Archive for January, 2007

Michael Jackson Patent Shows Up On Google Search

Wednesday, January 10th, 2007

Long time MJ fans already know this, but this is now big news to the public at large.

Back in 1993, Michael Jackson, along with two of his tailors, patented a special pair of shoes that produce the “method and means for creating an anti-gravity illusion.” The special shoes attach to a movable device on the stage. The drawings for the shoes show a figure leaning forward at an angle of about 45 degrees.

These, of course, were the means by which Michael created the stunning leans showcased both in the Smooth Criminal video and in his on - stage performances.

Source: Kerala Guide, MJFC

Michael Jackson’s Big Brother To Visit Matt Fiddes

Tuesday, January 9th, 2007

Michael Jackson’s big brother Tito will visit Matt Fiddes on Wednesday 10th January in Barnstaple in Devon to stay for a few days before he flies back to the USA.

Matt who has been a friend and bodyguard to Michael for years has invited all fans to the event. There is not cost and all fans should get a chance to meet and have their picture taken with Tito Jackson if time permits.

Tito will be making a personal appearance at the below address,

Matt Fiddes Martial arts School
27 Castle Street
North Devon
EX31 1DR

He will arrive to talk to fans and members of the Matt Fiddes Martial Arts Schools at 8pm. For any further details you can call the Matt Fiddes HQ direct on 01271370555.

Tito has been on UK television recently as a judge on the charity celebrity talent show Just The Two Of Us on the BBC.

Source: MJNI

Michael Jackson Dines With Choreographer

Sunday, January 7th, 2007

Michael was seen dining with Emmy award winning director and choreographer Kenny Ortega who choreographed the HIStory tour. The two were seen having dinner in a private room at Wynn Las Vegas.

Although this article states that King of Pop has not communicated with his mother and father since Michael moved to Bahrain in May of 2005, Angel Howansky the Family Publicist and Spokesperson has called “Norm” with a correction to the article namely:

“That the parents have spoken to MJ since the trial and they even visited him after the trial.”

Both Michael and Ortega have been associated with Steve Wynn. Michael was often a guest of Wynn’s at The Mirage and there was talk that Wynn was bringing Michael back to Las Vegas.

Ortega’s credits include work with Madonna, the Pointer Sisters,Cher, Gloria Estefan, Kiss and Diana Ross.

Source: ReviewJournal.Com, Angel Howansky, MJFC

Quincy Jones spotlighted In Jazz Icons DVD Set

Friday, January 5th, 2007

The memories come flashing back when Quincy Jones watches the DVD of himself as a young man directing his “dream” jazz big band that barnstormed through Europe in 1960 after unrest in Paris forced the musical they were performing in to close.

Jones recalls that year as a turning point in his career before he went on to become an acclaimed Hollywood and TV composer, producer of pop megahits such as Michael Jackson’s “Thriller,” and entertainment industry mogul.

“Quincy Jones — Live in ‘60,” is one of nine DVDs in the recently released “Jazz Icons” series featuring long-lost concert and studio film footage from the 1950s through the 1970s of such influential jazz artists as Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk and Chet Baker. The film was uncovered in European TV vaults and nearly all of the material is being released officially for the first time.

The series’ producers, San Diego-based Reelin’ in the Years Productions, believe the DVD contains the only known film footage of Jones’ 1959-61 big band. The DVD showcases Jones’ tight ensemble arrangements and colorful orchestrations, including piccolo-flute duets on “Lester Leaps In,” Julius Watkins’ French horn solo on “Everybody’s Blues,” and fluegelhorn and muted trumpet backgrounds on the ballad “The Gypsy” featuring alto saxophonist Phil Woods.

“Quincy Jones is internationally acclaimed as one of the greatest arrangers in history,” said “Jazz Icons” co-producer Phil Galloway. “But people don’t remember him so much as a great big-band leader, and his 1960 big band is revered as one of the great all-time big bands.”

Jones, the only one of the “Jazz Icons” headliners still alive, says that watching the two 1960 concerts filmed in Belgium and Switzerland evokes “a whole collage of emotions.”

“That’s 40 years ago, and it hits you hard. Number one, I’d kill for that waistline. I was 118 pounds then. Now I’m about 218,” laughed the 73-year-old Jones, speaking by telephone from his Los Angeles home. “It reminds me of all the struggles we went through, the good times and the bad times.”

In 1959, Jones, a trumpeter who had established a reputation as a composer-arranger for Count Basie, Duke Ellington and his old Seattle buddy Ray Charles, got his big break when producer John Hammond asked him to put together a big band for Harold Arlen’s blues musical, “Free and Easy,” which was to tour Europe before coming to Broadway.

“I had some of the best musicians in the world, starting with a man that taught me when I was 13 years old how to put the trumpet on my mouth, Clark Terry … who was Miles Davis’ influence too,” Jones recalled. “Clark and (trombonist) Quentin Jackson left Duke Ellington to come with my band and that’s the biggest honor I ever had in my life.”

Despite rave reviews, the musical was forced to close in February 1960, a few weeks after its official Paris opening, when police and soldiers filled the streets to quell unrest over the government’s Algeria policy.

