Jordin Sparks ‘floored’ after Paula Abdul guessed her identity on The Masked Dancer – Music News



Jordin Sparks was left “floored” when she found out she was going to be reunited with her American Idol judge Paula Abdul on The Masked Dancer.

The No Air singer was revealed as Exotic Bird on the latest episode of the U.S. TV talent show on Wednesday night after dancing to Paula’s song Opposites Attract.

Following the episode’s broadcast, Jordin told Variety that she thought Paula was going to correctly guess it was her, as she was one of the judges on the 2007 series of American Idol, which Jordin won.

“When they told me that (Paula) was judging, the first thing that popped into my head was I can’t believe that all this time later I’m now going to be on another competition show stage with her sitting at the judging panel,” she smiled. “That blew my mind. And I was like, she’s gonna know. When she guessed me, I was floored but I was actually very happy that it was her guessing. It was a really cool moment.”

And her suspicions were correct, as both Paula and fellow judge Ashley Tisdale guessed it was her, while Ken Jeong plumped for Jennifer Hudson.

Jordin added that her inspiration for taking part in the programme was her two-year-old son Dana Isaiah Jr., explaining: “I wanted to show him that I can do things even if they scare me. He was very instrumental in inspiring me to go, and my husband as well.”



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Tool’s Maynard James Keenan battled COVID-19 twice – Music News



The 56-year-old rocker has revealed he had the “ugly” respiratory illness for a second time in November and was hospitalised on December 1, after it “kind of” progressed into pneumonia.

Sharing his symptoms, he told ‘STROMBO’ on Apple Music Hits: “Ugly, ugly. Couldn’t breathe. I could barely put two words together without going into a coughing fit that, you know? It ended up kind of also progressing into pneumonia. So, if I stayed in the hospital, they said, ‘Okay, we can keep you here, but you’re fighting 12 other people for a bed and a ventilator we don’t have, so what do you want to do?’ I’m like, ‘Well, I need to breathe and I need to sleep.’ So, you’re just treating symptoms at that point. There’s nothing you can do other than treat the symptom, so for a real cough medicine, not the c*** over-the-counter and then like an inhaler, and some antibiotics to fight the pneumonia and strap the f*** in.”

The ‘Third Eye’ star first had coronavirus in October.

He said at the time: “I’m still dealing with the residual effects. But it was ugly. I survived it, but it wasn’t pretty. So I definitely had to deal with that.”

Maynard previously implored everyone to take the pandemic “seriously” and wear face masks and social distance in order to help flatten the spread of the virus.

He said: “I knew what I went through and I know what I’m still going through, so I would recommend that you take this seriously, but I feel like that’s just going to fall on deaf ears. It’s just going to be a polarized, politicised statement, so it’s pointless. In that case, I’m just going to worry about keeping my family safe and keeping my friends safe.”



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Dave Grohl: ‘There must be more to life than just living this hopeless existence’ – Music News



Dave Grohl spoke to Steve Lamacq’s BBC Radio 6 Music show this evening ahead of the release of Foo Fighters’ new album, Medicine at Midnight.

Dave Grohl: It’s been a busy few months for the band because we finally decided it was time to release the record. Right now, we can’t just run around the planet doing interviews and playing shows and things like that […] so I wake up every day, I talk to people about music, I take a shower, I go to the studio, we film ourselves playing live in there, we send that out to people. It’s been a busy few months and happily so.

Steve Lamacq: So the album – you’d finished the album, just before everything starts to shut down, is that right?

Dave Grohl: That’s right. So, we started writing this record maybe in 2018, but I started doing demos for the album in early summer 2019. I had rented this house, where I built a little studio in the house, just so that I can demo. So, when I demo stuff by myself, I don’t even want an engineer there. I like the total isolation. I like to be by myself. I set up all the instruments, I’ve got the recording equipment and I just started writing and recording and banking all these ideas. While I was banking these ideas, I was sending these demos to our producer Greg Kurstin, who is a dear friend of ours, and at one point he said ‘Where are you recording this? These drums sound great’ and I said ‘Oh, it’s this weird funky house that I actually lived in 10 years ago. It’s this funky old house.’ He goes ‘Man we should just do the record there’ and I thought ‘Of course, yes’. I’m all about the experience of making a record, right. So, we started officially recording I think in September 2019 and by January, early February we were done and we were ecstatic. We thought ‘Alright, let’s go take over the world – it’s our 25th anniversary, it’s our 10th album, all the stadiums are booked.’ Then of course, someone hit the lights and the world turned off. So, yes, we were totally ready to go and the album was done a year ago.

