When it comes to items being thrown onstage, there is a certain point where Drake draws the line. The rapper took a moment Wednesday night to call out a fan who threw their purse onstage during his tour stop at Madison Square Garden.
“Why would you throw your purse up here? You don’t have a life?” he said, holding up the bag by its strap. “You don’t have, like, a life that you need to attend to? Your I.D. and sh–!”
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He continued, “Why would you throw this? This was a terrible idea. Here, take this back. You don’t have, like, work to go to tomorrow or something? You just throwing your purse up here and sh–? You really didn’t think that through, at all.”
Drizzy’s rant comes days after a fan threw her bra onstage at a different concert. “36G?” he excitedly said while inspecting the undergarment onstage. “Locate this woman immediately.” The person who threw the bra was, indeed, located and identified as TikToker Veronica Correia. (In the time since, Correia received an offer to appear in Playboy.)
Elsewhere during Drake’s concert, he confirmed that his new album, For All the Dogs, is officially on the way and is scheduled to arrive very soon. “I will be back soon. I have an album dropping for you in, like, two weeks or some sh–. But until then, just know, you’re always with me and I’m always thinking of you. Everything I do is for you. Every time I step in that booth, I hope I make you proud,” he told the crowd.
Watch the video of Drake calling out the person who threw a purse at him below.
Just hours before their slated headlining concert at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena, The Chicks revealed that they are postponing the show due to illness.
A statement from The Chicks’ team said they are working to reschedule the show, noting that fans are encouraged to keep their tickets for the newly scheduled date.
“The Chicks are looking forward to seeing their Nashville fans soon and apologize for any inconveniences this may cause,” the statement read.
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Canadian pop trio Wild Rivers was slated to open the concert.
The next show on The Chicks’ world tour is Saturday at Thompson-Boling Arena in Knoxville, Tennessee. They previously performed on Tuesday at Louisville, Kentucky’s KFC Yum! Center. The world tour launched in June in Oslo, Norway, with stops in the U.K. and Europe before returning to North America. Other openers on the world tour have included Maren Morris and Ben Harper.
“North America! Thank you to all our fans for making last Summer so fun! We look forward to returning to the road and bringing the show to fans in new cities across the US and Canada! See you soon,” the trio said in a statement when announcing the world tour back in February.
The Nashville show would have marked The Chicks’ first Nashville headlining concert since 2016, although the trio did perform during the Bonnaroo festival in 2022 in Manchester, Tennessee.
The Nashville concert was slated to include an array of the trio’s signature hits, including music from 1999’s Fly and 2002’s Home, as well as their 2020 album, the Jack Antonoff-produced project Gaslighter, which marked their first album in 14 years.
Sia has added another empowering anthem to her discography.
The singer debuted her new song “Champion” during FOX Sports’ coverage of the FIFA Women’s World Cup Australia & New Zealand 2023 on Wednesday night (July 26), when the USA faced off against the Netherlands — which ended in a 1-1 tie.
The nine-time Grammy nominee’s music can be heard throughout Fox Sports’ coverage of the tournament, including hits like “Chandelier,” “Titanium,” “Unstoppable,” “Alive,” “Cheap Thrills” and more.
This year, the FIFA Women’s World Cup will be held until Aug. 20, when the final two teams face off. When does the U.S. women’s team play next? You can catch them move closer to another World Cup trophy on Tuesday (Aug. 1) at 12 a.m. ET, when they play against Portugal. To check out the entire FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023 schedule, click here.
Fox Sports is the official English-language broadcast partner in the U.S., which means you’ll need to tune in to Fox Sports or any of its affiliated channels, such as Fox and FS1 to watch the tournament. You’ll also be able to view it through FoxSports.com or the Fox Sports app (you’ll just need to log in with your provider’s info).
Check out a snippet of “Champion” from Fox Sports via a fan-captured Twitter video here.
Forever No. 1 is a Billboard series that pays special tribute to the recently deceased artists who achieved the highest honor our charts have to offer — a Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 single — by taking an extended look back at the chart-topping songs that made them part of this exclusive club. Here, we honor the late Sinead O’Connor with a look back at her lone No. 1: “Nothing Compares 2 U,” a timeless pop peak at the center of one of the most unusual before-and-after careers in popular music history.
