Re: NPNY: GMA VIP Access Interested?

2006-06-15 Thread Walkerterry1
I'm going D I will need 2 please
 
Terry

Moderator: Added  -Derek

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[no subject]

2006-06-15 Thread Andrew Stanger
I have 4 vip tix already but if you have a better hookup...

Moderator: Its more then likely going to be a part of the same thing 
-Derek

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: NPNY npny@lists.panix.com
Sent: Wed Jun 14 21:54:39 2006
Subject: NPNY: GMA VIP Access Interested?

If I can some how finagle VIP Access for the GMA show Friday who is
definitely going? Get back to me ASAP because I am waiting for a call
back...

I am trying to get as many as I can and I am not making promises this will
even happen

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RE: NPNY: PP9 Cryptic Message (Possible NY show hint??)

2006-06-15 Thread Oliver, Damon
Is this restaurant also a club? I know there is a club called Butter
also?

Moderator: It can be a club.  -Derek

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of april snow
Sent: Thursday, June 15, 2006 11:30 AM
To: npny@lists.panix.com
Subject: Re: NPNY: PP9 Cryptic Message (Possible NY show hint??)

Isn't Prince's fav NYC restaurant Butter?  Didn't he have it shipped to
Philly during the Musicology tour?

Moderator: Yup, I completely forgot about that last night -Derek

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:  PaisleyPark9 BUTTER is BETTER with NPG on it.
3121 Posts


Just wondering if this could be a hint 4 a NY show 4 u guys? Anyplace
that

has a butter name or??

Much love n I know Derek is going 2 have a field day with this.


j7

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NPNY: Prince Going Public

2006-06-15 Thread Derek
Prince Going Public
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/SummerConcert/story?id=2075571page=1

The Notoriously Reclusive Musician Is Making More Public Appearances Lately
By CAITLIN JOHNSON
June 15, 2006— - Prince is notorious for shunning the media, refusing to do
interviews and being reclusive. This past year, however, he has been showing
up at some very mainstream spots: Saturday Night Live, American Idol,
and this Friday he will perform on Good Morning America. 

What is going on? 

Music industry experts generally agree that since he splashed onto the music
scene in the 1980s, Prince's catchy melodies and ability to parse androgyny
with hypersexuality, have made him an icon. According to Billboard magazine
editor-in-chief Tamara Conniff, who scored a much sought-after interview
with the singer, he can do whatever he wants. 

Although Prince performed the song Satisfied from his new album 3121 on
American Idol, he refused to meet with any of the contestants or
participate in onstage banter following his set -- raising the ire of judge
Simon Cowell. 

He'll do it on his terms, and 'American Idol' wanted him on so they're
willing to deal with Prince and do what he wants to do, Conniff said. You
cannot convince Prince of anything -- I think he just woke up one day and
decided: 'Yeah, I want to do some TV.' Like anyone, he likes being
relevant. 

Prince's 3121 debuted at No. 1, and during its first week sold 183,000
copies, even though it is not getting played on the radio. Conniff
attributes the sales to loyal fans and to the people who are curious to hear
the album after the American Idol and Saturday Night Live performances. 


Selling Out?


When Prince became embroiled in a legal battle with his record label,
Warner, in 1994, he became increasingly inaccessible to the media. He also
made music that was so experimental it pushed him to the margins of the
industry. Prince drove himself into further isolation with the 2001 ode to
his new Jehovah's Witness faith, Rainbow Children, and the
all-instrumental N.E.W.S., released in 2003. 

Some industry experts think Prince is making a concerted effort to re-enter
public consciousness and forcing himself to take gigs from which he would
usually recoil. 

Nowadays, he has been trying to be more relevant, said Village Voice music
editor Rob Harvilla. He does the kind of stuff that it's pretty clear that
it's not his idea. He's stopped short of pandering. If he made a record that
was like southern hip-hop with a lot of rappers on it, that would be more
embarrassing. If he did a killer summer tour of entirely Purple Rain, it
would be insane, but he won't stoop to that level. 

Greg Tinjerina, 28, grew up listening to Prince and rediscovered Prince's
music while in college, when the innuendo and eroticism were no longer lost
on him. When he entertained people, he said he put on his Prince mixes
because the music was cool, it had a good rhythm ... it seemed to always be
a crowd pleaser. 

There was a boldness to the songs back in the day, said Tinjerina, of New
York City. Now it's more of a nostalgia thing from the good old days. 

The 1980s was a decade characterized by big sounds, big clothes, big hair
and big personalities. It was the perfect time for an artist like Prince,
now 48, who wrote songs that pushed the boundaries of pop. 

Today the pop music scene is characterized by rap and hip-hop artists who
outdo even Prince's infamous nods to eroticism. Syrupy sweet singers like
Aaron Carter or Hillary Duff are hugely popular with preteens. It's an
industry, Conniff says, that is stretched thin by the sheer number of
artists out there and the influx of technology, which has caused album sales
to plummet.

In today's weird music climate, according to Conniff, it's difficult for
one intriguing personality to capture a vast audience's attention like
Prince, Madonna and Michael Jackson did in the 80s. 

But Jonathan Nice of Prince's hometown, Minneapolis, said people should
appreciate Prince for his versatility, not just the music he made 20 years
ago. 

A lot of people appreciate the new music because we all know that he's got
this vault full of new music, so everyone's excited when he releases
[something new], said Nice, 30, who founded a Web site for Prince fans,
www.princefams.com. 

You got some people -- I think it's a minority, though -- that are still
stuck in 1984 and think of Prince as the 'Purple Rain' guy, and I think they
are not appreciating all the music that he can create. 'Purple Rain,'
Nice adds, was primarily a rock album, and that is not all that he is
capable of.


Prince the Legend

I think Prince is respected as a historical figure and as one of those guys
who, when he's gone, no one will replace him, says Harvilla. We may never
see that combination of extreme talent and erratic behavior again. 

Prince's new album has been getting decent reviews, but according to
Harvilla, it does not compare to songs of 20 years ago like 1999, Purple
Rain and Little