Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson’s Best Music Moments – Billboard


Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson quickly became one of the biggest names in Hollywood due to his multifaceted career as a former professional wrestler and football player, Teremana tequila founder and, of course, an actor. He’s known for his roles in Jumanji, The Game Plan, Get Smart, Black Adam, DC League of Super-Pets, the Fast & Furious franchise and so many more.

However, a lesser known fact about the 50-year-old star is that he’s also proficient in the music world. He has shared his musical talents on talk shows, on social media, in films and on actual studio recordings.

As a result, we at Billboard have compiled our favorite music moments by Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson. See them below in chronological order.



The Grammys | GRAMMY.com


Hanging out with Jeff Coffin is a bit like listening to his music. Engulfed in a whirlwind of musical references, you’re never lost. Music seems dizzyingly limitless when he describes it, like the fractals in the cartoon eye on his new album’s self-drawn cover.

For a three-time GRAMMY winner with bona fides in two household-name bands, Dave Matthews Band and Béla Fleck and the Flecktones — Coffin has zero airs and a whole lot of music knowledge. 

Our conversation left me to check out Albert Ayler’s rip-your-heart-out gospel album Goin’ Home, Van Morrison‘s country-breezy Tupelo Honey and Charles Mingus‘ warped masterpiece Oh Yeah

Understanding Coffin’s background enhances the listening experience of his inspired latest release, 2022’s Between Dreaming and Joy, which is nominated for Best Contemporary Instrumental Album at the 2023 GRAMMYs.

Read More: 2023 GRAMMY Nominations: See The Complete Nominees List

Featuring “Middle Eastern frame drums, Brazilian percussion, Moroccan vocals, a turntable artist, multiple horns, an ice cream truck, a Hungarian tárogató and an African ngoni” — as well as modern greats like guitarist Robben Ford, bassist Vicente Archer and drummer Chester Thompson — the album feels jubilant and companionable.

It’s surprising to learn the album was recorded completely remotely. 

“It was crafted in a way that I’ve really never crafted a record before,” Coffin tells GRAMMY.com in its New York Chapter Office, ahead of DMB’s sold-out Madison Square Garden gig. So, to him, this GRAMMY nomination is extra sweet: “it’s a recognition of the process, but also a recognition of the work. Not just in this record, but the 19 others before it.”

If you’re familiar with Fleck and/or Matthews but not so much Coffin and his musical universe, let Between Dreaming and Joy act as a gateway to all 19 — with the Mu’tet, in co-billed LPs, all of it. And read on for an in-depth interview with the musician, clinician and searcher.

Jeff Coffin. Photo: Rodrigo Simas

This interview has been edited for clarity.

Congratulations on your nomination for Best Contemporary Instrumental Album at the 2023 GRAMMYs. What role has the Recording Academy played in your career over the decades?

You know, when I was in the Flecktones, we were nominated a number of times; I won three GRAMMYs with Béla. It’s always kind of been interwoven with the things that I’ve done. 

The Flecktones were a hard band to pin down. We won for Best Pop Instrumental Album [for 2008’s Jingle All the Way; we were nominated [that same year] for Best Country Instrumental Performance [for “Sleigh Ride”].

It’s interesting; I remember the first time we were nominated was for Left of Cool [at the 1999 GRAMMYs]. I remember it being my first time there, and just being like, “Wow, this is unbelievable.” We didn’t win, and I remember thinking that I wasn’t disappointed: Oh, it’s OK, it’s not a big deal that we didn’t win. It reaffirmed that this is not why I do what I do.

You know, it’s funny. [With Dave Matthews Band], it’s a machine. We have like 90 people on the road with us, of course, and the band is really all about the music. We’ve talked about it a lot: how the music has got to come first.

Elaborate.

I think that music is a service industry. I think that first, we serve the music. Then, we serve the other musicians we’re playing with, and then we serve the audience. So, we’re at least fourth on the list. But by serving those others, we get served.

I talk to my students about this all the time: how important it is to recognize that circle. I think about management, and I’m thinking, Well, they’re just thinking dollars and butts in seats. Which I understand: that’s part of it. But I feel a disconnect sometimes in the way they approach things, as opposed to the way we approach things.

So, for me, with awards and accolades and things like that: I’ve had my fair share, and I’m very honored and grateful for that. But that’s not why I do it. I’m not like, I’m going to do this record and submit it for a GRAMMY.

Read More: Béla Fleck Has Always Been Told He’s The Best. But To Him, There Is No Best.

At this point, you’ve won three GRAMMYs. How does it feel to earn another nomination for Between Dreaming and Joy?

It’s big for me. It really is. There was a ton of work put into it during the pandemic. Most of the record was remote, although you’d never know listening to it. It was crafted in a way that I’ve really never crafted a record before. So, it’s a recognition of the process, but also a recognition of the work. Not just in this record, but the 19 others before it.

I’ve got six others in the can that I’m working on, that are basically ready to go. It was a very prolific time for me during the lockdown. So, this material on the record was culled from a lot of other stuff I had recorded also. 

I wrote about 30 or 34 new tunes, and they were all over the place from the standpoint of genre or style. So, when I put this together, I had to decide which tunes I was going to put into this pot. There are a couple that I was on the fence about initially, but I’m really glad they’re on there because it kind of diverges, and then comes back into a particular space.

So, yeah, I’m just thrilled about it, and the GRAMMY Foundation <a href=”https://grammymuseum.org/national-reach/grant-program/”>now the [GRAMMY Museum Foundation] has been part of that. I love what they do educationally; I want to be more involved with that, because I do a lot of education work outside of touring. I’ve done 325-plus clinics over the years, and I’ve been teaching at Vanderbilt now for eight years.