Dave Grohl: We only do what feels right at the time. We don’t have anyone else making decisions for us […] we follow our gut. So, knowing that this year was our 25th anniversary and this was to be our 10th record, I did sort of take stock. I looked back at what we had done and the different types of music we made and the range of the dynamic and I realised the one thing we hadn’t really done was make this groove orientated, kind of really up, almost danceable record. We hadn’t done that before. If you look back to Little Richard, Elvis Presley, if you go back that far, those songs were meant to make you move, they were meant to make you dance. [Led] Zeppelin songs, Sly and the Family Stone songs, Rolling Stones songs, Beatles songs, David Bowie songs. And so, I thought, ok, well, maybe we should try doing something like that. Now as a drummer, I’m always interested in and appreciate a good beat, a good groove. So, that was kind of the intention […] I talked to Omar Hakim, the drummer who played drums on David Bowie’s Let’s Dance and I would sort of ask him about it like ‘How did you guys do that, like, how did that work?’ He’s like ‘Well, we sat in a room and we played the song and we hit record’ and that’s David Bowie. And I’m like ‘Oh God, I wish we could do that’ But, I did think ‘Ok, well, because this is something we’ve never done, that’s why we should do it and we should do it now.’ Not only to just explore, but also to find some new – to surprise ourselves, or to find some new reward.

The first song we recorded was the song Making a Fire, which is actually the first song on the record. We felt like that was the perfect place to start […] I mean the groove in that song, it’s almost like a DJ sort of breakbeat […] We had touched on something we hadn’t necessarily done before. So then there were other songs that sounded, I thought, too familiar. They sounded too much like the Foo Fighters, so we through them away and we kept moving and it was really exciting, I mean, we would sit down and record something, have no idea what we were going to end up with and at the end of the day we would look at each other and just smile, or laugh and we had surprised ourselves. So that was the intention. I told everybody ‘Listen, before we go in there, let yourself go. Let’s just think about the album or the song or the music.’ There are 45 people in the Foo Fighters at this point – if the song doesn’t need you, you don’t need to be on the song, right? If it doesn’t need 17 guitars then it doesn’t need that. And everybody agreed […]. Now Greg Kurstin, Greg’s a genius producer, I can honestly say he’s the most brilliant musician / producer that I’ve ever met in my entire life, so when you’re working with Greg, you can do anything. So if you have an idea, even if it’s just conceptual, not even a specific riff and you say ‘I’d like to try this’, you can try it. Of course, he’s famous for making records with Sia and Adele and Beyoncé and Pink and Kelly Clarkson and things like that, but he’s a jazz musician that grew up loving punk rock. So if you throw him a bone, he’ll run away with it you know.

Dave Grohl on Nirvana: There are times where I’ll be in the car and a Nirvana song will come on and I’ll not just think of the music but think of the time and place where it was recorded. It’s funny, my connection to Nirvana is different than most people, in that it was a very personal experience and it was a very emotional experience. I look back on that music almost like someone would look back in an old photo album. I remember everything. I do, I remember everything from the last 32 years. So whenever I think of that time, I usually am reminded of the place I was in emotionally. So when we came down to record the record Nevermind. We were kids man. I think I was 21 or maybe 22 years old […] We were excited and there was some sense of mystery of adventure to it. We knew what we were there to do but I think we felt really fortunate that we were given that opportunity […] someone paid for us to go into the studio in Los Angeles and make an album. There was an innocence and we were a bit naïve. Nobody expected what happened was going to happen. Over time, when Nirvana first started getting popular, there were some really good times and I look back on those like ‘I bought a motorcycle’. That kind of thing, like, ‘I met a beautiful girl’, like, ‘I took my mother out to dinner, I bought my mother a car’, things like that […] At that age too, it’s a formative age. I have a lot of great memories. And of course you know , a lot of really traumatic heart-breaking memories as well. But it’s almost like those memories, in sequence, they become all of these stepping stones, this trail of breadcrumbs that you sort of lay, that you can look back on.

