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Searching for Sugar Man Receives Oscar

Searching for Sugar Man Receives Oscar

Searching for Sugar Man Wins Best Documentary at the 85th Annual Academy Awards

Searching for Sugar Man was honored with more than 30 awards in the last year, won the big one Sunday when it was named best documentary at the 85th annual Academy Awards.

A fascinating documentary about the quest for a vanished ’70s rock legend. Back in 1968, two record producers discovered a charismatic, soulful Mexican-American singer-songwriter named Rodriguez in a Detroit bar.

Convinced they’d found the Chicano Bob Dylan, they signed him up and put out a critically acclaimed album, ‘Cold Fact,’ which promptly flopped. Rodriguez disappeared, and it was even rumoured that he’s committed suicide. A few years later, on a different continent, a bootleg copy of ‘Cold Fact’ became the soundtrack to a revolution.

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Rodriquez (Searching for Sugar Man)

In Apartheid South Africa, Rodriguez’s anti-establishment lyrics had struck a chord with a generation of disaffected Afrikaners. The album eventually went Platinum. But what really happened to Rodriguez? In the mid-’90s, South African fans Craig Bartholemew and Stephen ‘Sugar’ Segerman embarked on a quest to find out. Filmmaker Malik Bendjelloul charts a journey that proved stranger – and more exhilarating – than anyone anticipated.

“Rodriguez wanted to stay home in Detroit” and watch the Oscars on TV, producer Simon Chinn said backstage. “He genuinely doesn’t want to take credit; he regards it as Malik’s film.”

“Searching for Sugar Man” is the first music-oriented film to win the documentary award since 1986′s “Artie Shaw: Time is All You’ve Got.” “From Mao to Mozart: Isaac Stern in China,” “Woodstock” and “Arthur Rubenstein – The Love of Life” are the other music films that have won the documentary Oscar.

2013 Oscar Winners, 85th Academy Awards

2013 Oscar Winners, 85th Academy Awards

Oscar buzz is in the air! In A Distinctive Style magazine, readers will find interviews with this year’s most watched Academy Award Nominees, all vying for a coveted gold Oscar statue.

A Distinctive Style magazine starts with the amiable Hollywood heartthrob, actor, and philanthropist, Brad Pitt who is featured in an exclusive interview about his creative pursuits, and life with Angelina Jolie and their six children. Read his interview on page 42 (CLICK TO SEE INTERVIEW)

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Honest Abe Lincoln leads the nominations with 12 accolades, including a Best Actor Nomination for Daniel Day-Lewis, who portrays the 16th President of the United States. This is Lewis’s fifth academy award nomination; he previously won Best Actor Oscars for his leading roles in the films My Left Foot and “There Will Be Blood.” Read more about Day-Lewis—who recently won the 2013 Golden Globe for his role as President Lincoln— on page 58. (CLICK TO SEE INTERVIEW)

Check out our chat with Oscar nominee Bradley Cooper, up for Best Actor for his leading role in Silver Lining Playbook, in which he plays a former high school teacher battling mental health issues.This is Cooper’s first academy award nomination; his interview is on page 36. (CLICK TO SEE INTERVIEW)

Tony-award winning actor Hugh Jackman won the 2013 Golden Globe award for his portrayal as accused convict turned heroic mayor Jean Veljean in the musical-movie adaptation of the “Les Misérables.” He’s nominated for an Academy Award for the same role. An interview with the multi-talented Jackman can be found on page 52. (CLICK TO SEE INTERVIEW)

Anne Hathaway also received a Golden Globe award for her portrayal of Fantine in the “Les Misérables.” Proving she is more than just a pretty face, the actress can add “singer” to her resume now. The spunky brunette, who remains close to her childhood friends despite her success, once co-hosted the 83rd annual Academy Awards and wed actor/designer Adam Shulman last year in Big Sur. Hathaway’s interview in this issue can be found on page 62. (CLICK TO SEE INTERVIEW)

A Distinctive Style continues to bring readers informative, interactive videos, and this issue is no exception. The documentary “Chasing Ice,” featured on page 26, (CLICK TO SEE INTERVIEW) explores the rapidly melting ice caps that affect our precious planet.

View the magazine in its entirety at: A DISTINCTIVE STYLE .COM

ABOUT

Founded in 2007 by Dallas resident Denise Marie, A Distinctive Style—a magazine with heart—is a pioneer in the digital online experience, Their stimulating presentation using hd videos, breathtaking imagery and arousing music, is designed to appeal to the senses, while featuring diverse and prominent topics, in a fresh new way.

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And The 2013 Oscars Go To?

And The 2013 Oscars Go To?

The 2013 Oscars Go To?

A Distinctive Style’s Winter issue features human interest, social awareness, sustainable and organic fashion and this years Academy Award nominees.

A Distinctive Style magazine kicked off the New Year with Brad Pitt. The amiable Hollywood heartthrob, actor, and philanthropist, graces the Winter 2013 cover and is featured in an exclusive interview.

“There is so much passion in this issue, from celebrities, to motivational women who run a horse ranch in Colorado,” says Denise Marie, publisher of A Distinctive Style. “The Winter 2013 issue is full of amazing humanitarians who pay-it-forward—just like Pitt does—by giving back to those less fortunate; individuals who possess a sincere love of family, or go through great lengths to save our environment. Everyone featured brings important social issues to the forefront. It may be tricky for people to see the reasons I have for each story I place, but there is always something humbling behind each editorial.”

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A Distinctive Style Winter Cover

Pitt’s latest action movie, Killing Them Softly, directed by Andre Dominik, is currently available on DVD, and you can read more about his creative pursuits, and life with Angelina Jolie and their six children, on page 42.

Also in this issue, we learn about Trashed, a documentary that examines environmental pollution, executive produced by actor Jeremy Irons. The documentary—highlighted in an interactive, introductory video on page 18—is a political “wake-up call” about the ways food is affected by air, sea, and land pollution. We also provide readers with a list of 10 breakfast cereals that most likely contain GMO’s corn—which has been linked to tumors. Bringing readers health-oriented news remains a priority in our publication.

On a lighter side, we chat with Los Angeles-based fashion designer Deborah Lindquist, who up-cycles all sorts of eco-friendly fabrics to create one-of-a-kind clothes and accessories for women around the world. Story on page 64.

Oscar buzz is in the air—the 2013 nominees have been announced! In this issue, readers will find interviews with this year’s most watched Academy Award nominees, all vying for a coveted gold Oscar statue.

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Daniel Day-Lewis as Lincoln

Honest Abe Lincoln leads the nominations with 12 accolades, including a Best Actor nomination for Daniel Day-Lewis, who portrays the 16th President of the United States. This is Lewis’s fifth academy award nomination; he previously won Best Actor Oscars for his leading roles in the films My Left Foot and There Will Be Blood. Read more about Day-Lewis—who recently won the 2013 Golden Globe for his role as President Lincoln— on page 58.

Also, in this issue, check out our chat with Oscar nominee Bradley Cooper, up for Best Actor for his leading role in Silver Lining Playbook, in which he plays a former high school teacher battling mental health issues.

“We do many editorials on individuals with all kinds of challenges, and this film brings up a very important topic—mental illness—and how it’s perceived,” says Publisher, Denise Marie. This is Cooper’s first academy award nomination; his interview is on page 36.

