Tag: gaysocialites

The Borowski Spin / Who knocked Minaj out?

We’re being hit with new albums left and right! Among the soon-to-arrive are the long-awaited follow-up releases from Leona Lewis and Calvin Harris, and we have those two projects’ next singles below. We also go deep into 80s Realness with re-imaginings of songs by Thompson Twins, Duran Duran, Shannon, Nu Shooz and Wang Chung (of all things). When it rains it pours! Speaking of rain, taking one quick detour from Dance music – we also wax rhapsodically on a jazzy new album and collective out of Brooklyn that absolutely must be heard.

 

“Trouble” – Leona Lewis

Leona Lewis’ first single off her upcoming third studio album Glassheart, the deliciously ivory-tickling “Collide,” was a great kick-off for the new project – despite a brief legal snafu with Avicii over authorship. Now comes the follow-up, “Trouble,” which takes Lewis in yet another unexpected direction. Lewis has been said the song was inspired by Massive Attack, and it is indeed a haunting, gothic cut drenched in piano and strings. But forget similarities to Massive Attack, the song sounds almost exactly like “Heaven” by Emeli Sandé – who actually co-authored the new tune. Its trip-hop backbone gets underlined in the dance mixes that kick everything up a notch with some serious percussion. (The Wookie Remix actually improves on the original in intensity.) Two notable cameos: one version of “Trouble” features a brief, mid-song rap by American multi-hyphenate Childish Gambino (aka 30 Rock writer and Community star Derrick McKinley Glover), and Lewis’ hunky co-star in the video is Colton Haynes of Teen Wolf fame.

 

“Sweet Nothing” – Calvin Harris feat. Florence Welch

DJ/producers love their divas! Last week we wrote about David Guetta and Sia on their latest, “She Wolf.” This week we have a collaboration between Calvin Harris and Florence Welch of Florence & The Machine. Written by the pair, this will be the 5th single (!) from Harris’s forthcoming album 18 Months, dropping later this month. (For the record, “Sweet Nothing” follows the hits “Bounce,” “Feels So Close,” “Let’s Go” and the lesser “We’ll Be Coming Back.”) We love that this particular song is a more electronic detour for the Machine’s front-woman, while still a great showcase for her pipes that range from ethereal tones to pyrotechnical.

 

NEW New Romanticism

Just typing the name New Romanticism leaves us yearning for the days of early 80s British New Wave. The hair, the clothes, the synthesizers. As it happens, there are currently TWO new (though vastly different) takes on classic of the genre: songwriter/producer Nivek Tek’s remake of Thompson Twins “Hold Me Now” and DJ Steve Aoki’s reimagining of Duran Duran’s “Hungry Like The Wolf.” The former is a pretty faithful cover, re-setting the song as a high-octane dance explosion and featuring new vocals by Nivek. Of the many mixes, the Tom N Currie is the most faithful to the original, which is probably why it’s the most satisfying. The latter re-rub is Aoki’s complete deconstruction of the original “Wolf,” using Simon Le Bon’s vocals in a mind-bending, lower key. The now-plaintive verses are chased by a wild wall of sound that’s also punctuated by terrifying drums. The wolf itself is after us! We are obsessed. Our only quibble is we wish this version incorporated the original’s final call-and-answer between LeBon and the moaning girl. The video link below features a surprise appearance by D2 at Aoki’s last NYC concert.

http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/nivektek2

 

“Hurricane Season in Brooklyn” – Analog Players Society

Man does not live on EDM alone, and from time to time we enjoy pointing out music off the Dance radar that’s also somewhat off the beaten path. We do not say lightly that Hurricane Season in Brooklyn is instantly a serious contender for Best Album of 2012. Masterminded by producer/percussionist Amon, the group Analog Players Society is a collective of studio musicians in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Their sessions are a literal jam of drums, horns, piano and bass. Indeed, Hurricane Season comes at you like a hurricane itself, bursting with a wide-range of musical styles and flavors: Caribbean, Reggae, Jazz, Afrobeat, Funk, Soul. But always organic and never a gimmick. Think Vampire Weekend meets The Style Council. The center of the album scores a perfect trifecta of 3 unlikely 80s covers : Shannon’s “Let The Music Play,” Nu Shooz’s “I Can’t Wait” (featuring Cecilia Stalin’s terrific vocals) and Wang Chung’s “Dance Hall Days.” The entirely sassy project is the perfect soundtrack for both a rainy afternoon or a scintillating cocktail party, as if the 90s Lounge reissue trend has come to flesh-and-blood life. Hurricane Season in Brooklyn is an absolute must for any serious music fan.