Dave Grohl on the song Waiting on a War: I was taking her [my daughter] to school one day […] and she said ‘Dad, is there going to be a war?’ and I said ‘What makes you say that?’ I think she’d seen something on the news […] What immediately struck me was that she was now feeling the same anxiety that I felt, growing up outside of Washington D.C. in the early 80s. The early 80s, with the Reagan administration, there was all this tension and conflict with the Soviet Union and there was a lot of focus on the arms race, nuclear weapons and nuclear war and I was definitely afraid of that. I would have these dreams where there were missiles in the sky and soldiers in my back yard. There was a part of me that thought ‘Well I’ll never live to be 16 years old. I’ll never live to drive a car. I’ll never live to be 18 years old. I’ll never live to have a drink.’ Seeing my own daughter feel the same as I did at her age, generations later, 40 years later, God, it broke my heart, because I thought ‘There must be more to life than just living this hopeless existence, where you have nothing to look forward to’. And at that age, that’s a really a inspired, imaginative, formative time in your life where you should be excited about becoming the person that you’re going to become, but to have it snuffed out by this anxiety. So I dropped her off at school and I wrote that song that day.

Dave Grohl on his lyrics: I think in order to demonstrate hope, you have to be able to acknowledge the dark side of yourself, or fear, or anxiety, whatever it is. Its funny, it’s like the juxtaposition of those two things, sometimes work. So that you don’t really know how dark it is until someone shines a light. It works that way in songs. It really just depends, sometimes its unintentional. I don’t walk around with a leather-bound journal, writing poetry in the park. That’s not how I work […].sometimes, when it comes to writing lyrics, sometimes, that balance of the dark and the light work.

Steve Lamacq: The house – you mentioned the house where you went and did the demos and then recorded. I read somewhere that the house is haunted.

Dave Grohl: I’m not a ghost hunter. I’m not one of those paranormal experience chasers […] I did live in a house in Seattle that was a little off and I lived there for a few years and I truly believe that I wasn’t the only person living there. I honestly do and I’m not that type of person. I don’t run around looking for paranormal conspiracies, it’s like, honestly, it was weird. I wasn’t the only one to feel it. From Nate our bass player to my friends. So sometimes it’s that intuition where you just kind of feel it, or you kind of know. Did I see ghosts of Civil War soldiers in the living room while we were tracking the drums? No. But did some really strange things happen? I mean, the thing is I actually lived in this house 10 years ago when I was remodelling the house that I live in. My daughters, when they were kids, they saw things and they felt strange. I didn’t, but for some reason they did and I just thought ‘Ah, that’s just their imagination.’ This time around it was definitely weird. We made the record and we kind got the hell out of there. But at the same time you know, we weren’t trembling in fear as we were tracking Love Dies Young […]

Dave Grohl on listening back to an album after its been released: I appreciate albums as these moments in time. So when you’re finished with it and you release it, it is what it is. So you can look back on it in regret and think ‘God, I could have done better’ but until the moment its released, I am hovering over that album. Every corner of every song. Every microphone on every instrument […] I don’t find too many surprises down the line. If its on there, it’s on there because we put it on there and we know it’s there.

Steve Lamacq: It’s been a year since this one was finished – have you written another one?

Dave Grohl: No – I’ve actually been writing words. I started this Instagram page called Dave’s True Stories, right when everything shut down because I thought ‘Ok, I don’t want to make any more music, I just finished an album, but what can I do to create?’ So I started writing those stories for that Instagram page just to, you know, make someone smile or make someone laugh and shine a little light on the absurdity of my life as a little kid rock and roll fan that gets to jam with Prince or gets to jam with Bowie […] so I found it really rewarding.

Dave Grohl on the return of live music after the pandemic: Usually every few weeks my manager calls and says ‘Hey, we got an offer to play in blah blah blah, you want to do it?’ and I say ‘Yes’ and then I say ‘Is it actually going to happen?” and my manager says ‘I hope so’. So basically, anyone that says ‘Dave, would you like to play a show?’ I say ‘’Yes’. Unfortunately, no one is really in control of this situation. We can do our best to be diligent, responsible, compassionate, co-operative, look out for your fellow man. We can do all of those things, but until we get there, we have to get there. I feel like every day we are one day closer to it happening and I’m a hopeful person. I really am. When I hear like ‘Oh god, did you hear that they postponed Glastonbury?’ I say ‘Well, yeah, that makes sense’. It doesn’t mean it’s going to disappear. How could that be possible? To me that’s an impossibility. Rather than think that live music will forever be impossible, I think it’s impossible that we will never have it again. Send me a plane ticket when it’s time and we’re all safe and good to go, I mean, I’ll be the first one there, because I miss it just as much as you.



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Billie Eilish is ‘almost done’ with her new album – Music News



The 19-year-old megastar revealed to fans this week that her follow-up to her record-breaking 2019 debut LP ‘When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?’ will likely boast 16 tracks.

And now, the ‘Therefore I Am’ hitmaker has shared a studio snap on Instagram, as she nears the end of the process.

She simply captioned the grainy photograph: “almost done.”