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Plenty of artists — plenty of great artists, even — have only one major Billboard Hot 100 hit over the course of their careers. But few, if any, one-hit-wonder stories have ever gone quite like Sinead O’Connor and “Nothing Compares 2 U.” After becoming a critic’s darling and college radio fixture at the end of the ’80s, she pole-vaulted into the top 40 with “Compares,” a Prince-penned cover that was both unanimously acclaimed and overwhelmingly popular, showcasing the enormity of O’Connor’s talent while not being particularly representative of her sound or artistry. And then, just as quickly and spectacularly as she entered the mainstream, she exited it, with a series of creative, personal and political decisions that all but ensured she would never score a hit anywhere near that size again.
While “Compares” bears an unfortunately outsized proportion of the public’s memory of the extraordinary O’Connor today, it also remains one of the most brilliant musical moments of the early ’90s — a song that stands alone, both within her catalog and within all popular music, as without obvious peer or precedent. The number of “greatest” lists it can claim a rightful place on is significant: greatest ’90s songs, greatest covers, greatest breakup songs, greatest music videos. And yet, the fact that O’Connor (who died on Wednesday at age 56) never matched it again — never even tried to — is ultimately more blessing than curse, allowing a singular artist who was never meant for compromise to continue to operate her career (and life) outside of the trappings of the unlikely pop stardom that “Compares” brought her in 1990.
“Nothing Compares 2 U” was written and first demoed by Prince in 1984 — busyyearfortheman — and inspired, according to his longtime engineer Susan Rogers, by the departure of his housekeeper Sandy Scipioni. (The fact that the seemingly despairing love song was actually inspired by a non-romantic relationship was “probably why he felt comfortable giving the song away,” Rogers theorized.) Give the song away he did, as the first version appeared as an album cut on the 1985 self-titled debut of The Family, a Prince-formed outfit spawned from the splintering of his prior collaborators The Time. The song was suggested to O’Connor as a cover possibility by Fachtna O’Ceallaigh, her friend and manager who she had also been dating. (O’Connor’s relationship with Prince himself was contentious, and in her 2021 memoirs Remberings, she accused him of behaving violently during their one meeting; the Nelson estate would later block usage of her version of the song in the 2022 Nothing Compares documentary about O’Connor.)
O’Ceallaigh and O’Connor’s romantic relationship was disintegrating around the recording of “Compares,” which many involved credit as the reason her vocal take on the song comes off as so raw and visceral. (“She came into the studio, did it in one take, double-tracked it straight away and it was perfect because she was totally into the song,” engineer Chris Birkett told Sound on Sound. “It mirrored her situation.”) The combination of O’Connor’s alternately mighty and fragile delivery and Prince’s typically vivid and right-brained songwriting made the song indelible from its sighing opening lines — “It’s been seven hours and fifteen days/ Since you took your love away” — and pierces through with the unpredictable bends O’Connor’s vocal takes it through on each verse (“I can eat my dinner in a fancy REST-AU-RAAAAANT,” “I went to the doctor, and guess what he told me, GUESS what he told me”).
It helped O’Connor’s version that The Family’s left clear room for improvement. The arrangement of the original was both too sparse and too busy, lacking in drums and guitars, but still smothered by claustrophobic-sounding keyboards and over-pronounced “oh-oh-oh-oh” backing vocals. And that version’s chorus arrives like an anti-climax: just the title sung twice, without much adornment. With help from Soul II Soul maestro Nelle Hooper, O’Connor’s version instead gets a sturdy but unobtrusive drum shuffle to anchor it, turns down the “ah-ah-ah-ah” backing vocals to a gentle exhale, and smooths the blanketing synths into a soft pillow for her to cry on. And O’Connor’s vocal adds punctuation to a hook that badly needs it: she spikes the final syllable of her second “no-THING!” insistence, and chokes out a rushed “…to you….” like she can feel the knife twist in her heart as she says it.
