Bob Dylan has put together a compilation album featuring songs he has played on his satellite radio show. The album 'Theme Time Radio Hour with your host Bob Dylan' features a diverse range of tastes from the classic country of Grandpa Jones to the alt-rock sound of The White Stripes.
Universal Music has hit back at a group of artists including COUNT BASIE and BENNY GOODMAN who are suing the company over royalties payments - calling the lawsuit
ONE EVENT. Two stories. Which one will prevail at the moment of truth. According to the Associated Press, the divorce hearing between Sir Paul McCartney and Heather Mills will head into a second week, after Justice Hugh Bennett allotted extra time for the couple's court case.
The estates of some of American music's biggest names, including Count Basie , Benny Goodman and Sarah Vaughan , have sued Universal Music Group Inc. for more than $6 million, claiming the company has been cheating them out of royalties for years.
More than a dozen recording artists have sued Universal Music, saying they had been cheated out of more than $6 million ($A6.6m) in royalties since 1998.
More than a dozen recording artists, including the estates of Count Basie and Benny Goodman, sued Universal Music on Friday, saying they had been cheated out of more than $6 million ($A6.6 million) in royalties since 1998.
The estates of some of American music's biggest names, including Count Basie, Benny Goodman and Sarah Vaughan, have sued Universal Music Group Inc. for more than $6 million, claiming the company has been cheating them out of royalties for years. The lawsuit, which was also filed on behalf of some living artists, claims the company withheld record royalties, engaged in lucrative self-serving
It may be no coincidence that Sheryl Crow unleashed her sixth studio album on Super Tuesday. Politically, "Detours" takes left turns that will surprise no one who is aware of her activism.
To judge from the wonder that greeted last year's theatrical release of "Killer of Sheep" after 30 years of relative obscurity, one might have thought that Charles Burnett had been moldering in an attic somewhere since his exceptional 1977 debut feature. A very modest retrospective opening tonight at Anthology Film Archives fills in a few of the blanks with a pair of the director's television