Friday, September 20, 2024
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McCartney Gets Letterman’s Roof After All

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Flash: this morning, after much back and forth, the Letterman show got permits for Paul McCartney to go up on their roof. Even as you read this, workmen are bracing the Ed Sullivan Theater marquee and fixing the sound system. Neighbors in the surrounding area of Broadway and West 53rd St. are going to have a treat this afternoon.

Please note: the city is worried about crowds. The fact is, it will probably be better to watch this thing on TV tonight. So, as with Michael Jackson’s memorial last week in Los Angeles, they’re asking people to stay away. I’m just passing this on.

Goodbye WBCN and Smart Rock Radio

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WBCN, maybe the greatest of all rock radio stations, is being yanked off the air by its owner, CBS Radio, in August. We shouldn’t be surprised. CBS Radio (which used to be called Infinity Broadcasting, but really was finite) did the same thing a few years ago to New York’s grand WNEW-FM. The succeeding station is a joke.

Of course, it made me feel very old to learn that WBCN is 41 years old. My first thought was wow, 41 years ago ‘ it must have started in the Fifties! LOL, as they say now. When the station celebrated its 10th anniversary in 1978 ‘ yes, 1978 ‘ yours truly won the station’s big’ contest. The station printed a list of the 104 top albums of “all time” ‘ “all time” having been just really a short time, but the golden era of rock. They left off the top 10; the winner had to guess what they were, in order. My memory is scratchy, but I think the list was something like: Sgt. Pepper, Blonde on Blonde, Songs in the Key of Life, What’s Going On, Tapestry, Fleetwood Mac (the one before Rumours), Beggars Banquet, Astral Weeks, Led Zeppelin 1 and maybe Purple Haze.

This was just as punk/new wave had taken hold in Boston, before it was anywhere. It was a generation before grunge and Nirvana. At the time, WBCN had solidified a fervent listening audience with Charles Laquidara and Oedipus by introducing the Cars, Talking Heads, Blondie, Ramones, Elvis Costello, Graham Parker, Joe Jackson, Mink DeVille, Patti Smith, the Jam, the Clash, Dire Straits, and so on. They were definitely the first to play “Ca Plane Pour Moi.” These were artists whom WNEW in New York were ignoring by and large.

All the good new music was coming out of Boston, and in particular BCN. Check this out’to hear and see Laquidara from last year’s 40th anniversary. He was Howard Stern before there was Howard Stern, trust me.

It’s all very ancient now. As a 52 year old curmudgeon, I am always eager to report that digital, rap, hip hop, sampling, a lack of respect for real musicanship and artistry, etc. washed over the music business and killed it. Radio now in New York and Boston, as well as Los Angeles (and probably a lot of other places) is completely unlistenable.

I guess the fact that WBCN hung in there so long is remarkable in a way. They were known for having a personality. That’s verboten now. I can remember when the station (I think this happened at WCOZ too) had intermittent strikes, where a deejay would lock out management. Now, you know, a SWAT team would be called, ATF agents would arrive, etc.

This morning, a la Ted Baxter in the final episode of “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” the two morning jocks were singing the praises of the station’s upcoming new format. Why? They’re staying, of course! Such a betrayal would not have been possible in ‘78. But that, my friends, was 31 years ago.’ Charles would have been playing the Talking Heads’ “Don’t Worry ‘Bout the Government.” And the audience would have known it was ironic.

Springsteen, Aretha, U2 Sign Up for Rock Hall Anniversary Show

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I told readers of my old column back in March that the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame was planning its 25th anniversary for the fall of 2009 at Madison Square Garden.

Now I can tell you that the Rock Hall folks, not exactly my favorite for various reasons, have booked Oct. 29 and 30 for a two-day extravaganza at the Garden.

Tentatively scheduled for the Thursday show are Bruce Springsteen, Simon & Garfunkel, Paul Simon as a solo act, Stevie Wonder, and the whole posse that includes Crosby, Stills, Nash, Young and friends.

aretha franklin 259x300 Springsteen, Aretha, U2 Sign Up for Rock Hall Anniversary ShowThen on Friday: Aretha Franklin headlines, with U2, Metallica, and Eric Clapton. Those are the names I’ve heard so far, but we won’t be surprised if Paul McCartney, Sting, the Rolling Stones and a few other big names like Bob Dylan. I’d like to see some more black acts– like Earth, Wind & Fire, Al Green, Sam Moore, Gladys Knight and Smokey Robinson, and Mavis Staples.