It also helped, at least in a commercial sense, that the start of the ’90s was essentially ballad-central times for pop music on top 40 radio. The year started off with back-to-back ballads at No. 1 — Phil Collins’ “Another Day in Paradise” and Michael Bolton’s “How Am I Supposed to Live Without You” — and racked up double-digits’ worth by year’s end: Taylor Dayne’s “Love Will Lead You Back,” Mariah Carey’s “Vision of Love” (and “Love Takes Time”), Roxette’s “It Must Have Been Love,” the list goes on and on. “Compares” in particular built from the success of two No. 1 ballads from the end of the ’80s: George Michael’s “One More Try,” whose opening synth washes are a near-dead ringer for “Compares,” and Martika’s “Toy Soldiers,” another moody slow song with booming drums and a volatile vocal — sung by another ’90s Prince collaborator, no less. (Top 40 was also becoming increasingly hospitable to crossover hits by artists from the alt world, as demonstrated by major pop crossovers scored in the prior few years by U2, R.E.M., The B-52’s and The Cure.)
But what really put O’Connor’s “Compares” over the top, both artistically and commercially, was the accompanying video, directed by John Maybury as a sort of impressionistic painting come to life. In it, shots of a hazy Parc de Saint-Cloud are cut with uncomfortably close close-ups of a lip-syncing O’Connor, looking almost like a disembodied head in her black turtleneck, filmed against a dark backdrop. The entire thing feels like a painful, distant memory — and O’Connor makes the hurt particularly palpable in the third verse, when her eyes begin to well up, with tears streaming down her face by the start of the final chorus. (She’s since explained that the tears were genuine — inspired not by any breakup-related memories, but thoughts of her then-recently passed mother, brought about by the “all the flowers that you planted, Mama, in the backyard/ all died when you went away” lyric — and watching, they certainly felt it.)
The combination of top 40 readiness and instant MTV iconicity made “Nothing Compares 2 U” a quickly undeniable sensation. The song debuted on the Hot 100 at No. 63 in March of 1990, and five weeks later, it replaced Tommy Page’s “I’ll Be Your Everything” (another ballad, natch) atop the Hot 100 dated April 21 — a jaw-droppingly rapid ascent for the time period, especially for an artist with no prior history on the chart. It stayed on top for four weeks, tied with “Vision of Love” and Stevie B’s “Because I Love You (The Postman Song)” for the longest-running No. 1 of the year, before being replaced by Madonna’s “Vogue” (a rare club-friendly No. 1 for the year). “Compares” would make history at that year’s MTV Video Music Awards, becoming the first video from a female artist to win video of the year, and was also nominated for record of the year at the 1991 Grammys, losing to “Another Day in Paradise.”
In the meantime, the song’s parent album — I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got, O’Connor’s second LP — also topped the Billboard 200 albums chart, staying there for six weeks. But while the album was a stunning collection of protest songs, personal statements, relationship dissections and, well, “Compares,” there wasn’t a particularly obvious choice for a follow-up single. That was well-evidenced by the song her Chrysalis label ultimately went with: “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” an up-tempo number about O’Connor’s frustrations over being told what to do by family, friends and interested business partners after becoming a young mother and young industry sensation at nearly the same time. It had a fun groove and clever lyrics, but it also had difficult subject matter, no proper chorus, and a title that didn’t show up until the very last line of the song. Unsurprisingly, it stalled at No. 60 on the Hot 100.
More surprising was that she would never visit the chart again in her lifetime. Her discomfort at being part of the mainstream was quickly clear; in August of 1990, she refused to play a concert at New Jersey’s Garden State Arts Center if the venue followed its tradition of playing the National Anthem before shows; local backlash was immediate and Jersey icon Frank Sinatra threatened to “kick her in the ass.” The next year, she would refuse the Grammy she won for Haven’t Got — the first-ever Grammy for best alternative music album — while decrying the “false and destructive materialistic values” within the industry that she felt the ceremonies helped promote. Most famously, in 1992, she ripped up a picture of Pope John Paul II live on Saturday Night Live, stating “fight the real enemy” — a message she later clarified to be in protest of his purposeful ignorance regarding sexual abuse in the church. While such protests would likely receive support as well as backlash now, in the early ’90s O’Connor ended up getting it from both sides, targeted by the right as a heretic and agitator and mocked by the left as a kook.
O’Connor’s musical output was hardly any more likely to steady her stardom: In 1992, weeks before the SNL protest, she released Am I Not Your Girl?, a covers album of jazz and vocal pop and country standards, released at the height of grunge, R&B and house music. Compounded by her off-court controversies, the album underperformed, peaking at No. 27 on the Billboard 200 and spawning only minor alternative radio hit singles. She continued recording throughout the ’90s — returning to the top five on her Ireland home country’s singles chart with her 1994 Gavin Friday collab for the In the Name of the Father soundtrack, “You Made Me the Thief of Your Heart” — and remained productive in the ’00s, releasing four studio albums. But her time in the mainstream was over.