The producers said “we’re going home in two days, and I said, ‘No, we’re staying.’ You had to be 26 to do something like that,” said Jones. “I had 30 people I was responsible for, with dogs and wives and mothers. … We were stranded in Europe for 10 months, and I was just totally idealistic, saying we will make it because of the music. We were like gypsies.”

Without an agent, Jones patched together gigs as he went along. One promoter ran off with the band’s advance money. Jones went deeply into debt to cover the band’s expenses.

“At one point in Turku, Finland, I came that close to suicide,” said Jones. “But I wouldn’t trade it for anything in the world because it was an amazing experience. It will either kill you or it will make you stronger. … I learned a lot.”

After Jones returned to the U.S., Mercury Records president Irving Green helped him get back on his feet with a personal loan and a job as the label’s music director. “He said, ‘Quincy, it’s called the music business. You’ve dealt with the music, now I’m going to show you what the business is about because you can’t make it without that.”‘

In 1964, Jones opened new doors for blacks in the music industry when he became Mercury’s vice president and also wrote his first film score, for director Sidney Lumet’s “The Pawnbroker,” prompting him to move to Los Angeles.

Today, despite his pop-music success, Jones has never abandoned his first love — jazz — and regrets that young people get so little exposure to the music.

“One thing that’s concerned me my whole life is that every country in the world has adopted the American jazz and blues as their Esperanto, and the people that know the least about it are in our country where it came from,” Jones said.

That’s why he’s enthusiastically welcomed the “Jazz Icons” series, which he has shown to his grandchildren and endorsed as “a gift to our culture” in a publicity blurb.

Producers David Peck and Galloway began work on “Jazz Icons” two years ago after the TDK label offered to invest in a jazz series drawn from Reelin’ in the Years’ vast library of music film footage from some 30 non-U.S. TV stations. The producers made it a point to obtain clearances and pay royalties to all the headliners and side-musicians or their estates. Some of the artists’ children such as T.S. Monk wrote forewords and contributed rare family photographs for the booklets accompanying each DVD which feature detailed essays by leading jazz writers.

The producers wanted to present the most influential jazz artists in their prime by going back to the Golden Age of Jazz in the ’50s and ’60s, when many of the music’s founding fathers were still active alongside the bebop pioneers and their successors.

In the U.S., before the emergence of PBS and cable TV, U.S. television largely ignored jazz except for the occasional number by an Armstrong or Fitzgerald sandwiched between the ads, puppets and comedians on network variety programs like “The Ed Sullivan Show.” But in Europe, where jazz had always been treated with more respect, the government-run stations allowed the musicians to showcase their repertoire in concerts of up to an hour.

Through persistent detective work, Peck and Galloway unearthed historic footage that had been gathering dust in European television archives. Their finds included the earliest known complete Fitzgerald performance on film, taped by Belgium’s RTBF in 1957, and another Belgian TV production from 1959 that is one of the only complete concerts on film by Armstrong and his All-Stars from the 1950s. Some of the footage, including a 1978 concert in Holland featuring Buddy Rich’s “Killer Force” big band, was never broadcast.

Peck says the series’ “Holy Grail” is the Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers DVD. Originally, the producers thought they were getting a 1965 Blakey concert from Belgium featuring trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, but when they checked the master tape they discovered it had been mislabeled. By “accident” they had been sent a previously unknown and unaired tape of a 1958 Blakey concert — the only known footage of the drummer’s legendary Messengers lineup with trumpeter Lee Morgan, tenor saxophonist Benny Golson and pianist Bobby Timmons filmed just a month after the group recorded the classic hard-bop “Moanin”‘ album.

The producers have their own favorite visual highlights. One is drummer Sonny Payne’s showmanship as he juggles his sticks while keeping the beat in his solo feature on the Count Basie DVD filmed in Sweden in 1962. The other is Monk’s unorthodox keyboard fingering and trancelike dances caught in two 1966 concerts in Norway and Denmark.

“It’s one thing to sit and groove to the music … but when you can see Thelonious Monk play and see the emphasis of how he hit the keyboard, it gives you a whole better appreciation of the artist,” said Peck.

The producers hope to release a second series of DVDs in 2007, pending clearances, by such jazz greats as Charles Mingus, John Coltrane, Duke Ellington and Cannonball Adderley.

“I just give them all the props in the world for creating the series because it helps us get a perspective … about our roots,” said Jones. “I tell the youngsters if you know where you’re coming from it’s going to be easier to get where you’re going.”

Source: Associated Press

Jermaine Jackson Enters U.K. Reality Show

Thursday, January 4th, 2007

Michael Jackson’s big brother Jermaine has shocked many by entering a house with other celebrities to be watched 24/7 for a reality TV show in the U.K.

Jermaine could spend up to 25 days without any contact with the outside world, take part in tasks for food and share a small bedroom with 10 other contestants in Celebrity Big Brother on Channel 4.

For those of you not familiar with the concept of the show, it’s not just made up of contestants who happen to be big brother’s of celebrities. (Although, many could argue Jermaine is the ultimate Celebrity Big Brother before the show even begun)

This is the 5th celebrity edition of the Big Brother series in the U.K. Contestants enter the house and have to communicate and work with each other to pass tasks, earn a food budget and simply get along. All the while they are being watched 24/7 by cameras that broadcast on terrestrial and digital TV as well as the internet. The only way anyone can say anything without talking to other contestants is by going to the Diary Room to speak to Big Brother, which often gets aired on the highlight shows. One (sometimes more) contestant will get voted off at a time until one is left who is then crowned the winner.

Past contestants in the series have included Dennis Rodman, Bridgitte Neilsen, Jackie Stallone, Mark Owen, Chris Eubank and Pete Burns. Jermaine is undoubtedly the most famous man ever to enter the Celebrity Big Brother house, which was proven by the decision to let him enter his new home first. But who are the other contestants he is sharing his new home with…

Danielle Lloyd
23-year-old former Miss Great Britain. She famously lost her crown shortly after winning it last year when it was found out that she was dating one of the judges, 40-year-old West Ham United footballer Teddy Sheringham. Although she claims they only started talking at the after show party when she was already crowned. They are still together.

Ken Russell
79-year-old British film director. Best known for directing films such as Women In Love, The Devils and rock-opera Tommy.

Jo O’Meara
27-year-old pop singer. Jo was the lead singer of British pop band S Club 7, however she has not done much since the band split in 2003.

Leo Sayer
58-year-old musician. Best known for 70’s hits You Make Me Feel Like Dancing and When I Need You. A remixed version of his track Thunder In My Heart reached No.1 last year. Upon entering the house it appeared Jermaine and Leo knew each other already.

Shilpa Shetty
31-year-old Bollywood actress. Has been acting since she was a teenager, considered to have the best body in Bollywood.

Cleo Rocos
44-year-old actress. Most famous for being Kenny Everett’s side-kick in his comedy shows. Born in Brazil.

Carole Malone
47-year-old journalist. Although Malone claims she is a journalist she’s actually a columnist for the Sunday Mirror best known for her outspoken views… we’re not sure that’s the same thing.

Donny Tourette
22-year-old singer. Frontman of rock/punk band Towers of London. Also known for apparently dating Bob Geldof’s daughter Peaches.

Ian Watkins
29-year-old singer/dancer. Best known as “H” from pop group Steps. Since the group broke up he has been seen on the West End stage. “Came out” the same day he entered the house.

Dirk Benedict
61-year-old actor. Best known for his role as Templeton “The Face” Peck in the TV show ‘The A-Team’.

This isn’t the first time someone close to Michael has appeared on a reality TV show, as David Gest (a close friend) recently appeared on jungle show I’m A Celebrity (Get Me Out Of Here) in which he turned the public’s bleak view of him around with his sense of humour, eventually finishing in 4th place. Another of Michael’s brother’s, Tito, is also currently appearing on the BBC as a judge on celebrity charity show Just The Two Of Us.

Big Brother continues to broadcast on Channel 4, digital channel E4 and live on the internet. Click here to visit Channel 4’s Celebrity Big Brother website.

Usher Also Potential Collaborator With Michael Jackson

Thursday, January 4th, 2007

Usher, another long-time admirer, may also be added to Jackson’s list of potential collaborators which also include Akon and G-Unit affiliate DJ Whoo Kid.

“We actually spoke about doing something, but nothing more than a conversation. It was for his project,” Usher told KIIS FM host Ryan Seacrest.

Source: SOHH Soulful

Will.I.Am And Chris Brown Working On Jackson Comeback Album

Tuesday, January 2nd, 2007

Black Eyed Peas principal Will.I.Am was ubiquitous behind the boards in 2006, producing tracks for Justin Timberlake, Fergie, Snoop Dogg and Nas and earning a producer of the year Grammy nomination. But his sights are now set on Michael Jackson’s comeback album, which is tentatively due before the end of the year on the Bahrain-based Two Seas Records.

Will.I.Am tells Billboard.com he has been doing “a lot of talking on the phone, a lot of brainstorming” with Jackson so far. Their conversations, he says, involve more than just music but also figuring out how Jackson can use new technology, particularly social networking sites and download outlets, to his advantage.

But Jackson’s next musical direction remains a primary concern. “Man, he still sings like a bird,” Will.I.Am says. “He could go anywhere. I think we have a real opportunity to do something here. It’s either gonna be really big or nobody’s gonna care. Ain’t no middle ground on this one.”

“I like what he is doing and thought it would be interesting to collaborate or just see how the chemistry worked,” Jackson told Access Hollywood of Will.I.Am in October. “I think he’s doing wonderful, innovative, positive, great music.”

As previously reported, Akon is also rumored to be collaborating on the album but told Billboard.com last month that he was not at liberty to disclose details. Chris Brown is also in talks to work on the Jackson album, which will be his first since 2001’s “Invincible.”

“We got a chance to meet at the World Music Awards and we’re talking to his management about when we can set up a date to be working on his album,” Brown tells Billboard.com. “It would be an honor and a blessing for me to work with my idol. He’s one of the reasons I do my music.”

Source: Billboard.Com