Home Blog Page 411

Katt Williams Defends So-Called ‘Cancel Culture’ | Celebrities

0



Katt Williams is providing his two cents on so-called “cancel culture.”

On the latest episode of The Joe Budden Podcast, the famed comedian was asked about heightened sensitivity in comedy and its effects on those in the business. He responded by comparing boundaries in comedy to physical ones in basketball on the court and speed limits when driving.

“Nobody likes the out of bounds, but the out of bounds gotta be there or you’ll run up in the stands,” Williams said. “Some of these things are for the benefit of everything. Nobody likes the speed limit but it’s necessary. Nobody likes the shoulder of the road but it’s there for a reason. My point is, people weren’t all that extremely funny when they could say whatever they wanted to say.”

RELATED: Katt Williams Talks Trump, Voting And Black Lives Matter In New Stand-Up

Continuing his point, Williams said “cancel culture” does not exist and that heightened sensitivity has been pushed by “people without a voice being trashed” by others like they “didn’t matter.”

“Cancellation doesn’t have its own culture,” he said. “That was people of color. That was us policing our own culture. That was people without a voice being trashed by people just because they had a bigger name than them and more money than them and a better office than them, they could sweep them up under the rug like they didn’t matter. I don’t know what people we think got canceled that we wish we had back.”

Additionally, Williams shared that being a comedian means entertaining everyone, and that your words can interfere with that. 

“If all that’s gonna happen is we have to be more sensitive in the way that we talk, isn’t that what we want anyway? I’m saying, your job as a comedian is to please the most amount of people with your art,” Williams said. “If you want to offend somebody, nobody took those words away from you. ‘Dirty b***h’ ain’t been taken away, you can say that. But don’t call somebody this word when you know this effects all of these people.”

Watch the full interview below.



Apple TV+’s Lisey’s Story Series Composer Clark

0


Apple TV+ released its Stephen King series adaptation Lisey’s Story on June 4. ComingSoon’s Jeff Ames got the chance to talk with the series’ composer Clark (aka Chris Clark), who discussed everything from his views on classical music and his ventures into the world of sound design. You can check out ComingSoon’s interview with the composer below!

The series reunites Oscar winner Julianne Moore and Oscar nominee Clive Owen, who previously worked together in 2006’s action-thriller pic Children of Men. Joining them are Joan Allen (Nixon), Jennifer Jason Leigh (Atypical), Dane DeHaan (ZeroZeroZero), Ron Cephas Jones (This Is Us), and Sung Kang (Fast & Furious films).

The story was actually inspired by King’s own experience when he was involved in a serious accident in June 1999. The idea for the novel sprang from a sudden realization he had when he came home from the hospital and saw that all of his belongings were in boxes. Because of that, he saw a vision of what his studio would look like after his death.

RELATED: Lisey’s Story Featurette: Stephen King Talks Personal Connection to Story

Lisey’s Story is executive produced and directed by Pablo Larraín from a script written by Stephen King. It is produced by J.J. Abrams’s Bad Robot Television and Warner Bros. Television, with Abrams, King, Moore, Ben Stephenson, and Juan de Dios Larraín set as executive producers.

Jeff Ames: Was it always your intention to venture into the world of film and TV scoring?

Clark: Not really. It actually kind of started as a hobby because I just enjoyed putting music to picture. I just got into it kind of accidentally about eight years ago with this show called The Last Panthers. It was kind of 50% accidental, like all the best things in life. Underneath that, there was a feeling that it was really exciting to work with directors and to turn your music into this kind of three-dimensional entity that needed to work around specific scenes. And it just gave me a really good opportunity to learn composition and learn the sort of foundational structures of music. You don’t really get that opportunity if you’re just like playing techno. I’ve always been interested in harmony, but I wanted to kind of get underneath it more and explore recording acoustic instruments and scoring is just the perfect vehicle for that.

What were some of the challenges presented by your early ventures into this new area of music?