This was a loss that O’Connor cried no tears for, however. “I feel that having a No. 1 record derailed my career,” she wrote in her 2021 memoir, Rememberings, “and my tearing the photo put me back on the right track.” As she continued to record and perform up until the early 2020s, she believed that those who thought her career had gone off the rails in the early ’90s were focusing on the wrong track altogether: “They’re talking about the career they had in mind for me,” she told The Guardian that same year. “I f–ked up the house in Antigua that the record company dudes wanted to buy. I f–ked up their career, not mine.”
And though her relationship with the song that did “derail” her career has seen its bumps — she stopped performing it for a few years in the 2010s, explaining that she’d lost any emotional connection to it — and the hurt between her and the Purple One never healed, she always held tight onto her signature hit: “As far as I’m concerned,” she told the New York Times in 2021, “it’s my song.” It always will be.
Two firefighters from Osage Beach are drawing well-deserved praise for stopped an out of control boat, and how they stopped it.
Officials say Chris Holden and Judd Douglas arrived at Lake of the Ozarks to a boat that was circling, with the passenger holding on to the side Tuesday morning.
In order to get to the boat, the two men commandeered a personal watercraft to get close to the boat.
Once near the boat, witnesses say Holden jumped from the PWC onto the boat, stopped the boat and got the passengers to safety.
No injuries were reported.
The investigation is now being run by the Missouri State Highway Patrol to determine what may have caused the boat to malfunction.
The US-65 ramp to James River Freeway is temporarily closed due to a vehicle crash.
According to MoDOT’s Facebook page, Northbound U.S. Route 65 to Westbound U.S. Route 60 (James River Freeway) Ramp is closed from 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. for recovery efforts following a vehicle crash.
Madonna‘s debut studio album arrived on July 27, 1983, and pop music hasn’t been the same ever since. The icon, then a budding star, released her self-titled set, Madonna, to critical success. In celebration of the album’s 40th anniversary, Billboard wants to know which track is your favorite.
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Madonna had a hefty climb on the charts following its arrival. The set debuted at No. 190 on the Billboard 200 in Sept. 3, 1983, and would scale its way all to the top 10 (No. 8) by the following calendar year. The set, released by Sire/Warner Bros. Records, ultimately went on to spend a whopping 168 weeks on the chart, the most weeks of any of Madonna’s albums.
The pop star’s album success could be attributed to to its three major singles — “Borderline,” “Holiday” and “Lucky Star.” “Borderline” and “Holiday” scored Madonna two top 20 singles, charting at Nos. 10 and 16, with each track spending a total of 30 and 21 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100, respectively. “Lucky Star,” however, managed to crack the chart’s top five and peaked at No. 4, with a total of 16 weeks on the all-genre tally.
Considered one of the best pop debuts of all time, Madonna’s self-titled album holds a special place in the heart of longtime fans. Billboard ranked each of the album’s eight tracks in honor of its anniversary (which you can read here), but which song on Madonna is your favorite? Vote in our poll below.
Arctic Monkeys’ The Car was named one of the 12 albums of the year by the 2023 Mercury Awards on Thursday (July 27). It’s the band’s fifth album to be shortlisted for the honor, which puts them in a tie with Radiohead for the most shortlisted albums since the award was introduced in 1992.
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Arctic Monkeys won the award in 2006 with Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not and were finalists with Favourite Worst Nightmare (2007), AM (2013), Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino (2018) and now The Car. Radiohead was shortlisted with OK Computer (1997), Amnesiac (2001), Hail to the Thief (2003), In Rainbows (2008) and A Moon Shaped Pool (2016). Radiohead has yet to win the award.
Should Arctic Monkeys win again, they will join PJ Harvey as the only two-time winners of the award. Harvey won in 2001 with Stories form the City, Stories from the Sea and in 2011 with Let England Shake.
Two of the shortlisted albums — The Car and Fred Again..’s, Actual Life 3 (January 1 – September 9 2022) appeared on Billboard’s list of The 50 Best Albums of 2022: Staff List.
The Mercury Prize — officially known as The Mercury Prize with FREENOW — celebrates the best of British and Irish music across a range of contemporary music genres.
