Monday, October 18, 2010

Winning with Down With Webster in Memphis

Me cheesing with Down With Webster rapper Cameron Hunter.
Just wanted to post my pics from the Down With Webster show from Memphis on 10/16/10. I had a blast at the show and got the opportunity to say hi to several of the guys from DWW.


Down With Webster opened for 3Oh!3 on their "Streets of Gold" tour on their stop at Minglewood Hall in Memphis. I was introduced to the music for the other opening acts The Secret Handshake and Hello Goodbye. Both those bands are very talented and are worth a listen. If you haven't heard DWW's music, check out their website www.downwithwebster.com and get ready to become a big fan!
A quick pic with Diggy the DJ.
I only got a small segment of "Your Man" on video but the sound is distorted and my phone was almost dead, so I will just say check out the video instead. I posted it at the bottom.

I heard several of my favorite songs like "Time To Win", "Your Man", and "Back of My Hand". They also played one of their new songs from the upcoming "Time To Win: Vol II" album, and y'all (had to use my Southern slang just for Pat) will be sooooo excited by what is to come from this Toronto based powerhouse.

Chillin' with DWW singer/guitarist Pat Gillett.
I haven't met too many celebs in my life but I can honestly say these guys have to be the nicest, most down to Earth artists out there. Hopefully everyone will be Down With Webster soon and will be as excited about their music as I am. Their energy on stage is amazing and infectious. The crowd was just as amped by DWW's music as they were during the 3Oh!3 set.

My only wish was that DWW could have played longer. I hope to one day get to go to one of their headlining shows, which are said to be epic. I really look forward to seeing their popularity continue to grow and become huge here in the U.S. And even though I don't get the station, I heard that their video for "Whoa is Me" is number 1 on the Much Music Video Countdown tonight.  With enough fan support in the States, I think it could easily be in rotation on MTV. The current surge of Canadian artists hitting it big here (Drake, Justin Bieber, etc) is proof that with enough backing, they could be big.

 Even though I have probably said thanks a hundred times, I want to thank the guys from DWW for being so nice to me and for signing my daughter's jacket (Pic left) and to Pat Gillett for saying hi to her on the phone. She talked about it for the longest when I got home :). Big thanks to Cameron Hunter, Tyler Armes, and KapOneOh for following me on Twitter. You guys WIN! :)




Video of the Week: 'White Knuckles" by OK Go



The guys that made dancing on treadmills look super easy has done it again in this Video of the Week. OK Go's new video for their song "White Knuckles" once again shows their creativity as well as their talented musicianship by using dogs and has had more than 5 million hits to date on their YouTube channel.
  
Their most popular video, "Here It Goes Again" currently has over 52 million hits on their YouTube channel and was a Grammy winner for Best Short Form Music Video in 2007. They also won the YouTube Video Award for Most Creative Video in 2006. 

The band's lead singer, Damian Kulash, met bassist Tim Nordwind at Interlochen Arts Camp when they were 11. Kulash was in for graphic design, Nordwind for music. The band name comes from their art teacher, saying "OK...Go!" while they were drawing. They kept in touch after camp, often exchanging mixtapes which influenced each other's musical taste and their future sound. They met the band's former guitarist and keyboardist Andy Duncan in high school, and drummer Dan Konopka in college. OK Go was formed in 1998. 

If you are the charitable type, you can go to okgo.net and purchase the "White Knuckles" video, and portion of the proceeds will benefit the ASPCA, specifically in support of animal rescue. They have shows in the coming weeks in Oct 20 Portland, ME; Oct 22,Camden, ME; Oct 26, Syracuse, NY; Oct 27, Clifton Park, NY; Oct 28, Hartford, CT.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

My 25 Most Played Tunes


Just thought this would be fun to do. I listen to music 8+ hours a day, so I was very curious what my most played songs are. Although I have about 1,000 songs on constant rotation, it's obvious that what I like most is American Idol season 9 contestant Alex Lambert's version of "Everybody Knows". He also lands in the number 18 spot with "Trouble".