The Grammy-winner recently teased: “There isn’t one song, or one part of one song, that I wish was this or that I wish it was that.”

Billie told fans that she’ll be beginning a “new era” this year.

She said on her Instagram story in December: “It will be the end of an era. I’m gonna give you a new era. I have announcements to make, I’ve got some s*** to put out.”

At the start of the clip, she joked that she won’t give her fans her new album if they keep poking fun at her green hair.

She quipped: “”F*** you guys. Stop making fun of me, my God! I’m f****** making you an album. I will not put it out if you keep making fun of my hair. Shut up!”

Meanwhile, the ‘No Time To Die’ hitmaker is set to release a photobook and audiobook about her life and career.

The pop megastar will document her childhood and her meteoric rise to fame as a teenager in the audiobook, which is narrated by herself, while she’ll share never-before-seen photographs from when she was growing up to touring the world in the self-made book.

A statement about the audiobook reads: “This is an audiobook like no other – providing a truly intimate window into her journey, in Billie’s own words.”

And of the tome, which will be released on May 11 in hardback and as an e-book, Billie – whose brother Finneas co-writes and produces her music – said: “I spent many hours over many months pouring through my family albums and archives, handpicking all of the photos in this book. I hope you love it as much as I do.”

Billie’s Apple TV+ documentary ‘Billie Eilish: The World’s A Little Blurry’, which also gives an insight into her fascinating journey to superstardom, is also set to premiere on February 26.



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Kylie Minogue denies engagement rumours – Music News



Kylie Minogue’s representatives have shot down rumours she and boyfriend Paul Solomons are engaged.

Asked by The Mirror to comment, the Australian popstar’s team stated: “It’s not true. They are happy as they are.”

The denial comes after Paul’s stepmother Gloria Solomons reportedly confirmed the news to MailOnline admitting she is “thrilled” for the happy couple but under orders not to “say any more”.

“She’s very nice I’m thrilled they’re engaged. It’s very exciting,” she supposedly said. “But, I’m sorry, I cannot tell you any more because I’ve been told not to. I respect my son and I respect Kylie too much to say any more.”

Gloria wasn’t the first to say something though; Billie Piper also seemingly shared the happy news in an essay she wrote for ELLE U.K. magazine.

“It was 2000 when I passed out in a Covent Garden club – ‘foaming at the mouth’, apparently, but I have no reason to believe that,” she wrote. “My PR rang through to my hospital bed to fill in some blanks – I’d been carried out of the club by a man, apparently. A hero or a pest? I wondered. It’s always hard to tell. (Later, I’d find out his name is Paul, like my dad. He’s Welsh, works at GQ and will, in time, become a dear friend, a blinding success and Kylie Minogue’s fiance. Hero, not pest. Kylie knows.)”

Kylie, 52, and GQ creative director Paul have been in a relationship since 2018 after being set up by a pal.



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Sam Fischer has hailed Demi Lovato the ‘bravest’ person he knows – Music News



The pair have joined forces on the moving duet, ‘What Other People Say’, out later today (04.02.21), and the 29-year-old singer-songwriter has admitted it’s admirable that the 28-year-old megastar has been open and honest about her battles with substance abuse and mental health through her music, because in sharing her own struggles she is helping “millions” of other people.

Sam told the Daily Star newspaper’s Wired column: “It’s a real gift for her to be able to share everything she’s been through, because I Imagine every time she thinks about it and every time she talks about it, it hurts.

“But she is giving millions of people around the world a chance to not feel alone in their struggle.

“Demi’s so brave – one of the bravest people I know – and she’s so talented.

“Demi Lovato is one of the greatest vocalists in the world so to be able to sing with her is such a dream come true for me.”

Sam has also been through his own battles and was broke and practically homeless for “a long time”, until his single ‘This City’ stormed the charts.

And the pair were able to offer two “different life perspectives” on the track.
He said: “Before ‘This City’ took off, it was kind of dark days.
“I didn’t have any money and I didn’t really have a place to live for a long time.
“Both of us have different life perspectives and our own struggles.
“She’s been in the public eye since she was like eight years old and me being newer on the scene.
“It’s really cool to be able to share this part of her story and give the fans more of her.”

A press release stated that ‘What Other People Say’ is about the “feeling of being alone and not wanting to let people down”.

Demi commented: “This song is a reflection on what it’s like to lose who you truly are in an effort to please other people and society. It’s why I wanted to make this song with Sam – ultimately it’s about two humans coming together to connect and find solutions to their problems.”

Sam said: “‘What Other People Say’ is a confession, realising how far away you can get from who you are in an effort to be liked. It’s about the pressures of society and how getting caught up with the wrong things can change you.”