 

BPM BITS: 

Dance diva Kristine W. is back. After having sent a whopping 16 of her previous 17 releases to the top of the Billboard Dance charts, she’s just released #18, “Everything That I Got.” Of the mixes to choose from, we love the stripped down version by Bimbo Jones that brings out the song’s inner Scissor Sisters…Whatever you think of Beyonce’s album 4 (and we were fans), the dance mixes for the entire project have been consistently top-notch – even exciting. She once again scores, this time with the mixes of “I Was Here,” especially the epic and evocatively named Strictlove Beach House Club MixKelly Rowland needs some direction. She gets perhaps too freaky/confessional on her lyrically direct, single-entendre “Ice.” In it, she improbably romances Li’l Wayne while he utters explicit groaners (including one line about putting a “pillow under her tummy”). The original slow groove emphasizes just makes everyone uncomfortable, though sped and spiced up in the Sugar House Mix it’s somehow less I your face…While a nice ode to friendship, Cher Lloyd’s “Oath,” her follow-up to “Want U Back,” is a sweet ode to friendship that doesn’t stray far from the sound of her debut single. It also sounds dangerously close to the verse melody of Pink’s “Please Don’t Leave Me”… Finally, snippets of Adele’s upcoming, eagerly-awaited title track from the equally-anticipated new Bond film Skyfall has leaked and the minute and half sounds like a doozy – classic atmospheric Bond torch ballad with John Barry’s iconic 4-note theme duly incorporated in a fantastically dramatic build. (We still think the Raconteurs mix of her “Many Shades of Black” would make a terrific and energetic Bond opening.)

Kristine W.

Beyonce

Kelly Rowland (original, mix not yet available online)

Cher Lloyd

Adele

http://soundcloud.com/rfmfrance/adele-skyfall-james-bond-rfm

[These links keep getting taken down, so listen while you can!]

 

NEWS: Summer’s over, which means my “GET YOUR MESS ON!” dance party returns to Saturdays, starting this Saturday, October 6! Boys, Booze, Tunes. It all goes down starting at 10PM at Pieces Bar (8 Christopher Street).

http://www.facebook.com/events/477028482318527/

 

After 2 weeks of pounding her alarm at the top of the Top 20 Countdown, Nicki Minaj slips back as Ne-Yo vaults over her to #1 with the fast-climbing “Let Me Love You.” In what’s suddenly become a contest between wild animals, Duran Duran (via Steve Aoki) makes a giant debut at #10, hot on the heels of Sia’s “She-Wolf” at #8. Beyonce wants you to know she was here, and leads this week’s debuts.

1) Let Me Love You (Pulse Remix) – Ne-Yo (5) (1 at 1*)

2) Triumphant (All Mixes) – Mariah Carey (2) (1 at 1*)

3) Pound The Alarm (Original & Liam Keegan Mixes) – Nicki Minaj (1) (2 at 1*)

4) I Can Only Imagine (Extended Mix) – David Guetta feat. Chris Brown & Lil Wayne (6)

5) Hello (Razor & Guido Mix) – Karmin (8)

6) Spectrum (Calvin Harris Remix) – Florence & The Machine (10)

7) Timebomb (Original Extended & Peter Rauhofer Mixes) – Kylie Minogue (9) (2 at 1)*

8) She Wolf (Falling To Pieces) (Extended Version) – David Guetta feat. Sia (11)

9) Hold Me Now (Tom N Currie Mix) – Nivek Tek (12)

http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/nivektek2

10) Hungry Like The Wolf (The New York Werewolf Mix) – Steve Aoki vs. Duran Duran (DEBUT)