Of course, there are all the great acts who have never been inducted into the Hall of Fame, almost too many to name including Hall’ & Oates, Linda Ronstadt, Chicago, Moody Blues, Carly Simon, Todd Rundgren, etc.

As I wrote last spring, Jann Wenner let this past year’s induction ceremony take place in Cleveland at the Rock Hall Museum because he knew he had this event coming up, Very clever, no? The question is, will the proceeds from these shows go to the Cleveland museum or into the Hall of Fame’s $14 million war chest for distribution by Wenner at his will. Maybe ticket buyers should specify that their donations — you know the ticket prices will be very high — go to the Museum itself.

Still unknown: whether the shows will be broadcast on Fuse TV, which has a three year contract with the Rock Hall. Fuse TV and the Garden are each owned by Cablevision.

Jermaine Jackson Books First Post-Michael Gig

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Jermaine Jackson isn’t going to wait for (a) a month to pass since his brother died or (b) for his brother to be buried before accepting his first new gig.

97126 jackson jermaine 500 300x210 Jermaine Jackson Books First Post Michael GigJermaine has agreed to travel to Austria next week and sing Michael’s favorite song, Charlie Chaplin’s “Smile,” at the inaugural Save the World Awards.

The awards will be presented in a mothballed Austrian nuclear power plant that was built 30 years ago and never used. The show’s producer, George Kindel, tells me that the whole night will be dedicated to Michael Jackson. They’re even flying over musical director Ray Chew to play Michael’s hits, Kindel is busy lining up stars to perform with Chew. So far he has Bryan Adams. He’ll have more names to announce shortly.

For Jermaine, singing “Smile” will be a repeat of what he did at Michael’s memorial service in Los Angeles last week. Michael, however, is still not buried after dying on June 25th.

Kindel tells me that Jermaine will only receive expenses for the trip, but absolutely no fee. “We’ve had a lot of stars come for many awards shows for peace and making the world a better place,” Kindel says. “We don’t have money to pay fees.”

You can read more about this group at www.savetheworldawards.org.

Harry Potter 6: Is It Good, or Just More of the Same Thing?

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“Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” opens Wednesday with a huge advance ticket sale and lots of great reviews from fans who’ve been made to wait six extra months to see it.

“Half-Blood Prince” was supposed to be released last winter. But star Daniel Radcliffe was naked on Broadway, blinding horses in “Equus.” So Warner Bros. decided to hold off until “Equus” was just a distant memory. Luckily, “Equus” didn’t even get a Tony nomination. It just faded from view.

So what about the new “Harry Potter”? It’s long, very long, and ends on a dark, slow, sad note. At last night’s screening, the kids all said they liked it, but there was little applause and no cheering. It’s a very talky movie, frankly.

On the upside: Jim Broadbent as Professor Horace Slughorn is exceptional. He may even get some awards mentions next fall. The production is top notch, of course, with great music, tremendous sets, and visual richness. On the downside: Helena Bonham Carter now plays crazy too well. She also looks like she’s about to star in “The Stevie Nicks Story” in every movie.

But you can feel the series is drawing to a close. For one thing, the young actors are about to launch into “Harry Potter 90210″ with much talk of snogging, love potions and dating. The real magic is over. If you haven’t read the books, the movies are indistinguishable. Yes, kids love this stuff. A bunch of them last night told me they’ll go back and see it again. And that’s what it’s all about. But is this one of the five extra Best Picture nominees this year? In a word: no. “Lord of the Rings” this is not.

Whitney Houston Comeback CD Gets U.K. Debut Today

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Whitney HoustonWhitney Houston’s big comeback CD, “I Look to You,” will be unveiled in Britain today to U.K. music journalists.

The album gets the same treatment next Tuesday in New York.

Clive Davis will be on hand today as everyone gets a listen to Whitney’s first collection since cleaning up her act, shedding husband Bobby Brown, and getting off drugs.

Advance buzz is good, and a couple of the songs have already “leaked” enough that we know Houston could have a hit. The real proof will be in the Grammy Awards. The picture of Houston and Davis doing a victory lap on Jan. 31, 2010 is hard to resist.

More to come as word starts pouring in…

ABC is Being Used by Michael Jackson’s Father, Promoter

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I never thought I’d say this about a real network news operation, but ABC News is allowing itself to be used by Joseph Jackson, father of Michael Jackson, and a crooked concert promoter named Leonard Rowe.

joe jackson 239x300 ABC is Being Used by Michael Jacksons Father, PromoterReaders of this column and of my past column know that Jackson Sr. and Rowe tried to push their way into the Michael Jackson London concerts this past March. Jackson Sr. was furious that he had no part of the shows, and no cut financially.

