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Review: ‘The Number Ones’ examines backstories behind pop’s biggest hits

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Review: ‘The Number Ones’ examines backstories behind pop’s biggest hits

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The Quantity Ones: Twenty Chart-Topping Hits That Reveal the Historical past of Pop Music

By Tom Breihan
352 pages
$24.66

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In February 1964, Paul McCartney boarded a airplane for his first transatlantic journey to New York. Issues undoubtedly seemed to be on the upswing. He and his Beatles bandmates have been booked to play the favored “Ed Sullivan Present” and two units at famed Carnegie Corridor. Lower than per week earlier, “I Wish to Maintain Your Hand,” the exuberant sing-along that he had co-written with John Lennon, hit No. 1 on the Billboard Scorching 100.

Nonetheless, the younger McCartney frightened. Capitol, the band’s American label, thought so little of the Beatles that it had refused to launch any of their earlier singles. As a substitute, Chicago label Vee-Jay put out “Please Please Me” and “From Me to You,” whereas Swan Data, a Philadelphia-based imprint co-founded by Dick Clark of TV’s “American Bandstand,” launched “She Loves You.” Not one of many songs charted.

On that long-ago Pan Am flight to the Large Apple, McCartney sat subsequent to Phil Spector, the architect of the Wall of Sound and future producer of “Let It Be.”

“Since America has at all times had every little thing, why ought to we be over there earning profits?” McCartney requested Spector. “They’ve received their very own teams. What are we going to offer them that they don’t have already got?”

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Nothing greater than a musical and cultural revolution, in keeping with Tom Breihan, creator of the participating, illuminating and exhilarating “The Quantity Ones: Twenty Chart-Topping Hits That Reveal the Historical past of Pop Music.” The Beatles, Breihan notes, paved the way in which for the British Invasion, went on to have a report 20 No.1 singles and reworked widespread music.

“When it comes to pop-music influence, the Beatles’ arrival was a comet hanging the earth,” Breihan writes. “If ‘I Wish to Maintain Your Hand’ merely introduced the band’s American arrival, it might be probably the most necessary hit singles of all time. However ‘I Wish to Maintain Your Hand’ did greater than that. It opened the floodgates.”

In “The Quantity Ones,” Breihan brings a laser-like focus and fan’s sensibility to stone-cold basic No. 1 hits comparable to The Supremes’ “The place Did Our Love Go” and Prince’s “When Doves Cry” in addition to to fluff like Britney Spears’ “…Child One Extra Time” and BTS’ 2020 Okay-pop smash “Dynamite.” Breihan selects six No. 1s from the Sixties, 4 from the Nineteen Eighties, 4 from the Nineties and 4 from the 2000s. Curiously, he options solely two songs from the seminal music of the Nineteen Seventies, together with the forgettable 1974 hit “Rock Your Child” by George McCrae, “the primary disco hitmaker,” in Breihan’s phrases.

Breihan concedes that his selections aren’t essentially the most effective Scorching 100 chart-toppers of all time. As a substitute, they “marked new moments in pop-music evolution— those that instantly made the earlier weeks’ hits sound like relics.”

That’s debatable. In truth, one of many nice joys of “The Quantity Ones” is second-guessing the creator.

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Was 1990’s “Ice Ice Child” actually the primary rap track to prime the charts? What about Blondie’s “Rapture,” which reached #1 9 years earlier and options an prolonged rap and even references hip-hop pioneer Fab 5 Freddy? The place’s “Satisfaction,” the Rolling Stones’ iconic 1965 chart-topper that launched a thousand storage bands and impressed raunchy, blues-based rock for many years to come back? What about landmark No. 1s by Stevie Marvel, U2, Drake, Beyoncé and different defining artists?

Maybe no one writing about music right this moment is healthier geared up to grapple with these questions than Breihan. A senior editor on the music information website Stereogum, he has spent the previous 5 years writing about each No. 1 within the historical past of the Billboard Scorching 100, starting with Ricky Nelson’s “Poor Little Idiot” in 1958. Thus far, he has made it to 2005.

Whether or not in his column or “The Quantity Ones,” Breihan reveals fascinating nuggets about even essentially the most pedestrian songs. Like a Russian nesting doll, his writings comprise multitudes.