The most played band is Down With Webster, who I will be seeing live this Saturday night at Memphis. They have eight songs that make the list. Others that make the list that are among my favorite is The Bravery, Brandon Flowers (from The Killers), CJ Baran (from Push Play), the Glee cast and Christian artist Andrew Witt (listed as Rough Draft on my playlist). '

Another American Idol Season 9 contestant, Casey James, is number 20 with "It's All Over Now". Numbers 21 and 22 perplexed me a bit. They are amazing covers of two of my most favorite songs. "Wonderwall", performed by the acapella group Straight No Chaser, is originally by Oasis. I actually also really love Ryan Adams' version of the song as well. I think I probably have about five different copies of this song on my iPod. Number 22 is "Supermassive Black Hole". The original version is performed by Muse, which some know was a major hit due to the Twilight soundtrack. However, this version is from the Vitamin String Quartet. I managed to come across this ensemble because of another vampire inspired fave of mine, The Vampire Diaries. The show plays some incredible music, as some of my friends are finding out (thanks for playing Kris Allen!), and Vitamin String Quartet are known for performing cool instrumental covers of popular tunes.

There are lots of things that I love that didn't make the list. Everything from Kris Allen to Eminem to Maroon 5 are absent from this list. Some of my favorite music, like the Beatles, I have on CD. I lost several of my playlist tunes when my last computer died. So, I am replenishing my stockpile and putting my old cd's on here.

So, what's on your Top 25 Playlist? Please feel free to share in the comment section, or you can tweet me at @lostiegirl78.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Video of the Week: "Magic" B.o.B. featuring Rivers Cuomo



There's been few artists that have captured my attention so quickly and made me go straight to the store and pick up a CD as 19-year-old Atlanta based rapper B.o.B.

He was born Bobby Ray Simmons and has burst on to the music scene doing collaborations with some of today's hottest artist. My pick for video of the week is "Magic" by B.o.B. with Weezer frontman Rivers Cuomo. B.o.B scored a record deal with Atlantic Records while he was still in high school, and sailed to number 1 with the song "Nothin' on You" featuring Bruno Mars. B.o.B. then went to number 2 on Billboard's Top 100 and Pop charts on the song "Airplanes" featuring Paramore's Hayley Williams. The song was from his highly anticipated debut "The Adventures of B.o.B".

B.o.B. had a love of rap from an early age. He admired the works of DMX and Eminem, and by the age of 15 was writing his own lyrics. "At the time, Joe Budden was poppin' and my brother told me when Joe was 15 he used to fill up notebooks with rhymes," says B.o.B. on his official website."That lit off a light bulb for me and I was like damn, I need to do more than that. Then from seventh grade up to tenth grade, I just started filling up notebooks with lyrics. Then it got to the point where I was just writing them in my head."

B.o.B. went on to put his dreams into action, forming a rap act called The Klinic with his cousin while they were in high school. The duo performed at open mic nights in the Atlanta area. However, by the time B.o.B. was a senior in high school in 2006, his cousin decided to go to college. This is the moment when Bobby Ray went solo. This decision paid off.

Most of "The Adventures of B.o.B." was produced by the mult-talented artist himself. He learned to play the piano, trumpet and French horn while making the record. Each song on the CD has such versatility, and there is no doubt that B.o.B. will be household initials for years to come. "I just want to show people that there are endless possibilities of what you can do," B.o.B. says on his site. "You don't just have to be a rapper, you don't just have to be a trapper; you can be anything you want to be and whatever you do, just love it and it will show."

B.o.B. is currently on tour with Playboy Trey on US dates. He will head to the UK in November. For complete dates, go to http://www.bobatl.com/tour/.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Heavy Hitters We Wanna See on Glee

We’ve seen music from Madonna, Gaga and most recently, Britney. Glee has brought us the biggest names in the entertainment industry. In a show that has brought the high school musical where “High School Musical” could never go, audiences are anxious and amped to see what’s in store for Rachel, Finn, Coach Sue and Mr. Shuester. There’s already a “Rocky Horror Glee Show” scheduled to be released on iTunes on October 19th, so we know that the episode should fall in the next couple weeks. I’ve asked my followers who they would like to see on Glee.