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Hugh Jackman

Tony-award winning actor Hugh Jackman won the 2013 Golden Globe award for his portrayal as accused convict turned heroic mayor Jean Veljean in the musical-movie adaptation of the Les Misérables. He’s nominated for an Academy Award for the same role. An interview with the multi-talented Jackman can be found on page 52. “Hugh Jackman is a sincere person that truly loves his family over anything else,” says Marie. ‘I think that’s noble.

Les Misérables co-star Anne Hathaway also received a Golden Globe award for her portrayal of Fantine in the Les Misérables. Proving she is more than just a pretty face, the actress can add “singer” to her resume now. The spunky brunette, who remains close to her childhood friends despite her success, once co-hosted the 83rd annual Academy Awards and wed actor/designer Adam Shulman last year in Big Sur. Hathaway’s interview in this issue can be found on page 62.

A Distinctive Style continues to bring readers informative, interactive videos, and this issue is no exception. The documentary Chasing Ice, featured on page 26, explores the rapidly melting ice caps that affect our precious planet.

You can view the magazine in its entirety at: A Distinctive Style Magazine

Founded in 2007 by Dallas resident Denise Marie, A Distinctive Style—a magazine with heart—is a pioneer in the digital online experience, proving that utilizing this medium is not only a green practice, but can actually enhance the reading experience. The online magazine can access a variety of media not available in a traditional print format, and incorporates music as well as video and audio interviews.

ADISTINCTIVESTYLE.COM

Scarlett Johansson lends her voice to “Chasing Ice”

Scarlett Johansson lends her voice to "Chasing Ice"

Scarlett Johansson lends her voice to documentary “Chasing Ice”

Original end title song “Before My Time” is up for an Oscar for “Best Original Music” was written and produced by J. RALPH. Performed by Scarlett Johansson  & Joshua  for the Sundance award winning documentary “Chasing Ice” opened November 9th 2012. Directed by Jeff Orlowski.
Chasing Ice is the story of one man’s mission to change the tide of history by gathering undeniable evidence of our changing planet. Within months of that first trip to Iceland, the photographer conceived the boldest expedition of his life: The Extreme Ice Survey. With a band of young adventurers in tow, Balog began deploying revolutionary time-lapse cameras across the brutal Arctic to capture a multi-year record of the world’s changing glaciers.

As the debate polarizes America and the intensity of natural disasters ramps up globally, Balog finds himself at the end of his tether. Battling untested technology in subzero conditions, he comes face to face with his own mortality. It takes years for Balog to see the fruits of his labor. His hauntingly beautiful videos compress years into seconds and capture ancient mountains of ice in motion as they disappear at a breathtaking rate. Chasing Ice depicts a photographer trying to deliver evidence and hope to our carbon-powered planet.

Ⓒ Ⓟ 2012 Rumor Mill Records

SOUNDTRACK AVAILABLE NOW ON  ITUNES

See the Film Chasing Ice and Bring the Reality of Climate Change to Light (VIDEO) http://bit.ly/QOYIq8

A Fine Frenzy with Alison Sudol

A Fine Frenzy with Alison Sudol

A Fine Frenzy with Alison Sudol

“I had been running to keep up with a world which I could not catch for so long, trying to find somewhere to belong.” ~Alison Sudol

PINES, Alison Sudol’s third full-length Album as A Fine Frenzy, is a fable about a pining tree who is given the unheard-of chance (for a conifer) to make a life of her own choosing. Drawing inspiration from the redwood forests and dramatic landscapes of Northern California and Washington’s Cascade Mountains, the thirteen new original songs survey a sonic landscape as vast and deep as the woods, their namesake.

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Alison Sudol

Sudol crafted PINES in response to our accelerating pace of life in the 21st century. “Sometimes I feel like the world has been strapped onto the back of a giant rocket and it’s hurtling us into the unknown at a pace we’re not entirely equipped to deal with. All kinds of things are falling off, good and bad. It’s a crazy, exciting, terrifying time- so much is changing, and fast. Yet some of the most wonderful things in the world are slow- rivers and seasons and turning leaves and growing older with the ones you love. I wanted to create an environment where a person could retreat to, somewhere vivid and real where their minds and hearts could wander freely. I wanted it to be a place you could go to feel, like a quiet spot in a forest or the sea on a cloudy day.”

The adventure of PINES is further realized in a companion book and short film. The animated film PINES, (produced by TakePart, the digital division and Social Action network of Participant Media, whose mission is to create entertainment that inspires and compels social change) integrates hand-cut sets, puppets, stop motion, physical effects, and layered glass to augment the depth and texture of the film.  The book is a collaboration with illustrator Jen Lobo, whose aesthetic Sudol chose for her blend of “scientific precision and whimsical beauty.”

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Jackie Evancho Singing “Songs from the Silver Screen”

Jackie Evancho Singing "Songs from the Silver Screen"

Jackie Evancho

Think: this girl is a 12-year-old professional soprano. A Pittsburgh, Pen­nsylvania native. She was first discovered on America’s Got Talent at age 10 and has recently made several television appearances to celebrate the release of her third album. Who comes to mind?

Jackie Evancho.

Her recently released album, Songs from the Silver Screen, is her newest collection for Columbia/Syco Records and offers her melodic interpretations of music from iconic movies.

In her first two full-length albums, Dream With Me and Heavenly Christmas, Jackie explored musical classics from arias to holiday standards. For this album, she collaborated with Grammy-winning producer/ engineer Humberto Gatica, who worked closely with superstars like Michael Bublé, Madonna, Michael Jackson, and Mariah Carey.

Just this past summer, PBS asked Jackie to make a second Great Performance Special. The event, called “Jackie Evancho: Music of the Movies,” featured many of the songs from the new album, including “Some Enchanted Evening” from South Pacific, “My Heart Will Go On” from Titanic, “Can You Feel The Love Tonight” from The Lion King and the aforementioned ‘The Music of the Night.’

Her interest in music began at a young age. “I’ve always had a talent for singing; my inspiration stemmed from seeing “Phantom of the Opera” when I was 7-years-old, and it made me want to become a singer. The Music of the Night is one of the most beautiful songs ever written and I’ve always wanted to perform it in public,” Jackie revealed, “My enjoyment of the Phantom score is one of the things that gave us the idea to focus an entire album of songs that stayed in our minds for a long time after the movies were over.”

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Composer Paul Englishby wins Emmy for Page Eight

Composer Paul Englishby wins Emmy for Page Eight

2012 Emmy Award Winner Paul Englishby

Page Eight: a political thriller about a long-serving M15 officer who quits his job to investigate a mystery file, which threatens its stability. Directed by David Hare, this drama stars Bill Nighy, Rachel Weisz and Ralph Fiennes. Of course, let’s not forget about its composer: Paul Englishby.

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Paul Englishby

Paul Englishby scored the 2009 Academy Award-nominated drama, An Education, this project marks his first high profile feature project. He received his first Emmy in the Outstanding Main Title Theme Music category for his theme in this thriller, winning a Creative Art Emmy Award. This  Award is considered the television equivalent to the Academy Awards for film, the Grammy Awards for music or the Tony Award for theatre.

His interest in music began at a young age. “When I was about 11, I wrote a piece dangerously close to the slow movement of a Beethoven symphony (without any of the genius) that I was listening over and over to. I wrote pieces for musical friends, the school band, choir, whoever I could get to play it,” he explains, “At 13 I joined the Lancashire county Big Band, which started a love of jazz, and I would do arrange­ments for them, something I continue to do for my own Big Band.”

