Re: [arr] Stars remake We are the World for Haiti victims

2010-02-03 Thread devMannemela
wow.
go ARR

On Tue, Feb 2, 2010 at 12:57 AM, Gopal Srinivasan catchg...@gmail.comwrote:



 Stars remake We are the World for Haiti victims
 Tue Feb 2, 2010 8:43am GMT

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 By 
 http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=ukn=dean.goodman;Dean
 Goodmanhttp://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=ukn=dean.goodman;

 LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Star-struck singers, rappers and actors, including
 Barbra Streisand, Kanye West and Miley Cyrus, checked their egos at the door
 on Monday to record a new version of We are the World for Haiti earthquake
 victims, 25 years after the song raised awareness of the famine in Africa.

 None of the singers of the original song were invited to participate in the
 update, which was recorded at the same Hollywood studio once again under the
 oversight of Quincy Jones and the song's co-writer Lionel Richie.

 In all, more than 70 stars lent their voices to the song, and they all
 seemed in awe of each other.

 As celebrities, we're fans of one another, so we're all looky-looing in
 there, and getting autographs and numbers, said Natalie Cole.

 Streisand, Celine Dion and Tony Bennett appeared to inspire the most
 stares. Fifteen-year-old Canadian heartthrob Justin Bieber joked that he
 would ask his new friend, RB singer Akon, to get the telephone number of
 Nicole Scherzinger of the Pussycat Dolls.

 Streisand, a noted perfectionist, ran through multiple takes of the line
 originally sung by Diana Ross, each one seemingly better than the previous
 one. Jazz singer Patti Austin came into her recording booth to coach her.

 Guitar virtuoso Carlos Santana sang along, even though he is not a singer.
 Two members of the Beach Boys, Brian Wilson and Al Jardine, appeared to
 ignore each other.

 'INSPIRED CHAOS'

 Classical crossover tenor Josh Groban described the event as inspired
 chaos.

 It's great to see so many legendary artists sweating it out. Everybody
 left their ego at the door, he said, referring to a request made by Jones
 at the original session in 1985.

 To be smack-dab in the middle of a sandwich between Barbra Streisand and
 Weezy (rapper Lil Wayne) was personally a creative experience I don't think
 I'll ever have the pleasure of having again, Groban added.

 For his part, Lil Wayne said his mother asked him to get a photo of Gladys
 Knight.

 He was among a heavy quotient of hip-hop stars, including Snoop Dogg, Lil
 Wayne, Drake, LL Cool J, and will.i.am of the Black Eyed Peas as well as
 West.

 Hip-hop is rock 'n' roll to a lot of people around the world, right now,
 said Jones, explaining the absence of the modern-day equivalents of original
 performers Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan or Paul Simon.

 Lil Wayne, for one, noted that he was not a singer, and thought organizers
 were joking when they asked him to sing the line originally sung by Dylan.
 Asked if he did a better job, Lil Wayne said, Hell no!

 Country and Latino artists were notably under-represented. Organizers said
 they were turned down for various reasons by some stars. In fact, most of
 the big Grammy winners from the night before were absent, including Beyonce
 and Jay-Z, who returned to New York, and Taylor Swift, who flew to Australia
 straight after the ceremony.

 Randy Phillips, one of the organizers, said his one regret was the
 absence of dance-pop star Lady Gaga.

 The song, which was still being worked on into the small hours of Tuesday,
 will make its world premiere during NBC's coverage of the Vancouver Winter
 Olympics on February 12.

 Both the song and an accompanying video, shot by Oscar-winning Crash
 director Paul Haggis, will go on sale both through traditional and online
 retailers.

 Phillips said all proceeds will go to a newly established foundation that
 will carefully monitor disbursement.

 The January 12 earthquake killed up to 200,000 people in Haiti and
 devastated the already impoverished nation.


 http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE6111GG20100202?sp=true
   



[arr] Stars remake We are the World for Haiti victims

2010-02-02 Thread Gopal Srinivasan
Stars remake We are the World for Haiti victims
Tue Feb 2, 2010 8:43am GMT

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By 
http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=ukn=dean.goodman;Dean
Goodmanhttp://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=ukn=dean.goodman;

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Star-struck singers, rappers and actors, including
Barbra Streisand, Kanye West and Miley Cyrus, checked their egos at the door
on Monday to record a new version of We are the World for Haiti earthquake
victims, 25 years after the song raised awareness of the famine in Africa.

None of the singers of the original song were invited to participate in the
update, which was recorded at the same Hollywood studio once again under the
oversight of Quincy Jones and the song's co-writer Lionel Richie.

In all, more than 70 stars lent their voices to the song, and they all
seemed in awe of each other.

As celebrities, we're fans of one another, so we're all looky-looing in
there, and getting autographs and numbers, said Natalie Cole.

Streisand, Celine Dion and Tony Bennett appeared to inspire the most stares.
Fifteen-year-old Canadian heartthrob Justin Bieber joked that he would ask
his new friend, RB singer Akon, to get the telephone number of Nicole
Scherzinger of the Pussycat Dolls.

Streisand, a noted perfectionist, ran through multiple takes of the line
originally sung by Diana Ross, each one seemingly better than the previous
one. Jazz singer Patti Austin came into her recording booth to coach her.

Guitar virtuoso Carlos Santana sang along, even though he is not a singer.
Two members of the Beach Boys, Brian Wilson and Al Jardine, appeared to
ignore each other.

'INSPIRED CHAOS'

Classical crossover tenor Josh Groban described the event as inspired
chaos.

It's great to see so many legendary artists sweating it out. Everybody left
their ego at the door, he said, referring to a request made by Jones at the
original session in 1985.