J. Jackson and Rowe called this reporter trying to convince me to help them. According to sources at Jackson’s Holmby Hills rented mansion, they badgered Michael incessantly.

Attached here is a letter that Michael finally wrote to Leonard Rowe in May, telling him to take a hike. It reads: “this is to inform you that you do not represent me.” How much clearer could he be?

What ABC News is not telling its audience: that when Rowe and Jackson Sr. did not get their way, they went into business with Patrick Allocco of AllGood Entertainment. At the time of Michael’s death, AllGood was suing him.

What ABC News is telling its audience: in October 2008, singer R. Kelly was awarded $3.4 million by a Los Angeles Superior Court judge who determined that Leonard Rowe had defrauded him. Rowe was also ordered to pay R&B star Ne Yo $700,000 in conjunction with the same tour.

This is the man ABC News has let go on the air and tell the world he was Michael Jackson’s financial advisor. Leonard Rowe was never Michael Jackson’s financial advisor, not for a minute.

For a while this spring, Tohme R. Tohme managed Michael Jackson until he was dismissed. Late in the spring, Frank DiLeo, Michael’s trusted manager during the “Thriller” era and his steadfast friend for more than 25 years, returned as his manager. Jackson also rehired John Branca, his attorney for more than 20 years, and Joel Katz, the respected Atlanta music business attorney, to look after his affairs.

It’s shocking to see Chris Connelly, a very good journalist, interview Joseph Jackson on national television and let him spew nonsense about “foul play” and his son’s illnesses. Connelly doesn’t ask Jackson Sr. if he has any culpability in Michael’s death. Witnesses at the Holmby Hills house say Jackson Sr. ‘ whom Michael feared ‘ played on the singer’s lack of self esteem and hounded him.

“I have no money and it’s your fault!” a friend of Michael’s heard the father yell at the son in the month before his death.

You can only imagine what was going on in Michael Jackson’s life the weekend of March 28, 2009, for example. This reporter got sent a press release from one Ladd Biro, representing Jackson Sr. and Leonard Rowe, announcing that they’d taken over his management. It simply wasn’t true, but the pair hoped someone in the press would bite, print it, and make it sound true.

There are other people still filling the airwaves, by the way, who sued Michael Jackson and now purport to have been his close friends. It’s shocking. Brian Oxman is still out there on low end TV shows. There are others. The shows don’t seem to have researchers, and do no vetting of their guests. Michael Jackson isn’t buried, but his memory is being trashed nightly in an effort to get ratings.

In the end, though, ABC News must accept responsibility for turning this into a sideshow. Joseph Jackson told them, and it’s in their transcript, that “no artist could do shows like that, back to back …” Has ABC even looked at Jackson’s schedule? It was designed after the first two nights to give him an extraordinary amount of time off between performances. He wasn’t doing 50 shows in one month. They were spaced out over six months. And so on. It’s enough now.

McCartney Will Do Letterman Inside Only

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Well, we can scotch that idea about Paul McCartney playing on the roof of the Ed Sullivan Theater on Wednesday night.

Word from the New York City Department of Film and Television is that they’ve declined the Letterman show’s application to let McCartney re-create the “Let It Be” movie and perform on top of the theater marquee.

A spokeswoman from the department says that the Letterman show didn’t even apply for permission until Monday after this column reported the plan.

Well, it was a good idea. But the marquee is kinda shaky. So McCartney on Letterman is a coup anyway, and we’ll be watching whether it’s inside or out.

Debbie Rowe Wants Her Kids, Retains Legal Rights

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debbie rowe 227x300 Debbie Rowe Wants Her Kids, Retains Legal RightsDebbie Rowe, the mother of Michael Jackson’s two eldest children, wants her kids. She retains legal rights as a parent through a 2006 court order. Her lawyer, Eric George, has sent a letter to the New York Post demanding a retraction for a story they ran today claiming that she would sell the kids to the Jackson family for millions.

Debbie had better get her retraction. I am going to tell you something now I did not write before. In the moments that the world discovered Michael Jackson had had a heart attack and might be dead, Debbie — whom I’ve known for many years — called me. She was crying so loudly I could barely make out what she said. She did say, first, before anything else, “I’ve got to get my kids.”

Rowe never “sold” her kids to anyone. As she said to me a few days after Michael died: “I lost my best friend.” She was heartbroken over Michael’s death. Debbie is not a public person. She is extremely private. I cringe when I see her in that video clip, screaming at the paparazzi who stuck a camera in her face. When challenged, Debbie will fight back. She had every right to confront that idiot with the camera. He was in her face.