Justin Timberlake - The former ‘N Sync heartthrob struck out to be one of the most successful solo artists of the 2000’s. He brought SexyBack with his first two efforts, “Justified” and “Future Sex/Love Sounds”, which each sold in excess of 7 million copies. To me, you can’t do a Britney episode without doing a Justin episode. It has to be done.
Songs that are Glee worthy: Besides the obvious choice of “SexyBack”, I’m sure we are all hoping for Jonathan Groff to make a re-entry as Jesse so I could see Finn getting angry if Rachel ever went back to Jesse. That would be a great time for “What Goes Around Comes Around” or “Cry Me a River”. 

If they went for a more social conscious episode, I could envision the entire New Directions ensemble doing “Losing My Way”, which is my favorite track of JT’s. They could go back to the ‘N Sync days and fulfill our need for a real boy band episode with songs like “Bye Bye Bye” and “Tearing up my Heart”. Another haunting track that received major airplay and would sound amazing on screen would be the Timberlake/T.I. collaboration of “Dead and Gone.


Elvis - I got on the Sony Music site to look at Elvis’ most popular tracks, and it’s safe to say that all of the top 10 would be Glee worthy. 

Of those tracks, I can hear Rachel pining away over her love for Finn to “Don’t Be Cruel”. It would be lovely if Arty could sing “Are You Lonesome Tonight?”, and I would be so excited to see Puck do “Hound Dog”, “Love Me Tender” or “All Shook Up”. Finally, Finn could finally tear down his walls and confess his devotion to “Can’t Help Falling In Love”. 

Meat Loaf - Just like hearing songs like “Highway to Hell”, I feel like getting a Glee-vamped version of “Paradise by the Dashboard Lights” and “I’d Do Anything for Love (But I Won’t Do That)” would be excellent. Some of you might be too young to remember Meat Loaf in his glory days, and honestly, I barely remember him myself. But, his mark on pop music is unmistakable. He made theatrical power ballads that puts some of today’s artists to shame. 

British Invasion - I am going to go out on a limb and say I wish they would just do a Beatles episode. They could do a few songs from Sgt. Pepper, throw in “Let It Be”, "She Loves You", "Hard Day's Night" and maybe even do “Revolution”. After seeing the film Across the Universe, it is certain that the Glee cast could probably do something just as fun and beautiful. They could also do Oasis, Elton John, Robbie Williams, Natasha Bedingfield, Adele, etc.
Songs that are Glee worthy - I would be happy to see the Glee cast sing anything by Oasis and Elton John. I think “Wonderwall” would be awesome, but “Don’t Look Back In Anger’ would probably fit better with the show. Robbie Williams songs “Let Me Entertain You” and “Angels” are genius and would work. I can see Amber Riley performing Adele’s brilliant ballad “Chasing Pavement”, and Lea Michele would shine on “Unwritten” or “Pocket Full of Sunshine”.


Rent - If there were ever an episode that would make you feel, make you cry and make you want to rejoice, I would think that it would be seeing the cast try to tackle the songs of the Broadway musical Rent. It would be a season finale episode to me. This is my favorite musical, so I may be a bit partial. It would be incredible to see someone like Anthony Rapp (maybe as Mr. Shue’s brother) on the show in some capacity, and it would be ironic to see Idina Menzel go against them as not only Rachel’s mom and the coach of their rival glee club, but because she was also in the musical. This is another one of those episodes that will have to occur. For those of you who haven’t heard the music that the late Jonathan Larson created that would become one of the most successful runs on Broadway ever, take a look at this clip. Any of the songs from the musical will do, but "Seasons of Love" has to be performed on Glee! :)



Saturday, October 2, 2010

Live Like We're Dying: How Kris Allen’s music changed my life

Article and pictures by Amber Pruitt
(Special thanks to Lisa C for editing)

   Okay, I think Simon Cowell would call me extremely indulgent with what I'm about to say, but that never  stopped the best American Idol contestants. Tonight, that's not going to stop me from sharing my thoughts on why I have come to admire and respect season 8 winner Kris Allen.


