Justin Timberlake Launches Tennman Records 

Filed under: Celebrity News on Tuesday, May 29th, 2007 by Celebrity News | No Comments

Justin Timberlake has joined forces with a rival music company to launch his own label, Tennman Records.

The Los Angeles-based label — whose name pays tribute to Timberlake’s home state of Tennessee — will operate as a joint venture with Interscope Records. Timberlake will serve as chairman and CEO, a statement said.

As an artist, Timberlake is signed to Jive Records, a unit of Sony BMG Music Entertainment. Interscope, meanwhile, is a unit of Universal Music Group.

Tennman will announce its first signings in the next few weeks, a statement said. Former Sony BMG talent scout Ken Komisar will serve as president.

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Lindsay Lohan Arrested and Goes to Rehab 

Filed under: Celebrity News, Lindsay Lohan on Tuesday, May 29th, 2007 by Celebrity News | No Comments

Lindsay Lohan, who was arrested on suspicion of driving while intoxicated after crashing her Mercedes-Benz roadster on Sunset Boulevard early Saturday, was reportedly at an addiction treatment center in Malibu on Tuesday.

The 20-year-old actress decided to check herself into Promises on Monday afternoon, sources close to the “Georgia Rule” co-star told In Touch Weekly.
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Lohan’s publicist in New York City has been unavailable for comment since the wreck.

The actress, who turns 21 on July 2, spent 30 days at the Wonderland Center, another addiction treatment place in Laurel Canyon, in January and February — at the urging of her therapist, she told Allure magazine.

Beverly Hills police booked Lohan Saturday on suspicion of driving under the influence and said a “usuable” amount of what appeared to be cocaine was recovered from the wrecked Mercedes SL65.

The actress was allegedly behind the wheel of the 600-horsepower supercar — with Ronson and another person in the passenger side of the two- seater — when it went out of control and jumped a curb on Sunset Boulevard, hitting some shrubbery near Foothill Road at about 5:15 a.m. Saturday.

Lohan’s bodyguard arrived within moments and drove away the damaged car before Beverly Hills police, who have one of the fastest response times in the nation, arrived at the scene. Lohan was apparently driven to a hospital in the vehicle in which the bodyguard arrived.

According to paparazzi who had been trailing Lohan, the actress was driven by her bodyguard to Les Deux nightclub in her GMC SUV about midnight.

Around 3 a.m., she went to a party at home in Hollywood. About 4 a.m., she went to the Mondrian Hotel and tried to get a room but was reportedly told none was available. About 5 a.m., she returned to her condominium, driven by her bodyguard, to pick up her Mercedes.

After the wreck, Lohan, who apparently was not seriously injured, was not arrested because she was briefly admitted to a hospital, police said. She is scheduled to be arraigned Aug. 24.

Ronson and the other person, who has not been identified, were unhurt.

The New York-born actress came to prominence in the movies “Freaky Friday” (2003) and “Mean Girls” (2004). She also appeared in Robert Altman’s final film, “A Prairie Home Companion” (2006).

Lohan isn’t alone when it comes to being rich, young and in trouble with the law.

Paris Hilton, caught driving on a suspended license following an alcohol-related arrest, is due to report to jail for a 45-day sentence on June 5. And Hilton’s pal, Nicole Richie, is also facing a possible jail term for driving while intoxicated arrest.

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Rock Band The Police ready for Reunion Tour 

Filed under: Celebrity News on Friday, May 25th, 2007 by Celebrity News | No Comments

All fans had to do to feel absolutely fantastic about the Police reunion tour, which officially began Monday at the GM Place sports arena, was keep their eyes on the drummer, Stewart Copeland.

Wearing a very New Wave red-and-black bicycle shirt and sporty headband, hopping like a leprechaun between an imposing percussion setup and an equally sizable drum kit, the 54-year-old bard of rocking polyrhythms couldn’t stop grinning. Sometimes, as Copeland kept the pulse going while guitarist Andy Summers bent chords in all directions and bassist/rock god Sting tinkered with his vocal phrasing, the grin turned toward a grimace. But rarely do players exhibit this much glee during a two-hour arena rock show, especially one marked by unremitting sing-along choruses of “yee-o!” and enough elegant meandering to suggest that Sting had won some battles in rehearsal.

