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Thriller Album Cover

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TRACKLISTING
Thriller: Original Tracklisting
1. “Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’” – (#5 Hot 100, #5 R&B)
2. “Baby Be Mine”
3. “The Girl Is Mine” (with Paul McCartney) – (#2 Hot 100, #1 R&B, #1 Adult Contemporary)
4. “Thriller” – (#4 Hot 10, #3 Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks)
5. “Beat It” – (#1 Hot 100, #1 R&B)
6. “Billie Jean” – (#1 Hot 100, #1 R&B, #9 A/C)
7. “Human Nature” – (#7 Hot 100, #2 Adult Contemporary)
8. “P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)” – (#10 Hot 100) 9. “The Lady in My Life”
Bonus Material
10. Vincent Price

Previously Unreleased Tracks For 25th Anniversary Edition
11. The Girl Is Mine 2008 with will.i.am*
12. P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing) 2008 with Michael Jackson and will.i.am*
13. Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’ 2008 with Michael Jackson, Akon and will.i.am*
14. Beat It 2008 with Fergie*
15. Billie Jean 2008 with Kanye West*
16. For All Time (unreleased track from original Thriller sessions)*

Bonus DVD

The Videos
1. Thriller
2. Beat It
3. Billie Jean
4. Billie Jean performance from Motown 25: Yesterday, Today and Forever

Les Paul Dies

Les PaulLes Paul, the virtuoso guitarist and inventor whose solid-body electric guitar and recording studio innovations changed the course of 20th-century popular music, died Thursday in White Plains. He was 94.The cause was complications of pneumonia, Gibson Guitar announced.

Mr. Paul was a remarkable musician as well as a tireless tinkerer. He played guitar with leading prewar jazz and pop musicians from Louis Armstrong to Bing Crosby. In the 1930s he began experimenting with guitar amplification, and by 1941 he had built what was probably the first solid-body electric guitar, although there are other claimants. With his electric guitar and the vocals of his wife, Mary Ford, he used overdubbing, multitrack recording and new electronic effects to create a string of hits in the 1950s.

Mr. Paul’s style encompassed the twang of country music, the harmonic richness of jazz and, later, the bite of rock ’n’ roll. For all his technological impact, though, he remained a down-home performer whose main goal, he often said, was to make people happy.

Sheryl Crow rocks All-Star festivities

From News 2 editor and rock critic Bob Ivy:

Brad’s blog travels and you never know if you are really safe from prying eyes and reviews.

This past weekend was St. Louis, under the Arch, for the mega-fabulous Sheryl Crow in St. Louis. Sheryl and her band (with special guest Elvis Costello) were part of MLB’s lead up festivities to the All-Star game tonight.

Crow, a Missouri native, performed the free-for-the-fans benefit concert to raise money in the fight against cancer, a disease she and one of her band members have beaten over the last three years.

Now a Williamson County resident, Sheryl brought her entire band, including TWO guitar players. So instead of the normal instrument hopping Crow is known for, she focused in on the vocals. It was a powerful set, almost two hours, nearly entirely focused in on the rockin’ older stuff that made her famous.

Look for Crow tonight at the All-Star game as she is scheduled to sing the National Anthem. Rock on!

Bryan Adams



Born on November 5, 1959 in Kingston, Ontario, November has gone on to be one of the most successful and recognizable Canadians in the American film industry, even though this recognition comes from his voice rather than his physical appearance.

Adams first found stateside popularity in 1983 with the release of his album Cuts Like a Knife. It was also in 1983 that his music was first used for a motion picture with the recording of Heaven for A Night in Heaven. Adams' popularity continued throughout the 80s (during which he had a bit part in the 1989 Clint Eastwood excursion Pink Cadillac), but it wasn't until 1991, when Adams wrote Everything I Do, I Do It For You for Kevin Costner's Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves that he met with record-breaking success. The song's single sold over 3 million copies in the United States, becoming the second best-selling single after We Are the World. The song also netted Adams a Golden Globe nomination and a Grammy for Best Song Written for a Motion Picture or Television. Following this success, Adams continued to write songs for movies, including All For Love for The Three Muskateers (1993), Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman for 1995's Don Juan DeMarco (for which he garnered Oscar and Golden Globe nominations as well as his fourth #1 hit), and I Finally Found Somone for Barbra Streisand's The Mirror Has Two Faces (1996), for which he received his third Oscar nomination as well as a Top 10 hit.