For years Debbie and Michael had a very satisfactory arrangement. Then, in February 2003, Martin Bashir’s “Living With Michael Jackson” aired on ABC. It depicted Michael as a child abuser who let young boys sleep in his bed. Debbie went into action mode. She volunteered to be interviewed for a TV special so she could praise Michael as a father. The show aired, and did Jackson a lot of good. The reality: He never spoke to her, or thanked her. She wasn’t paid. She did it for the father of her children.

A few months later, Debbie gave another TV interview, this time about her horse ranch. Jackson, feeling his usual cash flow pinch, responded through lawyers. He claimed that Rowe had violated her confidentiality agreement. He cut off her monthly alimony payments.

That’s when things went from bad to worse. The Nation of Islam, known for being viciously anti-Semitic, had moved into Michael’s life. Debbie, already in a court fight with Michael, now worried that her kids were in danger. When she was married to her first husband, Richard Edelman, she’d converted to Judaism. She thought of Prince and Paris as half-Jewish. The issue was added to her court situation.

On top of these things, Debbie felt that at no time from Michael’s arrest in November 2003 until his exoneration in June 2005 that she was included in what was going on with her kids or Michael. She testified for him at the trial in April 2005. Her testimony was considered a turning point in getting Michael acquitted. He never even thanked her.

Eventually, Debbie’s alimony was restored. She saw her kids in the summer of 2005 but was limited to telling them she was a friend. Michael Jackson would not let her reveal she was their mother. Then the kids were whisked off to Bahrain, Ireland, France and Las Vegas. Debbie went back to her life as horse rancher. She lived by all their agreements. But when Michael died three weeks ago, she saw red. She knew what his life had been like with Joseph Jackson. And still, as I reported here, she wanted to wait to do anything until Michael was buried.

But Michael Jackson has never been buried. His greedy family continues to bicker over how to profit off the location of his final resting place. In the meantime, Joseph Jackson has told interviewers — for money, no less — that he plans to create an act with the kids. He wants to exploit Michael’s children since Michael — who hated him — is gone and and cannot be abused by his father again. The Jackson side is planting stories that Debbie will accept more money in exchange for her parental rights and custody.

Here’s the reality: Debbie Rowe gave birth to those kids. She’s 50, not 80. She can easily afford to raise them. She is the biological mother. They look like her. If she wants them, a California court will likely give them to her. The more she’s provoked by hurtful, inaccurate gossip, the more likely she will go for something more than visitation. She should. She and Michael, she told me, had a clear understanding of how the kids should be raised.

The New York Post, the British tabloids and other outlets had better get this thing straight in their heads and calm down. Debbie Rowe is not going to stand for this anymore.

Music Biz Legend Michael Klenfner, 62, Passes Away

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The man who made the Blues Brothers into a hit recording act and movie, and who put Cher’s “Believe” onto the charts, passed away this evening.

Michael Klenfner, 62, was a giant of a man in the record business, a friend to thousands and one of the great mensches of all time, died from complications of congestive heart failure.

Michael worked for Ahmet Ertegun in the 1970s and had numerous hits besides the Blues Brothers. He promoted Laura Branigan, Genesis, Yes, Emerson Lake and Palmer, just to name a few. He consulted every single company in the business, as well as Madison Square Garden, where he reigned as an unofficial royalty. He also was deeply attached to the T.J. Martell Foundation.

In the 1990s, Klenfner had more hits as a consultant, literally filling the Billboard charts with catchy songs. I can remember when Cher’s “Believe” was a hit in Europe and when no one wanted to play it here, it was Klenfner who took on the project. Cher’s whole career was revived because of him. He had loads of celebrity friends who loved him too, including Dan Aykroyd and Whoopi Goldberg. He also had two terrific daughters, Bryn and Kate, who took excellent care of him in his last difficult weeks.

I’ve been thinking about Michael a lot since I saw him on July 4th in the hospital. We had a great talk. He loved what used to be the music business. He was so proud that the only flowers in his room (the hospital didn’t allow them otherwise) were from Clive Davis.

When I first met Michael officially it was in the early ’90s. We were at Mark Strausman’s Campagna, where everyone in the business ate at the time. Klenfner was the big pasha, he knew everyone. He was eating with Seymour Stein. They were scheming about something. It was that night that he nicknamed me “Belushi” very fondly for his late pal. Tomorrow, there are going to be lots of reminiscinces about him. He was one of those people we will never, ever forget.