Tell me more about your teaching style, and how it’s in dialogue with the other parts of your career.

I’ve looked at people that have kind of been DIY, like Dave Liebman, Bob Mintzer, Bobby Shew, these kinds of people. I don’t try to do exactly what they did, because that’s how they see things. But I’ve been able to kind of muddle out a career [incorporating] certain aspects of what they do.

The books that I’ve written are all for my students; they have nothing to do with the things that I’m working on, because I’ve already done it. So, the method books, the etude books — I have something called The Road Book, which is all the things you do before you leave the driveway. These are for students that are just getting out there and doing this stuff, to help them along the way.

I really respect what [The Recording Academy] has done educationally around the country and the world. I think it’s awesome, and really makes a big difference. You know, music is an essential part of education on every level — not just in higher education, but deep in the schools. A lot of those programs are being cut, and it’s categorically unfair.

Let’s talk a little more about Between Dreaming and Joy. You mentioned that you pulled these songs from disparate sources. So what was the throughline, or thesis? What made these songs swim together in the same tank?

When I was with Béla, one of the things I remember him talking about was the sequence of a record, and talking about how it really makes or breaks a record. It’s really the flow, now that I think about it. 

I put a lot of effort into putting sequences together. The middle tune, “Spinning Plates,” is just me — all me, all horns. I think there’s percussion on there, and it’s sort of the place where you would flip the record over. It’s a breath between the first and second section of the record. I did it that way on purpose.

It’s kind of the spirit of the tunes that [make them] work. “Vinnie the Crow” wouldn’t have worked in any other place except for opening the record.

It’s very strident. It has that swagger in it.

Yeah, and it has the only co-writer on the whole record: a drummer named Alex Clayton, who was living in Nashville and a Belmont student. He’s turned me on to some really great s—. He was the first person who ever told me about Anderson .Paak and Donald Glover. He’s really got his ear in these different places. 

He’s a very, very dear friend. We were just hanging out and were like, “Let’s write a tune.” He had a groove, so I put some stuff down, and just kind of went from there.

But coming back to the sequence: I want it to be a journey. I don’t want it to be the same tune written seven or eight different times. I wanted to touch on the different influences and interests I had musically, but not be so removed from the other tunes that it doesn’t connect.

Because there’s a bunch of stuff that I also wrote that’s very global music-oriented. There’s this one tune written off this traditional Peruvian folk melody that wouldn’t have fit on this record. It’s this really elaborate thing. I’ve got Brazilian percussion on it. There’s some Afrobeat stuff that I did with Chester Thompson. 

There’s a lot of pretty esoteric stuff, too. [Turns to publicist Lydia Liebman, Dave Liebman’s daughter] Stuff your pops would be way more into than this kind of thing.

Jeff Coffin. Photo: Rodrigo Simas

I remember something Béla said to me years ago: “I’ll never be an Indian musician. I’ll never be an African musician. But I can bring those elements into what I do, and have them inspire the music that I make.” 

And it’s the same with Dave Matthews. He’s from South Africa, and he went back in his early teens and grew up there for a number of years. His music is very influenced by that music — by those dances, by that structure of music, and there’s a hybrid of things that are going on there. So, to me, using the term “jam band” for a group like that doesn’t do it justice at all. I don’t have any idea what you’d call it.

I love when they asked Miles about his music. They said it was jazz, but they said, “What should we call it?” He said, “Call it music.” I’m totally down with that, and that’s how I look at it. It’s just music.

It’s coming from different places I’m influenced by. Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash, Ornette Coleman, Miles Davis, et cetera, et cetera: they’re all the same spirit. That’s what I’m looking for in the music that I make, the players I play with, the way I’m putting something together. I like art that is mysterious — that I don’t totally understand.

We first spoke for an article about Yusef Lateef. Given the sheer range of ethnic instruments you play on Between Dreaming and Joy, it seems like you’re in his lineage. Can you talk about your ongoing process of learning new instruments and weaving them into your work — choosing what’s appropriate and what isn’t?

Here’s the thing, too: I know a lot of people who play a lot of different instruments. Michael League was playing Moroccan frame drums, but everybody knows Michael from playing bass with Snarky Puppy. And the ngoni on “When Birds Sing” was played by a Moroccan woman named Sarah Ariche, who also sang. The title is kind about her, also: what she’s doing is this angelic vocal stuff.

I’m really interested in a lot of different sounds. Some of this is also coming from people like Roland Kirk. This gets into a whole other tangent, but the idea of string theory is that everything is a vibration; therefore, everything is sound.

I have the tárogató I bought from Charles Lloyd; my bass flute is Yusef Lateef‘s. I feel like I’m just the curator of these instruments, because I’m always like, “This is Yusef Lateef’s bass flute.” I don’t ever say, “This is my bass flute.” [Same with] the tárogató. There’s kind of a spirit imbued in the instruments.

You’re calling out a spirit, even when the musician is alive and well — in Lloyd’s case.

Right, yeah. I bought Yusef’s main tenor and bass flute after he passed. The first time I played the tenor, I recorded it; I was like, I want to hear what happens the first time. And this tune came out. I called it “Yusef.” And as I tell people, he left the tune in the horn. It’s a very powerful tune. My hands were off of it.

For those who might know Dave or Béla but not be familiar with your solo work, with the Mutet or otherwise: how do you conceptualize it in relation to these household names? What’s the nature of that isthmus between these two massive entities?

Let me take a step back. 