Now holding the position of Associate Arts for the Royal Shakespeare Company, Englishby describes the benefits of the job. “You have a small say in company policy and some benefits like opening night tickets, as well as being listed alongside some incredible and legendary actors, directors and designers, but there is no compulsion to do a certain number of shows a year,” he states, “I have a wonderful time there and write for an average of two shows a year, which works perfectly with my other commitments.”

But this doesn’t stop him from finding inspiration. “I’m so lucky to have written for movies, theatre, concert hall, dance works, big band… all manner of situations. I absolutely love mixing things up like that, and always facing a fresh challenge,” Englishby elaborates.

READ MORE >>>

A Distinctive Style with Jackie Evancho, Glenn Close, Bill Cosby

A Distinctive Style with Jackie Evancho, Glenn Close, Bill Cosby

Jackie Evancho, Glenn Close, Bill Cosby, Paul Englishby among others can be found in the Fall 2012 edition of A Distinctive Style

When you open the Fall 2012 issue of A Distinctive Style you will be greeted by a beautiful cover featuring child singing sensation Jackie Evancho, then you will notice the music of Emmy Award Winner Paul Englishby.

In our cover story with Jackie Evancho you’ll hear how she has handled the media storm since coming on the scene as a contestant on the fifth season of America’s Got Talent. She talks about her acting debut in a Robert Redford film to release in 2013 and tells us how she picked the songs for her newly released album “Songs From the Silver Screen.” You will see highlights from the CD by clicking a link on her page.

Other stories you’ll enjoy in this edition include:

  • A personal look at 2012 Emmy winner Paul Englishby focusing on his love of music and the success he has had with film and television musical scores.
  • A preview on “Stories of Change,” a partnership between the Skoll Foundation and the Sundance Film Festival to promote documentary films that promote global awareness and stimulate change.
  •  An interview with legendary film actress Glenn Close as she sits down with Robert Milazzo at The Modern School of Film.
  • An inspirational profile of Tony Volpentest, a four-time Paralympic Gold Medalist and 2012 Olympic Hall of Fame nominee.
  • An examination of the fascination with the Mayan calendar and its prediction that the world will end on December 21, 2012.
  • A look into the “Gerson Therapy,” a natural cure for cancer.
  • A letter from Bill Cosby on “Why we must put our Children First.”
  •  A review of Lizzie Velasquez’ insightful new book “Be Beautiful, Be You” which relates the power of finding inner beauty.

Of course all of the stories feature the innovative aspects that A Distinctive Style is known for. They are expertly written, have vivid photography and are enhanced with audio and video clips to give you a complete interactive experience.

Flipping through the pages of the Fall issue is like losing yourself in a virtual visual world. For the readers of this magazine, this is truly a magnificent treat for the senses and a perfect way to celebrate the publication’s fifth anniversary.

Those who haven’t seen this issue yet should certainly take a look now by visiting www.adistinctivestyle.com. You will be hooked on the experience!

A Distinctive Style, a Digital Media Magazine is Celebrating 5 Years

A Distinctive Style, a Digital Media Magazine is Celebrating 5 Years

Our Digital Media Magazine is Celebrating 5 Years and 20 Issues!

This month marks the 20th Anniversary issue of A Distinctive Style (ADS) magazine.  We are proud what we’ve accomplished over the past five years and wish to thank our readers, followers and supporters and those created the innovative tool which has allowed A Distinctive Style magazine a platform to showcase our stories.

ADS began as a medium to highlight environmental issues, but merged beautifully into a gallery for artists, a stage for musicians, a platform for celebrities who do more than entertain us, and a lesson in tenacity through the many stories we’ve covered.

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Five Year Anniversary

Fran Drescher (a.k.a “the Nanny”) was featured in two ADS issues as she educated us about the early warning signs of cancer…pay attention to your body: Stage 1 is the cure!

Actress and singer Olivia Newton-John shared her story of cancer during a candid interview, reminding us all of how we have an inner strength that can pull us through anything.

Actress Diane Keaton brought us her new book “Then Again,” a leveling story of the “all American” family and how our own family stories are not so different from hers.

And when “Dallas” finally made its way back to network television we were elated to have the opportunity to cover the Red Carper affair, and interview some of the cast.

We are each teachers in our own way. We wish each of you experience greatness so you can teach/help others. Looking back on the ADS journey it seems that a deeper lesson was there for us… a lesson intending on reminding us of the possibilities we each hold within us. No matter what life gives you, there are lessons in the highs and lows. What emerges is a bigger, better, stronger YOU!

We hope ADS has given you an inspiring look at the world and how YOU are an integral part of the future. Thank you for allowing us to be part of your life.

Enjoy Your Journey,

denise marie

See our new Fall Edition by clicking here

Happy 100th Birthday, Woody Guthrie !

Happy 100th Birthday, Woody Guthrie !

New songs by the American folk legend keep turning up, a century after his birth

By Abigail Tucker
Smithsonian magazine

The recording is old but the voice is timeless: Woody Guthrie is singing to his daughter Cathy Ann (“Stacky” to her dad) on her fourth birthday:

You’ve played, little Stacky, all day
With dolls and wagons and clay
Your bath was warm and your jammers are nice
Goodnight, little Stacky, goodnight.

It’s not clear whether Cathy ever heard the 1947 ditty; shortly after its recording, a spark from a badly wired radio ignited her crinoline birthday dress and she burned to death.

Guthrie never recovered from the loss. His sadness, friends believed, hastened the progress of his Huntington’s disease. By 1952, the folk singer couldn’t remember the words to “This Land Is Your Land,” his most famous song; soon he was hospitalized for good. (He died in 1967, at age 55.) Most of his best work was crammed into a single decade, but he is still celebrated as one of the country’s most prolific artists, the prototypical singer-songwriter and a lodestar for Bob Dylan, Joan Baez and John Lennon.

WoodyGuthrie Happy 100th Birthday, Woody Guthrie !

“Guthrie was one of these solar flares who pass through periodically,” says Smithsonian Folkways producer Jeff Place, who, with Robert Santelli, put together Woody at 100, a collection of songs (including his lullaby to Cathy, previously unreleased), essays and drawings in honor of the centennial of Guthrie’s birth this July 14. “He threw sparks wherever he went.”

Cathy’s death was not the only time fire touched the singer’s life. His beloved older sister Clara died in a house fire; his father was badly injured in another blaze, and Guthrie, as his illness destroyed cells in his brain, would burn his arm and lose his ability to play guitar.

“Pete Seeger said that fire was Woody’s muse,” says Guthrie’s daughter Nora. “It just followed him around.” Indeed, Guthrie’s whole existence had a combustible quality: He drank hard, couldn’t hold jobs, married three times and fathered eight children (of whom Arlo Guthrie is the eldest son), sweeping through one city after another.

Sometimes called the Dust Bowl Balladeer, Guthrie got his start performing in the late 1930s when he traveled west from his home base in dust-drowned Pampa, Texas, with displaced Arkies and Okies. In California he wrote of his fellow migrants, setting the lyrics to traditional folk tunes. By 1940 he’d moved “from California, to the New York Island,” as his song goes, befriending Lead Belly and other famous artists. His country charm and writing chops inspired the city musicians: “Next thing you know everybody’s got a guitar and harmonica rack,” Place says.