The 2023 awards show will take place on Thursday, Sept. 7, at the Eventim Apollo in Hammersmith, London. The event will feature live performances from many of the shortlisted artists and the evening will culminate in the announcement of the overall winner.
The shortlist was revealed at a launch event. It was also announced live on BBC Radio 6 Music by Tom Ravenscroft as part of a Mercury Prize special. BBC Music, The Mercury Prize’s broadcast partner, will provide coverage of the event across BBC TV, radio, online and social media.
The shortlist was chosen by an independent judging panel chaired by Jeff Smith, head of music, 6 Music & Radio 2. Unlike judging panels for the Grammy Awards, where the members’ names are not revealed, the Mercury Prize publishes the names of all of the committee members. In addition to Smith, this year’s committee consisted of: Anna Calvi – musician, songwriter & composer; Danielle Perry – broadcaster & writer; Hannah Peel – musician, songwriter & composer; Jamie Cullum – musician & broadcaster; Jamz Supernova – broadcaster & DJ; Lea Stonhill – music programming consultant; Mistajam – songwriter, DJ & broadcaster; Phil Alexander – creative director, Kerrang!/contributing editor, Mojo; Sian Eleri – broadcaster & DJ, Tshepo Mokoena – music writer & author; Will Hodgkinson – chief rock & pop critic, The Times.
Here’s the complete list of 2023 Mercury Prize albums of the year:
Arctic Monkeys, The Car
Ezra Collective, Where I’m Meant to Be
Fred Again., Actual Life 3 (January 1 – September 9 2022)
“Right here is Clayton Cameron on the drums … he’s gonna show you how [to swing]…”
That was Tony Bennett, the legendary performer who died at the age of 96 on Friday (July 21), during his 1994 MTV Unplugged performance of Duke Ellington’s “It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing).” The man he was introducing, Clayton Cameron, had only been playing drums in his band for a couple years — after nearly a decade spent backing iconic Rat Packer Sammy Davis Jr. — and Bennett was cuing him on the biggest spotlight moment of his career to that point: a nearly two-minute drum solo in the middle of the song.
The showcase included a switch from sticks to brushes, and a move from a sitting drum set to a standing solo drum, with Cameron frequently flipping between the two ends of each brush while playing — all with circus performer-like dexterity and fluidity. Each member of the Ralph Sharon Trio backing Bennett that night was given individual moments to shine, but none was quite as show-stopping (in both senses) as Cameron’s jaw-dropping “Swing” display, lighting up the special’s penultimate performance without disrupting the casual-hang vibe that the four performers had worked hard to establish to that point.
The Unplugged special was an immediate success, as part of Bennett’s successful mid-’90s rebranding as an artist accessible to the MTV generation, and its accompanying soundtrack would go on to be certified platinum by the RIAA and win two awards, including album of the year, at the 1995 Grammys. (MTV re-ran the special, along with its 2021 sequel alongside Lady Gaga, after Bennett’s passing on July 21.) Its popularity also brought newfound exposure to Cameron, then in his mid-30s.
“I was living in New York at the time, and I knew that something was up when I was crossing the street — I think like sixth avenue or something — and this fireman was yelling at me,” he recalls. “I realized he was saying my name, and then I realized he was a Tony Bennett fan. And he had seen me on [MTV] … that was something very very different for me, very new.”
Cameron would ultimately drum with Bennett for a total of 13 years and 13 albums — the longest artistic partnership for Cameron in a career that also included work alongside such icons as Frank Sinatra, Mariah Carey and James Taylor, and even a one-off gig conducting the UCLA Bruins Marching Band and playing drums on BTS’ 2020 hit single “On.” (“It gave me credibility with my daughter and her friends,” Cameron laughs about the last one.) He currently works as a continuing lecturer at UCLA, does sideman gigs and plays with his own band The Du U Project, and remembers his time working with Bennett and his orbit of collaborators as “very special.”
“I enjoyed being in the studio with him so much,” he says. “He just always really knew what he wanted, and how to do it. And then just following him, he was just … I had to keep reminding myself, ‘OK, you’re a part of this – you’re not a bystander. You’re with Tony Bennett.’”
Below, Cameron reminisces to Billboard about his time with the late Bennett, his memories of working with him on the classic Unplugged special, and how tennis helped bring the two together both years before they ever properly collaborated and for many years after. (The conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity.)