Take “Ice Ice Child,” the ridiculously catchy trifle that rode a hook from Queen and David Bowie’s “Beneath Stress” to the highest of the charts. As Breihan recounts, Suge Knight, a former NFL prospect and future convicted felon, threatened to throw Vanilla Ice off his resort balcony except he agreed to signal over a number of the royalties from the smash hit. Mario “Chocolate” Johnson, a Dallas rapper and considered one of Knight’s shoppers, claimed he had written “Ice Ice Child” and different Ice songs however by no means received paid.

A terrified Vanilla Ice shortly acceded to Knight’s calls for. The entrepreneurial Knight leveraged his monetary windfall to co-found Dying Row Data, launch Dr. Dre’s solo profession with the blockbuster “The Power” and make superstars of Snoop Dogg and 2Pac. In essence, Vanilla Ice’s success helped lay the groundwork for the gangsta rap that killed his profession.

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Rapper T-Ache, left, and Usher.

(Christian Petersen / Getty Photographs; Pascal Le Segretain / Getty Photographs)

By T-Ache’s “Purchase U a Drank (Shawty Snappin’),” which hit No. 1 for one week in Might 2007, Breihan chronicles the event of the voice-warping Auto-Tune expertise that the artist took to the intense and popularized. Then the backlash started, with Usher allegedly telling T-Ache that he had ruined music. Different musicians groused that Auto-Tune diminished the significance of actual singing. Though rappers to today proceed to prime the charts by emulating T-Ache’s Auto-Tune type, the person himself has at instances moved in a distinct path. In 2014, he confirmed off his gorgeous vocal chops by showing with out filters on NPR’s “Tiny Desk Live performance” video. 5 years later, T-Ache received the primary season of Fox’s “The Masked Singer” TV present. Fascinating stuff.

That doesn’t imply that Breihan at all times strikes the fitting chord. In his zeal to cowl as a lot floor as potential, he generally sacrifices nuance to overgeneralization. In a chapter about “Good Vibrations” by the Seashore Boys, as an illustration, Breihan rightly notes that the group largely stopped producing huge hits after its 1966 psychedelia- tinged No. 1. Nonetheless, the Seashore Boys most definitely didn’t “lose their relevance as a pop act.” Within the early Nineteen Seventies, they did a few of their strongest work, together with 1970’s “Sunflower,” which critics rightfully hailed as a artistic rebirth. Equally, the Human League didn’t immediately fade away and discover themselves relegated to the oldies circuit after their ’80s business heyday. The synth-pop group, whose MTV-fueled “Don’t You Need Me” topped the charts in 1982, reached the Billboard High 40 with “Inform Me When” 13 years later in 1995.

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These are minor quibbles. With “The Quantity Ones,” Breihan has penned a piece that resembles a number of the indelible hits he spotlights: memorable, timeless and value revisiting time and again.

Marc Ballon, a former L.A. Occasions reporter, teaches a complicated writing class at USC. He lives in Fullerton.

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Nashville council rejects Morgan Wallen's bar sign over singer's questionable behavior

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Nashville council rejects Morgan Wallen's bar sign over singer's questionable behavior

Morgan Wallen’s new bar won’t feature one of those neon signs that are ubiquitous among downtown Nashville honky-tonks.

Nashville’s Metro Council this week rejected the “Whiskey Glasses” singer’s request to install such a sign bearing his name outside of Morgan Wallen’s This Bar & Tenessee Kitchen, which is set to open over Memorial Day weekend.

“I don’t want to see a billboard up with the name of a person who’s throwing chairs off of balconies and who is saying racial slurs,” Delishia Porterfield, council member at large, said during the Tuesday council meeting.

Wallen came under fire for using a slur in 2021, which put his career into free fall and saw him banned, albeit temporarily, from the nation’s two largest radio networks and a TV network, pulled from music-streaming services and suspended by his record label.