Copeland had good reason to be happy. Though not flawless, the Police’s two-hour return to the arena stage amply demonstrated what made the band such a force in pop two decades ago. It’s something surprisingly rare in hugely successful bands: risk-taking interplay that stresses the subtleties in songs as well as the hooks, among players different enough to spar but smart enough to prioritize the groove.

At the turn of the 1980s, this wasn’t as common as it should have been, considering the stealth influence of reggae, funk and even disco on New Wave, the loose subgenre the Police spearheaded. Only a few groups beyond the post-punk underground — notably the Talking Heads, may they reunite someday! — could generate as much dance floor fun as the famously blond trio. In a long set that bopped from hit to hit to hit, starting with “Message in a Bottle” and ending with a cheerfully frenzied “Next to You,” from the band’s 1978 debut, “Outlandos d’Amour,” the three musicians chased one another’s leads and finished one another’s musical sentences, providing more than enough stimulus to make up for a near-complete absence of crowd-pleasing spectacle.

The music was the spectacle. Sting’s glamour (now enhanced by what must be a Madonna-esque workout regimen, whose benefits he displayed in a taut white tank and yoga-friendly black stretch pants) and his flowery but often sinister lyrics about love and obsession defined the Police’s pop identity. But without his nimble bass playing and singing, Copeland’s breakneck inventiveness on percussion and Summers’ subtly cocky way of filling space with effects and syncopation, the band would have been merely hitmakers, not genre leaders.

Caribbean cool was mixed with a very British surliness and a prog rocker’s love of twists and turns to form the basis of the Police palette. Over the years, another characteristic emerged: Police music somehow seemed both fast and slow, intense and spacious. “Roxanne,” the group’s first hit and, judging by the crowd’s reaction at GM Place, still its biggest, set the mold with its syrupy verses and jittery chorus. Many variations followed as the threesome worked on the intricate rhythms and tonalities that lent Police hits their intricate aura.

At GM Place, the band reached for that complexity again, and hit it more often than not. The stage set-up was spare, with only a few flashing lights and video images filling in for the dancers, props and signage that fluff up most contemporary arena shows. Perhaps it’s vainglorious for the Police to think that their playing is exciting enough, but it’s also correct. “Synchronicity II” was six minutes of zigzagging guitar and fuming vocals pushed forward by Copeland’s stick on the snare. “The Bed’s Too Big Without You” and “Roxanne” turned reggae’s dislocated lilt into the sound of romantic anxiety. “Every Breath You Take,” with its lovely melody and upsetting lyrics about sexual thrall, showed how the band uses prettiness as a trick to get across some transgressively nasty sentiments.

Most songs extended beyond the original versions, allowing everyone to stretch and show off. But this approach occasionally backfired. Sting’s highly successful post-Police career has favored smooth, jazzy forays into adult contemporary pop, and this sensibility sneaked into the arrangements, making “Invisible Sun” unbearably mellow (despite a stark video somehow about the Middle East crisis) and “Walking on the Moon” simply boring. That song also fell victim to Sting’s penchant for the Harry Belafonte-esque refrain, “Yee-o,” which made for far too much audience call and response.

Such missteps and detours may be why it took fans almost an hour to really start dancing, though they ardently cheered from the set’s first note. The Police is not a band that should ever dawdle. Yet Summers sometimes drifted into private dialogue with his effects pedals, and Sting made some strange vocal choices — he was too stingy with his falsetto and laid back when he could have pushed harder. The fastest songs came off best, requiring all three players to put their own interests aside and lock in.

As for the limitations wrought by age, they were limited to the occasional glitch in Sting’s upper register. A few songs were slowed down, maybe to encourage those jazzy jams or maybe just because Sting likes to take his time. If that’s the reason, Sting should reconsider his strategy. After many years of playing the field, he’s finally back with the guys who can really kick his carefully toned backside. Especially that drummer. And he’s delighted to have the chance

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