Can you tell me a little bit about your early career, and the path that took you to working with Tony?
I was born and raised here in Los Angeles, California, and I grew up playing behind some of the local people like Ernie Andrews and Teddy Edwards. And I ended up playing for Gerald Wilson’s band, which included people like Ernie Watts and Jerome Richardson, Gerald Wiggins, Oscar Brashear, who recently passed. These were all great jazz musicians who were in L.A. And so playing with Gerald would actually lead me later on to playing with Sammy Davis Jr., after I graduated from college.
I was Sammy’s last drummer, from ‘82 until he passed away in 1990. And during that period, I would do the Rat Pack Tour with Sinatra and Dean [Martin] and Sammy. And later on, Dean would drop out and Liza Minnelli would come on. Sammy passed away in 1990, and so I did a few things around L.A., and then I just moved to New York. So when I got to New York, I was playing with a lot of great people – playing with the Mingus band, doing some stuff with Barry Harris, and I even worked with Kenny Burrell while I was there.
And so I was really happy, just kinda being on the scene. Then I got a call, saying that Tony was looking for a drummer and that I had been recommended. They said, “Why don’t you give it a try and we’ll see if Tony likes what you’re doing and you like the gig?” And so I started April 1 of 1992, with Tony.
So we’re on a plane going to… Paris, California, I think it was? Up north, just past the Bay Area. Tony and I were talking on the plane, and I reminded him that we had met back in the ‘80s on the tennis court, in Atlantic City. Tony,’s youngest daughter was taking a tennis lesson — she must have been 10 years old, or something like that. There was only one tennis club in Atlantic City, and so the pro there knew me. And he said, “Hey, can you hit with Tony Bennett while his daughter takes a lesson?” And so Tony and I hit some tennis balls. And it was fun, it was kinda cool.
So I reminded him of it while we’re on the plane, and he says, “Oh, OK.” We get off the plane — instead of going to the gig, he takes me to the San Francisco Tennis Club. And that was the first thing I did with Tony once I got hired. I kinda became the tennis valet after that.
Did you get to see much of his game? How was he as a tennis player?
He could hold his own. I guess we would call him maybe like a 3.0 player in tennis terms. Which means – all the tennis players out there will know – you have maybe one shot that you could really do well, and you had to work on the other ones. But he had a good forehand. So it was a lot of fun. For a lot of years we would play together, before he stopped playing.
Were you already versed in his catalogue before performing with him? What kind of level of knowledge did you have in his stuff?
Oh well certainly, the BillEvans stuff I knew really well. And I knew his couple of hits that he had when I was growing up. So I was aware of him, I just hadn’t heard a lot about him in recent years — y’know, ‘80s into the ‘90s. And so that’s why it was kind of a surprise to me when I got the call. Even though I’d seen him in Atlantic City, that sort of thing. It was the same thing kinda with Sammy Davis, Jr., when I joined him — he wasn’t recording, but he was doing a lot of gigs and stuff. But he wasn’t necessarily doing a lot of television, things like that.
Was the style that he wanted you to play for him something that you were comfortable with? Did you push you into new territories, or did he want you in your pocket?
There wasn’t really much discussion on what to do. We just did it. There was never really much discussion, just swinging and grooving. The big thing with Tony is his dynamics – I learned a lot in that sense. Especially in the studio, just really being able to play with that quiet intensity — so that he didn’t have to compromise what he wanted to do.
Maybe one time, he gave me one real directive. And that was, we were in the studio, and I think we were recording – it must have been a ballad, I can’t remember the tune. Tony was not in a booth, we were pretty much all in the same room most of the time. And so that way, he would really get a feel of the band. And so one take was one take — if you did it again, everybody did it again.
So I remember one time, we were playing, and so Tony says, “Hey Clayton, the brushes are too loud.” I said, “Oh, OK, no problem.” And so I adjusted, and I did something that I had never done before. Usually when you’re playing brushes, you kinda have these broad strokes. And so I made the strokes very minuscule. But you’re in the studio, so the mic is picking it up. After we finished the track, Tony came over and he thanked me – he said, “Thank you Clayton, I wanted to whisper the lyric.” I said “Oh wow, it makes so much sense.”
What did you know about MTV Unplugged as a series before doing it? Did you have a vision about how Tony’s set would translate to it?