The world of electronic music is amazing and I’m never going to jettison my roots, but it can sometimes feel a bit like playing tennis without a net. There’s so much freedom and you actually — under pressure and under a certain narrow set of parameters — you get to really understand what your craft is and you get to hone it. But I’m hungry for challenge permanently. Every project is like a leap forward and I don’t just like releasing music for the sake of it. Every project needs to signal progression.

I’m not in people’s faces with social media, but my music is very much — I’m very prolific and I hope it’s clear that over the last six years, each album I’ve done is a clear signal of progression and that just has to continue, really. And so, in some ways, it’s just practical for me to score films because I write so much music. I’m just not fit for a pure studio album career. It doesn’t work because I write about four albums a year. Scoring to me is like a perfect opportunity to get my music out there and work with people that I enjoy working with.

What draws you to a project like Lisey’s Story?

Well, it’s kind of hard to say no. I mean, I’m a big Stephen King fan. Pablo [Larrain] seemed like a really chill guy and fun to work with. I love the cast and it was hard to turn down. Particularly the cinematography on this one —it made me kind of hallucinate the score because it’s so vivid and there’s so much to work with. I just kind of internalized the world and built this accompanying sound world. It was just a real thrill to work on this one. All the things I’ve scored have been good in different ways, but particularly this — just because of the resources we had — we had access to play at the Abbey Road and had access to AIR Studios in London. I just didn’t feel limited at all in terms of what I could use to record the music.

Was it this wild imagery that pushed you towards a more classical approach for the score?

Good question. I don’t know. It’s a funny thing, string instruments, because they just work the picture, but part of me thinks do they just work because people think they work and it’s this sort of self-reinforcing thing where we just think an orchestra needs to be the thing that you hear when you watch a classic film. I think we’ve been programmed to think that, and I think it’s kind of 60% objectively true, but I think some of the time strings just don’t work, but we think they do because there’s so much orchestral music out there. So, I never come at an orchestra from this sort of snobby perspective, that it’s the real music and the electronic music isn’t real, and the highest we can ever achieve is orchestra. There’s so much prestige in using orchestra, and that is amazing.

However, I also think sometimes it’s not necessary. Sometimes you can achieve just as much with a synth, actually more; and it says more. So, I’m one of those hybrid composers. I kind of find myself — when people are really sticking up for classical music — I kind of want to defend electronic music. And then when people defend electronic music, I go, yeah, but orchestras are really good. I’m never one or the other. In terms of a solo, if you’re releasing an album that needs clear marketing, then that’s not so good. Like people expect all the boxes to be ticked — this is a Metallica album, we expect distorted guitars and drums. As a composer for film, you need to be able to be versatile. So, I really feel like I found my niche because I can sort of inhabit both of these worlds pretty convincingly. And I would say that sort of gradually coming clear and I think that’s why I enjoy working on film.

Is there a trick to scoring horror films or shows like Lisey’s Story?

Yeah, I think its resources and being more confident with orchestra. When I recorded Daniel isn’t Real it was the first time I’d ever recorded strings and those tracks on the album are the ones that worked. There were a few that were just like really sort of gleefully naive experiments that I had to jettison. And then Lisey’s Story is like the third or fourth time I’ve worked with an orchestra. So, I just felt way more confident and happier with it knowing what I wanted from it — it’s sort of a learning process. Last Panthers was purely electronic and a bit of piano. It’s a bit more lo-fi, which is what the director was after; and also my own electronic music.

Where did you start with Lisey’s Story?

It was really her, it was Lisey and her interior state and watching how she moves through the world in this kind of numb, grieving, beautifully, elegant way; and a bit of — you really have to kind of become the character in a way and imagine what they’re feeling. It’s almost like acting. You’re like an invisible actor. All you’ve got is a synth and an orchestra to act with. It always comes from an emotional space. The horror stuff, for want of a better word, you do have to follow certain tropes. Horror just seems to be like, you just get to do the most incredible sound design. Just make the most mental noise you possibly can and put as much effort into it, as long as it’s scary and it comes in at the right point. I’ve been doing that since I was 16. So, that stuff’s easier.

