How to make a multi million dollar pop song…
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The 0800 Jukebox crew.
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One of the infamously falsetto-voiced trio the Bee Gees, Robin Gibb, has announced a three date New Zealand tour.
As part of his Bee Gees Greatest Hits tour, Gibb will perform with the Pointer Sisters, comprising sisters Anita and Ruth with Ruth’s granddaughter, Sadako, at the TSB Bank Arena, Wellington and the CBS Canterbury Arena between November 10-12.
Gibb, who has maintained a successful solo career, last performed in New Zealand in 1999 when he played to more than 60,000 people in Auckland’s Western Springs, one of the largest concert attendances in New Zealand history.
“It’s been a long time, but I’m really, really pleased to be coming back one more time to play for the New Zealand fans,” Gibb says.
The Bee Gees are the only group to have recorded number one songs in four different decades and there are more than 6500 cover version of the songs.
Gibb will perform the group’s biggest songs including Massachusetts, How Deep is Your Love, Stayin’ Alive, Night Fever, You Win Again, Nights on Broadway, Jive Talking, I Started A Joke, Words, To Love Somebody, New York Mining Disaster and many more.
The Gibb brothers, Barry, and twins Robin and Maurice, were born in Britain to British parents but moved to Australia in the mid ’50s where their music career began, gaining their first chart success there with Spicks and Specks. Inducted into the Rock’n’ Roll Hall of Fame in 1997, it is estimated The Bee Gees have sold more than 200 million records. Maurice died in 2003. In 2009 Barry and Robin announced plans to record and perform together as the Bee Gees.
Tickets go on sale on Monday, July 5 through ticketek.co.nz.
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Paramore are returning to New Zealand, just seven months after performing two sold out shows here.
The American rock act, fronted by red haired front woman Hayley Williams, will perform in Wellington on October 7, and in Auckland on October 8.
The band last performed here in March, and according to a tweet by Williams, the band loved their time here.
“Why did it take us 5 years to get here? Can’t wait to come back to New Zealand. Please, dear God, let it be soon. Never had so much fun in 3 days in my whole life. NZ, we’ll miss you!” she said after the show.
Tickets for both shows go on sale on July 9.
Paramore
October 7: TSB Bank Arena, Wellington
http://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/music/3848981/Paramore-announce-NZ-show
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The 0800 Jukebox crew.
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Rock’s global icons, Bon Jovi, return to New Zealand in December with two gigantic stadium shows as part of The Circle world tour.
Bon Jovi will play Westpac Stadium in Wellington on December 4 and Auckland’s Mt Smart Stadium on December 5. Tickets will go on sale on Thursday 8 July.
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The 0800 Jukebox crew.
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Pete Doherty painted in his own blood! A selection of these gruesome artworks went on sale in 2006 via a London art gallery. They were daubed using a combination of Doherty’s own blood and that of his former James Mullord, who said: “He was very careful, he used a new needle.
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The 0800 Jukebox crew.
In 1984, a U.S. library accused Jackson of owing it over $1 million in overdue book fines. Officials said they would scrap the fines if he returned the books autographed.
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The wait is over…
Intriguer Album Released in New Zealand Today
One of the most distinctive bands of the past quarter-century return with their brand new album Intriguer.
Produced by Jim Scott and Neil Finn and recorded in Roundhead Studios in Auckland, Intriguer follows Crowded House’s 2007 release Time On Earth, which hit No. 1 in Australia and New Zealand, and No. 3 in the UK.
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The alternative music act Devo, best known for its 1980 hit “Whip It,” is pioneering a new method to help win fan approval. It is asking them what they want to hear.
Singer and co-founder Mark Mothersbaugh told Reuters Television that the U.S. band’s first album for 20 years — “Something for Everybody” — was shaped through an online campaign which asked fans for their opinions.
“We thought people understood us enough to make observations which could be really important,” he said.
The resulting disc bears a promotional sticker that reads “88 percent focus group approved.”
Fans helped whittle a selection of 16 songs down to 12 which appear on the album, selected the new color for the band’s trademark flower pot hats (blue rather than red) and even issued decisive advice on the cover art.
“The focus group liked the picture of the woman eating a piece of candy in the shape of a Devo hat,” Mothersbaugh said The campaign was devised by U.S. advertising agency Mother.
“People nowadays really don’t like surprises,” Mother creative director Bill Moulton told Reuters. “They look at surprise as something negative, as something scary.”
Forrester Research media analyst Mark Mulligan said the band’s approach made sense in an era where fewer fans were buying music.
“The relationship between fans and artists is much closer than it was before and will continue to become closer, and that’s simply because the role of record labels cannot be relied upon as a guarantee of success anymore,” Mulligan said.
Devo frontman Mothersbaugh said the band’s focus group strategy is also meant as a statement in itself.
“We were doing it both for real and also kind of a little bit as a joke, poking fun at pop culture.”
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The 0800 Jukebox crew.
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Play games at the party to help the families get to know each other.
bride / groom to be trivia, is a great one to get the ball rolling. Split into mixed family groups with the bride & groom as the hosts.
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The 0800 Jukebox crew.
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