Well, I was aware of it. MTV Unplugged was fairly new. And we had done the record Steppin’ Out [in 1993], and then Danny Bennett, Tony’s son and manager, said, “Hey, we’re gonna do this MTV thing, Unplugged, and it may become a record.” So that was it. We just went on and we did our show – there was no directives or anything, we just played. And I think that’s how it comes off — where we’re just having a good time and just doing a concert.
So the show that you guys played on Unplugged – was that fairly standard in terms of both the setlist and the arrangements that you normally would have played at a show around that time period? Or did you have to rehearse it differently?
No, there was no rehearsal. I mean, I was still fairly new in the band, and so things were developing. And that’s why it’s kinda nice for me to look back on it, because it was still early in the process of me playing with Tony. So the fact that he would feature me with a drum solo, I thought was just quite generous. It really told me that, here was a guy that just really knew what he wanted, and was very secure in what he was doing — to allow me to go off and do a drum solo and come back.
Is that something that he would frequently do at concerts? Because over the course of the special, he really gives all three of you a pretty specific time to shine individually.
Yeah, absolutely. It was – I did that for 13 years. Get featured, and all of that.
I’ve heard stories about the Unplugged tapings that sometimes they drag on for seven-eight hours, and everybody’s exhausted by the end, you end up doing these retakes and retakes. Was it like that for you guys, or was it more get in-get out, you do your set and move on?
Oh yeah, the latter. Yeah, I’m shocked to hear that people were doing all those takes. You have to realize that — people of Tony’s era, of Sammy Davis’ era, Frank Sinatra’s era — they know how to perform. It’s not like, you gotta tell them what to do. They know how to perform. All those guys had at least 10,000 hours on the road, if you’re gonna do the Gladwell, 10,000-hours-makes-you-a-pro kinda thing. Those guys had 100,000 hours doing shows.
So it’s not like you have to tell them. And then if you’ve got a good band, you don’t have to tell them either! What tunes are we gonna do? And then do it. You don’t have to rehearse a bunch of tunes. If you’ve got consummate musicians, and you’ve got a consummate performer like Tony Bennett or Sammy? Man, they could do 10 shows without rehearsing.
Did the Unplugged change your career at all? There’s such a focus on you, and Tony says your name over and over again – were you getting more gig requests? Were people asking you to do the thing with the brushes on their album or their stage?
Yeah, that actually did happen. I certainly got a lot of attention because of Tony. I didn’t have time to do a lot, though, because during the time with him, we were so busy… everyone from Sting, James Taylor were reaching out to me, just these different people, maybe little things here and there. But I didn’t have time. Because we were on the road like 200 days a year. I mean, doing the television and concerts and all of that. But I did do some things, yeah.
Did you have any moments from the special that stick out to you as particularly memorable?
What I remember most is… what I learned about Tony at that concert is just how gracious he was. He just did his thing and didn’t blink. Tony just did his show. There wasn’t anything different than what we would ordinarily do. But I tell you – watching him, when I look back on it, it was like he had done it the first time. Like everything was fresh. Even though we had done like 20,000 shows or whatever. It was still fresh! There was not any, like, “Oh, I gotta do this again…”
And he would tell you that, too. “You’re sinning against your talents” is one of the things he used to say. If you’re gonna not show up, y’know. “You’re sinning against your talents.”
You mentioned Danny Bennett taking him in that MTV-oriented direction over the course of the ‘90s. Was that something that you were surprised by – that he was able to connect with the younger audiences the way that he was? What was it about him that allowed him to reach audiences that were, at that point, almost two generations his junior?
Well one, the music was good. And Tony was charismatic, period. And so when we were doing a lot of these – like, going between Smashing Pumpkins and all these different groups – when we play, we gonna swing, and we gonna groove, and it doesn’t really matter whether you’re a grunge or this or that. The groove is there. And then Tony comes out, and he’s doing his thing? I mean, come on… it’s infectious.
But the thing about what Danny and Tony did, is that they took Tony’s thing into those young people’s arenas. They didn’t have to go to Carnegie Hall to see Tony. Naw, Tony went to them and said, “Hey, check this out!” And so it was amazing. It really was. I don’t know if anyone could’ve really predicted how much of an effect it really would have.
Did you go to the Grammys when he was nominated?