12) Turn Up The Radio (All Mixes) – Madonna (7) (3 at 1)*

11) R.I.P. (Seamus Haji Mix) – Rita Ora feat. Tinie Tempah (3)

13) Trouble (Wookie Mix) – Leona Lewis (19)

14) Sweet Nothing – Calvin Harris feat. Florence Welch (17)

15) Wanna See U Dance (La La La) – Kat DeLuna (14)

16) I Cry – Flo Rida (16)

17) I Was Here (Strictlove Beach House Club Mix) – Beyonce (DEBUT)

18) Everything That I Got (Bimbo Jones Mix) – Kristine W (DEBUT)

19) Want You Back (Cahill Mixes) – Cher Lloyd (4)

20) Finally Found You – Enrique Iglesias feat. Sammy Adams (DEBUT)

*Indicates current/former #1

Things that make you go hmmm…How physically fit are our political leaders?

Question:  How physically fit are our political leaders?

Answer:  Well, we’ve all seen the cover of Men’s Health magazine last spring, which sported a picture of U.S. Representative Aaron Schock of Illinois in all his washboard glory.  Schock, who is on the cusp of his 30th birthday, is the youngest, and ostensibly fittest, member of the House of Representatives. He is also one of the dozen of so congressmen who make 6:30 AM daily treks to the House gym for weight training and sessions of P90X, a video series created by Tony Horton.

And who do you think runs these early morning workout sessions? None other than Paul Ryan, the Republican nominee for Vice President. According to TMZ, Ryan is “totally shredded” and would probably contest Men’s Health claim of Schock being “America’s Fittest Congressman.”

Fitness seems to be a truly bipartisan issue. First Lady Michelle Obama has spearheaded Let’s Move!, a comprehensive exercise and healthy eating initiative dedicated to solving the problem of obesity among American youth.

So everyone seems to be concerned about fitness and weight. Well, as a well-nourished woman packing a few extra pounds, I wanted to know if this has always been a political obsession.

There seems to be a long tradition of scrutinizing political bellies. In 1965, after Lyndon Johnson had his gallbladder removed, he faced rumors that the operation had really been to excise a cancerous tumor. During a press conference outside Bethesda Naval Hospital, he famously lifted his shirt to reveal the telltale jagged scar across his stomach. (TMI-wise, this was topped by the time Johnson showed his penis, which he’d nicknamed “Jumbo,” to a group of reporters.) More than 30 years later, Bill Clinton, dogged at the time by Paula Jones’ sexual-harassment lawsuit, was photographed in his swim trunks – his baby-boomer torso exposed in all its flabby ­glory – as he slow-danced with Hillary on a beach in the Virgin Islands.

But in Washington as on the ­Jersey shore, it’s the toned abs that tend to get the most attention. The Kennedys, ever attuned to optics, were known to flash midriff—think of the iconic pictures of the twentysomething John aboard PT-109 or bare-chested Bobby and Teddy playing touch football on the beach. A buff Reagan, running for governor of California, had himself photographed in his pool. In December 2008, as Barack Obama prepared to enter the White House, he was photographed sans top emerging from the Hawaii surf, prompting not US Weekly but the Washington Post to report: “The sun glinted off chiseled pectorals sculpted during four weight-lifting sessions each week, and a body toned by regular treadmill runs and basketball games.”

Yet not all politicians feel it necessary to be buff. As a matter of fact, a study at the University of Missouri found that male politicians should be thinking about supersizing, as people considered fatter men more reliable, honest and better able to cope with the pressures of public life. (Alas, the opposite was true for heavier women – there go my political aspirations!)

But in the case of someone like the obese Chris Christie, governor of New Jersey, hopes for moving up in the political world might be short-lived. Many feel that Christie’s common man physique won’t endear him to the common man, since the common man aspires to be thin. Yet should girth really matter in the voting booth?

Apparently, it wasn’t always that much of any issue. William Howard Taft, our 27th president, was known as “Big Lub” at Yale because of his size. He is remembered by some historians as being the fattest president and his weight problem led to many incidents including loud belches and chronic flatulence. One embarrassing episode involved Taft becoming stuck in a bath tub in the White House, where he had to call for his staff members to use butter to dislodge him from the tub.