For my closest friends, you've probably already heard this story. I don't know if I'm the biggest Kris fan out there. I can say that I probably know the biggest Kris fans personally, though, because I consider them among my best friends. That's what I want to share tonight. The story of how Kris Allen's journey has changed my life in the best possible way.

When Idol Season 8 started, I had recently moved myself and my daughter, Brianna, back to Little Rock from another state after a rather unpleasant divorce. I was heartbroken and miserable and getting home to Arkansas seemed like the best choice for me. Almost a year prior to my divorce and the move back, I had a really strong urge to get back home. I didn't know why, but the pull was there. I felt I was needed home more than ever but there was a paralyzing fear of changing, even though I knew I was in a bad situation.
  
Anyway, back to approximately February 2009. I had been randomly blogging on another site about the show because of my love for all things Idol. Early in the season, I was a rooting for both Matt Giraud and Kris Allen. They were the ones I wanted for the final two. I voted hard and often, even though I wasn't an AT&T user (yes, there are some of us that voted hundreds of times by calling for him, not power texting). The season had been much better than the past few and having an Arkansan in the mix made it even more exciting.

In the middle of February, I got a call from my middle sister saying that my mom had stopped talking mid-sentence during a phone conversation. It wasn't that she was unhappy or had lost connection, it was that she physically was unable to speak. After several phone calls, my oldest sister talked my parents into going to the hospital. Early tests made the doctors think my mother, who was 72, had a mild stroke. But he regained her ability to speak and seemed to be doing better. I remember thinking back weeks prior at the many times she had talked about her blood pressure spiking up so high. I was way more concerned about it than she ever seemed. She would say, "Oh, yeah, I need to have the doctor check on that." Well, eventually, news came that it was not a stroke.
  will never forget the word, what I was doing, and how I felt when I heard it. I was sitting at work in my rather spacious cubicle that I had at the time, when my oldest sister called. She said she had bad news. "Contusion" is the word she described to me. I didn't truly understand. I repeated it and asked what would happen next. The words that came flowing out next broke me. She said they had to do some more tests. It could be cancer. I got off the phone, stunned and confused. My co-worker came up to me with a wet rag and started patting my head. I looked at her puzzled. "I worked for a neurologist once," she told me. "I know what this means." Come to find out, she worked for the neurologist that my mom ended up using at the University of Arkansas at Medical Sciences when they removed the Grade 4 Glioblastoma that was attacking her brain. The surgery went on without a hitch, and I knew that God had given my mom a little more time, no matter how much that would be.

I'll never forget the first meeting with the oncologist. I took Mom to it. Dad's health was suddenly declining, and we didn't know why. He had went from driving to shuffling his feet. My oldest sister was keeping us all together, so I wanted to go with Mom to help her out. The oncologist told us, "Best case scenario, with the recommended course of chemo treatments, the tumor would grow back after a year. If you don't do chemo, it will grow back in six months." I remember Momma looking at me after the doctor walked out, saying "This is going to come back even after the chemo?" I felt so helpless. I looked at her and said "yeah, that's what he said." At the time she was still clear headed. But the chemo treatments changed all that.
  
I remember the 6 weeks of chemo after the surgery. Mom ate a lot of "her fruit", which is what she called the fruit salad that my sister would make her. It had grapes, strawberries, and blueberries in it, and maybe bananas. I can't remember. Before the surgery I would tell her about all the music I listened to and TV shows I watched, even though she normally never really watched the same things I did. She never listened to the type of music I did, but she always listened. I had told her about Kris Allen being from Conway and being on Idol. She had thought it was neat. She kept forgetting it, of course, and we would have to repeat the conversations, but she'd forget my name a lot of times, so it wasn't a big deal in comparison.