While his double album “Dangerous” and 2023 follow-up “One Thing at a Time” burned up the charts in the background, Wallen’s reputation slowly recovered — until he was arrested in April after allegedly throwing a chair off of the six-story rooftop of Chief’s, the Nashville bar and music venue co-owned by country singer and Wallen business partner Eric Church. The chair landed three feet away from police officers on a sidewalk below, and the superstar was later arrested on three felony counts of reckless endangerment and one misdemeanor count of disorderly conduct.

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Other council members who spoke out Tuesday said their “no” votes were driven by Wallen’s history of comments that were “hateful” and “racist”; the singer was captured on a neighbor’s Ring camera calling a friend by the n-word in his driveway after a night of drinking.

One council member remarked that she was voting no in part because, in her words, Wallen had pledged to give money “to the NAACP for funding” and then did not. Rolling Stone had published a report in late 2021 saying Wallen had reneged on his commitment to donate $500,000 to various Black-led groups and organizations, but USA Today subsequently reported that Wallen and his team had, in fact, donated the majority of the funds as promised.

Jacob Kupin, a council member who voted yes on the measure, acknowledged that Wallen’s behavior was concerning but said he would support the sign because the company that is operating the bar had been a reliable business partner. “It struck me that we’re putting up a sign with someone’s name on it who has not been a good actor downtown,” he said.

Wallen has attempted to make amends for the chair-tossing incident. An initial court hearing has been postponed until Aug. 15.

“I’ve touched base with Nashville law enforcement, my family, and the good people at Chief’s. I’m not proud of my behavior, and I accept responsibility,” the singer wrote on X.

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For the time being, it seems the Metro Council isn’t convinced.

Times freelance writer Holly Gleason contributed to this report.

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‘The Village Next to Paradise’ Review: Somali Family Drama Doubles as a Potent Portrait of Life in the Shadow of War

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‘The Village Next to Paradise’ Review: Somali Family Drama Doubles as a Potent Portrait of Life in the Shadow of War

Mo Harawe’s debut feature The Village Next to Paradise is a haunting offering. The film, which premiered at Cannes in the Un Certain Regard section and is the first Somali film to ever screen on the Croisette, presents a compelling narrative of one family’s survival in a sleepy Somali town. But it’s the devastating backdrop against which their drama plays out that lingers long after the credits roll. 

The siren wails of drones soundtrack each scene of Harawe’s film, which opens with footage of a real-life report of a United States drone strike on Somalia. Since the U.S. began using drones in the East African country in the early 2000s, Somalis have suffered at the hands of an enveloping and ravenous counterterrorism operation. According to data from the New America foundation, there have been more than 300 documented uses of drones resulting in hundreds of known civilian deaths.

The Village Next to Paradise

The Bottom Line

Uneven but affecting.

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Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Un Certain Regard)
Cast: Ahmed Ali Farah, Ahmed Mohamud Saleban, Anab Ahmed Ibrahim
Director-screenwriter: Mo Harawe

2 hours 13 minutes

The fatal impact of contemporary warfare organizes life in Paradise village, a locale whose name seems more melancholic with time. Marmargade (Ahmed Ali Farah), a principal character in Harawe’s languorous film, makes money doing odd jobs, but one of his most lucrative gigs involves burying the dead. Some of the people for whom he finds a place in the sandy terrain died of natural causes, but many of them are victims of foreign airstrikes. When this business slows, Marmargade reluctantly smuggles a truck full of goods — the contents of which play a pivotal role later — to a nearby city. 

Because Marmargade knows the realities of living in a place shrouded by the shadow of death, he strives for a better life for his son Cigaal (Ahmed Mohamud Saleban), a buoyant kid who thinks nothing of the constant buzzing coming from the sky. When the local school cancels classes for the year because of chronic absenteeism among the teachers, Marmargade works to send Cigaal to a school in the city, where safety is more than an illusion. But Cigaal doesn’t want to leave his family, friends or his life in the village. When Marmargade proposes this new life to him, the child rejects the idea. 

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The main narrative of The Village Next to Paradise revolves around the conflicting desires within this makeshift family. Marmargade lives with his sister Araweelo (Anab Ahmed Ibrahim), a recently divorced woman who wants to build her own tailoring shop. The two have the kind of fractious relationship resulting from years of mistrust. She thinks her brother should be honest with Cigaal instead of trying to trick the young one into going to school. Marmargade wants his sister’s financial support more than her advice. After she refuses to lend him the money for tuition, Marmargade makes a series of decisions that threatens all their livelihoods. 