Adams has been called the most successful Canadian singer ever, an honor that he undoubtedly owes in part to the movies. Out of all of his number one hits, only one, Please Forgive Me, was not written for a film. All Movie Guide

Marilyn Manson

Love him or hate him, the self-proclaimed "Antichrist Superstar" -- Marilyn Manson -- was indisputably among the most notorious and controversial entertainers of the 1990s. Celebrated by supporters as a crusader for free speech and denounced by detractors as little more than a poor man's Alice Cooper, Manson was the latest in a long line of shock rockers, rising to the top of the charts on a platform of sex, drugs, and Satanism. Though widely dismissed by critics, his brand of metal nevertheless struck a major chord with the youth market, and he became a mainstream anti-hero on the strength of a masterfully orchestrated marketing campaign, much to the chagrin of conservative politicians and concerned parents. Such attention pushed many of his songs -- including "The Dope Show," "The Beautiful People," and a cover of the Eurythmics' "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)" -- into the upper reaches of the modern rock charts during his heyday.

Born Brian Warner, Manson was raised in Canton, OH. At the age of 18, he relocated to Tampa Bay, FL, where he worked as a music journalist. In 1989, he became friends with guitarist and fellow outsider Scott Mitchell; the two soon decided to form a band, with Mitchell rechristening himself Daisy Berkowitz and Warner adopting the name Marilyn Manson. With the addition of bassist Gidget Gein and keyboardist Madonna Wayne-Gacy, the group -- originally dubbed Marilyn Manson & the Spooky Kids -- began self-releasing cassettes and playing gigs, their gothic stage show notable for Manson's elaborate makeup and homemade special effects. Jettisoning their drum machine in favor of one Sara Lee Lucas, the band's sound began taking on a harder edge, and by 1992 they were among the most popular acts in the south Florida area. In 1993, Nine Inch Nails' Trent Reznor came calling, offering both a contract with his Nothing Records label as well as the chance to open for NIN the following spring; Manson accepted both offers, and the group's debut LP, Portrait of an American Family, appeared during the summer of 1994. With new bassist Twiggy Ramirez replacing Gein, the group's notoriety began to soar. Most infamously, during an appearance in Salt Lake City, Manson ripped apart a copy of the Book of Mormon while on-stage. The Church of Satan's founder, Anton LaVey, also bestowed upon him the title of "Reverend."

While some onlookers dismissed Manson's behavior as crass audience manipulation, his cult following -- comprised almost entirely of disaffected white suburban teens -- continued to swell, and the band broke into the mainstream with the release of 1995's Smells Like Children EP, propelled by their hit cover of the Eurythmics' "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)." Berkowitz quit a short time later and was replaced by guitarist Zim Zum, and the revised group saw their next LP, 1996's Antichrist Superstar, debut at the number three spot on the pop album charts. As Manson's popularity grew, so did the furor surrounding him. His concerts were regularly picketed by civic groups, and his music was the subject of widespread attacks from the right-wing and religious fronts. Again, however, his quick embrace of the media spotlight called into question the true sincerity of his revolutionary aims. With a cover story in Rolling Stone and the timely release of a best-selling autobiography, The Long Hard Road Out of Hell, some onlookers doubted whether Manson had sold his soul to Satan, or just sold his soul, period. The glam-inspired Mechanical Animals followed in 1998, with the resulting tour yielding the live Last Tour on Earth a year later.

Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death) came out at the end of 2000, and the band toured to support the album in 2001. During a July show in Michigan, Manson was charged with criminal sexual conduct after performing an alleged offensive act on a security guard. Another charge followed before the year's end, when an additional security guard filed a civil suit alleging that Manson had rubbed his pelvis on the guard's head. Manson's version of "Tainted Love" appeared on the Not Another Teen Movie soundtrack that December, and the July 2001 sexual conduct charges were lowered to a misdemeanor one month later. The civil suit was dropped soon after.

May 2003 saw the release of The Golden Age of Grotesque, which spent a week atop the album charts and ended up on several critics' year-end Top Ten lists. The following year, former member Daisy Berkowitz released Lunch Boxes & Choklit Cows, a compilation of demos and unreleased tracks that was credited to Marilyn Manson & the Spooky Kids. Berkowitz had obtained the rights to the material in a lawsuit against Manson, who subsequently fought the release and court-ordered some artwork to be removed. At the end of September, Manson released his own compilation, a greatest-hits affair titled Lest We Forget. The collection covered the highlights of Manson's career and included a new cover version of Depeche Mode's "Personal Jesus," whose success helped push the album to gold status in multiple countries.

Late in 2005, the band announced that a new album was nearly finished; however, it wasn't until 2007 that Eat Me, Drink Me was released. The record was largely written, performed, and produced by Manson and guitarist/bassist Tim Skold, who left Marilyn Manson's lineup shortly thereafter and was replaced by returning member Twiggy Ramirez. Manson and Ramirez then began writing material for the band's seventh studio album, The High End of Low, which arrived in spring 2009.