My sisters and I took turns taking my parents home each weekend to their home about an hour away. During the week, they stayed at my sister's house and would go to chemo treatments. In all the chaos, I remember American Idol being the only escape. I felt some kind of hope as I rooted for Kris. Some weekends were worse than others. My mom was getting more and more confused with chemo-head symptoms. My dad's strange behavior kept getting worse. I remember having to physically remove a pill bottle from my mom's hand one day b/c it was something she wasn't supposed to take. Another time, she yelled at us for not being able to find a roll of film. It's moments my sisters and I can look back on now and sort of laugh at, well, sort of. :)
  
At one point - I believe it was mid-April - my dad felt that he needed to be placed in a nursing home. It was just horrifying to see his decline. He went from walking and driving to barely being able to get up and down in a chair. This was all in just a little over two months. It was just another blow to my family. My mom couldn't understand why he would holler at night for help to get things. She didn't understand the full extent of what was going on with him. At the time it seemed like Mom was actually doing better than Dad. When he left the house to go to the nursing home it was the last time he saw my mom. I believe this was the week that Matt Giraud was meant to go home but was saved by the judges. I remember it because it was the only good thing that happened around that time. Tuesdays and Wednesdays watching Idol had become the only bright spot in my life.

Shortly after putting Dad in a nursing home, Mom had to go to a nursing and rehab center in Little Rock. We would go see her and then go see Dad in the nursing home in Carlisle. Brianna and I went to see one of the famous watch parties in Conway at the Farris Center that last weekend in April. It was the first taste of being around fellow Kris Allen fans. It was too loud to hear the actual performances, but it was fun nonetheless.

  
  Then Kris' song "Live Like We're Dying" came out, and I held on to the music as my life fell apart.
Brianna and Kris at the Heifer Barefoot show. Photo courtesy of Fourteen Plums





I was with the thousands of true Arkansas superfans on May 8th to see Kris come home to both Little Rock and Conway for his homecoming. The excitement of it all, sharing with the many thousands of people who came adoringly to share their support and congratulations for Kris and his lovely wife, Katy, and their entire family, was so much more exciting than seeing the previous performances of Kris for me. I knew he was talented, but his voice was so controlled, so emotional that everyone in the crowd was adamant that he was going to win it all. It was before I got a very good camera so I just did the best I could, but was happy at the time just to be there and share the experience with my daughter and what felt like the entire cities of Little Rock and Conway.

That Sunday was Mother's Day, and my sisters and I took turns going to visit my mom in the nursing home. Brianna and I went up there to visit Mom for a while and luckily she was having a good day. We talked a good while. I told her about going to see Kris perform and what it was like. We sat with her and listened to her as she talked about the things she had going on within her mind. It was hard for her to go from someone who could do anything and everything a perfectly normal person could do - read, write, remember your own birthday - to barely being able to remember your own name. She loved seeing Brianna and me that day. I remember as I said goodbye that she gave me an extra special big hug and told me she loved me. She did the same for Bri. It seemed like I didn't want to let go. As we left she asked if we could come back later. I said we would try, but we never got the chance.

In the early morning hours of May 11th, 2009, my sister called, "Amber, I need you to wake up." I rubbed my eyes and tried to figure out what was going on. "Are you awake?"
 "Yes, I am awake now."
"I got a call from the hospital this morning. Mom's passed away." She went on to say that they called about 2:30 that morning to tell her and that she went ahead to the hospital. She then got composed and called me and my other sister.

I felt like a part of my life died.

I remember more about seeing my mom at the hospital that morning, laying in that bed...her face, her mouth, her hands, everything. I won't ever forget. The funeral is more of a blur. I remember lots of beautiful flowers, seeing my dad cry as he sat in the nursing home's wheelchair, which seemed so alien to me because Dad had always been such a tall man, but that day he seemed so small, so frail. When we went to the graveside, the ground was too wet for him to get to the grave, so Dad stayed by the van, sitting outside quietly in reflection. That was the saddest view I've ever had in my life. So lonely, so heartbroken.


The couple weeks following my mom's funeral, I felt a strong peace, and it was the only thing that kept me alive. I couldn't blog anymore, but I was still watching Idol and cried like a baby when Kris won. I jumped and screamed and cried some more. I thought things were getting better, but in reality that was not true. Dad had not only gotten worse, but had lost his will to live. It was truly a case of the spouse who can't live without the other one. When he did get much worse, it got scary for him. I think he did not realize that death is scary and it is real. It hurts. I saw him one Sunday, and he was in really bad shape. He wasn't happy I had to see him like that, and he just wanted to die. I didn't know what to do or how to feel. When my sister and I left that afternoon, I snuck out of the room. He was having slight dementia, but mostly we didn't want to make him feel any worse. I didn't even get the chance to say goodbye or I loved him. That week at work was extremely hectic. I thought I would have more time when I got a call that I should go see him on Friday. I had planned to go the next day. He died about 8 am that morning.

