Contrary to several reports, Chris Cornell's solo
debut will hit the street in September, not June. The
still-untitled effort has received several tenuous release dates
(mostly because Cornell's Interscope label is smack dab in the
middle of the volatile Polygram merger), but now manager Jim
Guerinot says a September release looks "dead solid." The album is
expected to feature three different drummers, with Guns n'
Roses/Vandals' Josh Freese banging away on nine
tracks, and former Soundgarden bandmate Matt
Cameron on another. As previously reported,
Eleven members Alain Johannes and
Natasha Shneider back Cornell on the entire album
. . .
If you've found yourself longing for a new offering from
Bjork, you're going to have to wait a little
longer. According to Elektra Records, they don't have any firm
releases pencilled in for the ice maiden. Instead, they say Bjork
has barricaded herself in her London flat and is finishing the
soundtrack for Dancer in the Dark, the musical directed by
Lars Von Trier that is set to begin filming in May. According to
Elektra, the soundtrack will be released as an album, they're just
not certain at this point which label has first dibs -- but there
is a possibility that Elektra may release it. Our spies spotted the
musician window shopping on London's Portobello Road last month,
but other than the occasional foray out for a meal, Bjork is giving
her full attention to finishing the score and memorizing her lines
for her role in the flick. Everyone's favorite sprite is set to
play the part of Selma, a Czech woman who arrives in the U.S. in
the Sixties with her young son and must find work to pay for his
medical treatment. Von Trier, best-known for his controversial
Breaking the Waves, has convinced the still-beautiful
Catherine Deneuve to take a role in the film, and
is currently on a hunt to sign a high-wattage U.S. star. If you're
really hard up for some Bjork, she does have a
track on the Mod Squad soundtrack due out on March 23 . .
.
Although ARK 21, the label owned by former Police
manager Miles Copeland (Sting's current manager
and brother of Police drummer Stewart), released
not one, but two Police tribute albums last year, a reunion of the
white reggaemeisters didn't materialize to celebrate the twentieth
anniversary of the legendary band's inception. Stewart and
guitarist Andy Summers did grace the same stage
last October for the first time in a decade when they both joined
Mexican rock outfit the Jaguares at the House of
Blues for three of their songs. The night was so magical, they
began talking about a Police Reunion in South America this year --
without Sting, but with a handful of renowned Latin vocalists
singing parts in Spanish. But those plans were scotched when
Summers developed a bone spur. Howard Stern
couldn't let the matter rest, and when he had Sting's
jill-of-all-trades wife, filmmaker/writer/actress Trudie Styler, on
the show on Wednesday (March 3), he grilled her about whether her
husband was ever going to rejoin his comrades. "Reunion? He
wouldn't do a reunion unless I went on a rampage at all the shops
and bankrupted him," Styler said. "He doesn't want to get together
with them now. I mean, he's recording a new album." If not now,
*when* is what we want to know. Styler did fob off Stern's remarks
that Sting was feuding with his former bandmates. "No, he doesn't
hate them. He just played tennis with Stewart two weeks ago in Los
Angeles. As for ARK 21, they told us there are no plans to
reschedule the truncated Police reunion -- but didn't pooh-pooh a
full-on Police reunion in the near future. "They're always talking
about it," said a spokesperson . . .
Pearl Jam were originally going to begin work on
their next album in early January, but with imbibing on all the
hype surrounding the Super Bowl and getting cross-eyed evaluating
previous Monica Lewinsky hair-dos, who has the
time? But now it looks that the Seattle quintet is ready to get
back to work. "Hopefully, we're gonna start making a new record in
the next few weeks," says guitarist Stone Gossard.
"We haven't really gotten together since the last day of the tour,
so we're planning on meeting soon, but haven't done that yet." With
regard to the uncertain drummer position, Gossard says Live on
Two Legs skinsman Matt Cameron will
"hopefully" assume duties in place of Jack Irons
when they reconvene . . .
Lo-Fi Scottish indie popsters the Beta Band, whose
overseas hype has reached very un-indie proportions with praise and
adulation to rival Gomez, are set to follow up the
release of The Three E.P.s with their official full-length
album on June 15th. The band's debut disc will be comprised of two
CDs: the first containing ten tracks and the second of experimental
ambient music, according to Astralwerks. Following the release, the
band is set to make a short, four-city U.S. tour in late June,
followed by a more expansive tour in the fall . . .
Remember back in 1993, when KISS bassist
Gene Simmons said that he was rededicating his
life to music and was backing off the movie industry? That was
after his brief tenure as an actor playing a raft of seamy
characters, like a transsexual in 1986's Never Too Young To
Die, and an Israeli terrorist in 1987's Tom Selleck thriller,
Wanted: Dead or Alive. But after co-producing Detroit
Rock City, Simmons apparently got the bug again, and is
producing Groupies for New Line Cinema, as well as a flick
for VH-1 based on Casablanca Records, the label headed by industry
maverick Neil Bogart, who died from brain cancer in May 1982. The
label, which broke the careers of KISS, disco diva Donna
Summer, the Village People and
Parliament/Funkadelic was reportedly deeply
embroiled in some of the drug/payola scandals of the roaring
Seventies, and should make for interesting viewing. That's not the
only expose of the edgy label in the works. Larry Harris, former
Casablanca VP and Bogart's cousin, is writing a book based on some
of the more nefarious goings-on at the label while he was on board
. . .