The working man’s struggle was Guthrie’s favorite subject, but he also sang of spaceships, washing dishes, one-legged sailors, Ingrid Bergman and Hanukkah. He composed a remarkable series on the builders of the Grand Coulee Dam, another (commissioned by the Army) on venereal disease and several albums of children’s music. His creativity was almost unnerving in its intensity: He sometimes delivered six songs in a sitting, or reams of skillful pen-and-ink drawings. (Many of those featured in Woody at 100 were drawn in the same week.) He also wrote several books and composed personal letters that could ramble on for 70 pages, scribbling on wrapping paper if nothing else was at hand. “Every letter would have a lyric in it,” says Nora Guthrie. “Even his journal had this flow.”

Today “This Land Is Your Land” echoes at presidents’ inaugural concerts and Occupy Wall Street rallies alike. But it’s not just the classics that survive: In 2005, the  punk band Dropkick Murphys released “I’m Shipping Up to Boston,” an obscure Guthrie snippet that has since become an oft-blasted Boston Red Sox anthem.

Because Guthrie wrote so much, stashes of recordings and drawings are still being found. And it wasn’t until decades after his death that Place finally traced the origins of the “This Land Is Your Land” melody. It’s likely based on a church hymn titled “When This World’s on Fire.”

Source www.smithsonianmag.com

 

 

Bob Dylan ‘s New Album Marks 50 Years as a Recording Artist

Bob Dylan 's New Album Marks 50 Years as a Recording Artist

 COLLECTION OF TEN NEW BOB DYLAN SONGS MARKS MUSICIAN’S 50TH ANNIVERSARY AS A RECORDING ARTIST

Columbia Records announced recently that Bob Dylan’s new studio album, Tempest, will be released on September 11, 2012. Featuring ten new and original Bob Dylan songs, the release of Tempest coincides with the 50th Anniversary of the artist’s eponymous debut album, which was released by Columbia in 1962.

Tempest is available for pre-order now on iTunes and Amazon. The new album, produced by Jack Frost, is the 35thth studio set from Bob Dylan, and follows 2009’s worldwide best-seller, Together Through Life.

Bob Dylan’s four previous studio albums have been universally hailed as among the best of his storied career, achieving new levels of commercial success and critical acclaim for the artist. The Platinum-selling Time Out Of Mind from 1997 earned multiple Grammy Awards, including Album Of The Year, while “Love and Theft” continued Dylan’s Platinum streak and earned several Grammy nominations and a statue for Best Contemporary Folk album.

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Modern Times, released in 2006, became one of the artist’s most popular albums, selling more than 2.5 million copies worldwide and earning Dylan two more Grammys. Together Through Life became the artist’s first album to debut at #1 in both the U.S. and the UK, as well as in five other countries, on its way to surpassing sales of one million copies.

Those four releases fell within a 12-year creative span that also included the recording of an Oscar- and Golden Globe-winning composition, “Things Have Changed,” from the film Wonder Boys, in 2001; a worldwide best-selling memoir, Chronicles Vol. 1, which spent 19 weeks on the New York Times Best Seller List, in 2004, and a Martin Scorsese-directed documentary, No Direction Home, in 2005. Bob Dylan also released his first collection of holiday standards, Christmas In The Heart, in 2009, with all of the artist’s royalties from that album being donated to hunger charities around the world.

This year, Bob Dylan was the recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the country’s highest civilian honor. He was awarded a special Pulitzer Prize in 2008 for “his profound impact on popular music and American culture, marked by lyrical compositions of extraordinary poetic power.” He was also the recipient of the French Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres in 1990, Sweden’s Polar Music Award in 2000 and several Doctorates including the University of St. Andrews and Princeton University as well as numerous other honors.

Tempest is available for pre-order now on iTunes and Amazon.

See Bob Dylan’s Artwork: http://www.bobdylanart.com

The music of Billy Vera spans genres and generations

The music of Billy Vera spans genres and generations

The music of Billy Vera spans genres and generations.

Raised on the soul of Ray Charles, the jazz of Benny Golson, and the pop of Frankie Lymon, Billy Vera broke color barriers in music in the ‘60s, wrote hit songs for numerous notable singers as well as for himself, and is undoubtedly one of the most knowledgeable ethnomusicologists in the field of blues, soul, and R&B. Jilly Rizzo, famed as Frank Sinatra’s right-hand man, was quoted as saying, “Other than Frank, this kid is the best phraser in the business.” While he never met Ol’ Blue Eyes himself, Billy Vera heard from other friends of Sinatra that he was one of his fans.

03bv.dick  The music of Billy Vera spans genres and generations

Billy Vera and Dick Clark

Vera grew up with music; his mother sang with the Ray Charles Singers on The Perry Como Show; his father was a staff announcer for NBC. Billy Vera’s early exposure to music came from the R&B and jazz records his father would bring home from the station. After experimenting with drums, Vera learned to play the guitar and began writing, recording, and performing. He received regional airplay in the Northeast, Texas, and Louisiana while he was still a teenager. By the mid-‘60s, he was beginning to make his mark in the music business. In our interview for ADS, Vera said, “In those days, I could write a song in the morning and by the afternoon play the song in a publisher’s office and walk out with 50 dollars.”

Screen Shot 2012 07 18 at 8.29.52 AM The music of Billy Vera spans genres and generationsWhen Billy Vera was 21, Ricky Nelson charted with his song, “Mean Old World,” which gave Vera his first Billboard hit. A year later his song, “Make Me Belong to You” charted as a hit for Atlantic Records’ vocalist Barbara Lewis. This success brought R&B godfather Jerry Wexler into Billy Vera ’s life. Wexler, producer and label exec for Atlantic Records, believed in the hit potential of one of Billy Vera ’s love ballads, “Storybook Children” (co-written with Chip Taylor). Written as a duet, numerous vocalists were auditioned for the female part; none of them had the right feeling until Wexler brought in gospel/R&B singer Judy Clay. Judy’s relatives included Cissy Houston (mother of Whitney) and Dionne Warwick. If you haven’t heard of Judy, she sang with strength, sensitivity, and feeling on a par with any star singer you may care to name.

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Walk Off The Earth a multi-talented five-piece musical phenomena

Walk Off The Earth a multi-talented five-piece musical phenomena

Walk Off The Earth is an unconventional, multi-talented five-piece musical phenomena that is currently taking the world by storm. Based in Burlington, Ontario (just outside of Toronto), their brilliant 5-people-playing-one-guitar interpretation of Gotye’s “Somebody That I Used To Know” recently exploded on Youtube garnering well over 35 million views in under 2 weeks. The massive fan response quickly drew attention to their collection of innovative songs and videos spanning their last 5 years and generated an unprecedented flood of media interest. New fans from around the world immediately fell in love with the band’s organic, independent, sincere and honest original songwriting, cover interpretations and beautifully filmed videos. For the past 5 years, the band has built a massive following of dedicated fans from around the world through their unique and heartwarming approach to songwriting, filming and constant, open interaction with everyone their music touches.

