of thousands of tween girls.

It was Z100’s Jingle Ball ’09, this year’s incarnation of the annual holiday-timed but not holiday-themed revue, and enthusiasm had been waning throughout the almost-four-hour show. Mr. Bieber, who released his debut EP, “My World” (Island), only last month, had a prime slot, just before Taylor Swift, the headliner.

Ms. Swift, who turned 20 on Sunday, is a grizzled veteran staring down the late period of her underage-crowd dominance. Comparatively, Mr. Bieber, a light-voiced pop-R&B singer, is fresh meat, and accordingly, was met with the sorts of shrieks normally reserved for slasher films and kidnappings. (Last month a scheduled appearance by Mr. Bieber at a Long Island mall resulted in injuries and an arrest.)

He sang, thinly, and despite the cast on his right leg — gray, matched by a gray high-top sneaker on his left — he managed to nail the outlines of his dance routines, though he took to a stool and strapped on a guitar for “Favorite Girl,” his best song of the night. After that, Mr. Bieber’s mentor, Usher, joined him, trying not to outsing him on “U Got It Bad,” one of Usher’s old gems. But even humility couldn’t make Usher appear as anything other than a parental figure, tolerated but not embraced.

Immediately preceding Mr. Bieber was John Mayer, who is twice Mr. Bieber’s age plus two, and the oldest performer of the 11 on the bill. He took his irrelevance in self-deprecating stride, though. After performing “Crossroads,” the quixotic electric blues exercise from his latest album, “Battle Studies” (Columbia), he announced, “We’re almost done and we’ll pass it off, I promise.”

In decibels, Mr. Bieber’s only competition was Ms. Swift, whose closing performance was, mostly, vibrant and charged. And dissonant, too: her hits, teen-strife anthems like “Fifteen,” “You Belong With Me” and “Teardrops on My Guitar,” are beginning to sound much younger than she is. During a dull, indulgent medley of “You’re Not Sorry” and a cover of Justin Timberlake’s “What Goes Around ... / ... Comes Around,” she sat at, and manhandled, a piano: it was maudlin, not mature.

Earlier in the show, she made two guest appearances, in two different spangled dresses — first with the artless emo mooks Boys Like Girls, on “Two Is Better Than One,” and later, during a splendid “Half of My Heart,” the only moment of Mr. Mayer’s set noted by audience members under 30.

Ms. Swift was one of pop’s through-lines this year. Another one at Jingle Ball was the moving-target pop sensibility that’s lately landed on electro hybrids.

There was electro-rap, from Ke$ha, whose “TiK ToK” is No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100; electro-indie-rock by Owl City, whose Postal Service-pilfering “Fireflies” is No. 5, on its way down from the top; and electro-R&B by the Lil Wayne-affiliated British import Jay Sean, who had one of the night’s most entertaining sets.

Rock barely registered here — in addition to Boys Like Girls, there was the Fray, the soul-less soft-rock troupe, which demonstrated how little noise six musicians could make — and there was a minimum of hip-hop: Ke$ha, nominally, and the palatable Pitbull, who earned a deafening response early on, before fatigue (and the Fray) had set in.

Also, there was Kanye West’s “Heartless,” sung ably, it should be said, by Kris Allen, the current “American Idol” champion, who was nevertheless received indifferently, like a substitute teacher, by the Bieber demographic. It was a reminder of the limitations of the “American Idol” machine, also evinced by the hollow response to Jordin Sparks, the 2007 winner, who had an energetic set that went largely uncheered until Mr. Bieber joined her to sing the Chris Brown parts of the love duet “No Air.”

Even after she unstrapped her heels and tossed them aside, Ms. Sparks still had four inches on him, to say nothing of octaves in vocal range. The effect was that of a mother singing to her child, not two lovers desperate to hold on to each other. Ms. Sparks is no vixen, nor is she much of an adult, but she made Mr. Bieber seem small.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Beatles Claim The Best Selling Album of the Decade

According to Rolling Stone Magazine, over three decades after their breakup, the Beatles still released the top-selling album of the 2000s. The Fab Four’s greatest hits compilation 1 sold over 11,448,000 copies since its release in November 2000 according to Nielsen SoundScan’s decade-end sales numbers. Eminem was the 2000s’ top-selling artist with 32.2 million combined in sales, plus two albums in the decade’s Top 10: The Marshall Mathers LP was fourth with 10,195,000 sold and Eminem Show was fifth with 9,789,000. Slim Shady edged out the Fab Four for the distinction of the decade’s top-seller as the Beatles claimed Number Two with 30 million.

Only two more albums managed to cross into diamond — or 10 million sales — certification: ‘NSync’s No Strings Attached (11,111,000) and Norah Jones’ Come Away With Me (10,523,000.) As a testament to the record industry’s decline in the second half of the decade, only two albums released in the years between 2005 and 2009 managed to get in the Top 20 of the 2000s’ bestsellers: Nickelback’s All the Right Reasons and Carrie Underwood’s Some Hearts at 14 and 17 with sales under seven million. Nickelback’s “How You Remind Me” was also named the 2000’s Number One overall song, beating out Train’s “Drops of Jupiter” and Lifehouse’s “Hanging on a Moment.”

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Chart Beat Thursday: Pink Floyd, Susan Boyle, Usher

Billboard Report on This Week's News Music Chart Toppers:

EW 'MOON': With the revamping of the Billboard 200 last week to again include both current and catalog titles, one of the chart's landmark records is updated this week. At No. 189, Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" re-enters the chart for the first time since Oct. 8, 1988, logging a record-extending 742nd week on the survey.

The collection, which debuted on the tally on March 17, 1973, and spent a week at No. 1 on the April 28, 1973, chart, leads the album with the second-longest stay on the chart by 252 weeks (or 4.8 years). Here is a list, as of this week, of the releases with the longest chart lives on the 53-year-old Billboard 200 (with debut years in parentheses):

742 weeks, "Dark Side of the Moon," Pink Floyd (1973)
490 weeks, "Johnny's Greatest Hits," Johnny Mathis (1958)
480 weeks, "My Fair Lady," Original Cast (1956)
331 weeks, "Highlights From the Phantom of the Opera," Original Cast (1990)
302 weeks, "Tapestry," Carole King (1971)

With Jason Mraz's "I'm Yours" also having established the lengthiest stay (70 weeks) in the Billboard Hot 100's 51-year history in October, the longevity records on Billboard's signature song and album charts have both been re-written in 2009.

BOYLE-ING HOT: Click here for Billboard 200 chart manager Keith Caulfield's exclusive analysis of Susan Boyle's astonishing, record-breaking sales week, as her debut album, "I Dreamed a Dream," begins at the chart's summit.

How does Boyle stack up against other women to arrive atop the Billboard 200 with a maiden chart entry? She is the first solo female to enter at No. 1 with her first charted title since fellow U.K. native Leona Lewis began at No. 1 with "Spirit" in April 2008.

The only other women to manage the feat this decade are Miley Cyrus (2007), Ashlee Simpson (2004), Beyonce, Kelly Clarkson (2003), Ashanti (2002) and Alicia Keys (2001).

On the Hot 100, two tracks from Boyle's album bow: the title cut, originally from the musical "Les Miserables," at No. 62 and "Wild Horses" at No. 98. The latter song is the first Rolling Stones cover to grace the list since Guns N' Roses' "Sympathy for the Devil" in 1995.

(The Verve's "Bittersweet Symphony" in 1998 featured Mick Jagger and Keith Richards writing credits, but the song was not a true remake of the Rolling Stones' 1965 composition "Last Time".)

ADDITIONAL COVERAGE: Lil Wayne maintains his lead over the "Glee" Cast for most charted entries on the Hot 100 this year, though the ensemble closes the gap.

Lil Wayne posts his 21st charted title of 2009, guesting on Birdman's "4 My Town (Play Ball)" at No. 90, while the "Glee" singers up their count to 20 with a pair of newly-arriving covers.

Their remake of "True Colors" at No. 66 marks the ballad's first Hot 100 ink since Cyndi Lauper's original reached No. 1 in 1986.

Directly below at No. 67, the troupe returns John Lennon's "Imagine" to the Hot 100 for a third consecutive year, following versions by Jack Johnson (No. 90, 2007) and David Archuleta (No. 36, 2008).

Tracie Spencer's rendition first brought Lennon's 1971 No. 3-peaking classic back to the chart, reaching No. 85 in 1989.

'PAPERS' TRAIL LEADS TO NO. 1: Usher collects his 10th No. 1 on R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, as "Papers" lifts 2-1. His eighth No. 1 since 2000, the track moves Usher past the chart's former leaders Jay-Z and Alicia Keys, each with seven, for most No. 1s on the list this decade. The latter pair dips to No. 3 after three weeks on top with "Empire State of Mind."

At No. 77, Keys debuts with "Empire State of Mind (Part II) Broken Down," a re-worked ballad version of the song exclusive to the special edition of her fourth studio album, "The Element of Freedom," due Dec. 15.

Usher's sixth studio album, "Raymond vs. Raymond," streets Dec. 21.

