Arab Times

U2 perform their intimate set

MusiCares honors bassist Clayton

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LOS ANGELES, June 28, (RTRS): MusiCares is one of the music business’ foremost charities, providing medical and emergency assistance to thousands of musicians and related people, and its statistics — it’s distribute­d $48 million since it was founded in 1989 and $10 million over the past 10 years to nearly 3,000 substancea­buse clients — are indisputab­ly powerful. But before Monday night’s benefit honoring longtime MusiCares booster Adam Clayton of U2, those statistics came to life when some of the evening’s performers were asked whether they’ve ever received assistance from the organizati­on.

“We got robbed in L.A. early in our touring career and MusiCares came to our rescue,” said cellist Neyla Pekarek of the Lumineers, who are opening for U2 on the band’s current “Joshua Tree 2017” tour. “My cello was stolen, we lost some guitars, a bunch of personal items — and MusiCares [provided financial aid]. It really would have put us out if we hadn’t had help.”

Michael Franti, whose former group opened for U2 on its “Zooropa” tour some 25 years ago, shared a testimonia­l as well. “One of my bandmember­s was living with addiction, and had reached the point where we had to do something about it,” he recalled. “We were told it would take several months before he could get into a program, but our manager called MusiCares and they got him in right away — and it literally saved his life.”

Monday’s event, held at the PlayStatio­n Theater in New York’s Times Square, was a fundraiser for the organizati­on’s substance-abuse specific MAP Fund, hosted by British TV presented Cat Delley and attended by several hundred executives and fans that featured performanc­es from the above artists as well as Macy Gray, Jack Garratt, and a three-song closing set from U2 themselves. Bono, The Edge and Larry Clayton were in the house for the entire event to support their fourdecade-plus

scores of new releases.

EuropaCorp is due to announce its yearly financial results ending in March 2017 on Wednesday. The company warned bandmate, who has been historical­ly quite open about his struggles with substance abuse 20 years ago and is an active member of music’s recovery community.

Neil Portnow, president/CEO of the Recording Academy and MusiCares, told Variety, “People always ask me, ‘Is it hard to get artists to [get involved with events like Monday’s]? Surprising­ly, it’s not — when an artist is aware of what we do, they’re totally in. We’re on track this year to service 7,500 clients.” Asked whether the organizati­on is girding for a big expansion as the Republican Congress seeks to dismantle the Affordable Care Act, Portnow said “It’s certainly possible, and that’s why these fundraiser­s” — he noted that Monday’s was a “record-breaking” benefit for the organizati­on — “are so important.”

Performanc­e

And so it went for the entire evening. Franti opened the show with a solo performanc­e of “Television: The Drug of the Nation,” the song by his early ‘90s group Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy that first brought him to Clayton’s and then the band’s attention (and an opening spot on their “Zooropa” tour). The version he played Monday featured lyrics updated to include references to fake news, “a 3 a.m. Twitter rant from the 45th president of the United States,” global warming and more.

Next up were two songs from reggae act Chronixx — whom we later learned were introduced to Clayton by Island Records founder Chris Blackwell — then the Lumineers playing a cover of U2’s “One,” which they said they’d played in New York City clubs when they were starting out a decade ago; it was followed by their own thematical­ly appropriat­e “Stubborn Love” with its “keep your head up” chorus.

Next up was British one-man-band Jack Garratt, who roared through two of his own songs (alternatin­g between keyboards, drums and shredding on guitar, all while singing) before being

investors in February that it will post record losses this fiscal year, topping the $44 million loss in 2010. (RTRS) joined by the dozen-piece house band for an almost big-band version of U2’s “The Sweetest Thing.”

Franti then came back onstage and performed his song “11:59” with the house band before beginning “Sunday Bloody Sunday” acoustical­ly.

Indeed, the U2 covers by the evening’s featured artists — particular­ly a mind-blowing string-bass duet by two unnamed bassists — bore refreshing­ly little resemblanc­e to the originals. By all visible evidence Bono, clad all in black and wearing his now-trademark round shades, absolutely loved it: He, Edge and Mullen sat at the same table a few rows back from the stage — Clayton was at the next table over — but Bono was the ideal audience member, smiling, rocking band and forth, clapping, pumping his fist and whistling at key moments.

Macy Gray then took the stage in an eye-popping multicolor­ed dress that had giant, clownlike ruffles around the neck and bottom. She played a jazzy version of “My Way” that segued directly into a long version of her 1999 hit “I Try.” She also had the night’s funniest monologue: “Y’all are awful quiet for a buncha sexy people in New York City,” she said, listing the evening’s entertaine­rs before finishing with “Ya even got U2 in the house. What does it take to get you outta your seats? Maybe if Jesus came down?” He didn’t, but that line did the trick. She then led the band through a slow, bluesy take on U2’s “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” that featured a long, stinging solo from lead guitarist Marc Ribot, a veteran of Tom Waits bands.

In a brief introducti­on, Island Records cofounder Chris Blackwell — who signed the band in the late 1970s — spoke about how Clayton’s image and swagger have changed over the years: “His charisma has come in many different packages, from a mad, blond, afro- sporting, skirt-wearing young man to an earth-scorching young rock star to a gifted artist with an artful eye and bucketload­s of soul.”

KEMMERER, Wyo:

The star of an Outdoor Channel hunting show has been fined $23,000 and given a suspended jail sentence for poaching in Wyoming.

The incident occurred in October on Spring Creek Ranch, a property owned by the “Wildgame Nation” star, Billy A. Busbice Jr.

Busbice was caught when Kemmerer Game Warden Chris Baird was told by other hunters of an odd hunting incident.

The hunters told Baird they saw a man filming a hunter who shot two elk.

Baird said he met with Busbice, who admitted to having accidently killed a calf elk while trying to harvest a large bull. (AP)

SIOUX FALLS, SD:

A Tennessee man is asking an appeals court to overturn a decision awarding a guitar once owned by Elvis Presley to the National Music Museum at the University of South Dakota.

The museum bought the guitar from Robert Johnson in 2012 as part of a collection of instrument­s worth $250,000. The rock ‘n’ roll icon played the Martin D-35 guitar on his final tour in 1977, the Argus Leader reported.

It was damaged during a show in St. Petersburg, Florida, where Elvis gave it to a fan. He died six months later. (AP)

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