The hardest thing to crack was character and also themes and emotional, memorable interacting parts that conjure up the character; and that’s definitely the harder part. That’s what I always start with. If you can get what the director wants within a few things, then the rest is kind of easy kind of. Or, maybe not easy, but it’s a relief. getting those themes down is just such a relief because then you feel like — although you’ve got a mountain of work ahead of you — you can see the parameter of the mountain. You kind of know where you’re going. You’ve got a bit of a map. It’s not easy, but you’ve got a map at least.

You also helped with the sound design for some of the elements on the show 


Sound design is crucial to everything really. It’s one of the pleasures of being a modern composer. I was walking the other day and these birds took off and their wings had to flap so intensely that it sounded like sub-base. I was thinking, there’s no way a composer from the 19th century would probably have a language for that kind of detailed sonic representation. It’s a very modern thing, and it’s something of our age. I think we’ll look back and think, yeah, that was the time of sound design where emotion was not just scales and keys and chords and acoustic instruments; but rather textures and how that can envelop you when you’re watching a picture. It’s a really massive part of what I do. I want to get involved in Foley, but I’m usually not allowed because I’m not an expert in that.

And on that same point, you helped create the voice of the Long Boy Monster. Where did that sound come from?

Pablo knew he wanted demonic sounds of humans in pain. (Laughs) I thought that would work as well. I mean, it’s quite literal, but we didn’t want it to be too monstery, because that’s actually less scary than, like — if you think what is terrifying or what gets to you, like the sound of a small boy crying, or a small boy making a kind of satanic noise is actually way scarier than like a lion’s roar because you recognize the humanity in it. And because of that, you recognize something of yourself in it. It’s a subtle thing. We didn’t want it to be too special effects-y and artificial. It needed to be believably human, and that’s why recording this 30-piece choir just doing all manner of depraved noises was the way forward.

The other thing that I’ve noticed is the link you can make between horror and beauty and ugliness and appeal — like, one saying sounds terrifying and dark, but we recorded it with the best mics in the world. So, it’s this strange cognitive dissonance of ugliness but captured in the most Hi-Fi way. It’s a really weird combination. It’s like, let’s just get this really horrible thing, but just make it sound fucking amazing! It’s my favorite kind of combination of sort of depravity with expensive taste.


Clark can be followed on Twitter and Instagram.



TiĂ«sto Takes Coldplay’s “Higher Power” Even Higher with New Remix [LISTEN]

0


TiĂ«sto has transformed Coldplay’s hit “Higher Power” for the dance floor with his latest remix.

The producer works his progressive magic, matching his own grade of dance with Coldplay’s singalong-style mass appeal. With epic builds and releases, the song has never sounded more powerful as two major acts join forces in this genre-bending banger.

Back in 2012, TiĂ«sto remixed Coldplay’s “Paradise” to a similar effect. The track has become a staple in TiĂ«sto’s remix catalog and we expect his take on “Higher Power” to achieve the same status.

Recently, ZHU also remixed “Higher Power” with a more sensual, but no less astounding soundscape. Be sure to check that out here, as well, for yet another entirely different take on the Coldplay original.

Enjoy!

Coldplay – “Higher Power” (TiĂ«sto Remix)

 

Photo via Rukes.com



Source link

Teena Marie – Fire and Desire (John Morales M+M Mix)

5


Buy the album here:

Producer extraordinaire John Morales returns to BBE Music, celebrating the life and work of R&B / soul legend Teena Marie with a double album full of brand new remixes, lovingly crafted from the original studio tapes, entitled ‘Love Songs & Funky Beats’.

“Teena is somewhat underrated, and people don’t really know much about her.” Says Morales. “I set out to immerse people in her music and represent what she really did. That meant for me a dive into more than her R&B hits, to dig into her ballads and dance cuts. People know she was talented. I don’t really think they really knew the depth of her abilities, her complete confidence to take it upon herself to do everything – singing, producing, arranging, songwriting. Teena Marie was the total package.”

John Morales had the pleasure of mixing many of Teena Marie’s original records over the years, so it felt natural to dig into the archives and select his favourite cuts to rework, extend and subtly update in his own distinctive style. While by no means a definitive collection of Lady Tee’s expansive musical catalogue, ‘Love Songs & Funky Beats’ represents a fitting tribute to a multifaceted and important voice in popular music, by one of the most storied mix engineers and remixers of our age.