ALL-'AMERICAN' BOYS: Kris Allen may have defeated him on "American Idol," but Adam Lambert bests the series' reigning champ on the Billboard 200.

Lambert's major-label debut album, "For Your Entertainment," bows at No. 3, topping the No. 11 start for Allen's self-titled introductory set last week. ("Take One," an independent release of Lambert session recordings from 2005, entered last week's chart at No. 72).

Last year, runner-up David Archuleta likewise arrived at a higher rank (No. 2) than winner David Cook (No. 3).

Has the "American Idol" viewing audience come to regret its final vote the last two years? Prior to Allen and Lambert and the two Davids, no debut album by an "American Idol" runner-up had bested the debut rank of the same season's winning singer. From 2002, the show's first year, through 2007, the winning "Idol" either topped or tied the runner-up's initial Billboard 200 entrance.

Here is a look at the debut positions of each first- and second-place "Idol" finisher. Winners of each season are listed above runners-up:

2009
No. 11, Kris Allen, "Kris Allen"
No. 3, Adam Lambert, "For Your Entertainment"

2008
No. 3, David Cook, "David Cook"
No. 2, David Archuleta, "David Archuleta"

2007
No. 10, Jordin Sparks, "Jordin Sparks"
No. 10, Blake Lewis, "Audio Day Dream"

2006
No. 2, Taylor Hicks, "Taylor Hicks"
No. 2, Katharine McPhee, "Katharine McPhee"

2005
No. 2, Carrie Underwood, "Some Hearts"
No. 4, Bo Bice, "The Real Thing"

2004
No. 8, Fantasia, "Free Yourself"
No. 52, Diana DeGarmo, "Blue Skies"

2003
No. 1, Ruben Studdard, "Soulful"
No. 1, Clay Aiken, "Measure of a Man"

2002
No. 1, Kelly Clarkson, "Thankful"
No. 20, Justin Guarini, "Justin Guarini"


CHART BEAT BITS: Rihanna rejoices with her first No. 1 on R&B/Hip-Hop Albums, as "Rated R" launches at the summit. The set starts at No. 4 on the Billboard 200. The singer eclipses the No. 2 peak on R&B/Hip-Hop Albums of her 2006 set, "A Girl Like Me" ...

Three Days Grace climbs to the top of Rock Songs and the billboard.biz-exclusive Active Rock and Mainstream Rock charts with "Break." The song is the band's fifth No. 1 on each of the latter two lists ...

Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers notch their first simultaneous debuts on the Billboard 200. "The Live Anthology" arrives at No. 51, with the four-disc set likely spurring nostalgic fans to purchase the band's 2008 "Greatest Hits," which bows at No. 160 ...

'Tis the season for Mariah Carey's "All I Want for Christmas Is You" to return to the Digital Songs chart, where it reappears at No. 18. The 1994 carol has become an annual re-entry on the tally, even spending a week at No. 1 on the chart dated Dec. 24, 2005 ...

Not only does Taylor Swift grab the second-most 2010 Grammy Award nominations, but she's also the subject of one of the wryest radio promotions currently on-air. Whenever listeners hear one of Swift's songs interrupted by Kanye West on WCTK/Providence, R.I., the lucky 20th caller wins a pair of tickets to her show at neighboring Gillette Stadium next June. Clever thinking by the country & West-ern station.

Source

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Asher Roth Shouts Out Justin Bieber's Rap Skills At The Woodie Awards

From MTV Newsroom:

Asher Roth might be one of the biggest breakout stars of the year. His hit "I Love College" made him into an instant cult hero on the university circuit, and his significant skills on the microphone have allowed him to team up with some of the best in the business. One particular tag team that might not be as expected? Justin Bieber, the 15-year-old singer who took the music world by storm with a series of online videos and a commitment to Twitter. Roth and Bieber share a manager, and he said that the two of them first moved to Atlanta around the same time, which lead to an interesting alliance.

"He lived like a block away from me," Roth told MTV News on the red carpet of the 2009 mtvU Woodie Awards. "Watching him is like watching your little brother. It's crazy."

Roth, who just moved to New York, is hard at work on his second album, which he promises will feature a handful of quintessential New York producers and guests. He was short on details, but promised that we would be hearing new music soon.

Would we be hearing Bieber on Roth's new album? The MC says that wouldn't be all that strange. "He can rap," Roth revealed. "I put him on a remix, but I don't think his mom would like that very much." For more from Roth — as well as the rest of the stars at the 2009 mtvU Woodie Awards — be sure to check out the show this Friday, December 4 at 10 p.m. on MTV, MTV2 and mtvU.