[Laughs.] Oh man, yeah. I was there. It was in L.A. I mean, we weren’t really expecting – I wasn’t really expecting — that it was gonna win. I’m just kinda lounging up in Tony’s dressing room at the Grammys, backstage. And then they say, “Tony Bennett!” And I was like, “Whoa!” I mean, it was mind-boggling.
But I’m so happy that Tony won. Because that was historic, really. It really created a whole ‘nother energy for Tony himself. And he just rode the wave, but he didn’t have to change anything. He didn’t do anything differently, other to be himself, which was great.
Did you stay in touch with Tony over the years, after you stopped touring and recording with him?
Oh yeah. We talked — usually when the U.S. Open was on, or Wimbledon, I would get a call, or I would call him. “Did you see Federer?” “Did you see Agassi?” That sort of thing. So we absolutely stayed in contact.
There have been some pretty amazing remembrances of Tony since his passing – just what an incredible life he lived, and what a great person he was. But is there anything about Tony that you think gets underappreciated, either as a performer or a man?
There’s a couple things. We did a session one time for 2001’s Playin’ With My Friends – it was the blues record – and we were waiting for Stevie Wonder to come in to do a duet. I think it was “Everyday (I Have the Blues).” And so Stevie comes in, and immediately says, “You know, Tony, I want to thank you for marching in the Civil Rights Movement.” And I think that’s one of the big things — Tony was a humanist, he was a pacifist, in terms of war. Because he was a veteran as well.
And the last thing I want to say is, I remember being at South by Southwest, and he was giving a little talk. And he was in tears, just telling the kids on how to hone your craft, and how to be true to yourself. And so he was very, very interested in the welfare of other people, and the welfare of young people.
As he gears up to release his new album AustinFriday (July 28), Post Malone wants to set the record straight. In his Wednesday (July 26) interview with Apple Music 1’s Zane Lowe, the 28-year-old singer-rapper opened up about his drug and alcohol usage, emphasizing that — while he may have gone a little wild in the earlier days of his career — it’s definitely not what it used to be.
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“I mean, first off, I shouldn’t have to really justify anything to anyone, but I appreciate the concerns,” he began, sitting casually on a couch with Lowe. “But then the rumor starts that I’m doing hard drugs, which I’ve never done in my entire life.”
“Yeah, I take shrooms … I like shrooms,” explained the musician, confirming he made his last album, Twelve Carat Toothache, while taking the psychedelics. “I like shrooms. Not as much as I used to. It’s really affected my short-term memory. … Maybe it was just a stint of habitual overuse. Daily.”
“But now I take a little bar of chocolate with my buddies, a little square chocolate and just laugh and laugh and laugh,” he added. “It’s interesting because it’s improved. It has improved my view on things. Making the last record, I was so, so, so … Well, writing it, I was so, so sad. But now I’m so happy and it’s definitely improved my viewpoint on life.”
The “White Iverson” artist also gave an update on his current relationship to alcohol, which he noted is “very much” a weakness for him. “It’s very frustrating,” Post admitted. “I have a very hard time expressing myself via recording if I’m not a little f–ked up. It’s a good spot now because if I’m not recording or I’m not talking to people or if I’m not doing shows, I really do drink just to have fun. It’s having a beer with my dad or with my bud.”
Posty also acknowledged that family life with his fiancée, with whom he welcomed a daughter last year, has helped to keep him grounded. “I really love hanging out with my baby, hanging out with the lady, playing video games, and in my garage working on projects,” he told Lowe. “That’s what I love to do. And so it hasn’t been that hard, but there’s times to where you have … It’s that one drink that sets you over.”
The interview comes just a couple months after the “Circles” singer took to Instagram to deny he was using drugs, which fans speculated was the reason behind his recent weight loss. “I’m having a lot of fun performing, and have never felt healthier,” he said at the time. “i guess dad life kicked in and i decided to kick soda, and start eating better so i can be around for a long time for this little angel.”
“The difference is I don’t rage in social settings,” Post told Lowe. “It’s usually me and a buddy. And we just stay up super late until the sunrise and we’re just drinking and sitting out on the car and just hanging out listening to music. I used to go nuts, and this is significantly better. There used to be a time, especially at the beginning of our relationship, that I would just disappear and just go for a week. And I was like, oh man, that’s so sh–ty.”
Watch Post Malone’s interview with Zane Lowe above.
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