Harawe’s film contains many admirable elements. With its unhurried pacing and tender focus on a single family, The Village Next to Paradise recalls Gabriel Martins’ 2022 feature Mars One. And the way Harawe structures the film around a broader geopolitical conflict resembles the role the Chadian civil war played in Mahamet Saleh Haroun’s  2010 film A Screaming Man, which also premiered at Cannes. The cinematography (by Mostafa El Kashef) offers truly striking images that conjure up the ghostly atmosphere of this village without turning its people into caricatures for a Western gaze hungry for a particular kind of poverty porn. 

But The Village Next to Paradise is also hobbled in places by its meandering narrative and occasionally wooden performances from Harawe’s cast of local nonprofessional actors. The sharpness of Harawe’s vision is dulled by a story that takes one too many detours before settling into itself. Characters with dubious relevance are introduced and then dropped, while ones who come to play crucial roles don’t get an appropriate amount of screen time.

The film becomes more dynamic in its latter half, when Marmargade’s desperation leads him to questionable decisions that clash with Araweelo’s desires. Indeed, it’s also during these parts of the film that Harawe pulls the strongest performances from his actors, who otherwise struggle to shake off an understandable stiffness. 

Despite these flaws, Harawe’s film does have a real staying power. The Village Next to Paradise orients itself around a quiet optimism and surprising humor that mirror real life. There are moments throughout that serve as a reminder that even in places where death feels close, hope for tomorrow is still alive.

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‘Masked Singer’ winner reveals whether they will resume 'Musical' — that was a clue — career

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‘Masked Singer’ winner reveals whether they will resume 'Musical' — that was a clue — career

Sixteen contestants went down to one Wednesday night when the “Masked Singer” crowned Goldfish the winner. Underneath the mask was Disney darling, Coachella queen and Broadway beauty Vanessa Hudgens, who was champion of Season 11 of the reality TV competition series.

The competition was down to Goldfish, who sang “Heart of Glass” by Blondie and “Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Me” by Elton John, and Gumball, who chose “Latch” by Disclosure featuring Sam Smith and “Renegade” by Styx. The candy man was revealed to be “Friday Night Lights” star Scott Porter, who worked with Hudgens on 2009’s “Bandslam.”

Judges Jenny McCarthy-Wahlberg and Robin Thicke both guessed incorrectly that he was Derek Hough. Ken Jeong guessed Taran Killam, and Rita Ora thought Joseph Gordon-Levitt was under the mask.

They fared much better unmasking Goldfish: While Thicke guessed Hilary Duff and Jeong said it was Nicole Scherzinger, both Ora and McCarthy-Wahlberg were correct that the star of Broadway’s “Gigi” was their winner.

“It’s honestly the most incredible thing ever. I’ve just been so excited to take my mask off and stare into Rita’s eyes and be like ‘Girl, this is why I couldn’t hang out with you,’” Hudgens, a longtime friend of Ora’s, exclaimed after the reveal.

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“I was like, ‘What’s going on with Vanessa? She always texts me back’ — but now it’s because you were here,” Ora yelled back from the judges’ seats.

The “High School Musical” star had been asked to join the show several times but decided this time to give her fans a taste of what they’ve been missing in her time away from music, Hudgens told ET.

“My fans had been asking, saying, ‘We want more music, we want singing anything, give it to us please.’ And I was like, ‘You know, this would be a really interesting way to give my fans what they want, but make sure they’re really fans,’” she said. “And they are!”

But the Queen of Coachella, so named because of her remarkable outfits at the annual Southern California music festival, admitted that she would probably stick to the screen for the immediate future.

The actor’s “Bad Boys: Ride or Die” opens in theaters on June 7. It’s the fourth film in the Will Smith-Martin Lawrence buddy cop action comedy franchise. Hudgens also co-starred in the third movie, “Bad Boys for Life.”

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“I always say life is about priorities and [music’s] just not a top priority right now,” the new mom said. “Who knows? Maybe down the line, maybe it will be, but as of now, it’s still no.”

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