Ozzy Osbourne


Ozzy Osbourne
born: 03-12-1948
birth place: Aston, Birmingham, England

Osbourne grew up in a working-class family and left school at fifteen to work a series of low-paying jobs, before being imprisoned for burglary.

On his release, he joined a friend’s band, which he quickly outgrew, joining another outfit called Earth (later to become Black Sabbath).

Black Sabbath released their self-titled debut album on Friday 13th February, 1970 and almost immediately, developed a cult following in both Britain and America. Unfortunately, Ozzy and the rest of the band became seriously dependent on alcohol and cocaine, and gained a reputation for trashing cars and hotel rooms.

In 1977, Osbourne's father passed away, causing him to leave the band for a period before the release of their next album ‘Never Say Die’. Osbourne became increasingly disinterested in Black Sabbath and, at the end of the ‘Never Say Die’ tour, the band replaced him.

After months of despair and drug abuse, Osbourne met Sharon Arden, who helped him turn his life around. Sharon encouraged Osbourne to launch a solo career, and he joined forces with guitarist, Randy Rhoads, to begin work on his 1980 solo debut, ‘Blizzard of Ozz’. The album was a resounding success, reaching platinum status.

In 1981, Ozzy released his follow-up, 'Diary of a Madman', which eventually sold more than five million copies and firmly established him as a solo artist in his own right.

Unfortunately, the infamous ‘Diary of a Madman’ tour was one of the most troubled outings in rock history, with misfortune, bad publicity and protests dogging Osbourne the whole way.

After a series of tragedies and bizarre incidents (including the death of Rhoads in a plane crash) Osbourne sobered up and released a softer, more personal album, ‘No More Tears’, in 1991. He had announced that the 1992 tour would be his swansong, but decided to put his retirement on hold and returned with ‘Ozzmosis’ in late 1995. In 1996 he headlined the Ozzfest festival tour.

At the end of the 1990s Ozzy also rejoined the original line-up of Black Sabbath, for a series of highly successful live shows. His first studio album of the new millennium, ‘Down To Earth’, was released in 2001.

He became a household figure the following year when his bizarre family life was featured on the MTV reality TV show, ‘The Osbournes’. The show became an overnight hit, and helped lauch the singing career of Ozzy's daughter, Kelly.

In December 2003, Osbourne was rushed to hospital in Slough, England after he was involved in an accident whilst driving an all-terrain vehicle on his estate in Chalfont St Peter in Buckinghamshire. The singer broke his collar bone, eight ribs, and a neck vertebra. An operation was performed to lift the collarbone, which was believed to be resting on a major artery and interrupting blood flow to the arm. Sharon later revealed that Osbourne had stopped breathing following the crash and was resuscitated by Osbourne's then personal bodyguard, Sam Ruston.

While in the hospital, Osbourne actually achieved his first ever UK number one single, a duet of the Black Sabbath ballad, "Changes" with daughter Kelly. In doing so, he broke the record of the longest period between an artist's first UK chart appearance (with Black Sabbath's "Paranoid", number four in August 1970) and their first number one hit; a gap of 33 years.

Ozzy made a full recovery and headlined at Ozzfest for the next three years before announcing his retirement from the event. In May 2007, Osbourne released Black Rain, his first new studio album in almost six years.

Jon Bon Jovi


Jon Bon Jovi
born: 02-03-1962
birth place: Perth Amboy, NJ, USA

John Francis Bongiovi Jr was born in New Jersey, and was then raised in nearby Sayreville. Both of Jon’s parents - Carol Sharkey and John Sr - were US Marines.


Jon spent most of his adolescence bunking school to opt for music activities instead and he ended up playing in local bands with friends and his cousin Tony who owned the then famous New York recording studio, the Power Station. One demo in particular, Runaway caught the attention of the local New Jersey radio station and Jon recruited a band to support the song. Bon Jovi’s first studio album, self-titled, went gold in the charts and Runaway became their first Top 40 hit. It was at this time that Jon’s cousin Tony Bongiovi apparently sued Jon and the band by claiming that he’d been responsible for their creation and unique sound. In 1985, the band’s second album 7800 Fahrenheit was released and also gained a gold record sale status yet Jon and his co-members felt that their fame wasn’t at the level they were hoping for.

The release of the finished work in 1986 was the huge hit the band had been waiting for. Following the group’s success, Jon Bon Jovi was asked to assist in producing Cher’s ‘comeback’ album, Cher, as a solo influence. Jon co-wrote and sang backing vocals on Cher’s single We All Sleep Alone and also produced several other tracks on the album, later going on to co-produce Cher’s best-selling multi-platinum album Heart of Stone in 1987.

In 1989, Jon married his high school sweetheart Dorothea Hurley and the couple remain together today, with four children.

Meanwhile, Bon Jovi’s fourth album New Jersey was released in September of the same year. The album topped the American Billboard charts for a month and included five Top 10 singles. The film and album were released in 1990 and gave Jon his first solo number one single with the hit Blaze of Glory. The soundtrack also peaked at number three in the charts and Jon’s input was recognised with both Grammy and Academy Award nominations plus a Golden Globe win for Best Original Song. A second single from the film’s soundtrack album, Miracle, also had a successful release in reaching the number 12 chart position and featured a then unknown Matt LeBlanc in the video.

Jon reunited with the rest of his band members in 1992 with their new work, Keep The Faith. The album didn’t manage to meet the success of the group’s previous two hit releases and spent only a fortnight in the top 10.

In 1994, Bon Jovi released a greatest hits album, Cross Road. Jon’s first significant acting part came in 1995 in the film Moonlight and Valentino alongside Gwyneth Paltrow and Kathleen Turner. Jon’s first solo album, Destination Anywhere was released 1997 and was a success. In 2000 after a five year break, Bon Jovi reunited for their seventh studio album, Crush. It’s My Life earned the band a Grammy for Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group while Crush won Best Rock Album.

Synching the band’s constant success in the musical world, Jon continued to take acting roles and starred in two significant hits in 2000. Bon Jovi’s eighth album, Bounce followed suit of its predecessors by zooming straight to the number two slot in 2002. This was the band’s highest chart debut in their 20 year career, proving that their winning song writing formula was unbeatable.

In the years that have followed Bounce, Jon Bon Jovi has successfully continued to synch his acting career, most recently in the hit US TV series, The West Wing (2006) alongside Bon Jovi’s acclaimed musical status, releasing a further four albums. 2007 marks the release of the band’s ninth studio album, Lost Highway with a tour to promote it.

Sting

After disbanding the Police at the peak of their popularity in 1984, Sting quickly established himself as a viable solo artist, one obsessed with expanding the boundaries of pop music. Sting incorporated heavy elements of jazz, classical, and worldbeat into his music, writing lyrics that were literate and self-consciously meaningful, and he was never afraid to emphasize this fact in the press. For such unabashed ambition, he was equally loved and reviled, with supporters believing that he was at the forefront of literate, intelligent rock and his critics finding his entire body of work pompous. Either way, Sting remained one of pop's biggest superstars for the first ten years of his solo career, before his record sales began to slip.

Before the Police were officially disbanded, Sting began work on his first solo album late in 1984, rounding up a group of jazz musicians as a supporting band. Moving from bass to guitar, he recorded his solo debut, 1985's The Dream of the Blue Turtles, with Branford Marsalis, Kenny Kirkland, and Omar Hakim. The move wasn't entirely unexpected, since Sting had played with jazz and progressive rock bands in his youth, but the result was considerably more mature and diverse than any Police record. The album became a hit, with "If You Love Somebody Set Them Free," "Love Is the Seventh Wave," and "Fortress Around Your Heart" reaching the American Top Ten. Sting brought the band out on an extensive tour, which was captured on a documentary called Bring on the Night, which appeared in 1986, along with a live double album of the same name. That year, Sting participated in a half-hearted Police reunion that resulted in only one new song, a re-recorded version of "Don't Stand So Close to Me."

Following the aborted Police reunion, Sting began working on the ambitious Nothing Like the Sun, which was dedicated to his recently deceased mother. Working from a jazz foundation, and again collaborating with Marsalis, Sting worked with a number of different musicians on the album, including Gil Evans and former Police guitarist Andy Summers. The album received generally positive reviews upon its release in late 1987, and it generated hit singles with "We'll Be Together" and "They Dance Alone." Following its release, Sting began actively campaigning for Amnesty International and environmentalism, establishing the Rainforest Foundation, which was designed to raise awareness about preserving the Brazilian rainforest. An abridged Spanish version of Nothing Like the Sun, Nada Como el Sol, was released in 1988.

Sting took several years to deliver the follow-up to Nothing Like the Sun, during which time he appeared in a failed Broadway revival of +The Threepenny Opera in 1989. His father also died, which inspired 1991's The Soul Cages, a dense, dark, and complex album. Although the album peaked at number two and spawned the Top Ten hit "All This Time," the record was less successful than its predecessor. Two years later, he delivered Ten Summoner's Tales, a light, pop-oriented record that became a hit on the strength of two Top 20 singles, "If I Ever Lose My Faith in You" and "Fields of Gold." At the end of 1993, "All for Love," a song he recorded with Rod Stewart and Bryan Adams for The Three Musketeers, became a number one hit. The single confirmed that Sting's audience had shifted from new wave/college rock fans to adult contemporary, and the 1994 compilation Fields of Gold: The Best of Sting played to that audience.

Three years after Ten Summoner's Tales, Sting released Mercury Falling in the spring of 1996. Although the album debuted highly, it quickly fell down the charts, stalling at platinum sales and failing to generate a hit single. While the album failed, Sting remained a popular concert attraction, confirming his immense popularity. Brand New Day, which followed in 1999, turned his commercial fortunes around in a big way, and 2003's Sacred Love did well also.

Prince (Biography)

Few artists have created a body of work as rich and varied as Prince. During the '80s, he emerged as one of the most singular talents of the rock & roll era, capable of seamlessly tying together pop, funk, folk, and rock. Not only did he release a series of groundbreaking albums; he toured frequently, produced albums and wrote songs for many other artists, and recorded hundreds of songs that still lie unreleased in his vaults. With each album he released, Prince has shown remarkable stylistic growth and musical diversity, constantly experimenting with different sounds, textures, and genres.

Prince's first two albums were solid, if unremarkable, late-'70s funk-pop. The album was a monster hit, selling over three million copies, but it was nothing compared to 1984's Purple Rain.

Purple Rain made Prince a superstar; it eventually sold over ten million copies in the U.S. and spent 24 weeks at number one. Partially recorded with his touring band, the Revolution, the record featured the most pop-oriented music he has ever made. By 1987, Prince's ambitions were growing by leaps and bounds, resulting in the sprawling masterpiece Sign 'O' the Times. Prince was set to release the hard funk of The Black Album by the end of the year, yet he withdrew it just before its release, deciding it was too dark and immoral. Instead, he released the confused Lovesexy in 1988, which was a commercial disaster. The following year, he released his 12th album, which was titled with a cryptic symbol; in 1993, Prince legally changed his name to the symbol. Later that summer, Warner released the somewhat halfhearted Come under the name of Prince; the record was a moderate success, going gold.

In November 1994, as part of a contractual obligation, Prince agreed to the official release of The Black Album. In early 1995, he immersed himself in another legal battle with Warner, proclaiming himself a slave and refusing to deliver his new record, The Gold Experience, for release. By the end of the summer, a fed-up Warner had negotiated a compromise that guaranteed the album's release, plus one final record for the label. In the summer of 1996, Prince released Chaos & Disorder, which freed him to become an independent artist. Once it was clear that Emancipation wasn't the commercial blockbuster he hoped it would be, Prince assembled a long-awaited collection of outtakes and unreleased material called Crystal Ball in 1998. Prince then released a new one-man album, New Power Soul, just three months after Crystal Ball; even though it was his most straightforward album since Diamonds and Pearls, it didn't do well on the charts, partly because many listeners didn't realize it had been released. A collection of Warner Bros.-era leftovers, Vault: Old Friends 4 Sale, followed that summer, and in the fall Prince returned on Arista with the all-star Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic. Prince rebounded in 2003 with the chart-topping Musicology, a return to form that found the artist back in the Top Ten, even garnering a Grammy nomination for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance in 2005. A four-song appearance at the Brit Awards with Wendy, Lisa, and Sheila E. followed. Both appearances previewed tracks from 3121, which hit number one on the album charts soon after its release in March 2006. LotusFlow3r, a three-disc set, came in 2009, featuring a trio of distinct albums: LotusFlow3r itself (a guitar showcase), MPLSound (a throwback to his '80s funk output), and Elixer (a smooth contemporary R&B album featuring the breathy vocals of Bria Valente).

Eddie Van Halen

Born: 26-Jan-1955
Birthplace: Nijmegen, Netherlands

Gender: Male
Race or Ethnicity: White
Sexual orientation: Straight
Occupation: Guitarist

Nationality: United States
Executive summary: Guitarist for Van Halen



One of the best-known guitarists of the 80s and 90s, Edward Van Halen was spawned in the ancient, Roman-founded city of Nijmegen in Holland, but was primarily brought up in the rather less-ancient L.A. suburb of Pasadena, where his family chose to emigrate in 1962. Both he and his brother Alex Van Halen received training in classical piano as children, but it was ultimately rock music that won their interest, with Eddie deciding to channel his musical energies through the drums and Alex switching to the guitar. As it turned out, Alex -- who practiced on his brother's kit while Eddie was out delivering papers to pay for it -- developed faster as a drummer, motivating Eddie to turn his efforts to the guitar instead. Throughout high school and afterwards the brothers worked together in a series of groups, eventually forming Mammoth in the early 1970s. It was during this period that they came in contact with David Lee Roth, the vocalist for a band from which they occasionally rented a P.A.; deciding they would be better off with a full-time singer (Eddie having been filling this role with little enthusiasm), and impressed with Roth's skills, they lured him into their ranks. Not long afterward, bassist Michael Anthony was culled from another local band, cementing a line-up that would endure for the next ten years. Upon discovering that the name "Mammoth" was already taken, the four changed their name to Van Halen (apparently at Roth's suggestion) in 1974.

After spending the next year building up an audience on the local club circuit, Van Halen caught the attention of blood-spurting Kiss bassist Gene Simmons; impressed with the talent of Eddie and bandmates, he offered his services to produce a demo tape. That same year, a minion of the souless behemoth Warner Brothers also took an interest in the foursome, and within two shakes of a goat's tail a record deal was arranged. In 1978 their eponymous debut was released, strongly impacting the heavy metal scene and establishing Eddie as a guitar hero to countless uninspired teens. Five more albums with the Roth-fronted line-up followed over the next six years: Van Halen II (1979), Women and Children First (1980), Fair Warning (1981), Diver Down (1982), and the hugely successful 1984. By this time, however, relations between Van Halen and his vocalist had thoroughly disintegrated; the following year Roth moved on to a solo career, and a new frontman for the band -- former Montrose vocalist and solo performer Sammy Hagar -- was chosen.

With Hagar at the helm, Van Halen climbed even higher up the arena rock ladder, their new material appealing to a broader, pop audience. Hagar's tenure endured slightly longer than Roth's, yet only resulted in five albums (5150 (1986), OU812 (1988), For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge (1991), Balance (1995), plus a 1993 live album). The defining moment for this period of the band was the shameful, career-boosting sell-out of their song Right Now to the Pepsi corporation, a move that seriously damaged their credibility with many of their older fans. By 1996 the guitarist once again found himself at odds with his vocalist, and Hagar departed amongst rumors of David Lee Roth returning to the microphone stand. Roth did in fact add his voice to two new songs for a Greatest Hits collection, but the idea of a full-time reunion quickly went south, ending in a public exchange of insults through the music press. In the wake of this non-reunion, a third vocalist was picked: Gary Cherone, lately of the band Extreme. With this line-up (the least popular to date), Van Halen managed only to produce the 1998 effort Van Halen III. Following Cherone's quick exit, the Roth reunion rumors re-surfaced, but once again to no outcome.

During the peak years of his celebrity, Edward Van Halen dutifully pursued the expected lifestyle, turning himself into a first-class alcoholic along the way. After his marriage to actress Valerie Bertinelli in 1980, and particularly after the birth of his son a year later, the guitarist began the struggle to get control of his addiction, but not soon enough to avoid serious health consequences. One of the more dramatic consequences was a degenerative condition that required the replacement of his right hip in 1999. By 2000 he was faced with an even more serious procedure involving the removal of a cancerous tumor from his tongue. It was subsequently reported in 2002 that he was free from the cancer, but the impact upon his health continued to create an obstacle to his musical activity, putting his band out of commission for several years. In 2004 Van Halen finally resumued active duty, going out on the road once again with vocalist Sammy Hagar.

Jimi Hendrix the pioneer of the electric guitar


Perhaps no other rock-and-roll trailblazer has been as original or as influential in such a short span of time as Jimi Hendrix. Widely acknowledged as one of the most daring and inventive virtuosos in rock history, Hendrix pioneered the electric guitar (he played a right-handed Fender Stratocaster upside-down and left-handed) as an electronic sound source capable of feedback, distortion, and a host of other effects that could be crafted into an articulate and fluid emotional vocabulary. Although he was on the scene as a solo artist for less than five years, Jimi Hendrix is credited for having a profound effect on everyone from Miles Davis to Stevie Ray Vaughan.

He was born Johnny Allen Hendrix on November 27, 1942 in Seattle, Washington, a black American of African, European, Cherokee Indian and Mexican descent. An unsettled home environment made Jimi spend much of his early years staying with his grandmother, a full-blooded Cherokee Indian, in Canada.

Hendrix's father, James "Al" Hendrix, later changed his son's name to James Marshall Hendrix. His mother died when Jimi was 10, about the same time as Jimi began to take a serious interest in music and playing the guitar. When he was 12 he got his first electric guitar - the instrument which shaped the next 16 years of his life. At the age of 16, Jimi was thrown out of school, apparently for holding the hand of a white girl in class.