So when you’re in the voting booth in November, would you rather opt for the rippling pecs or belly hanging over the belt. Or maybe you should actually find out what these pols believe in and vote based on the issues and not on the abs.

GaySocialites.com celebrates 7 years online

7 years at GaySocialites

Happy Birthday to you,
Happy Birthday to you.

Happy Birthday GaySocialites,
Happy Birthday to you!

Throughout the month of October, we celebrate the 7th Anniversary here at GaySocialites.com!   We’ve got a lot planned including the 7th Annual GaySocialites Awards, the 7 most significant moments in GaySocialites History and the launch of our newest product – the GaySocialites Broadcast Network.

It’s hard to believe that we’ve been doing this for almost seven years!   It’s also hard to believe we’ve used all those logos pictured above.

On October 24, 2005 we launched a website to cover nightlife news and events as an alternative to New York City’s fag rags, which at the time were HX and Next Magazines.   Little did we know what we were doing would one day be referred to as blogging.  (Back then, blogging was when you recapped your day or vented via an online journal like Xanga, LiveJournal or MySpace).

Before we knew it, we were covering a lot more than New York nightlife as we branched out to other cities and started covering entertainment news.  It wasn’t until 2010 that we adopted our current format as an online magazine with more than just gay news for gay men compared to our former blogging format that was pretty much my opinion with some help from a few others. In 2011, Thomas Bistritz joined our team as Editor-in-Chief and over the past year has taken us places that I never would have imagined.  Last year, we also welcomed the Australian-based queerplanet.net to the GaySocialites family expanding our coverage world wide.

Today, we boast three nominations for Best Writer in the 2012 Glam Awards (Editor-in-Chief Thomas Bistritz, Editor-at-Large Kevin Novinski and myself which I share with the other 20-something contributors who are hard at work to ensure that we’re providing coverage you can count on)!  We have a staff roster larger than many print publications, and we are continually improving to make your online experience a  better one.

We hope you’ll spend the month of October celebrating with us!  After all, GaySocialites.com is as much yours as it is ours.  If it weren’t for you, we certainly wouldn’t have made it as far as we have today!  The sky is the limit, so lets keep on keeping on and growing larger and larger and larger.

Thank you for being a part of GaySocialites.com.  We couldn’t ask for better company!

Happy Anniversary,

Charles Winters
CEO, founder and Editorial Director
GaySocialites Media

Midnight Mayhem with Joshua Mayhew and guest Reymundo Santiago

Is Hillary Duff allowed to gain weight within the scope of celebrity rules? Can a series of Sarah Michelle Gellar soundbites successfully place an order to Amazon.com in this week’s prank call segment? Midnight Mayhem answers all of these questions this week, welcoming guest and nightlife vocalist and performer Reymundo Santiago.

Click the logo below to join in on Mayhew’s madness:

Ke$ha claims she had sex with a ghost

Keha-Kesha

Pop star Ke$ha has claimed a lot of things in her music (remember brushing her teeth with a bottle of Jack?) but none has been so bizarre as her latest confession: having sex with a ghost. On Ryan Seacrest’s KIIS FM radio show, the “Tik Tok” singer shares that her new song “Supernatural” is all about that moment:

“It’s about experiences with the supernatural… but in a sexy way.  I had a couple of experiences with the supernatural. I don’t know his name! He was a ghost! I’m very open to it.”

A sample of the lyrics of the song seem to show that the encounter was pretty hot:

“When you take my body to the stars/ I believe it/ Boy, this love is supernatural/ Can you feel it?”

The Huffington Post also reported the 25-year-old added  her new album “Warrior” is based on her own spiritual journey she went on to improve her music.  She explained the following to Seacrest:

“The theme of this record is magic. I went on a spirit journey by myself. No security guard. No managers. I just went around the world and lived on a boat.  I was in Africa rehabilitating baby lions. I went diving with great white sharks, and just went on this crazy spirit quest. I got hypnotized, and I just really wanted this record to be really positive, really raw, really vulnerable and about the magic of life.”

This may turn out to be one of the most interesting albums of the year!

Do you believe what Ke$ha is talking about or do you think it is just a publicity stunt?  Let us know in the comments section below.

 

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