Arab Times

Stars turn up at Bowie tribute concert

Timberlake sued by Cirque du Soleil over hit song

-

NEW YORK, April 1, (Agencies): A sold-out Carnegie Hall audience joined a children’s chorus in a singalong to David Bowie’s “Space Oddity” Thursday, a sweet end to a tribute concert that turned into a memorial through some bizarre timing.

Jakob Dylan, Michael Stipe, the Flaming Lips and Heart’s Ann Wilson were among the artists who joined Bowie’s former collaborat­or Tony Visconti and other musicians who had performed with the late rock star.

“God bless David Bowie,” Dylan said after performing the 1970s anthem “Heroes.”

Organizers of an annual benefit for music education that focuses on the work of a particular artist had decided last fall that Bowie would be featured for its 13th year. They publicly announced it in January — just hours before Bowie’s family said the rock star had died on Jan 10.

The concert sold out in two hours, demand so fierce that a second show was added for Friday at Radio City Music Hall.

After Bowie died, so many artists who were invited to perform said they wanted to do it that organizers didn’t have enough room and had to turn some away, said Michael Dorf, who produced the show.

“We felt kind of awkward because we are usually so humbly grateful to anyone who wants to participat­e in this,” he said.

For much of the night, an enthusiast­ic, quick-to-its feet audience tried to will the performers into a better show than they gave. While some of Bowie’s best-known work was featured, there was an equal amount of more obscure songs from his career.

Stipe, the former R.E.M. singer who now sports a flowing, grey beard and nose ring, sang a hushed version of “Ashes to Ashes” in duet with Karen Nelson.

Blondie leader Deborah Harry wore a silver hoodie, and brought the crowd to its feet with her take on “Starman.” Cyndi Lauper, with cotton candy-pink hair, struggled with the lyrics to “Suffragett­e City” and Laurie Anderson’s “Always Crashing in the Same Car” sounded under-rehearsed.

Wilson got the audience moving with “Let’s Dance,” while Rickie Lee Jones spoke-sang an acoustic version of “All the Young Dudes.”

After a feedback-drenched take on “The Man Who Sold the World,” Joseph Arthur unfurled an American flag that had an unprintabl­e message to Donald Trump spray-painted on it.

The Flaming Lips injected a necessary note of weirdness. Singer Wayne Coyne wore a suit of lights and sat atop the shoulders of a bandmate dressed as Chewbaca for “Life on Mars.”

A tiff the night before cost the show one of its best-known acts, the Roots. Leader Questlove said the Roots were pulling out, annoyed that the drummer for the band Holy Holy would not share equipment during a rehearsal.

Cirque du Soleil is not doing flips over Justin Timberlake’s hit song “Don’t Hold the Wall.”

The Canadian theatrical performanc­e company on Thursday sued the superstar singer with allegation­s that the song copied part of one of Cirque du Soleil’s original compositio­ns without permission.

Timberlake’s song appeared on his 2013 double album “20/20,” which has sold more than two million copies.

The lawsuit filed in federal court in New York claimed Timberlake bor- rowed from the song “Steel Dream,” which was originally on Cirque du Soleil’s 1997 album, “QUIDAM.”

The suit seeks a minimum of $800,000 in damages for copyright infringeme­nt.

In addition to Timberlake, the lawsuit also named among the defendants the producer Timbaland — real name Timothy Mosley — who helped write the song, and Sony Music Entertainm­ent , which released the album.

Representa­tives for the defendants did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on Thursday.

Copyright infringeme­nt lawsuits are relatively common in the music world. In one high-profile case last year, the estate of soul singer Marvin Gaye won a $7.4 million jury verdict against Robin Thicke and Pharrell Williams over their hit single “Blurred Lines.”

Rap mogul Jay-Z has sued the original owners of his Tidal streaming service for allegedly inflating subscriber figures, in the latest twist to the com- pany’s uneven relaunch.

Jay-Z last year bought Tidal from Aspiro, a tech company based in Norway and listed in Sweden, for 464 million Swedish kronor ($56 million) as he sought to enter the fast-growing streaming sector and challenge leader Spotify.

“It became clear after taking control of Tidal and conducting our own audit that the total number of subscriber­s was actually well below the 540,000 reported to us by the prior owners,” Tidal said in a statement Thursday.

“As a result, we have now served legal notice to parties involved in the sale,” it said, declining further details due to the litigation.

The lawsuit was first reported by the Norwegian business newspaper Dagens Naeringsli­v, which said that Jay-Z’s business arm Project Panther Bidco sent a notice to several Aspiro board members.

It quoted a representa­tive for one of the stakeholde­rs, Norwegian media group Schibsted, as denying the allegation­s and saying that Aspiro presented accurate and transparen­t data.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait