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Don't give up the Ghost: Singer-songwriter Amanda finally takes the spotlight | 17 février 2008

She turned James Blunt's 'You're Beautiful' into a mega-seller and has written hits for the likes of Beyoncé and Whitney Houston. But success as a singer has always been elusive for Amanda Ghost. She tells Stuart Husband why she's finally ready to take the spotlight...

Amanda Ghost is telling a story about a recent trip in a New York cab.

"I was on my way to see the music producer Mark Ronson," she says, "but I had this bad back.

"When the driver suddenly slammed on the brakes I literally screamed with pain, and suddenly I couldn't stop screaming.

"Everything came out - that I was thousands of miles away from my newborn daughter; that I needed to keep working despite a slipped disc - all the highs and lows of the past nine years.

Amanda Ghost has written hits for Whitney Houston and Shakira. Now the 33-year-old is ready to take the spotlight for herself with new album, Blood on the Line

"It was incredibly emotional," she says, "and as I sat there sobbing, the cabbie actually apologised, which is unheard of.'

Amanda has burst into the room like a force of nature, apologising for being late (her daughter Gia has been "playing up"), casting self-deprecating looks in the mirror ("God, I'm such a mess"), and enthusing about the clothes for the photo shoot ("So glam!").

It's a tribute to the 33-year-old's vivacity that she has made it through a decade that's been every bit as turbulent as she's hinted.

She was tipped for a stellar singing career back in 2000, when she was plucked from Enfield-born obscurity by Warner Brothers' Andrew Wickham, the man who signed Joni Mitchell and Emmylou Harris.

He claimed Amanda was better than both. She was fÍted accordingly, until her debut album, Ghost Stories (released in the U.S. only) failed to sell in huge quantities.

She was then left in hellish limbo, with Warners refusing to release a follow-up and trying to morph her into a Pink/Avril Lavigne hybrid.

"I think the reason it failed was because I wanted to do too much," shrugs Amanda.

"I could write in any genre - pop, jazz, country, reggae - and I put them all on the album. The chairman of Warners said that I had a great voice but I couldn't write hits."

An ironic remark, considering what came next. Amanda had signed a separate songwriting contract with Warners, and in 2004 was asked to polish up a somewhat maudlin ballad.

The song was James Blunt's 'You're Beautiful', which went on to top the charts in Britain, the U.S., Canada and virtually any other place where soulful young men moon after hopelessly unattainable women.

Her co-writing credit brought her Grammy nominations and two Ivor Novello awards, and, with her writing partner Ian Dench, Amanda has since gone on to provide huge hits for Beyoncé ('Beautiful Liar', the duet with Shakira, which went to number one around the world) and the latest American Idol winner Jordin Sparks ('Tattoo', which has given Amanda her third US top ten song in 18 months).

As well as working with boy wonder Mark Ronson, Amy Winehouse's producer, the in-demand Ghost has been asked to provide songs for Whitney Houston's much-anticipated comeback album, and has been collaborating with musical legends Jay-Z, Mariah Carey and Lionel Richie.

All of which means that it's a more propitious time for Amanda herself to venture back into the spotlight.

Her new album, Blood on the Line, provides a low-key acoustic showcase for her earthy, soulful voice to tackle a few of the songs she's written for other people over the years (including 'Time Machine', penned for her best friend Boy George).

Later in the year she'll be on the judging panel of a new American reality TV show that's a sort of American Idol for aspiring songwriters.

Amanda credits Boy George with honing her own songwriting skills. She met him when she was 19 and working on the door of London's then legendary nightspot, Mud Club.

"I was a fashion student, dabbling in journalism and pretending I didn't want to get into music," she recalls.

"I mean, I'd been singing and writing songs since I was eight; I'd sing them to my friends in the playground, and they'd go, 'You didn't write that!' and I'd go, 'Yes, I did!'"

Boy George took her under his wing. "What he gave me was an invaluable musical education.

"I was a pop kid at the time, and he introduced me to the likes of Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan, Nina Simone and David Bowie."

(Mitchell has since become a friend, and credits Amanda's song 'Blood on the Line' with reinvigorating her own faith in music.)

"George," Amanda adds, "knows more about music than anyone I've met."

The main thing he taught her about songwriting, she says, was to concentrate on simplicity and directness.

"Bob Marley said that the greatest songs can be hummed by a three-year-old, and it's true.

"George would be saying, 'Your voice and melodies are great but your lyrics are shit,' and I'd go, 'But they're from my heart!'" she grins.

"He also taught me that it's about two per cent talent and 98 per cent graft.