Screen Shot 2012 05 17 at 2.49.19 PM 300x203 Walk Off The Earth a multi talented five piece musical phenomena
Walk Off The Earth

The chemistry between the members of Walk Off The Earth is undeniable. Marshall, Sarah and Gianni’s individual vocal stylings mesh seamlessly with Taylor’s haunting harmonies and keys all the while soaring over epic melodic arrangements held together by Joel Cassady’s driving and prolific percussion work. Their independent spirit, unstoppable work ethic and awe-inspiring creativity has catapulted Walk Off The Earth into new and uncharted waters with only bigger and better things on the horizon.

WEBSITE: www.walkofftheearth.com

Zen Cowboy Chuck Pyle

Zen Cowboy Chuck Pyle

Chuck Pyle sings with a smile that brightens up the room, delivering songs and stories cradled in wisdom so deep it could have been forged in the molten granite that gave birth to the Rockies a million centuries ago. Pyle’s guitar playing is equally solid, a rich, rhythmic, rolling finger picking style that has some people looking around for another guitarist – but it’s all Chuck Pyle, seamlessly blending lyric and melody with signature warmth and humor.

ChuckPyle 300x137 Zen Cowboy Chuck PyleThe uninitiated may think they’re listening to a cowboy, and they are. But somewhere in the concert, your sense of being shifts; you’re not just drinking in music and lyrics; a new element is blossoming within, unnamed, undefined but you feel a dimension opening and you’re seeing life with new eyes and ancient sagacity. Maybe that’s what inspired a reviewer, a long time ago, to adhere the title, Zen Cowboy, to Pyle’s legacy.

Pyle will not take all the credit for this magic. “My audience inspires me; it’s time to quit if they don’t.” While he spoke about being a “word guy”, he does not make the mistake that dogs many writers who sacrifice the song for the sake of the message. Lush music and seasoned lyrics inform each other, like a marriage mingling love and respect, they entwine perfectly, enticing you into their journey.

Occasionally Colorado photographer John Fielder will join Pyle in performance; the two will share the stage with Pyle’s songs adding dimension to Fielder’s loving homages to the beauty of Colorado’s natural treasures. These traveling performances awaken those who may be taking their paradise for granted unaware of what they are losing to unsustainable development.

Some who hear Pyle for the first time wonder why they haven’t heard of him; why doesn’t he get airplay? The answer is fairly simple; his songs are not shallow enough for the commercial record and radio industry. To Pyle, commercial music generally isn’t very interesting; it tries to deliver an instant sell that seldom stands up to the test of time. Pyle’s music does play well the first time but some songs require a few listens before they begin to unfold, revealing layers of depth, perception and nuance. He has many evergreens, such as his signature song, Colorado that never wears out.

A highlight of Pyle’s live performance is his song, “Keeping Time by the River” that delivers an ever changing stream-of-consciousness commentary on observations of life gleaned from bumper stickers, quotes and slogans he’s run into his travels around the country. On a recent night, the audience chuckled, roared and groaned to such sayings as, “remember a conclusion might just be where you got tired of thinking”, and “always ride the horse in the direction it is going.” Wise words from a Zen cowboy who knows how to ride that horse.

SEE CHUCK’S NEW VIDEO HERE

Connie Lim Seduces Listeners

Connie Lim seduces listeners with her whole­hearted lyrics and flawless vocals…

From Spring 2012 of A Distinctive Style Magazine

Screen Shot 2012 04 29 at 7.10.44 PM 230x300 Connie Lim Seduces ListenersBorn in Hollywood, California, Connie Lim was raised in the conservative town of Palos Verdes. A shy girl, she preferred communication through the power of music, a power that improved her listening and emotional depth. Her emotional depth comes across immediately in both the range and the choice of her songs.

“Lim paid a price for acquiring this power—her family’s approval. They wanted her to complete her medical studies at Berkeley, rather than follow her dream to be a singer/ songwriter. When asked if her parents had accepted her choice Lim told us: “My parents took a while to accept my decision. In high school I trotted in my sister’s footsteps, taking AP courses, and landing on Honor Rolls year after year. I was ASB president and homecoming queen, founder of a club that started a local breast cancer walk.”

“I grew up ambitious and aware of my parents’ expectations for my future as a bright professional. They were devastated that I would throw my education away for the arts, but now see that I am channeling the same drive into what I believe is my calling and they could not be happier for me. It was the hardest journey in my life, but the most rewarding. To get emails from my dad saying that he loves my songs is probably the best accomplishment in my life,” she shared. For her fans, there are other remarkable accomplishments, including “The Hunted,” a song that Connie wrote as an anthem for gays in Uganda. When asked about her commitment to this cause she told us: “I would love to continue to sing for those who are discriminated for who they choose to love. I’m also very intrigued and compelled to sing for women who have survived sexual abuse or image disorders. I grew up with these obstacles and survived them and I want to stand as a voice for those who may seem vulnerable, but are ultimately mighty and strong.”

“Sugar” is a song that has a lot of weight behind the lyrics,” Lim shared: “I call them iceberg songs. I wrote that song about the young girls in Sub-Saharan Africa who are encouraged to have sexual relations with their teachers for survival. The pressure these girls must have felt really haunted me. Then I realized how I too encounter those pressures in today’s sex-crazed and money obsessed media culture.”

READ MORE  AND LISTEN TO CONNIE’S NEW SINGLE>>

Outer Space Video

Screen Shot 2012 04 27 at 6.23.30 PM Outer Space VideoOuter Space Video

The footage in this outer space video is derived from image sequences from NASA’s Cassini and Voyager missions.

By: The Hague (the Netherlands) based freelance editor and aspiring music-video and documentary director.

The song is The Cinematic Orchestra -That Home (Instrumental)

 

Smooth Jazz with Charley Langer

Smooth Jazz with Charley Langer

Get ready to let your heart and mind be moved by one of the most refreshing smooth jazz artists in recent time.

There’s no doubt that Charley Langer, a Northern California based saxophonist, can connect with thousands of contemporary jazz fans.

Langer incorporates everything from smooth contemporary jazz to rock/fusion, old school soul/jazz, Latin and straight ahead/swing. The result is best described as intelligent smooth jazz – think Phil Woods meets Boney James. The title track Never The Same, that everyone is hearing on The Weather Channel and Smooth Jazz Radio, is great but just scratches the surface of Langer’s many musical muses.

Screen Shot 2012 04 26 at 11.38.53 AM Smooth Jazz with Charley Langer

“Never the Same” is the culmination of years of writing and hard work in the studio, and features some incredible world-class talent, including Alphonso Johnson (Weather Report), Wally Minko (Jean Luc Ponty) and Michito Sanchez (Joe Sample).

It lives up to its name in that each of its ten tracks has its own distinct vibe, personality and set of musical influences. Written to reflect a challenging time in his life, the easy funk title track finds Langer in a slight melancholy mood in the verses, feeling hopeful in the pre-chorus and hitting his stride, breaking through to the light on the exuberant chorus. The tropical, Latin-flavored “Epifania” introduces the listener to Langer’s wistful melodic soprano, his colorful horn texturing and Wally Minko’s lively acoustic piano. The similarly vibrant and percussive “Outside In” features a playful jazzy sax melody and Minko’s Fender Rhodes coolness over Matt Bissonette’s bubbling bass groove. Following the lighthearted and melodic “Refuge” is the edgy jazz/rock fusion ballad “Remember When”—the first song Langer composed for the album. It begins as a moody sax driven ballad, then evolves in emotional intensity and a touch of gritty blues with Griffey’s blistering electric guitar intensity. Minko’s Hammond B-3 adds an old school bluesy jazz flavor to the bouncy mid tempo funk of “City Lights,” which features Langer at his alto strutting best.

