LaFace/ZLG diva Ciara looks headed to the top of the album charts this week, with a number that appears to be over 300k, followed closely by Eminem’s Shady/Aftermath/ Interscope mixtape collection, Re-Ups, and Gwen Stefani’s The Sweet Escape in the 295k and 235-250k range, respectively.
On the film front, Mel Gibson’s Apocalypto bowed as the box office leader with $14.2 million, ahead of The Holiday, with $13.5 million, which was enough to unseat last week’s leader, the penguin cartoon Happy Feet, which racked up $12.7 million for a total of $137.7 million. The three-day box office total was down 22% from last year, when Chronicles of Narnia hit theatres, and now year-to-date is up a little over 5%.
L.A. Film Critics picked Clint Eastwood’s yet-to-open Letters From Iwo Jima as its top film, the companion movie to Flags of Our Fathers. The film, in Japanese with English subtitles, opens Dec. 20. It was also named the top movie by the National Board of Review. Eastwood finished second to United 93’s Peter Greengrass as Best Director. Sacha Baron Cohen as Borat shared the Best Acting nod from the
The L.A. Times’ Ann Powers taps Fall Out Boy, Incubus and My Chemical Romance as the three top performers at this weekend’s KROQ’s Almost Acoustic Christmas, with runners-up honors to 30 Seconds to Mars and AFI here.
Ex-Billboard editor Melinda Newman checks in with an L.A. Times piece on the dearth of female A&R executives here.
The L.A. Times checks in on local indie band Aviatic, who find more success on, surprise, the Internet, than they do getting a major label deal here.
The N.Y. Times’ Jon Pareles examines the phenomenon of user-generated content on YouTube and MySpace here.
The N.Y. Times profiles American Idol winner Taylor Hicks on the eve of his debut release here.
Surprise Grammy Best New Artist nominee Imogen Heap shares her current, rather esoteric, listening list with the N.Y. Times here.
The Times’ Jeff Leeds on how labels are increasingly turning to ringtones, digital downloads and other auxiliary sources of revenue in the face of plummeting CD sales here.
The Washington Post weighs in on the death of Tower Records here.
ON THIS
In 1960: Aretha Franklin performed live for the first time at
In 1963: The Beatles appeared on the
In 1964: Sam Cooke died after being shot to death at the Hacienda Motel in
In 1966: Beatles manager Brian Epstein tried to sign Little Richard after he promoted two of the wild rocker’s
In 1967: The Beatles partnership Apple Music signed its first act, Grapefruit.
In 1968: The Rolling Stones’ Rock ‘n’ Roll Circus taped for the second day with Eric Clapton, John Lennon, The Who and Jethro Tull.
In 1971: James Brown released his 32nd album, Revolution of the Mind: Live at the Apollo, Volume 3.
In 1972: James Brown was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct after a show in
In 1972: Genesis made their American live debut with a show at
In 1973: Footage of Jimmy Page climbing a mountain was shot behind his home on Loch Ness in
In 1976: At a Kiss concert in
In 1976: Bob Seger released his Top 10 album Night Moves.
In 1988: Days after the death of the great Roy Orbison, Don Henley, Tom Petty, and Graham Nash performed a concert in his honor at the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles.
In 1995: Folk critic Robert Shelton died in
In 2002: Moby was attacked by three men with a can of mace outside the Paradise Club in
In 2002: Guns N’ Roses comeback tour was cancelled.
In 2002: David Lee Roth sued Warner Bros. and his old band Van Halen because he said he was owed royalties after a 1996 renegotiation of their contract.
In 2003: The RIAA certified AC/DC's Back In Black as the world's second-best-selling album of all time, behind Michael Jackson's Thriller.
In 2003: The Cure played their smallest British gig in years at the
In 2004: Two people were killed and 11 were wounded in
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