"I don't think of myself as a professional songwriter - I hate them; they come in and write the 'moon-in-June' stuff and don't add anything.

"To me, if I'm writing with someone, it's important that their voice comes out in the song, otherwise there's no point."

This seems an appropriate moment to bring up 'You're Beautiful', a song that's become the 'Lady in Red' of its generation.

For Amanda, its legacy is more ambiguous: it's set her up for life, but Blunt was curiously reluctant to acknowledge her as co-writer until he was forced to by the Ivor Novello triumph, hence her mix of pride and dismissal now.

"It changed everything for me," she admits. "Until then I was a struggling artist.

"It took James Blunt three years of hard work to write, whereas for me it was ten minutes of polishing up the chorus at a kitchen table in LA when I was bored.

"I didn't think it was very good," she says with a smile.

"I said to my publisher, 'Take my name off it.' Thank God they talked me out of it. It's a really childlike song, that's why it did so well, but a lot of people still don't realise he didn't write it by himself.

"Everyone says, 'Do you hate him, does he hate you?'" she continues breezily, "and we don't.

"But there's a lot of vitriol towards him, maybe because he got so successful so quickly with a song that's so loathed."

Amanda has always been grounded, a trait she attributes to her family - her father is Trinidadian, her mother Spanish, and she has two sisters, who are both bringing up families in New York.

But you get the feeling that success, now it's finally come, is all the sweeter, not only because she's a mother herself (her partner, Gregor Cameron, is a TV producer; they live in Notting Hill, London, and are planning an April 'flamenco wedding' in her mother's native Seville), but also because her new-found clout is happening on her terms.

"Being an artist, for me, isn't about being famous," she says firmly.

"Growing up with George, I got a crash course in how awful full-on fame can be.

"I'm doing this album because a lot of people have been asking me to do it, but I'm just as interested in my songs and my label and nurturing artists, bringing raw talent to fruition.

"The first time round, I wasn't ready. I signed for £1 million and I was on the cover of a Sunday magazine before I'd sold a record.

"Immediately, everyone wanted to shoot me down. You have to earn it, and f****** hell have I earnt it," she cackles.

"I've been plugging away for nine years, and I know everyone hates Madonna now, but one thing she taught me as a young, aspirational girl was that a quitter never wins and a winner never quits."

And Amanda Ghost strides off with the exuberant air of someone for whom those words have been triumphantly vindicated.

Amanda with James Blunt after scooping their Ivor Novello awards in London in 2006

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/you/article.html?in_article_id=514626&in_page_id=1908

Publié par dominic à 13:15:51 dans boy george | Commentaires (0) |

TETU n° 131 March 2008 | 16 février 2008

Publié par dominic à 21:13:16 dans boy george | Commentaires (0) |

WOMAD tickets on sale, Boy George playing | 16 février 2008

 

Tickets for WOMAD have gone on sale with several acts confirmed for the world music festival.

WOMAD (World of Music, Arts & Dance) will be taking place at Charlton Park, Marmesbury, Wiltshire from 25-27 July.

Tickets are available 
HERE and are expected to sell out quick. Full weekend camping tickets currently cost £115, but click through for a full list of prices.

Organisers have just unveiled several new acts for the bill. They are Lee Scratch Perry, Squeeze, Roni Size & Reprazent, Boy George, Orchestra Baobab and Eddy Grant.

Eddy Grant said: "Im delighted to be playing WOMAD. WOMAD is still about real people from all over the world coming together to play real music... Im thrilled, its going to be a great event, to be going back on the road after 25 years and play WOMAD is something very special for me."

The full line up is as follows:

Adrian Sherwood & Lee 'Scratch' Perry & Little Axe (UK) - Agricantus (Sicily) - Altai Kai (Mongolia) - Asif Ali Khan (Pakistan) - Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni Ba (Mali) - Beat Bristol (UK / Brazil) - Bedouin Jerry Can Band (Egypt) - Bill Cobham (USA) -
Boy George (UK) - Buckwheat Zydeco (USA) - Cara Dillon (Ireland (Irish Republic)) - Chic (USA) - David D'Or (Israel) - Dengue Fever (USA / Cambodia) - Devon Sproule (USA) - Dhoad Gypsies of Rajasthan (India) - DJ TC (UK) - Dulsori (Korea (Republic of)) - Eddy Grant (Guyana) - Ernest Ranglin (Jamaica) - Finley Quaye (UK) - Gocoo + GoRo (Japan) - Hossam Ramzy and his Egyptian Orchestra (Egypt) - Justin Adams & Juldeh Camara (UK / Gambia) - Kasai All Stars (Congo) - Kenge Kenge Orutu Systems (Kenya) - Kora (New Zealand) - Lo Cor de La Plana (Corsica) - Malam Mamane Barka (Niger Republic) - Mamani Keita and Nicolas Repac (Mali / France) - Michael Brook & Djivan Gasparyan (USA) - Mista Savona (Australia) - Monajat Yulchieva (Uzbekistan) - Mono Bloco (Brazil) - Roni Size & Reprazent (UK) - Rumberos de Cuba (Cuba) - Sa Ding Ding (China (Peoples Republic)) - Sarah Savoy & The Francadians (USA / France) - Shantel & Bucovina Club Orkester (Germany) - Sheikh Taha (Egypt) - Simone White (USA) - Squeeze (UK) - Terakaft (Mali) - Tibetan Monks from Tashi Lhunpo Monastery (Tibet) - Toumani Diabate (Mali) - Trans-Global Underground (UK)

http://www.virtualfestivals.com/latest/news/4364

Boy George And Eddy Grant For WOMAD Festival


 

By Jason Gregory on 18/02/2008

Boy George and Eddy Grant are among a host of performers who are scheduled to appear at this years WOMAD festival.

The event, which takes place at Charlton Park in Wiltshire from July 25th-27th, will also feature Squeeze and Roni Size.

Speaking about the festival, Grant, who is heading back on the road after twenty-five years, said it was “very special”.

“I'm delighted to be playing WOMAD. It's still about real people, from all over the world coming together to play real music... I'm thrilled, it's going to be a great event,” he said.

Tickets for the festival are on sale now. For more information go to our Gig Guide : http://www.gigwise.com/gigs

Alternatively, you can call our ticket hotline on 0871 230 1098.

http://www.festivalwise.com/news.asp?id=40861

Publié par dominic à 21:04:25 dans boy george | Commentaires (0) |

The Guardian : Boy George, 46, recording artist and DJ | 09 février 2008



Boy George, 46, recording artist and DJ

Interview by Rosanna Greenstreet
Saturday February 9, 2008
The Guardian

Boy George, 46, was born George O'Dowd, in Kent. He worked as a cloakroom attendant in a nightclub before becoming a household name as lead singer of 80s band Culture Club. The band broke up in 1986, since when he has recorded as a solo artist, written and performed in the musical Taboo and become a club DJ. He is currently touring the UK.

When were you happiest?

I am relieved to say that I find it hard to answer such a question, because if I could it would suggest that my life has become dreary and empty.

What is your greatest fear?

Becoming a sound bite.

What is your earliest memory?

My father's jealousy, rage and anger, and my mother's tears.

What is the trait you most deplore in yourself?

I give up far too easily, have no respect for money and I always make the mistake of working with friends.

What is the trait you most deplore in others?

Freeloading.

Aside from a property, what's the most expensive thing you've bought?

A number of friends, sadly.

What is your most treasured possession?

Humour.

What would your super power be?

To rid the planet of hunger, suffering, Aids and crap music.

What makes you depressed?

Watching gloriously dull and untalented people enjoy success.

What do you most dislike about your appearance?

I wish I had longer legs.

Would you rather be clever and ugly, or thick and attractive?

I'm all of those things, yet I have such a lustful libido that I refuse to take 'no' for an answer, wilfully lust above my station and often get my man.

Who would play you in the film of your life?

Uma Thurman, of course.

What is your guiltiest pleasure?

Satisfying my lust, whatever the price.

What is your most unappealing habit?

Bitching.

What would you most like to wear to a fancy dress party?

A bikini, sling-backs and the crown jewels.

What is the worst thing anyone's said to you?

'I need a bit of space, time to think.'

To whom would you most like to say sorry, and why?

Madonna, because I have said far too many vile things about her and all because she invited me to her birthday party and tried to humiliate me by making sure I was not allowed into an area sectioned off for the truly blessed.

What or who is the greatest love of your life?

Indifferent, heterosexual men.

What does love feel like?

I am not interested in physically restrained, polite love. I need passion - Liz Taylor and Richard Burton.

What was the best kiss of your life?

I love frantic french kissing, raging teenage face-eating kissing.

Have you ever said 'I love you' and not meant it?

Never.

Which living person do you most despise, and why?

Despise is too strong, but I met Bette Midler and was horrified to find she was nothing like I had dreamed. Her insincerity was matched only by her void of humanity, humour and grace.

Which words or phrases do you most overuse?

'I'll be five minutes!'

What has been your biggest disappointment?

Getting arrested in New York and discovering how lacking in morality US law enforcers are. Being handcuffed to a metal trolley in Bellevue Hospital because I cut my foot while being dragged from a police car, and listening to nurses chatting about hair products as I screamed for something to stop me hallucinating.

If you could edit your past, what would you change?

The royalty splits on Karma Chameleon - I had to force the rest of...#8239;Culture Club to record it.

What is the closest you've come to...#8239;death?

A headline in a tabloid.

What single thing would improve the quality of your life?

A lobotomy.

What is the most important lesson life has taught you?

Never tell the police the truth.

Tell us a joke

What is the difference between a man and a toilet seat?

A toilet seat doesn't keep bothering you after you've used it.

Tell us a secret

There is a wizard behind the curtain.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/weekend/story/0,,2253791,00.html


Publié par dominic à 13:21:02 dans boy george | Commentaires (10) |

ECHO-NEWS: George is the karma back kid | 09 février 2008

BOY George is a global phenomenon, known almost as much for his colourful private life as his music.

He has been in the headlines ever since his former group Culture Club burst on to the pop scene in 1982 and, at the height of his fame, was the most photographed person in the world alongside the late Diana, Princess of Wales. 

But a little known fact is his colossal rise to fame began in a club in Rayleigh.In an exclusive interview, Boy George told the Echo: "Crocs, in Rayleigh, was where I did my first ever live show.

"It was in 1981, just before Christmas, and we were playing our first ever gig. Depeche Mode were on just before us and it was awesome.

"We had chosen to play there because Ray Hay (the band's guitarist) lived in Rayleigh. I know Southend fairly well and I did some DJing more recently at a place near the pier."

Soon after that debut Rayleigh gig, Culture Club signed with Virgin Records and in 1982, became the first band since the Beatles to amass three top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for a debut album.

By 1986, Boy George was starting a solo career and, over the next two decades, he released a total of 23 albums, including those he has mixed in his reincarnation as a highly successful DJ.

The artist produced and performed (although not as himself) in the West End musical Taboo, which depicted his quirky rise to fame, while a courtroom battle with a former lover and a battle with drug addiction have meant George, now 48, is rarely out of the headlines.

But he said it was returning to singing live that made him realise what he had been missing.

He said: "I am really enjoying this and I'm planning to get back into it more. It's been quite a while - ten years now.

"People don't know what to expect from me and there is an element of surprise in my shows. But I love getting them up on their feet for things they didn't expect to hear.

"I have a lot of affection from my fans. When I am in London, I think it's only there I have fans but I have lovely fans all over the country."

Review of Boy George's Cliffs Pavilion gig

A GLOBAL pop icon took to the stage for one night at the Cliffs Pavilion and got the entire audience to its feet with a dizzying array of musical talent in a two-hour romp across musical history.

Boy George, the eccentric performer whose recent personal life has been a soap opera played out in the tabloids, was keen to impress fans with his latest songs, as well as play the hits which soared him to international stardom in the 1980s.

In laid-back fashion, George walked out in a striking red hat and safety-pin emblembed suit from his fashion label B-rude, and opened with a reggae-influenced tune.

It is hard to believe it has been ten years since Boy George last toured live. His unmistakable voice was as solid as ever, his raunchy moves revved up the crowd and confidence simply oozed.

A great showman, he interacted with fans and spoke frankly about episodes in his life that inspired him to write certain songs.

He sang several songs from the musical Taboo, which was about his rise to fame, including "Stranger in this World" which he sang in duet with a highly talented singer Lizzie Dee, who has only recently joined the band.

There was a mix of melancholic musical tunes including an up-tempo version of Summertime, as well as cabaret and gospel beats, which really proved the breadth of his writing and singing skills, but for many fans it was the Eighties hits that they had come to hear.

George teased with a promise of music that would make the audience want to "get up and shake your bum." And when the chord struck for Kharma Chameleon, that prediction came true.

He performed two other mega hits: Church of the Poisoned Mind and Do You Really Want to Hurt Me, but ended the show with the undeniable lyrics: "I've one of those faces, you'll never forget." 

http://www.echo-news.co.uk/news/local/display.var.2023344.0.george_is_the_karma_back_kid.php

PICTURE FROM MYSPACE.BOYGEORGE2008

Publié par dominic à 13:15:07 dans boy george | Commentaires (0) |

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FORUM

VOILA LE 1ER FORUM FRANCAIS DE BOY GEORGE : Image and video hosting by TinyPic http://forum-boy-george.forumactif.net/

LA PHOTO DU MOMENT

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LA PHOTO NOSTALGIE

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PLANNING / AGENDA


THURSDAY 31th DECEMBER - CREAM ARENA - CHESTER - UK & FLAMINGO'S - BLACKPOOL - http://www.flamingoonline.co.uk/



FRIDAY 1st JANUARY - DTPM, London, UK
Buy tickets @
www.ticketweb.co.uk




FRIDAY 6th FEBRUARY - GLISTEN, Ashford, UK
Info @
www.theglistenexperience.com

FRIDAY 13th FEBRUARY - BULLIT, Tamworth, UK
Info @
www.bullit.biz

and
FRIDAY 13th FEBRUARY - QI, Mansfield, UK
Info @ www.qinightclub.co.uk

FRIDAY 26th FEBRUARY, MANGO, Reading, UK
Info @ www.barmango.com

and
FRIDAY 26th FEBRUARY, EMBASY, london, UK (TBC)
Info @ www.embassylondon.com

SUNDAY 28th FEBRUARY, BROADWAY BOULEVARD
Llandudno, Wales, UK
Info @ www.broadwayboulevard.co.uk

FRIDAY 26th MARCH, CLUB AMADEUS, Northallerton, UK
Info @ Club Amadeus Facebook Page

SUNDAY 4th APRIL, THE REGAL, OXFORD, UK
Info @ www.the-regal.com

SATURDAY 17th APRIL, LIQUID, Bern, Swithzerland
Info @ www.liquid-bern.ch


 



BOY GEORGE IN CONCERT



 


"Up close & personal "
at Leicester Square Theatre



20,21,22,23,27,28,29,30,31 December 2009.

Boy George needs little introduction…he shot to international stardom in the 80’s as the front man of one of the UK’s biggest exports Culture Club and has remained one of the world’s most recognisable iconic figures…however George himself says…’I am sometimes recognised for all the wrong reasons’. In advance of his 2010 European Tour George will perform a set of exclusive intimate shows at Leicester Square Theatre…stripped down, acoustic, unplugged whatever cliché you want to call it this set of exclusive concerts lies bare George as an artist, singer, lyricist and musician – this is simply ‘The Man and his Music’… performing his biggest hits from Culture Club, his solo career, new writing and covers from his own music heroes. DON’T MISS ONE OF THE BEST SOUL VOICES AND MOST COLOURFUL PERSONALITIES BRITIAN AS EVER PRODUCED!

£35.00-£45.00


UP CLOSE & PERSONAL
LEICESTER SQUARE THEATRE, LONDON, UK


Sunday, December 20th @ 7:30 PM (7:00 PM doors)

Monday, December 21th @ 9:30 PM (9:00 PM doors)

Tuesday, December 22th @ 9:30 PM (9:00 PM doors)

Wednesday, December 23th @ 9:30 PM (9:00 PM doors)

Sunday, December 27th @ 7:30 PM (7:00 PM doors)

Monday, December 28th @ 9:30 PM (9:00 PM doors)

Tuesday, December 29th @ 9:30 PM (9:00 PM doors)

Wednesday, December 30th @ 9:30 PM (9:00 PM doors)

Thursday, December 31st @ 4:30 PM (4:00 PM doors)

 


2010 UK TOUR

Friday, April 16th @ Lighthouse, Poole
Sunday, April 18th @ Grand Theater, Blackpool
Monday, April 19th @ Birmingham Town Hall, Birmingham
Tuesday, April 20th @ Brighton Dome, Brighton, UK
Wednesday April 21st @ The Sage, Gateshead
Thursday, April 22nd @ The Lowry, Manchester
Friday, April 23rd @ Embassy Theatre, Skegness
Saturday, April 24th @ Congress Theatre, Eastbourne, UK
Monday, April 26st @ Grand Theatre, Swansea
Tuesday, April 27th @ Cheltenham


2010 UK TOUR HERE & NOW
THE VERY BEST OF THE 80'S

Sunday, June 20th @ Isle of Man
Saturday, August 7th @ Ascot Racecourse, Berkshire


2010 EUROPEAN DATES




Wuhlheide Open Air 2010
feat.
BOY GEORGE / KARAT
SUZI QUATRO / THE HOLLIES
BONEY M. feat. Liz Mitchell
FALCO FOREVER
(program changes reserved)


Saturday, July 3rd @ Kindl-Bühne Wuhlheide, Germany



http://www.ticketweb.co.uk/user?query=search&category=misc&search=Boy+George®ion=gb_london&beginmonth=12&beginday=10&beginyear=2009


CLIP DU MOIS

BRAND NEW WHITE XMAS

CULTE VIDEO - NOSTALGIA : 2000

Boy George avec CULTURE CLUB COLD SHOULDER live tv 2000

MENU / LEGEND

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