So, people ask about my influences. My main influences are people like Coltrane, Sonny Rollins and Ornette. Then there are the people I played with all these years, having spent 14 years with Béla, Victor Wooten and Roy Wooten — Future Man. And now, 14 years with Dave, [bassist] Stefan [Lessard], [trumpeter] Rashawn [Ross], [violinist] Boyd [Tinsley] when he was in the band, [drummer] Carter Beauford, [guitarist] Tim Reynolds, and now [keyboardist] Buddy Strong. 

I mean, we are creating every single night for three hours a night — playing some of the same music, but recreating it nightly also. So, there are no more profound influences on me than those players: the people that I play with at home, that I’ve had in my bands, where we’re digging deep in a way that is proactive.

So, when I’m listening, I’m active in that process, but I’m not participatory in that process — in the sense that I’m not making music when I’m listening to a Coltrane record or whatever. But when I’m making music, I’m participatory; even if I’m being silent, I’m still part of what’s going on. To me, that changes everything.

Jeff Coffin. Photo: Rodrigo Simas

Can you connect this to your experiences with Matthews and the Flecktones?

I remember that when I first started playing with Béla, I was like, “I don’t know any of your music; your audience knows the music better than I do.” Which was the same thing when I joined Matthews: “The audience” — they still do, actually — “knows all the words.”

With the Flecktones, one of things that was an epiphany for me was that I would look out and see people dancing. We’d be playing in 13 or 17 or some crazy s—, or moving time signatures throughout the piece.

But what it made me realize is that it’s all on up or down. It doesn’t even matter. Like, even on the Matthews stuff, there’s a tune called “Rapunzel.” I remember the first time we heard it, when I was with Béla because we were doing the opening dates. 

We couldn’t figure out the time signature. You have four great musicians who are listening to this and just going, “What is going on?” It’s in five, but if you listen to it, you would not know that it’s in five, unless you’re really tuning in and going, “OK, I’ve got to figure this out,” or watching somebody’s foot, given the way Carter’s playing polyrhythmically over it.

But, again, we joke about this: everything’s in one. Just one-one-one-one-one-one. If the pulse is there, than it’s going to feel good. It’s going to make a mixed meter not feel like a mixed meter, because it’s going to be all pulse. 

That’s why I love African music so much; it’s all pulse. You can feel it in six; you can feel it in two; you can feel it in three. You can also put different groupings; you can do sevens over the top. It all works, as long as the pulse is there.

It seems that you’ve conceptualized your solo work as an ongoing investigation of your influences.

I think that’s a great way to put it: an ongoing investigation of my influences. Not only my immediate musical influences, but my historic musical influences also, and trying to see it from above. Not just the immediacy of it, but the things that are in the periphery also.

I’m kind of going, I wonder what would happen if I did this, and drop this in there. I wonder what the sound of bass flute and bass trumpet is. The tárogató was on the new Dave record also, and it’s a Hungarian instrument, It’s a wooden soprano, basically. It’s like an English horn.

Sometimes, I’ll also give myself parameters to work within. I was doing a livestream every Friday all the way through the pandemic. There were nights when I would be like, I’m going to start writing a song at six o’clock because my livestream is at seven. I’m going to get it done within an hour, play it for them on the livestream, and maybe play along.

I tried to bring them into my process of doing what I was doing. It was really fun. It was really, really challenging. And I didn’t have any idea what the f— I was doing. 

So, it’s really just about exploring and trying things. There’s an element of randomness to it, but also an element of focus and “Let’s try this and see what happens.” I’ve always been really into pedals, envelope filters and harmonizers. Doing double-horn stuff. I’ve got this triplicate flute with one mouthpiece. I’ve got singing bowls and bells and gongs. I’m a total bell freak. Anything I can get my hands on that I can make music from, I’m going to try it.

Jeff Coffin. Photo: Rodrigo Simas

You’ve mentioned, like, 15 musical traditions and 150 instruments in this interview. Do you ever feel like you’re still getting started in learning about all the music the world has to offer?

I do, actually, yeah. I feel more creative than I’ve ever felt in my life. 

But here’s the thing, too: I play for a different reason now than I used to. I think that’s partially because I’m able to articulate my own feelings better — not only verbally, but musically. When I was younger, I was playing from a different emotional place. Today, some of the reasons for playing are the same; some are very different. But I feel like I can make decisions based on experience.

I’m still wrong a lot, by the way, which is really interesting to me. I’ll listen to a couple of tracks with some people, and I’ll think: OK, I know the one that I like. I’ll say, “What do you guys think?” and they’ll both pick the other one. I’ll be like, Oh, OK, great. Let’s use that one. Good thing that wasn’t up to me.

A year and a half ago, I went down to New Orleans and did a record with [drummer] Johnny Vidacovich, [saxophonist] Tony Dagradi and [drummer] James Singleton [of jazz quartet Astral Project]; Helen Gillet was on the cello on one tune. It’s very, very different than this record. It’s open and free.

I’m trying to mix it myself, and I’ve been working on it for a while. I think it sounds pretty good. But I’m not a mixing engineer, and those guys are wizards. So, I’m sitting around with some people, and I’m like, “Look, man, I want your brutally honest feedback. If it doesn’t sound good, I want to know, because I’m trying to mix it.”

I still second-guess myself on certain things, which I think is great, because I think that’s how we learn also. You’ve got to keep making mistakes, because after a while, you find those successes in there. I think it’s Vic Wooten who says something along these lines: “The only reason you don’t succeed is because you eventually stop trying.”

The History Of Yellowjackets In 10 Songs: A Gateway To The Jazz Fusion Greats



Dr Alex George to present new Classic FM series on classical music and positivity


13 January 2023, 08:30

Classic FM’s Uplifting Classics with Dr Alex George launches on Sunday 15 January.

Picture:
Classic FM


Dr Alex George returns to Sunday evenings on Classic FM from 15 January at 9pm, with a six-week series championing the most uplifting classical music, with tips and advice for everyday positivity.

Dr Alex George returns to Classic FM in January 2023 to present a new six-part series on music and wellbeing.

Classic FM’s Uplifting Classics with Dr Alex George launches on Sunday 15 January, from 9pm–10pm, and sees the UK government’s first ever Youth Ambassador for Mental Health explore some of his favourite pieces of uplifting classical music.

Dr Alex will also provide practical advice and tips along the way, on how to live everyday life in a positive way.

Over the six-week programme, Dr Alex will highlight 50 pieces of music to inspire and brighten your mood, from Holst’s ‘Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity’ and Scott Joplin’s ‘The Entertainer’, to ‘Adoration’ by Florence Price.

Listen on Global Player: Classic FM Relax Live Playlist – the most calming classical music

Dr Alex made his debut on Classic FM in January last year with his popular series on music, health, and wellbeing, Inner Harmony, and returned in the summer as a guest presenter on Classic FM’s Revision Hour.

Speaking to Classic FM ahead of his new series, Dr Alex said: “I am so excited to be returning to Classic FM for this brand new series. I listen to classical music every day, and I find it such a positive and uplifting influence on my mood and productivity.

“I know how difficult January can be for many, and so to be able to share some of the greatest Uplifting Classics every week and help boost the mood of Classic FM’s listeners is a privilege.

“I really hope that during the next six weeks, I can spread my passion for classical music, share helpful advice on staying positive when times are tough, and get the nation feeling good for 2023.”

Read more: Music takes 13 minutes to ‘release sadness’ and 9 to make you happy, according to new study

Philip Noyce, Classic FM’s managing editor, said: “Classical music has the power to touch the emotions like nothing else and regular listening can work wonders for our well-being. So, at the start of 2023, we are thrilled to announce our new Uplifting Classics series that celebrates the most inspiring classical music.

“It’s a pleasure to welcome back Dr Alex George to Classic FM, who proved his popularity with our audience last year. Alongside his love of classical music, Dr Alex brings experience and knowledge of approaching daily life in a positive way, and we know that our listeners will hugely enjoy and benefit from this special series at the beginning of the new year.”

Listen to Classic FM’s Uplifting Classics with Dr Alex George every Sunday from 9pm–10pm. Listen live, and catch up on shows you missed, on Global Player.



Margo Price: Strays album review — off-piste country music with sharp lyricism


Strays is Margo Price’s fourth album. A Nashville country music outsider, originally from Illinois — a stray of sorts herself — she came up through the city’s independent scene, gigging in the bars and clubs on its east side. Mainstream labels shunned her. Her debut album, 2016’s Midwest Farmer’s Daughter, was the first country record released by Jack White’s Third Man Records, a rock outpost in Nashville. It launched her as a successor to the outlaw country acts of the 1970s. The association was cemented when veteran outlaw Willie Nelson duetted on her follow-up album, 2017’s All American Made.

Her new songs were created during writing sessions with her musical collaborator (and husband) Jeremy Ivey. It does not take long to detect the pair’s use of magic mushrooms to oil the artistic wheels; no longer than the opening moments of the album, in fact, during which a trippy organ haze evokes a mirage-like vision of The Doors. The song that emerges from this haze is “Been to the Mountain”, a shamanistic psych-rock stomper inspired by Patti Smith, with lyrical riddles from the school of Bob Dylan (“Well, I wish I was God but I’m glad that I’m not”).

Co-produced with Price by Jonathan Wilson (Angel Olsen, Father John Misty), Strays takes the singer’s wayward path through country music almost completely off-piste. “Light Me Up” is a Led Zeppelin-indebted number in which levees break and Tom Petty’s sideman Mike Campbell plays wah-wah guitar solos. “Radio” combines twangy country guitar licks and symphonic swells of sound with an electronic beat and a guest vocal by indie music star Sharon Van Etten. Both are enjoyable, although not quite as charged as they would perhaps like to be.

Matters move up a gear with storytelling songs such as “County Road”, a touching heartland rocker about small-town suffocation, and “Lydia”, an intense orchestral ballad about abortion, drug addiction and the war on women’s bodies. It includes an example of Price’s lyricism at its sharpest, when its opioid-addicted protagonist sleeps with a man twice her age for a fix. “Really though,” Price laments, “it was anything but sleeping.”

★★★☆☆

Strays’ is released by Loma Vista Recordings

RRR song Naatu Naatu composer MM Keeravani interview


“It talks about ethnicity basically,” explains composer M.M. Keeravani about the song “Naatu Naatu” from the blockbuster Indian film “RRR.” The film and the song have been crossover international successes, and now “Naatu Naatu” is on the Oscars shortlist for Best Original Song. We talked with Keeravani as part of our “Meet the Experts” film songwriters panel (a day before he won the Golden Globe on Tuesday night). Watch our exclusive video interview above.

“RRR” is the story of two men who become friends (played by NTR and Ram Charan) as they both undertake secret missions to free their people from British colonial rule. “Naatu Naatu” is a number performed midway through the film when the protagonists need to challenge a racist British aristocrat who claims to have superior knowledge of art, culture, and dance.