Though the seductive reflection of “Gray Skies” has a gentle melancholy feeling, Langer actually wrote it on a very hot Sacramento afternoon when he was dreaming of a cooler, cloudy day. He calls the album’s spirited; straight ahead jazz/swing excursion “Upside Down” because it was inspired by one of his favorite Charlie Parker tunes, “Confirmation.” To create the classic big band vibe, Langer says he flipped Parker’s song upside down, so his song is rhythmically similar to the original tune but the melody moves in a completely opposite direction. Never The Same wraps with the in-the-pocket, soaring “Once In A Lifetime” (which features colorful horn textures and brass flourishes) and the dark, haunting “Expressivo”, an ambient piece which includes a tender call and response pattern between Langer’s emotional soprano and Mark Morris’ acoustic guitar.

For those who ACT NOW, there are some special things in store that you won’t want to miss!

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Symphony Orchestra in the Congo

An Inspiring Story of the Only Symphony Orchestra in Central Africa

Screen Shot 2012 04 16 at 7.01.00 PM Symphony Orchestra in the Congo Did you know that the only symphony orchestra in Central Africa is located in the capital of the Congo – a war-torn country plagued by poverty and despair?

“Joy in the Congo” seems an unlikely title for a story from the Congo, considering the searing poverty and brutal civil war that have decimated that country. Yet in Kinshasa, the capital city, we heard about an unforgettable symphony orchestra — 200 singers and instrumentalists defying the poverty, hardship, and struggles of life in the world’s poorest country…and creating some of the most moving music we have ever heard. Follow Bob Simon to the Congo to hear the sounds and stories of the Kimbanguist Symphony Orchestra.

This video tells the amazing story of the Symphonic Orchestra Kimbanguiste, revealing the difficult circumstances under which these musicians labor: they come from all over the city; most travel on foot to get to rehearsals six days a week; and the bulk of the instruments have been donated, salvaged and repaired or purchased from second-hand shops. Despite all of these difficulties, the orchestra manages to make the most beautiful music: listen to Johann Strauss’s The Blue Danube Waltz (An der schönen blauen Donau).

This is not the first documentary about this outstanding orchestra. In 2010, a team of German filmmakers released a 95-minute film called Kinshasa Symphony (see below). Also, Le Figaro has an arresting photo essay about the musicians.

By profession, Matthias Rascher teaches English and History at a High School in northern Bavaria, Germany. In his free time he scours the web for good links and posts the best finds on Twitter.

Social network, built by music lovers for music lovers

Social network, built by music lovers for music lovers

Curated network connects musicians & fans for small, in-home concerts

Slowbizz aims to bring together music fans willing to host small musical events in their homes with talented artists willing to perform in such settings.

Belgian Slowbizz is “a global musical social network, slowly built with passion by music lovers for music lovers,” in the company’s own words.

Slowbizz aims to bring together music fans willing to host small musical events in their homes with talented artists willing to perform in such settings. Both artists and hosts must apply for membership on the site, but acceptance is not guaranteed, and Slowbizz says it takes its time deciding. Once accepted, however, both hosts and artists can join the network for free and begin making small concerts possible. Hosts pay EUR 150 to put on a concert, recoupable in the form of admission fees for attendees; they also provide accommodation and a meal for the artist, as well as transportation to the artist’s next local gig. Artists, in turn, receive that EUR 150 fee as a guaranteed payment, in addition to any donations or purchases patrons may make at the event. Slowbizz, meanwhile, in exchange for facilitating and promoting a run of gigs, collects a fee of EUR 100 per tour (which must consist of 20 dates as minimum), as well as EUR 30 per date played. This is deducted from the artist’s EUR 150. The video below explains Slowbizz in more detail:

Join the Slowbizz.com artists community from slowbizz on Vimeo.

As the music industry struggles to reinvent itself in this era of streaming and instant music downloads, a return to small, intimate concerts may well come as a fresh, compelling alternative. Musically minded entrepreneurs around the globe: be inspired!

Website: www.slowbizz.com

Handsome English Violinist Charlie Siem

Handsome English Violinist Charlie Siem

Violinist Charlie Siem turns perceptions of classical music on their head

Handsome English violinist Charlie Siem turns perceptions of classical music on their head in director Asa Mader’s exclusive, disorientating short. The orchestral world’s current man of mode—the London-born soloist wore Kris Van Assche for Dior Homme in Mader’s film—Siem has been tutored by some of the greatest living violinists, including Shlomo Mintz and Itzhak Rashkovsky. For the soundtrack, Siem pulled his forefather Ole Bull’s Cantabile Dolorosa e Rondo Giocoso from his formidable repertoire for its “lyricism and almost mystically bizarre effect.” Chosen alongside broadcaster Sir David Frost and principal dancer Rupert Pennefather for Dunhill’s Voices campaign, Siem has recently graced the pages of lauded fashion and art publications Vogue Italia, VMan and ACNE Paper. Not content with conquering the worlds of high fashion and classical music, he has also lent his performance skills to pop iconoclasts The Who and Boy George. Here the dashing young gentleman expounds on the intricacies of performance and his take on classic style.

Charlie Siem: A Stylish Rendition on Nowness.com.

shot 07 228 med 239x300 Handsome English Violinist Charlie Siem

Charlie Siem

Emotional control
A performer needs to have control. If I completely lose myself emotionally, the architecture and progression of the piece gets lost as well. For an audience member to get lost in the music, the performer has to know where they are every step of the way.

Pop education
You learn a lot when you go on stage with contemporary pop performers. They don’t necessarily have as much complexity of music, but they compensate by being great entertainers.

Formative years
Beethoven’s Violin Concerto was the first piece I heard and his Pastoral Symphony always triggered my imagination. My sister played the cello and we always listened to Bach’s Cello Suites at home. I saw Mozart’s Magic Flute as a child and was overwhelmed! Outside of classical, my mum always played Françoise Hardy in the car.

Tailored performance
The design of structured jackets and the elegant people that wear them has always interested me. Dressing up to perform is a ritualistic thing to do, out of respect for the tradition of the instrument. It is always an occasion whenever I am playing in front of an audience.

Codes of attire
Being clean, smart and simple always help to achieve a timeless style.

WEBSITE: www.charliesiem.com 

Legendary Entertainer Ann-Margret

Legendary Entertainer Ann-Margret

Ann-Margret is Celebrating Ten Years on Grammy® Award-Winning Greenhaw Records

See our exclusive interview with Ann-Margret: www.adistinctivestyle.com/issue/60485/39

Legendary entertainer Ann-Margret has appeared in scores of television shows and motion pictures, in addition to releasing highly acclaimed music albums. Her latest album, God Is Love: The Gospel Sessions 2 (Greenhaw Records), was recently released and features the Preston Hollow Presbyterian Choir (Dallas, TX) on ten contemporary and traditional Christian and Gospel songs.

Produced by GRAMMY® Award winning musician and producer/arranger Art Greenhaw, God Is Love: The Gospel Sessions 2 marks a 10 year professional association between Ann-Margret and Greenhaw. According to Greenhaw, “As Ann-Margret’s gospel music producer, I believe that she has been called to the Gospel message of faith, hope and love through her tremendous singing and interpretive style. Listeners and her worldwide fans have agreed for over ten years as have the professional industry voters in the GRAMMY® and Dove Awards as evidenced by her nominations in the Gospel categories.”