To be smack-dab in the middle of a sandwich between Barbra Streisand and
Weezy (rapper Lil Wayne) was personally a creative experience I don't think
I'll ever have the pleasure of having again, Groban added.

For his part, Lil Wayne said his mother asked him to get a photo of Gladys
Knight.

He was among a heavy quotient of hip-hop stars, including Snoop Dogg, Lil
Wayne, Drake, LL Cool J, and will.i.am of the Black Eyed Peas as well as
West.

Hip-hop is rock 'n' roll to a lot of people around the world, right now,
said Jones, explaining the absence of the modern-day equivalents of original
performers Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan or Paul Simon.

Lil Wayne, for one, noted that he was not a singer, and thought organizers
were joking when they asked him to sing the line originally sung by Dylan.
Asked if he did a better job, Lil Wayne said, Hell no!

Country and Latino artists were notably under-represented. Organizers said
they were turned down for various reasons by some stars. In fact, most of
the big Grammy winners from the night before were absent, including Beyonce
and Jay-Z, who returned to New York, and Taylor Swift, who flew to Australia
straight after the ceremony.

Randy Phillips, one of the organizers, said his one regret was the absence
of dance-pop star Lady Gaga.

The song, which was still being worked on into the small hours of Tuesday,
will make its world premiere during NBC's coverage of the Vancouver Winter
Olympics on February 12.

Both the song and an accompanying video, shot by Oscar-winning Crash
director Paul Haggis, will go on sale both through traditional and online
retailers.

Phillips said all proceeds will go to a newly established foundation that
will carefully monitor disbursement.

The January 12 earthquake killed up to 200,000 people in Haiti and
devastated the already impoverished nation.


http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE6111GG20100202?sp=true


Re: [arr] Stars remake We are the World for Haiti victims

2010-02-02 Thread manisha madhavan
Small clip of shoot:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jOuJ4tJ4mts





From: Gopal Srinivasan catchg...@gmail.com
To: arrahmanfans arrahmanfans@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tue, February 2, 2010 3:57:49 AM
Subject: [arr] Stars remake We are the World for Haiti victims

  
Stars remake We are the World for Haiti victims
Tue Feb 2, 2010 8:43am GMT
Email | Print |  
Share | Single Page
[-] Text [+]
 
1 of 2Full Size
By Dean Goodman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Star-struck singers, rappers and actors, including 
Barbra Streisand, Kanye West and Miley Cyrus, checked their egos at the door on 
Monday to record a new version of We are the World for Haiti earthquake 
victims, 25 years after the song raised awareness of the famine in Africa.
None of the singers of the original song were invited to participate in the 
update, which was recorded at the same Hollywood studio once again under the 
oversight of Quincy Jones and the song's co-writer Lionel Richie.
In all, more than 70 stars lent their voices to the song, and they all seemed 
in awe of each other.
As celebrities, we're fans of one another, so we're all looky-looing in there, 
and getting autographs and numbers, said Natalie Cole.
Streisand, Celine Dion and Tony Bennett appeared to inspire the most stares. 
Fifteen-year- old Canadian heartthrob Justin Bieber joked that he would ask his 
new friend, RB singer Akon, to get the telephone number of Nicole Scherzinger 
of the Pussycat Dolls.
Streisand, a noted perfectionist, ran through multiple takes of the line 
originally sung by Diana Ross, each one seemingly better than the previous one. 
Jazz singer Patti Austin came into her recording booth to coach her.
Guitar virtuoso Carlos Santana sang along, even though he is not a singer. Two 
members of the Beach Boys, Brian Wilson and Al Jardine, appeared to ignore each 
other.
'INSPIRED CHAOS'
Classical crossover tenor Josh Groban described the event as inspired chaos.
It's great to see so many legendary artists sweating it out. Everybody left 
their ego at the door, he said, referring to a request made by Jones at the 
original session in 1985.
To be smack-dab in the middle of a sandwich between Barbra Streisand and Weezy 
(rapper Lil Wayne) was personally a creative experience I don't think I'll ever 
have the pleasure of having again, Groban added.
For his part, Lil Wayne said his mother asked him to get a photo of Gladys 
Knight.
He was among a heavy quotient of hip-hop stars, including Snoop Dogg, Lil 
Wayne, Drake, LL Cool J, and will.i.am of the Black Eyed Peas as well as West.
Hip-hop is rock 'n' roll to a lot of people around the world, right now, said 
Jones, explaining the absence of the modern-day equivalents of original 
performers Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan or Paul Simon.
Lil Wayne, for one, noted that he was not a singer, and thought organizers were 
joking when they asked him to sing the line originally sung by Dylan. Asked if 
he did a better job, Lil Wayne said, Hell no!
Country and Latino artists were notably under-represented. Organizers said they 
were turned down for various reasons by some stars. In fact, most of the big 
Grammy winners from the night before were absent, including Beyonce and Jay-Z, 
who returned to New York, and Taylor Swift, who flew to Australia straight 
after the ceremony.
Randy Phillips, one of the organizers, said his one regret was the absence of 
dance-pop star Lady Gaga.
The song, which was still being worked on into the small hours of Tuesday, will 
make its world premiere during NBC's coverage of the Vancouver Winter Olympics 
on February 12.
Both the song and an accompanying video, shot by Oscar-winning Crash director 
Paul Haggis, will go on sale both through traditional and online retailers.
Phillips said all proceeds will go to a newly established foundation that will 
carefully monitor disbursement.
The January 12 earthquake killed up to 200,000 people in Haiti and devastated 
the already impoverished nation.

http://uk.reuters. com/article/ idUKTRE6111GG201 00202?sp= true



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