“This is what we are, let us present ourselves with what we’ve learned, what we know, what we enjoyed in our childhood,” says Keeravani about the cultural pride that drives the characters. It’s “an earthly beat, a rustic percussion. So let us enjoy this beat, this 6/8 signature beat talking about all the things we enjoy, all the things we feel energetic and feel high about, all the things that belong to the motherland, and everything about us. So just look at us. It’s kind of exhibiting and displaying and showcasing their inner energy, packed with lots of stamina.”

The lyrics were written by Chandrabose, while Keeravani was responsible for “composing the music, writing the score … processing the song, and finally presenting the song.” Now it’s a contender at the Oscars. If it wins, it would be the first Telugu-language song ever to do so, giving “RRR” yet another chance to make history.

Make your predictions at Gold Derby now. Download our free and easy app for Apple/iPhone devices or Android (Google Play) to compete against legions of other fans plus our experts and editors for best prediction accuracy scores. See our latest prediction champs. Can you top our esteemed leaderboards next? Always remember to keep your predictions updated because they impact our latest racetrack odds, which terrify Hollywood chiefs and stars. Don’t miss the fun. Speak up and share your huffy opinions in our famous forums where 5,000 showbiz leaders lurk every day to track latest awards buzz. Everybody wants to know: What do you think? Who do you predict and why?

Stevie Wonder reflects on the late Jeff Beck: ‘A great soul’


Stevie Wonder had the artistic wind at his back, teeming with creative energy and scaling new musical heights, when he met Jeff Beck in 1972.

Their encounter at a New York studio would soon bear fruit for the young Motown phenom and the British guitar hero — including the enduring “Superstition,” a song that became a signature piece for both artists.

Wonder said Wednesday evening he was saddened by news that Beck had succumbed to bacterial meningitis at a hospital near his home in England. The guitarist was 78.

“He was a great soul who did great music,” Wonder told the Detroit Free Press. “I’m glad that I was able to meet him and have him in my life, giving some of his gift to my music.”

Wonder and Beck were introduced to one another by Robert Margouleff and Malcolm Cecil, producers who had worked with Wonder on 1972’s groundbreaking “Music of My Mind” and were now involved in its follow-up, the album that would become “Talking Book.”

“I really didn’t know too much about him,” Wonder said of Beck. “But then I heard him play in New York. We were working on ‘Lookin’ for Another Pure Love’ (in the studio) and I said to him, ‘Why don’t you play on this?’ He thought that would be great. He laid one part down, then another part and another part. It was just amazing.”

That song — a rippling number that showcased Wonder’s growing fascination with keyboard sounds — was augmented by Beck’s lithe guitar solo, complete with Wonder’s approving “Do it, Jeff!” captured on tape.

“It was just a wonderful thing, the whole deal,” said Wonder. “He gave it such a mixture — sort of a jazz feel with a bluesy feel, with the chord structure he took from what I had done. It was great. He put his touch on it. It was just really cool.”

Beck had sprung from London’s fertile blues-rock scene in the ’60s, making his first big mark with the gritty psychedelic rock of the Yardbirds. But he had an expansive musical vocabulary — jazzy, melodic, sophisticated — that was right up Wonder’s alley.

Like many of his peers, the British guitarist was infatuated with Motown, even heading to Detroit in 1970 to cut tracks at Hitsville, U.S.A., with members of the Funk Brothers. (That material remains unreleased, and Beck told Rolling Stone magazine in 2010 the tapes may be lost forever.)

In New York in ’72, Wonder was thrilled with Beck’s work on “Pure Love.” He and Cecil encouraged the guitarist to record a version of a new, unreleased song Wonder had recently written and tracked: “Superstition.”

Beck saw it as a gift from Wonder.

When it comes to origin stories of songs from that era, details can be cloudy or lost to time. It has often been reported that “Superstition” emerged from an impromptu jam by the two artists, with Beck at a drum kit and Wonder at a clavinet keyboard. But Wonder clarified Wednesday that a rough track of the song was already complete when he first played it for Beck at the studio.

Wonder’s own final version of “Superstition” was a dazzling display of chunky funk, featuring one of the most memorable drum openings in pop music history.

“The first thing I played (for the recording of) ‘Superstition’ was the drums, carrying the melody and all the breaks I wanted in my head,” Wonder recounted. “Then I put on the clavinet, then a second clavinet, then the Moog (for bass).”

Trumpeter Steve Madaio and saxophonist Trevor Lawrence contributed the track’s horn punches.

A friend of Wonder, singer-songwriter Lee Garrett, put an unplanned exclamation point on the song’s bridge.

“He was hanging out in the front of the control room and he kept going, ’Aaagggh!’” Wonder recalled. “I was saying: ‘Shut up, Lee! Shut up! Look, do you wanna be on the record? OK, here we go.’ That was all Lee.”

Wonder’s “Superstition” track, complete with that late-addition “aaagggh!” scream, was headed to Side 2 of his “Talking Book” LP.

Beck, meanwhile, had his own designs for “Superstition,” a song Wonder had encouraged him to embrace. The guitarist was intent on recording it with his new rock trio Beck, Bogert & Appice, and their heavy, muscular version would ultimately appear on the group’s 1973 self-titled debut for Epic Records.

But the October 1972 release of Wonder’s “Superstition,” issued as a lead single at Motown’s insistence, wound up stealing the thunder.

“I told Motown, ‘Listen, I did this for Jeff Beck. He likes the song,’” Wonder said. “I thought we should make ‘Sunshine of My Life’ the first single (from the ‘Talking Book’ album). They said, ‘No, no, no, no. The first single should be ‘Superstition.’ So I went back to Jeff and had that discussion.”