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Mick Fleetwood has a two year blank due to heavy cocaine use – Music News



Mick Fleetwood can’t remember two years of his life, due to being addled on cocaine at the time.

The Fleetwood Mac drummer has insisted he was the biggest “party animal” in the ‘Dreams’ band and claimed there was a lengthy period “way after” making their seminal 1977 album ‘Rumours’, when he was so off his face on drugs, that he didn’t work for two years and has no recollection of what he did.

He told Classic Rock magazine: “There’s no doubt we were well equipped with the marching powder. That’s a well-worn fairytale that gets more like a war story, that gets more and more aggrandised.

“I’m not minimalising the fact that we were definitely partaking in that lifestyle.

“But these weren’t a bunch of people crawling across the floor with green froth coming out of their mouths, we were working, you know?

“That went on for a long, long time, Stevie Nicks has addressed it, so I’m not divulging anything that she hasn’t spoken about.

“It got out of hand way after the making of ‘Rumours’. I remember not working for two years. I can’t even remember what I did.

“I was the party animal in the band, for sure. I wanted venture to say, Stevie was a close second.”

Though the 73-year-old musician believes himself to be the wildest member of the Grammy-winning group, Stevie, 72, has previously admitted she considered herself “the worst drug addict” of them all.

Stevie – who is also joined in the ‘Go Your Own Way’ group by former couple Christine and John McVie – said: “All of us were drug addicts, but there was a point where I was the worst drug addict. I was a girl, I was fragile, and I was doing a lot of coke. And I had that hole in my nose. So it was dangerous.”



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Aaron Carter set for fight night with Lamar Odom – Music News



Aaron Carter has signed on to fight retired basketball star Lamar Odom in a celebrity boxing match.

At 6ft 10ins (2.1 metres), former Los Angeles Lakers player Odom is nine inches taller than his popstar opponent, but the size difference will mean nothing when the odd couple clashes in June.

The three-round exhibition match will take place at the Showboat Casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, according to TMZ.

Both stars are clean after battling substance abuse issues, and fight organiser Damon Feldman of Celebrity Boxing insists this could be the best celebrity fight night he has staged to date.

“It’s gonna be a war, man,” he tells the outlet. “It’s gonna be a knockout, no doubt.”

According to TMZ, both Lamar, 41, and 33-year-old Aaron, the younger brother of Backstreet Boys star Nick Carter, have been putting in serious time at the gym and are taking the fight very seriously.

Sharing the news on the official Celebrity Boxing Instagram page, Damon wrote: “It is ON…..The POP Culture Showdown @aaroncarter Vs. @lamarodom Saturday June 12.”



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Dua Lipa set to release her first song of 2021 ‘We’re Good’ on February 11 – Music News



The ‘New Rules’ hitmaker took to social media to announce her first solo release since her chart-topping second album, ‘Future Nostalgia’.

She captioned the artwork: “WE’RE GOOD – 11TH FEB – PRE-SAVE https://dualipa.co/wg-presave (sic)”

The Grammy-winner hitmaker took to Instagram earlier this week to celebrate her single ‘Levitating’ being in the Top 5 of Billboard’s Hot 100 Chart in US, and confirmed new music was imminent.

She captioned a photograph from the set of her music video for the track: “Levitating is TOP 5 in the US new music coming soooooooooooon

Dua is set to release a series of B-sides to ‘Future Nostalgia’, which is a year old on March 27.

The ‘Hotter Than Hell’ singer took to her social media pages in January to tease their release.

Dua captioned a snap of herself crouching on the floor: “B-sides are on the way….”

Since the release of ‘Future Nostalgia’, Dua has given fans the remix record, ‘Club Future Nostalgia’, put on the Studio 2054 live event, and recently teamed up with Kylie Minogue on a remixed version of the disco icon’s track, ‘Real Groove’.

The ‘IDGAF’ hitmaker also duetted with Miley Cyrus on ‘Prisoner’ and has teased a yet-to-be-released collaboration with FKA twigs, which they previewed a snippet of during the Studio2054 live-stream.

Meanwhile, Dua recently insisted it’s harder for women to find success in the music industry and vowed to pave the way for more women to become successful before she moves on to other projects.

She said: “For women, it’s a lot harder to solidify yourself as an individual in music. In a perfect world, we wouldn’t have to prove ourselves so much to the point that maybe we run ourselves into the ground of being like, ‘I must be heard.’ But that is the world we’re in right now. I like to prove that I can do it. I’m stubborn.”



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