"Free Girl Now," the buoyant lead single from Tom Petty and
the Heartbreakers' forthcoming album, Echo, (due
April 13) can be downloaded free of charge at www.mp3.com, but
don't be surprised if the track plays back with a fair share of
blips and bleeps in the background. At least, that's how we're
hearing it at the RS offices. Neither mp3.com nor Petty's
management could be reached for comment on whether or not the
glitch is a file problem or an intentional copyright protection,
but, surprisingly, the song seems to play back fine on a portable
Rio player. Go figure. In other Petty news, rumor has it that the
Heartbreakers will be taping during their seven-day stint at San
Francisco's historic Fillmore beginning this Sunday. Although
Petty's label wouldn't confirm it, insiders claim that Petty would
love to release a Live at the Fillmore album. It's high
time, too; Petty's last live album was 1985's Pack Up the
Plantation: Live! . . .
Anyone savoring the thought of a messy, protracted battle between
Oasis and former drummer Tony
McCarroll -- or at least a punch-up -- was denied his
sport today. Proceedings were due to start this morning (March 2)
in London's High Court where the former drummer contested that his
sacking from the group, prior to What's the Story Morning
Glory, was unlawful and is seeking twenty percent of the
band's profits since his expulsion as compensation. However, as the
eleventh hour loomed, an announcement was made that the two parties
had settled out of court for an undisclosed sum. Last week, the
band had offered a settlement of $800,000, which McCarroll had
turned down; some estimates placed the amount sought by Carroll as
high as $26 million pounds. The undisclosed amount will go before
the judge for approval on Wednesday. Meanwhile, Noel
Gallagher told journalists last month that work wouldn't
begin on the fourth Oasis album until the case was out of the way.
Studios have reportedly already been booked and Gallagher, as
always, will be producing. However, regular engineer Owen
Morris has been replaced by Mark "Spike"
Stent, the famed British mixer who has worked with
Massive Attack, the Spice Girls,
Madonna and Bjork. He has just completed
mixing the second album by British trip-hop quartet Sneaker
Pimps, the follow-up to their million-selling Becoming
X and the first to be fronted by guitarist Chris Corner.
Former vocalist Kelli Dayton left the band last year . . .
The first commandment of rock & roll: Thou shalt not try to
upstage Keith Richards. Cake frontman John
McCrea shattered that tenet when he insisted on moving
furniture in his Sacramento, Calif., home last weekend, somehow
miscalculated and ended up with a broken arm, costing his band at
least four weeks of shows in Europe. The boner one-upped the
Rolling Stones guitarist, who, while reaching for a book in his
Connecticut home last year, fell and bruised his ribs. According to
a management spokesperson, McCrea will obey doctor's orders and
stay off the road this month to recuperate. Cake
were scheduled to launch a European tour on March 2, but will now
move those dates back at least one month and likely return to the
States in late spring . . .
So what if you can't mosh to cabaret music? Third Eye
Blind's Stephen Jenkins and piano man
Rufus Wainwright chilled out backstage Saturday
night at Bimbo's in San Francisco where Wainwright, beleaguered by
an inebriated and inattentive crowd comprised of contest winners
from a local radio show, told Jenkins he made it through the night
by singing to the first two rows. "At least I know those people
love me," he explained. The two got on so swimmingly that Jenkins
invited the singer to join him and Metallica
drummer Lars Ulrich for a drink at the local celeb
watering hole Tosca's. Wainwright demurred, but Jenkins and Ulrich,
who are now bosom buddies, closed the place down, and not before
trading quips with San Francisco Mayor Willie
Brown, who was better dressed than either of the rock
stars. And what's a celeb pow-wow without some celluloid talent?
Jenkins didn't gush over the finer points of Godfather II
when introduced to Francis Ford Coppola, but
rather chatted about the legendary director's son,
Roman, a video director cum feature filmmaker who
recently snared the rights to Jack Kerouac's
On The Road. The younger Coppola has been in touch with
Jenkins about taking a small but significant role in the pic.
Jenkins was flattered by the offer, but told the young filmmaker
he's too busy laying down tracks for the follow-up to Third Eye
Blind's 1997 self-titled debut album to get in character . . .
Anyone remember ABC? Assuming you can hum along to
the Buggles' "Video Killed the Radio Star," you'll likely recall a
verse or two of "The Look of Love" or "Poison Arrow," the two songs
MTV popularized about sixteen years ago. Amazingly, ABC haven't
gone away -- unless away means the world outside of the United
States. After touring the U.K. last winter with Culture
Club and Howard Jones, the band is
looking to make its return to the U.S., possibly in a New Wave
package tour. To help stir the memory of ABC amnesiacs, the group
will release its first-ever live album, tentatively titled The
Lexicon of Live (a play on the band's breakthrough record,
1982's The Lexicon of Love) via the Internet at
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Melomania/. Set to include
songs like "When Smokey Sings," "All of My Heart," and the two
aforementioned hits, the album should be available within the next
month or so. And, even if Americans refuse to greet ABC with open
arms, the group will be back in the U.K. and back on the road with
Culture Club and the Human League in November . . .
Could Bono be a no-show at the Johnny
Cash tribute concert on April 6 at New York's Hammerstein
Ballroom? U2 are listed among the A-list
performers scheduled to pay homage to the Man in Black, but a
high-placed industry source says the Irish superstars will not be
performing at the tribute, and neither will Bruce
Springsteen or the heretofore unannounced Bob
Dylan. All three will be sending pre-taped video salutes.
Artists scheduled to perform at the Cash tribute are:
Willie Nelson, Rosanne Cash,
Emmylou Harris, Lyle Lovett,
Trisha Yearwood, Kris
Kristofferson and possibly others yet to be announced,
including Cash himself. In other industry giant news, insiders say
Bono has agreed to give a speech for Springsteen's induction into
the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame on March 15 . . .
What do you get when you combine Communism and a member of
R.E.M.? Approval from the U.S. Treasury Department
to fly a cadre of musicians into the off-limits island of Cuba for
a nine-day writing/jamming session, that's what. Dubbed "Music
Bridges Around the World," the sonic cultural exchange is set to
take place in late March and will climax in a free concert at the
Karl Marx Theater in Havana. So far, organizer Alan Roy Scott, an
American songwriter who has hosted such exchanges in Indonesia, the
Soviet Union, Romania and Ireland over the past ten years, has
recruited not only R.E.M.'s Peter Buck, but also
such diverse artists as Burt Bacharach,
Joan Osborne, Jimmy Buffett,
Chuck D, Stewart Copeland,
Me'Shell Ndegeocello, Kris
Kristofferson, Lisa Loeb, Mick
Fleetwood, Montell Jordan, Andy
Summers and the Indigo Girls. Lucky
artists who sign up will not only get to fly direct from the
States, they'll also get to show off those fancy and much-coveted
stamps from the border patrol in Cuba (something scant American
lay-people can boast). . .
Neil Young for the birds? Apparently so. A fan
letter posted on the "Hyper Rust" Web site excerpts an article from
a recent issue of Cottage Life magazine that swears a
liberal dose of Young's finest hits soothed an ailing loon. Seems
bird rehabilitators Michael and Janice Enright could not comfort an
inconsolable loon chick in their care. After the bird had been
crying for weeks, the couple got the bright idea of playing the
infant bird music. They went through their record collection,
playing jazz, classical, pop. But nothing worked until they put on
Long May You Run, by Neil Young, and according to Michael
Enright, "the chirps turned into chirps." (Huh?) Just to make sure
that it wasn't just a coincidence, the couple continued their
musical tests, and interspersed Young with other artists. But the
bird responded only to Neil. "He really liked 'Thrasher' and
'Birds,' of course," said Michael. The couple were astounded at
their results and have included Neil Young music as a regular part
of their therapy. When a second loon was brought in to recover from
an injury, they immediately put Harvest Moon on the CD
player, and, like the first bird, the second loon was quieted. When
the magazine approached Young's father, Scott Young, about this
strange phenomenon, he replied: "I always knew loons were smart.
They probably heard in Neil's voice a kindred spirit, for he used
to . . . watch loons and serenade them. He has a loon-like sound,
I'm sure he tried to imitate them. That is why he's gotten so
successful." Cottage has not yet weighed in with a report
on how Young's charms work on former Byrd
David Crosby, with whom Young is collaborating for
new Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young tracks . .
.
In true "I don't practice what I preach because I'm not the kind of
people I'm preaching to"-like behavior, the guy who vociferously
denounced last week's Grammy Awards has decided to take home the
trophy he was granted by the National Academy for Recording Arts
and Sciences. Citing a gross lack of recognition for rap artists by
NARAS, chart-topping rapper Jay-Z boycotted
Wednesday's awards ceremony through a statement issued to the
voting committee. "Too many major rap artists continue to be
overlooked," the rapper wrote. "If it's a gun everybody knows about
it; but if we go on a world tour, no one knows." However, when luck
smiled upon him in the form of a nod for Best Rap Album for his
latest release, Vol. 2 ... Hark Knock Life, Jay-Z accepted
the accolade. "If they want to give us awards, we'll take them,"
Damon Dash, co-founder/CEO of Roc-A-Fella (Jay-Z's label), told
Billboard magazine. "But we aren't gonna drop everything
and run to the show to get a small pat on the head when they don't
even air the award he won. We feel we made our statement by
boycotting the show." Suppose he won't be giving over the money
earned by the sales of his album, which will be undoubtedly be
bolstered by last week's victory . . .
BLAIR FISCHER, JIM IRVIN, RICHARD SKANSE, HEIDI SHERMAN and JAAN
UHELSZKI
(March 3, 1999)
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