Wonder’s single raced up the U.S. pop and R&B charts — hitting the top spot 50 years ago this month — as Beck and company wrapped up their album recording sessions. Wonder earned a pair of Grammys from “Superstition,” which Rolling Stone ranked No. 12 on its latest 500 Greatest Songs of All Time list.

Beck went on to record another pair of Wonder originals, “Cause We’ve Ended as Lovers” and “Thelonius,” for 1975’s “Blow by Blow.”

Wonder downplays the idea that the “Superstition” release situation caused a deep rift between the two artists (“we had always been cool”), and said he looks back fondly on their performance together at a 2009 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame concert, where they linked up for a sizzling, showstopping rendition of the song.

Wonder said Wednesday he continues to write and record material for his next album, which will be released on his So What the Fuss Music, the label he launched with Republic Records in 2020.

He has also taken to listening back to his older work with his 17-year-old son, Mandla, dissecting tracks and reflecting on the music.

On Wednesday, after word of Beck’s passing, one of those songs played at home was “Lookin’ for Another Pure Love,” featuring Beck’s distinctive solo.

“When I heard it today, it was emotional for me because I could remember the moment,” Wonder said. “There’s just something about music. I know for you, as a fan, songs take you back to a space in time — you’re right there, right then. The same thing happens for us as writers and singers.”

At age 72, Wonder has grown accustomed to losing fellow artists, friends and peers. But he takes solace in his faith in God and his certainty that spirits transcend death.

“As long as you talk about people, you keep them alive,” he said, citing an African proverb. “You keep their spirits alive.”

And an artist’s musical legacy, Wonder said, is part of that conversation:

“We get a chance to hear and feel that spirit, for as long as we can have all the music that motivates people to move forward and do better.”

Contact Detroit Free Press music writer Brian McCollum: 313-223-4450 or bmccollum@freepress.com.

Raegan Sealy shares “Make ‘em Jealous” feat. The Gang of Angels choir – Aipate


British-born, Brooklyn-based singer/songwriter Raegan Sealy flaunts her velvety vocals on new song, “Make ‘em Jealous”. This single is a collaboration with The Gang of Angels, an all-female choir from Nottingham, UK.

“Make ‘em Jealous” is an invigorating retro soul tune with elements of indie. Speaking about the inspiration, Sealy said: “What is it that we tell ourselves in order to ‘stay?’ How does our ego react to accommodate disrespect? And how hilarious is that, when you think about it? This emotional push and pull in these dynamics is truly often like a Laurel and Hardy sketch.”

The song was written by Raegan alongside Honey Williams (of The Gang of Angles) and produced by Jay Diggs and Robin Buyer.

Listen to “Make ’em Jealous” and follow Raegan Sealy and The Gang of Angels on Instagram.



8 Platformers With The Best Sound Design







© Provided by TheGamer


A game’s music and sound design at large is an effective, often-overlooked technical and artistic tool. If utilized in the right way, the audio can add atmosphere, character, and immersive elements to the experience. And whether through simple 16-bit synthesizers, ambient noise, or full-blown epic orchestras — a good soundtrack can color a scene, invoke emotion, tell a story, and even enhance the fun factor.

RELATED: Best Platforming Games With A Great Story

The platforming genre is one that particularly shines when it comes to deep, enjoyable audio. It’s easy to see why, as dynamic sound design meshes well with the alluring, exciting, and colorful nature of 2D and 3D platformers. These are some examples of such platforming romps — whose well-crafted sound adds to the already great experience.

Super Mario 64

Most will point to the quasi-open-worlds and new progression system when it comes to Super Mario 64’s groundbreaking nature. But more underappreciated is this 3D platformer’s charming music and memorable sound effects. Mario’s iconic “wahoo!” and other enthused noises — coupled with satisfying sound effects — add to the exciting flow and bring a tactile, impactful feel to the game’s action.

These all help paint the picture and add a sense of immersion. And of course, the diverse, multi-layered soundtrack is one to remember, aging far more gracefully than the visuals. Who can forget the serenading melodies of “Dire Dire Docks”, or the catchy new spin on the classic Star Theme when Mario uses a power-up?

Limbo

The puzzle-platforming hit from 2010 reaffirms the notion that sometimes less is truly more. Whereas most studios stress bold, multi-layered music, voice tracks, and sound effects, Playdead takes a far more minimal approach — and is all the more effective. Crafted by specialist of “acousmatic music” Martin Stig Andersen, Limbo utilizes bits of vague, not-traditional music and sounds of nature. Like the shrowded visuals, this audio is meant to be both realistic and abstract, complementing the off-kilter vibe of the game.

RELATED: Single Player Platformers That Need Co-Op

The soft ambient noises sprinkled throughout add to the eerie, isolated sense that Limbo so greatly conveys, adding to the palpably thick atmosphere. These subtle sounds absorb you as you trek through dark, silhouetted maps, working through puzzles and evading hazards like glowing worms along the way.

Sonic The Hedgehog

It’s tough to think of a more delightful soundtrack and audio in early-’90s platformers than this Sega staple. The iconic blue mascot has seen his share of boundary-pushing sound design, even zipping through stages to campy rock songs. Yet, it’s the classic Genesis efforts, and in particular, Sonic’s debut, whose audio design still shines today. Despite relative limitations of the early 16-bit hardware, Sega does a lot with a little, hitting you with melodic tunes right out of the gate; notably the ever-catchy Green Hill Zone.