My dad passed away May 30th from a disease called Parkinson's Plus. The disease basically has many of the symptoms of Parkinson's but with an accelerated rate of degeneration. I will never forget riding in the car with my sister and my daughter to Des Arc, which was my parents' hometown. We were just passing the Crystal Hill exit in Little Rock, and I received a Facebook message I will always cherish. I won't go into detail about it, but I'll just say that Kris' mom, Kim, sent me a very sweet message of condolence for my parents. It was the only good moment of that day.

We had a different approach to my dad's funeral. I remember it so much better because it wasn't supposed to be so sad. It was more of a commemorative funeral. My oldest sister got up and spoke on behalf of all of us, telling those in attendance the things that we learned from our parents: everything from being able to skin a rabbit (that was her), understanding the pyramids (that's me) and knowing the love of God (that's my other sister). We had a friend of our family sing "You are My Sunshine" which was a song that our dad taught to each of us when we were very little. I have a tape of me singing it when I was about 3. I'll cherish that song for the rest of my life and will probably not be able to hear it without crying.

My sisters, Brianna and I went to Dauphin Island, Alabama in June as a way to celebrate my parents’ 50th anniversary. We placed an anniversary card with the story and a picture of my parents in a bottle, along with a note telling the person who might find it to contact us and tell us their story. About two weeks later, we got an email from a newlywed couple who was honored to share in our story. They added their names and their story to the bottle and tossed it back in the Gulf. To this day we haven't received another email.

 In August and September, I started getting severe migraines, which I still suffer from today. I think the stress from the events of the year triggered them. I saw the American Idol concert and realized that I had to find a way to see my faves perform as often as I could.  Then Kris' song "Live Like We're Dying" came out, and I held on to the music as my life fell apart. I listened to that song several times a day, most of the times crying my eyes out. Then one day I decided that I was no longer going to live in fear of what might happen in my life. I had seen the worst of the worse happen in a matter of six months: the death of my marriage and of both of my parents.  Before long I had found a new lease on life. The song had literally awakened me. Brianna and I went on our first big vacation on our own since I had divorced. We went out to Phoenix and toured Sedona and Flagstaff. The last night we were there we ate dinner with my first friend I had made online that was a Kris fan, and the three of us went to see "New Moon" together. It was a fun adventure.
  
Following that trip, I began to make connections with local Kris Allen fans, who I affectionately call the KAfangirls(and guys). We are all concert junkies. We went to see Kris at his Heifer International event this spring, which was his first home show since the Idol tour show. Following that were the headlining shows at the Benton concert, the Fayetteville show and then him opening for Maroon 5 at Mud Island in Memphis. We laugh together, cry together and get each other through the good times and bad. It is amazing that I ever went through all I did without them, but I'm so glad that I have them now. There are three more shows coming up in Springfield, Memphis and a charity event in Conway where I believe almost all of us will be together again. You can go to krisallen.com or krisallenaddicts.com to get all the info on the shows.



I guess I had never imagined when Idol started in Season 8 that I would be a part of Kris' journey. I watched him grow from this guy from Conway to the winner of the most popular show on TV in the best season that we had ever seen. I never realized that the music that he created would affect my life in so many ways. That the words "live like we're dying" would mean to make every moment count and to say what you mean and mean what you say. Make life mean something. Don't be content with the ordinary. If that were the case, Kris would still be playing Razorback Pizza. Instead he rocks out with artists like Keith Urban, Maroon 5 and Lifehouse. We have to take every day as it comes, treat every person as if it is the last time we will see them, and do the things we love to do. That's what Kris Allen would do, and it's alright with me.

Courtesy of Julie Ivy