GODISLOVE2Cover S 300x267 Legendary Entertainer Ann Margret

God is Love

Ann-Margret rose to fame for her starring roles in Bye Bye Birdie, Viva Las Vegas, State Fair, The Cincinnati Kid, Carnal Knowledge and Tommy, with later credits that include such hit films as Grumpy Old Men, Any Given Sunday, The Santa Clause 3 and The Break-Up. She has won five Golden Globe Awards and been nominated for two Academy Awards, two GRAMMY® Awards, a Dove Award, a Screen Actors Guild Award, and six Emmy Awards. In 2010, she won her first Emmy Award for her guest appearance on Law & Order: SVU.

You can purchase Ann-Margret’s CD’s at: www.theconnextion.com/artgreenhaw

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Record Producer Art Greenhaw

Art Greenhaw 230x300 Legendary Entertainer Ann Margret

Art Greenhaw

Art Greenhaw is a Grammy Award-Winning recording artist, producer and mixing engineer, having won the Grammy Award in 2003 in New York City for “Best Southern, Country or Bluegrass Gospel Album of the Year” for the album WE CALLED HIM MR. GOSPEL MUSIC: THE JAMES BLACKWOOD TRIBUTE ALBUM. He founded the independent record label, Greenhaw Records.

Greenhaw is bassist, multi-instrumentalist and manager for The Light Crust Doughboys. He officially joined The Light Crust Doughboys as band member in 1993 under the direction of Marvin “Smokey” Montgomery, one of Greenhaw’s musical mentors. The symphony performances and the other enterprises of The Light Crust Doughboys in the 1990s and in the new millennium are largely the products of Art Greenhaw’s imagination and promotional skill.

One of Greenhaw’s musical influences, Tom Brumley, steel guitarist for Rick Nelson and Buck Owens, says this about Greenhaw and his record production creativity: “Art was fantastic to work with. The guy has so much imagination to put such things together. He’s amazing to me.”

See our exclusive interview with Ann-Margret: www.adistinctivestyle.com/issue/60485/39

 


Connie Lim’s music is a breath of fresh air

Connie Lim's music is a breath of fresh air

Genuine artistic passion

Connie Lim doesn’t need any gimmicks to win you over. Armed simply with heartfelt lyrics and the purest of vocals, her music is a breath of fresh air. Reminiscent of artists like Feist, Norah Jones, Imogen Heap and Regina Specktor, Connie writes songs with genuine artistic passion that make an instant emotional connection. Connie brings a singular focus to her work: “Everyone deserves beautiful moments and I want that to shine through in my music.”

Screen Shot 2012 02 16 at 6.16.59 PM 264x300 Connie Lims music is a breath of fresh airAs a child, Connie was quirky and shy. She began writing short piano compositions at age eight, and spent most of her childhood overcoming stage fright. “The rush of pushing myself to do something I was so scared to do became addicting.” From elementary to high school, Connie sang in the choir and various acapella groups while working to overcome abusive relationships and fighting a battle with anorexia. “I am a perfectionist who can drive myself into the ground when I set my mind to do something. Writing music was my escape to freedom from internal and external pressures.”

Connie has now signed with Nashville-based record label, DigSin. In February 2012, she released her debut single, “LA City,” a beautiful and delicate love song filled with hope. The lush sounds of the piano and synth combined with Connie’s stunning voice inevitably takes the listener on the same romantic journey that inspired the song.

After spending many years fighting for her dream, Connie says that she is finally doing what she has wanted to all along: “Despite what many loved ones told me to do, I never let myself consider a backup plan. I’ve known that the career of an artist was my calling all along.”

Find out more about Connie here:

Whitney Houston is dead at 48-years-old

Whitney Houston is dead at 48-years-old

Whitney Houston is dead at 48-years-old, according to the Associated Press

Screen Shot 2012 02 11 at 7.51.38 PM Whitney Houston is dead at 48 years old

The superstar singer and actress’s publicist, Kristin Foster, broke the news of Houston’s passing to the AP, but thus far, no cause of death has been revealed. In recent years, she struggled with drug abuse.

Her self-titled debut album, released in 1985, sold 25 million copies worldwide. In total, she released seven albums and three film soundtracks; a winner of six Grammys, Houston sold over 200 million albums and singles worldwide. She earned 30 Billboard Awards, 22 American Music Awards and two Emmy Awards.

From The AP:

At her peak, Houston the golden girl of the music industry. From the middle 1980s to the late 1990s, she was one of the world’s best-selling artists. She wowed audiences with effortless, powerful, and peerless vocals that were rooted in the black church but made palatable to the masses with a pop sheen.

Screen Shot 2012 02 11 at 7.51.26 PM Whitney Houston is dead at 48 years oldHer success carried her beyond music to movies, where she starred in hits like “The Bodyguard” and “Waiting to Exhale.”

She had the he perfect voice, and the perfect image: a gorgeous singer who had sex appeal but was never overtly sexual, who maintained perfect poise.

She influenced a generation of younger singers, from Christina Aguilera to Mariah Carey, who when she first came out sounded so much like Houston that many thought it was Houston.

But by the end of her career, Houston became a stunning cautionary tale of the toll of drug use. Her album sales plummeted and the hits stopped coming; her once serene image was shattered by a wild demeanor and bizarre public apparences. She confessed to abusing cocaine, marijuana and pills, and her once pristine voice became raspy and hoarse, unable to hit the high notes as she had during her prime.

“The biggest devil is me. I’m either my best friend or my worst enemy,” Houston told ABC’s Diane Sawyer in an infamous 2002 interview with then-husband Brown by her side.

It was a tragic fall for a superstar who was one of the top-selling artists in pop music history, with more than 55 million records sold in the United States alone.

She seemed to be born into greatness. She was the daughter of gospel singer Cissy Houston, the cousin of 1960s pop diva Dionne Warwick and the goddaughter of Aretha Franklin.

Houston first started singing in the church as a child. In her teens, she sang backup for Chaka Khan, Jermaine Jackson and others, in addition to modeling. It was around that time when music mogul Clive Davis first heard Houston perform.

“The time that I first saw her singing in her mother’s act in a club … it was such a stunning impact,” Davis told “Good Morning America.”

Screen Shot 2012 02 11 at 7.51.16 PM Whitney Houston is dead at 48 years old

“To hear this young girl breathe such fire into this song. I mean, it really sent the proverbial tingles up my spine,” he added.

Before long, the rest of the country would feel it, too. Houston made her album debut in 1985 with “Whitney Houston,” which sold millions and spawned hit after hit. “Saving All My Love for You” brought her her first Grammy, for best female pop vocal. “How Will I Know,” “You Give Good Love” and “The Greatest Love of All” also became hit singles.

Another multiplatinum album, “Whitney,” came out in 1987 and included hits like “Where Do Broken Hearts Go” and “I Wanna Dance With Somebody.”

The New York Times wrote that Houston “possesses one of her generation’s most powerful gospel-trained voices, but she eschews many of the churchier mannerisms of her forerunners. She uses ornamental gospel phrasing only sparingly, and instead of projecting an earthy, tearful vulnerability, communicates cool self-assurance and strength, building pop ballads to majestic, sustained peaks of intensity.”

Her decision not to follow the more soulful inflections of singers like Franklin drew criticism by some who saw her as playing down her black roots to go pop and reach white audiences. The criticism would become a constant refrain through much of her career. She was even booed during the “Soul Train Awards” in 1989.

“Sometimes it gets down to that, you know?” she told Katie Couric in 1996. “You’re not black enough for them. I don’t know. You’re not R&B enough. You’re very pop. The white audience has taken you away from them.”

Some saw her 1992 marriage to former New Edition member and soul crooner Bobby Brown as an attempt to refute those critics. It seemed to be an odd union; she was seen as pop’s pure princess while he had a bad-boy image, and already had children of his own. (The couple had a daughter, Bobbi Kristina, in 1993.) Over the years, he would be arrested several times, on charges ranging from DUI to failure to pay child support.

But Houston said their true personalities were not as far apart as people may have believed.

Screen Shot 2012 02 11 at 8.00.07 PM Whitney Houston is dead at 48 years old“When you love, you love. I mean, do you stop loving somebody because you have different images? You know, Bobby and I basically come from the same place,” she told Rolling Stone in 1993. “You see somebody, and you deal with their image, that’s their image. It’s part of them, it’s not the whole picture. I am not always in a sequined gown. I am nobody’s angel. I can get down and dirty. I can get raunchy.”

It would take several years, however, for the public to see that side of Houston. Her moving 1991 rendition of “The Star Spangled Banner” at the Super Bowl, amid the first Gulf War, set a new standard and once again reaffirmed her as America’s sweetheart.

In 1992, she became a star in the acting world with “The Bodyguard.” Despite mixed reviews, the story of a singer (Houston) guarded by a former Secret Service agent (Kevin Costner) was an international success.

It also gave her perhaps her most memorable hit: a searing, stunning rendition of Dolly Parton’s “I Will Always Love You,” which sat atop the charts for weeks. It was Grammy’s record of the year and best female pop vocal, and the “Bodyguard” soundtrack was named album of the year.

She returned to the big screen in 1995-96 with “Waiting to Exhale” and “The Preacher’s Wife.” Both spawned soundtrack albums, and another hit studio album, “My Love Is Your Love,” in 1998, brought her a Grammy for best female R&B vocal for the cut “It’s Not Right But It’s Okay.”

But during these career and personal highs, Houston was using drugs. In an interview with Oprah Winfrey in 2010, she said by the time “The Preacher’s Wife” was released, “(doing drugs) was an everyday thing. … I would do my work, but after I did my work, for a whole year or two, it was every day. … I wasn’t happy by that point in time. I was losing myself.”

In the interview, Houston blamed her rocky marriage to Brown, which included a charge of domestic abuse against Brown in 1993. They divorced in 2007.

Houston would go to rehab twice before she would declare herself drug-free to Winfrey in 2010. But in the interim, there were missed concert dates, a stop at an airport due to drugs, and public meltdowns.

Screen Shot 2012 02 11 at 8.00.22 PM Whitney Houston is dead at 48 years oldShe was so startlingly thin during a 2001 Michael Jackson tribute concert that rumors spread she had died the next day. Her crude behavior and jittery appearance on Brown’s reality show, “Being Bobby Brown,” was an example of her sad decline. Her Sawyer interview, where she declared “crack is whack,” was often parodied. She dropped out of the spotlight for a few years.

Houston staged what seemed to be a successful comeback with the 2009 album “I Look To You.” The album debuted on the top of the charts, and would eventually go platinum.

Things soon fell apart. A concert to promote the album on “Good Morning America” went awry as Houston’s voice sounded ragged and off-key. She blamed an interview with Winfrey for straining her voice.

A world tour launched overseas, however, only confirmed suspicions that Houston had lost her treasured gift, as she failed to hit notes and left many fans unimpressed; some walked out. Canceled concert dates raised speculation that she may have been abusing drugs, but she denied those claims and said she was in great shape, blaming illness for cancellations.

Guitarist and singer Raul Midon

Guitarist and singer Raul Midon

Guitarist and singer Raul Midon plays “Everybody” and “Peace on Earth.”

Screen Shot 2012 02 11 at 6.52.54 PM Guitarist and singer Raul MidonRaul Midon is into beating the odds, shattering stereotypes, and making category-defying music. “I was told as a child, ‘You’re blind; you can’t do this,’” Midon told an interviewer in 2005. “I was told when I moved to New York, ‘You can’t do that, you’re not going to make it.’” At 40, however, Midon has clearly made it.

After singing backup vocals for stars like Shakira, Julio Iglesias, Jennifer Lopez and Christina Aguilera, Raul Midon released his major-label solo debut, State of Mind, with help from guest artist Jason Mraz. Midon’s innovative songwriting incorporates his lyrics, guitar handiwork (jazz, classical, flamenco, R&B) and “vocal trumpet” improvisation. Though he draws comparisons to Stevie Wonder, Donny Hathaway and Richie Havens, Midon is the rare original in an industry of few.

Jen­nifer Warnes “First We Take Man­hat­tan”

Jen­nifer Warnes "First We Take Man­hat­tan"

Jennifer Warnes Sings From her Heart

Consistently performed successfully as a soloist, duet partner and vocal guest in partnership with many of the world’s most well known music creators, creating a vibrant legacy in film, television, video and recordings.

From The Fall 2011 Edition of A Distinctive Style Magazine www.adistinctivestyle.com

 

Jennifer b w 225x191 Jen­nifer Warnes First We Take Man­hat­tan

Whether the audience numbers fifty or five thousand, an “Evening with Jennifer Warnes” in concert is an experience that touches each in the audience in a very personal way. Last appearing in concert in sold-out venues in 2009, Warnes has spent her time since then, in the recording studio working on a solo album of all new songs, writing, working with Leonard Cohen, recording a fund raising documentary for the New York YMCA Youth Orchestra and performing with Jackson Browne and Friends in a fund raising concert.

As satisfying as the past year’s projects were, it seemed to be time to get back “on the road,” Warnes says. “For the upcoming concerts, I am singing songs that I truly love, the ones that I honestly enjoy singing. With the help of two superb musicians, blues guitarist Billy Watts, and bassist Taras Prodaniuk, this time around there will nothing to hold on to, except our love for the music and for the listener. There is an element of free falling in this music that makes me feel alive, liberated and excited.”

The sound of Jennifer Warnes’ voice is immediately recognizable and absolutely unmistakable. As a two-time Grammy Award winner for her duets with Joe Cocker on “Up Where We Belong,” and Bill Medley, on “(I’ve Had) The Time of My Life,” Warnes voice, style and talent continue to defy categorization and genre. Some of her earliest performances were in the late 60’s as a regular member of an amazing ensemble of burgeoning artists, performers and creative thinkers who appeared on the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour. Regarding this time period, Warnes shared that she had a gift for being in the right place at the right time; “I always find myself energetically resonant with certain situations and I just fall into them…The Smothers Brothers was one of them. I stepped up, I sang, they said you’re in! I hung out with the most intelligent, beautiful people.” During the 70’s Warnes was a recognizable member of a talented array of musicians, such as Joan Baez and Maria Muldaur, who shared center stage in Mimi Farina’s Bread & Roses Concerts.

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