Jumping into the music industry deep end in 1979 with a three-year mentorship from Berry Gordy & Rick James at Motown, Teena Marie then spent seven fertile years with Epic, which yielded her greatest commercial successes (including the classic album ‘Starchild’). After founding an independent label ‘Sarai’, Marie took a ten-year hiatus which ended in 2004 in a deal with hip hop label Cash Money Records; a less unlikely partnership than some might assume, given that Teena was one of the first ‘mainstream’ artists to perform a rap verse, on 1981’s ‘Square Biz’.

Teena Marie Brockert forged a unique path through the industry, an artist in-charge of her own destiny, influencing (and heavily sampled by) both the hip hop and R&B sounds of the 90’s and early 2000’s. Her 1982 lawsuit against Motown records resulted in “The Brockert Initiative”, which has benefitted literally thousands of other artists by making it illegal for record companies to ‘shelve’ artists by keeping them under contract without releasing their material. She continued to tour regularly and deliver commercially successful, expertly sculpted music, right up until her untimely passing in 2010.

Installing High security GPS tracker on My New Car..❀

1


Auto Music Emporium
10172, Abdul Aziz Rd, Karol Bagh, New Delhi, Delhi 110005
01141451600
Monday closed
Opening time 11.30 am

My Instagram:

Auto Music Emporium Channel link:

Crime Scene Kitchen – canceled + renewed TV shows

0


Crime Scene Kitchen TV show on FOX: canceled or renewed?

(Drew Hermann / FOX)

Network: FOX  
Episodes: Ongoing (hour)
Seasons: Ongoing

TV show dates: May 26, 2021 — present
Series status: Has not been cancelled

Performers include: Joel McHale (host) with judges Yolanda Gampp and Curtis Stone.

TV show description:      
A culinary guessing game, the Crime Scene Kitchen TV series is hosted by Joel McHale and is judged by chef Curtis Stone and cake artist Yolanda Gampp.

Each episode begins at the scene of the crime — a kitchen that was just used to make an amazing mouth-watering dessert that has since disappeared. The chef teams of two are challenged to scour the kitchen for clues and ingredients to figure out what was baked.

Next, each team must duplicate the recipe based on the clues and their best guess. The competing dessert makers will need to prove they have the technical know-how, imagination, and problem-solving skills needed to decode and re-create incredible desserts and cakes from across the world.

Celebrity judges will determine how closely their sweet treat matches the missing dessert — and how good it tastes. The winners will take a $100,000 prize.

Series Finale:     
Episode #TBD
This episode has not aired yet.
First aired: TBD

  
 

Check out our FOX status sheet to track the network’s new series pickups, renewals, and cancellations. You can find lists of cancelled shows here.

What do you think? Do you like the Crime Scene Kitchen TV show? Do you think it should be cancelled or renewed for another season?

Trying Three WW1 Beverage Recipes

3


In this video, I will be sharing three beverage recipes from a 1918 British magazine article. (UPDATE: A remake of the oat coffee can be found here: )
These are all “wartime” recipes, as they don’t use any ingredients that would have been rationed in Britain at the time. The recipes are a mix of surprisingly delicious and (perhaps not so surprisingly) awful.

FIND ME ELSEWHERE:

My Instagram:

Enjoyed this video?
Want a written copy of my recipes, access to labels, historical articles, plus a vote on future video topics?
Please consider supporting me on Patreon:

SPIN Daybreaker: Violet Lounge

0




Wey U (from Waiting to Exhale – Original Soundtrack)

5


Provided to YouTube by Arista

Wey U (from Waiting to Exhale – Original Soundtrack) · ChantĂ© Moore

Waiting To Exhale

℗ 1995 Arista Records LLC

Released on: 1995-11-14

Keyboards, Synthesizer, Composer, Lyricist, Producer: Babyface
Saxophone: Reggie Griffin

Auto-generated by YouTube.

Popular articles