He slung his guitar over his back and left home to enlist in the Army, where he served as a parachute jumper until an injury led to his discharge. Hendrix began working as a session guitarist under the name Jimmy James, supporting such marquee acts as Sam Cooke, Ike and Tina Turner, and the Isley Brothers. After working extensively with Little Richard in 1964, Hendrix became entangled in a contract dispute with the mercurial artist and left to form his own band, Jimmy James and the Blue Flames. With the exception of an obscure single, "My Diary," with Arthur Lee (later of the L.A. psych band "Love"), none of the music Hendrix cut with other artists was made more remarkable by his presence.

After playing Greenwich Village coffeehouses for the better part of a year (still under the moniker Jimmy James), Hendrix encountered Chas Chandler, of The Animals fame, at a New York club. Impressed with his playing, Chandler, who was then looking to switch gears to management, took Hendrix to London in the fall of 1966 and masterminded the creation of the Jimi Hendrix Experience. Backed by Noel Redding on bass and Mitch Mitchell on drums, the Experience offered Hendrix the wide-open rock-and-roll format he needed to exercise his dazzling skills as a guitarist, singer, and songwriter. Chandler unleashed the band on the London pop scene, and in short order Hendrix et al became the talk of the town.

Aside from playing the guitar behind his head or with his teeth, Hendrix was renowned for setting his instrument on fire during his performances. The first time he set his guitar ablaze was on March 31, 1967, during a show at Finsbury Park in London. That year also marked the release of his first single, "Hey Joe," which went to #6 and lasted ten weeks on the U.K. charts. It was followed in quick succession by "Purple Haze" (#3), "The Wind Cries Mary" and the trio's ferocious debut album, "Are You Experienced?", which featured those tracks and the Hendrix staples "Foxy Lady" and "Manic Depression".

Hendrix's popularity Stateside was a bit slower in igniting, but "Are You Experienced?" finally broke through in a major way after a defining moment at the famed Monterey Pop Festival when the notoriously outlandish frontman created a sensation by coaxing flames from his Stratocaster during the band's performance. Throughout the next year, Hendrix's eclectic psychedelia reached a zenith with two albums, "Axis: Bold as Love" and "Electric Ladyland" - the latter ranks as one of the greatest albums of the rock era. But the Experience at the top didn't last long - Hendrix and bassist Redding grew apart, and muddled by over-indulgence in drugs and groupies, Hendrix came to believe - wrongly - that his management was cheating him. In 1969, the Experience disbanded.

In the summer of 1969, Hendrix played Woodstock with an informal ensemble called Gypsy Sun and Rainbows, in a performance highlighted by another career-defining moment: a startling, renegade rendition of "The Star Spangled Banner." Hendrix subsequently formed "the Band of Gypsies", with old army friend Billy Cox on bass and Buddy Miles (Electric Flag) on drums. The band's New Year's Eve concert at the Fillmore East in New York City provided them with material for their first album, "Band of Gypsies" (a second album, titled "Band of Gypsies 2", was discovered and released in 1986). Hendrix brought Mitch Mitchell back into the fold in mid-1970 to begin work on a new double album Jimi had tentatively titled "First Rays of the New Rising Sun". Several tracks were recorded for the project, but the sessions were sandwiched between tour dates, and, sadly, the album was left unfinished when Hendrix died September 18, 1970.

A German girl named Monika Danneman gave her version of what happened to Hendrix. Jimi arrived at her flat on Tuesday. What happened on Wednesday isn't clear but Thursday she describes as being taken up with shopping and taking photos.

They got home about 8:30 p.m. Monika prepared a meal. They shared a bottle of wine and talked and played music until 1:40 or 1:45 a.m. when Hendrix said he had to go out and see some people. Monika could not go with him but she could take him there and bring him home. She picked him up again around 3:00 a.m. On their return to the flat, Monika made Jimi a tuna fish sandwich. The two of them went to bed and talked until 7 a.m. when Monika took a sleeping pill and fell asleep.

Some time after, Hendrix took at least eight, possibly nine of the same tablets. Monika woke around 10.20. Hendrix was sleeping normally. She had planned to go out for cigarettes but just before leaving, she noticed vomit on Jimi's nose and mouth. She tried to wake him but couldn't and called a friend to ask what to do. An ambulance was called. It arrived about 11.20 a.m. Hendrix was seated upright in the back with no head support. Sometime in the next twenty-five minutes before they arrived at St. Mary Abbot's Hospital, Jimi Hendrix choked on his own vomit. He was pronounced D.O.A. The pathologist reported a large amount of Seconol in Jimi's blood but no reason to assume that suicide was the cause of death. The cause of death noted on the coroner's report was inhalation of vomit after barbiturate intoxication.

