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Big Bad Voodoo, known as much for their watershed cameo in Swingers as their steadfast touring schedule, will finally take a break from the road . . . to record a new album.| The retro-swing troupe will return to the studio this week with Michael Frondelli to begin work on what frontman Scotty Morris calls a "wider, more introspective" follow-up to their platinum-selling major-label debut. "It's written, it's ready to go," he says. "We're just ready to record it. We've been wanting to get back [to the studio] and make a new record, as it were, but the record kept selling and doing well, and we're the kind of band that we like to put out next records once a year to keep it rolling." Morris is hoping to nab Stevie Wonder, whom the band met during their gig at this year's Super Bowl, to play harmonica on a lullabye-esque song he wrote. In other BBVD news, the band is planning to re-release its self-titled indie release, which was originally recorded six years ago, via its web site (www.coolsvillerecords.com) in the near future ...
Twisted Sister's vow to return to the road this
summer may be broken. According to guitarist Jay Jay
French, scheduling conflicts, specifically involving
himself and frontman Dee Snider, are to blame.
"It's becoming logistically much more difficult than we thought,"
French says. Currently, producer Toby Wright (Alice in
Chains) and French are co-producing the next album for
Sevendust, a band French also manages. Snider is
busy with his radio show and promoting the home video release of
Strangeland, a film he produced, wrote and starred in. And
though the reunion may not happen this summer, French promises it
will eventually. "We've all decided to give it a go, but, unlike
being twenty years old and having no kids, all of a sudden you've
got a family and this reality hits you: how much can you spread
yourself thin and not be doing the [reunion] a disservice," he
says. As far as future recording plans go, French says that too is
a possibility, and that the group has "other stuff in the
can...that has not been released already and no one knows about."
Additionally, Twisted is in negotiations with their former Atlantic
label to attain the rights to their back catalog and re-release it
at a future date ...
James Brown, the Hardest Working Man in Show
Business, should be able to work a little less hard now that he
inked a $100 million deal to sell bonds backed by his future song
and music publishing royalties. The Godfather of Soul, who
celebrates a birthday today (which could be either his
seventy-first or sixty-sixth, depending who you ask), closed the
deal last Friday, April 30, with the Pullman Group, the same
organization that sold $55 million worth of bonds backed by the
future music royalties of David Bowie in 1997. "An artist like
Brown is ideal for this kind of deal, because his catalog is so
diverse and spans more than forty years," Pullman Group principal
David Pullman told reporters. Also sweetening the deal is the fact
that Brown, whose hits such as "Brand New Bag", "I Got You (I Feel
Good)" and "It's a Man's Man's Man's World" topped the R&B
charts, is also one of the few artists of such stature to retain
most of the rights to his own songs. In addition, he's one of the
most sampled artists in hip-hop. Brown will be taking his latest
album, last November's I'm Back, on a world tour beginning
Friday, May 7, in Sparks, Nev., and winding up on July 10 in Nice,
France . . .
BLAIR FISCHER and JAAN UHELSZKI(May 4, 1999)