This is fleshed out by a bombardment of fun, satisfying sound effects reminiscent of the “dings” and “chimes” of Vegas slot machines. The sound design in Sonic grows more impressive still when you realize a mere two sound engineers worked on the original game.

Banjo-Kazooie

A game’s sound design can prove almost as iconic as the characters that accompany them, as is the case with this 3D platformer from Rare. As you might expect from the title, Banjo-Kazooie is not shy about making music and audio a focal point of the experience.

Not only does the game’s bear-tagonist strum his favorite instrument from the outset of the intro, but players also collect music notes and other goodies that trigger charming sound bites. And of course, the soundtrack holds up its end, with a selection of bouncy, quasi-bluegrass and polka tunes. It’s these distinct songs and sound effects that bring an authentic, instantly-recognizable flavor to the game; almost serving as a third character alongside Banjo and his bird pal.

Celeste

Despite — and perhaps because of — its simple pixel art, Celeste is one of the most moving platforming experiences in modern gaming on multiple levels. While exciting and fun in its own right, this indie platformer also serves as a deep visual allegory for overcoming obstacles of depression and anxiety. You’ll assume the role of the burdened heroine as you run, jump, and dash your way through grueling trials made up of distinct, vibrant biomes.

RELATED: Indie Switch Game Soundtracks You Have To Listen To

This is further colored by the soundtrack of developer and composer Lena Raine. Using a melodic fusion of synthesizers and piano, the diverse music adds to the emotional tone and gives us a sense of what the lead character, Madeline, is feeling. This is taken a step further, as different characters prompt unique instrumentals to further convey their traits — guitar cues representing Theo, for instance.

Earthworm Jim

Earthworm Jim flew a bit under the radar on account of its brutal difficulty — and being overshadowed by other ’90s platforming greats. Yet it enticed many with its zany sense of humor, thrilling action, and over-the-top premise starring a robotic worm superhero. The game brings a unique element of fun with its worm-swinging and whipping mechanic, ample gunplay, and absurd feats like propelling a cow with a falling refrigerator.

But amongst Earthworm Jim’s most standout features is its superb sound design, helmed by composer and musician Tommy Tallarico. The frantic game truly comes to life thanks to the thumping tunes, spot-on sound effects, and sporadic yelps from the unique hero. To get a sense of the popularity of its rocking soundtrack, fans have actually requested Earthworm Jim performances of Tallarico’s music at concerts. On top of this, the sequel’s equally enthralling tunes have been featured on Game Central’s Best of the Best CD mix of gaming music.

Ori And The Will Of The Wisps

Ori and the Blind Forest by Moon Studios seemingly came out of nowhere in 2015, luring gamers with fluid platforming, puzzle solving, and rewarding Metroidvania gameplay. It colors in even more gorgeous detail from a gameplay and presentation standpoint. Even more than its predecessor, Will of the Wisps shines through with a gorgeous soundtrack.

Wrought with multi-layered classical melodies and vocal tracks — the score feels akin to a Howard Shore composition for a fantasy epic rather than a 2D platformer. The music invokes atmosphere and grandiosity, which ebbs and flows throughout; complementing the experience as we follow Ori in his journey through the wild.

Donkey Kong Country

In the mid-’90s, Nintendo’s ape mascot was emphatically reimagined with this delightful platformer by Rare. Donkey Kong Country blasted its way on the gaming scene and garnered much attention, with its dynamic visuals and appealing gameplay that was easy to get into.

DKC feels more like an experience than a game, wrought with lush locales dripping with atmosphere and character — and its stellar sound design is a key factor. From the delightful music at large to the “drip-drips” of cavern interiors to Donkey’s chest-thumping, there’s much to love about DKC’s audio. To this day, many point to composer David Wise’s featured tunes, like the soothing Aquatic Ambience, as among the best scores in gaming.

NEXT: Best Platformer Soundtracks

TV tonight: Rachel Riley and Pasha Kovalev put their relationship to the test | Television


Jon & Lucy’s Odd Couples

9pm, Channel 4

In this new gameshow, TV’s inescapable comedy marrieds Jon Richardson and Lucy Beaumont are on a mission to see how their relationship stacks up against those of two other celebrity couples before, as Richardson puts it: “We drive home in total silence and never talk about it again.” Kicking things off this week: Rachel Riley and Pasha Kovalev, and Richard Herring and Catie Wilkins. Hollie Richardson

Amanda & Alan’s Italian Job

8.30pm, BBC One

Aperol-loving duo Amanda Holden and Alan Carr continue their charity mission to convert two derelict apartments in rural Sicily by designing an open-plan rustic kitchen. Carr (briefly) hefts a sledgehammer and Holden haggles over some gorgeous local marble, but while the build is impressive, the banter is better: “I saw so many willies in Corfu!” Graeme Virtue

Travel Man: 48 Hours in Vilnius

8.30pm, Channel 4

After a busy few weeks of Qatar-related provocations it will be nice to see Joe Lycett getting a holiday. This time, he’s off to Vilnius with Sarah Millican in tow. They take an unexpectedly thrilling hot-air balloon ride, enjoy some medieval attractions and, as is the show’s custom, get stuck into the local booze, in this case gira, a tipple made from fermented beer. Phil Harrison

Joe Lycett and Sarah Millican float over Vilnius in a hot-air balloon. Photograph: channel 4

Death in Paradise

9pm, BBC One

When a doomsday prepper is found dead inside his own sealed bunker, the tecs must ascertain whether it was by his own hand or another’s, in this riff on the classic “locked room” mystery. Elsewhere, romance is blooming for Neville, and Marlon wants to be a sergeant. Ali Catterall