In 1971, several of the tracks intended for "First Rays" were compiled and released as "The Cry of Love", and the ensuing years have witnessed a flood of releases of Hendrix tributes, books, videos, and albums, including pre-fame barrel-scrapings of Hendrix takes from his pickup guitarist days. In the late '70s, audio engineer Alan Douglas grafted backup instrumentation onto incomplete Hendrix guitar tracks to a pale effect. In 1994, M.C.A. released three Hendrix thematic compilations, one ("Jimi Hendrix: Blues") devoted to blues, another ("Jimi Hendrix: Woodstock") to his Woodstock performance, and a third ("Voodoo Soup") that represented an attempt to posthumously recreate Hendrix's unfinished studio album. Despite these transgressions against his nearly faultless musical legacy, Hendrix's innovations and soul live on in the playing of every rock-and-roll guitarist.

In 1993, the investigation into Hendrix's death was reopened by Scotland Yard, but when no new evidence was unearthed, the matter was dropped.

The Jimi Hendrix Experience's bassist, Noel Redding, died at his home in Ireland of unknown causes on May 11, 2003, at the age of 57. Drummer Mitch Mitchell was found dead in a Portland, Ore. hotel room on November 12, 2008. He was 62.

Mick Jagger The Rocker Legend

Mick Jagger is one of the best known and highly respected musicians in the world. He is a living legend whose career has spanned 5 decades, and he, with his band the Rolling Stones have sold millions of albums around the world.

So when did it all begin? When did Mick Jagger decided he would be part of one of the most popular bands in the history of the world?

He was born in Dartford, Kent (England) on 26 July 1943. Amazingly, he met Keith Richards at the tender age of 4, lost contact, then became reacquainted on a train in 1960. Mick left the London School of Economics to become a rock musician. The Rolling Stones were formed between 1960 and 1962. Mick Jagger played a harmonica and was led to the vocals, Keith Richards and Brian Jones on guitar, Charlie Watts played the drums, Bill Wyman on bass. Their style was a mix of blues and rock, combining the styles of Muddy Waters and Chuck Berry.

Early years

The first album released by the Rolling Stones was entitled, "The Rolling Stones" in 1964. The band spent the years 1966-1969 tourism after they have accumulated several hits in England and the United States. Brian Jones committed suicide in 1968 and was replaced by guitarist Mick Taylor. With his band, the top spawned several hit records like "I can not get No Satisfaction" "Brown Sugar" and "Start Me Up". The Rolling Stones were thought to be one of the most successful rock bands, alongside The Beatles.

While recording albums, Jagger was also acting in movies. In 1970 he landed roles in performance, and Ned Kelly. In the 1980s Jagger was cast in Fitzcarraldo. Jagger was also considered a very, jet-setting celebrity, and the bottom part, The Rolling Stones were a band spiraling increase in drug abuse.

A Change in Direction

By the time they reached 80 around, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards were conflicted on the direction of the band should be headed. Keith wanted to stay at the bluesy rock roots, whereas Mick wanted to head the band in more than a pop, dance direction. The result has been a solo album by Jagger called "She's the boss" released in 1985. The recent onset of MTV was helpful in promoting Jagger solo career by airing several videos in this album. "Just one night" and "Lucky in Love", were single, which became hits.

Personal Life

May 1971, Mick Jagger married Bianca, who at that time was known as Bianca Perez-Mora DeMacias. About a year later, she gave birth to second child Jagger, Jade. Jagger's first child, Karis, was born in late 1970 to fellow musician Marsha Hunt. Mick and Bianca divorced in 1980.

Jerry Hall, an American woman had come into his life at the end of 1970 and was accused of being the reason he and Bianca had divorced. Jerry was born their first child together in 1984, Elizabeth Scarlett, and in 1985 for their second, James. The two were finally "married" in 1990 in Bali. Afterward their third child was born, Georgia May, and then, in 1997, Jerry gave birth to Gabriel Luke. Hall and Jagger partnership was dissolved in 1999 (due to their original Bali wedding not recognized under the law Engligh) after an affair between Jagger and Luciana Giménez led to another child Jagger. This child, Lucas, was born in 1999.

Mick Jagger is one of the wealthiest musicians. After 5 decades of rock in the world, it continues today. In 2006, he played during the Super Bowl halftime special, and not showing signs of slowing down.