Live at the Apollo

9.45pm, BBC Two

Your compere this week is British-Kurdish comic Kae Kurd, who came to the UK in his childhood as a refugee from Iraq, and thus has the ability to apply a sharp edge to what would otherwise be regular observational standup. He introduces sets from Laura Smyth and Liam Farrelly. Jack Seale

The Graham Norton Show

10.40pm, BBC One

The stars of two big Bafta contenders get comfy on Graham’s couch this week. Cate Blanchett will be talking about her classical music drama Tár, while Margot Robbie discusses Damien Chazelle’s Hollywood drama Babylon. Alan Carr and Ashley Banjo also join in, while Raye provides the music. HR

Film choices

The Estate (Dean Craig, 2022), 10am, 8pm, Sky Cinema Premiere

The imminent death of the childless, rich Aunt Hilda brings a plague of relatives to her door in Craig’s consistently cynical comedy. Sisters Macey (Toni Collette) and Savanna (Anna Faris), their sleazy cousin Dick (David Duchovny) and the hard-edged Beatrice (Rosemarie DeWitt) scheme to get into her good graces – and each plan is more desperate than the one before. With Kathleen Turner biting into every line as Hilda, it is refreshingly unsentimental stuff. Simon Wardell

Daniel Day-Lewis (second left, front) and Leonardo DiCaprio (centre, front) in Gangs of New York. Photograph: AJ Pics/Alamy

Gangs of New York (Martin Scorsese, 2002), Film4, 9pm

Martin Scorsese has brought the New York of his era to life in several classic films, but here he offers up a vivid snapshot of his home city circa the mid-1800s. The Manhattan slum of Five Points is the setting for an epic tale of warring criminal groups, nascent party democracy and long-nurtured revenge. Leonardo DiCaprio’s Irish-American orphan, Amsterdam, returns to the borough to kill “American Native” hoodlum Bill “the Butcher” (Daniel Day-Lewis), the man who murdered his gang leader father, Priest. There will be blood, racial tension and riots in a heady dramatic mix. SW

REPORT: Elvis’ Daughter, Lisa Marie Presley, On Life Support, In Coma, After Suffering “Full Cardiac Arrest”


An update on Lisa Maria Presley.

According to TMZ, Presley is currently in an induced coma and on life support after suffering “full cardiac arrest.” She was also given a temporary pacemaker.

Her mother Priscilla Presley released a statement to The New York Post upon arrival to the hospital:

“My beloved daughter Lisa Marie was rushed to the hospital. She is now receiving the best care. Please keep her and our family in your prayers.

“We feel the prayers from around the world and ask for privacy at this time.”

We’ll update as more information becomes available…

Elvis’ Daughter, Lisa Marie Presley, Hospitalized After Suffering “Full Cardiac Arrest”

Prayers up for Lisa Marie.

Lisa Marie Presley, the daughter of Elvis and Priscilla, had to be rushed to the hospital today after suffering cardiac arrest, according to TMZ.

EMTs responded to a call about a possible cardiac arrest at the  54-year-old’s home in Calabasas, California.

Once they arrived, they had to perform CPR as well as administer an epinephrine shot to help her regain a pulse before she could be transferred by ambulance to a local hospital.

It’s unclear what kind of condition she’s in at this point, but she reportedly suffered a “full arrest,” and she’s getting full treatment at the hospital.

She’s still the owner of Elvis’s Memphis estate, Graceland.

Presley was just at the Golden Globes on Tuesday night in Beverly Hills, where she and her mother were there to witness Austin Butler win an award for his role as Elvis in last year’s film, Elvis.

She called his performance mind-blowing, praising the young star for his impersonation of her father:

Elvis Presley’s First (And Only) Visit To The Grand Ole Opry

When you think of rock ‘n roll, what’s the first name that comes to mind?

Many would definitely say Elvis Presley.

Dubbed The King of Rock and Roll, the man changed the music world forever, although some of reasons he changed the game (shaking those hips like a madman), was the reason a lot of people didn’t like him.

Especially, in the country music world.

With rock music being relatively new, Elvis sort of fell into the country music genre when his very first single, “That’s All Right,” contained a cover of Bill Monroe’s bluegrass hit “Blue Moon Of Kentucky” on the B-side.

A 19-year-old Elvis had just burst onto the music scene, and ultimately landed him a spot at the Grand Ole Opry. However, his rocking cover of “Blue Moon of Kentucky,” didn’t sit well with the traditional country crowd.

According to NPR, Elvis actually sought out Monroe to apologize for re-working his song and performing it on the Grand Ole Opry. Monroe was rather gracious, and biographer Richard Smith says Monroe would later come to appreciate those big royalty checks.

“Bill recognized what Elvis Presley was doing with his song, and he was going with it.

And it was very, very admirable, I think, of him to pick up on that, and to tell Elvis that he was for him 100 percent if it would give him a start in his career.”

Not to be outdone by his own song, Monroe would then head back into the studio to re-record and even faster version of the song with triple fiddles.

However for Elvis, his experience on the finest stage in all of country music was… a forgettable one.

The Opry talent manager at the time, Jim Denny, allegedly even told Elvis to:

“Go back to driving a truck in Memphis.”

Needless to say, the performance was a total flop. Elvis vowed to never return to the Grand Ole Opry, and he never did.

However, much like Hank Williams before him, after Elvis shit the bed at the Opry, he started performing on the competitor show, Louisiana Hayride.

And the rest is history.

Here’s a clip of Elvis’ first performance on Louisiana Hayride, way back in 1954: