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#brit awards 2002
lovekylie · 2 months
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KYLIE MINOGUE — ICONIC BRITS AWARD PERFORMANCES (2002 & 2024)
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i-should-be-so-lucky · 2 months
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Kylie Minogue performing at the Brit Awards , 2002
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kylieforeverandever · 2 months
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Kylie Minogue backstage during The 22nd BRIT Awards Show, Earls Court 2, London, UK, Wednesday 20 February 2002.
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y2k-2day · 25 days
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Kylie Minogue - Can’t Get You Out of My Head @ 2002 Brit Awards
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fulltimehabibti · 1 year
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when i was 11 and thought i would like be a superstar who would perform at the VMA's, i fully designed a stage production for a gag worthy performance and when i tell you......nobody has ever come close to my vision
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Shaggy - Hey Sexy Lady 2002
Lucky Day (2002) is the sixth studio album released by Jamaican-American singer Shaggy. It peaked at number 24 on the Billboard 200 and later reached Gold certification. Shaggy have scored hits with the previous singles "It Wasn't Me", "Boombastic", and "Angel". He has been nominated for seven Grammy Awards, winning twice for Best Reggae Album with Boombastic in 1996 and 44/876 with Sting in 2019, and has won the Brit Award for International Male Solo Artist in 2002. In 2007, he was awarded the Jamaican Order of Distinction with the rank of Commander. In 2022, he was awarded an honorary Doctor of Fine Arts degree from Brown University.
"Hey Sexy Lady" was released in November 2002 as the first single from Lucky Day. The song features Brian and Tony Gold and the song uses the Sexy Lady Explosion riddim with additional beats. As of August 2014, it was the 110th best-selling single of the 21st century in France, with 287,000 units sold.
"Hey Sexy Lady" received a total of 49,8% yes votes.
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tomhollandnet · 11 months
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Tom Holland declares his love for Brazilian football and talks about his meeting with Neymar: “We’ve been trying for a long time”
The British actor Tom Holland, widely known as the current Spider-Man in the MCU, didn’t need to read a single page of The Crowded Room script, which premieres next Friday on Apple TV+, to accept the project. Especially because there was nothing at all to read. Tom was enchanted just by the story he was told by the show creator, Akiva Goldsman, Academy award winner for A Beautiful Mind, in 2002.
“I was excited to be in the project even before there was a script because it was something I’d never done before. Akiva sold the idea in an incredible way,” says Tom. “No doubt it was the hardest job I ever had. There was nothing remotely similar to this show.
There’s not much to say about the thriller that captivated the young actor as much as his co-star, Amanda Seyfried. Anything could reveal important plot details, but we can say that Tom plays Danny, a young man involved in a shooting in Rockefeller Center, New York, in the summer of 1979. In prison, he crosses paths with investigator Rya, played by Amanda. [...]
“I shot this show before The Dropout was released. I was looking for a project that allowed me to interpret someone completely different,” says Amanda, who in the Star+ production interpreted the con artist Elizabeth Holmes.
Amanda and Tom had never worked together before. The American actress knew the blockbusters he had been in and his performance in Lip Sync Battle, in 2007: a cover of Umbrella by Rihanna.
“I’ve seen him in big productions, such as Uncharted, and I’d seen his Umbrella performance. I laughed so hard. I thought: ‘this kid is really talented’,” she recalls. “I thought it was really cool that he wanted to take this deep dive now.”
CONTROVERSIAL HAIR
For this show, Tom also had a job as producer. Although he had taken a similar position in last year’s Uncharted, he was even more present in the making of this new show.
“In Uncharted, I was part of the script writing process, looking for directors. But in The Crowded Room, I went deeper: I got involved with costume design, hair and makeup, I discussed which directors and cinematography director we wanted. It was a much more immersive experience,” says the young actor, who fought for the look his character has on the show. “Danny’s hair was my choice.The studio wanted me to keep the hairstyle I had at the time, but I cut [my hair] just the same. Apple ended up accepting that we’d made the right choice, but they were very, very hesitant at first.”
IN THE PIT WITH NEYMAR
Sporting a completely new look, the Brit went to the F1 Grand Prix in Monaco, on the 28th [of May], and drove Brazilian fans mad by taking a photo with Neymar at the event. When he heard the commotion it had caused on social media, he laughed and didn’t spare any compliments:
“I think the way you play football [in Brazil] is a form of art. I’m a big fan of Neymar. We’ve been trying to meet for a long time but any time we arranged anything, it ended up not happening,” Tom says. “The only time we didn’t plan to meet, we bumped into each other. It was good to finally meet him. I love Brazilian football.”
Loosely translated by tomhollandnet
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mrschwartz · 2 years
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Alex Turner on the Arctic Monkeys' musical evolution
By Mark Savage (published on October 22 2022)
Alex Turner is out of breath.
The Arctic Monkeys frontman has just blazed through a guitar solo on Body Paint - the swaggering, Bowie-esque centrepiece of their new album, The Car - on TV institution Later with Jools Holland.
"You've parched me out there," he pants. "Could someone get me a water?"
Unusually, the Arctics are the only band in the studio. For the first time in 15 years, the show is devoting an entire episode to a single act - an honour reserved for rock legends like REM, Radiohead, Metallica and Oasis.
Turner and his band-mates appreciate the enormity of the situation. They film additional takes and switch up their setlist to ensure the new music is conveyed with appropriate punch and panache.
"Gotta make this one count," says Turner as the recording runs into its second hour. "We'll do an acoustic one, and then Born To Run."
The promised Springsteen cover never materialises. Nor does the band's hellraising 2007 hit Brianstorm, despite guitarist Jamie Cook idly bashing out the riff between takes. But, with almost twice as much Monkey business as they'd bargained for, the audience leaves on a high.
"I enjoyed it a great deal," agrees Turner, on the phone to the BBC a couple of days later. "I'm a big fan of that show and I have been for a long time, even before we put the band together."
In fact, his highlight in the run-up to the show was getting access to the Later vaults, to pick a performance that influenced him for broadcast on the show.
"I kind of lost myself in the archive back there for a minute, Mark, to be honest with you," he says. "I found myself gravitating to performances from 2002 and going, 'Oh God, yeah, I remember seeing that and getting excited about it.'"
Of course, 2002 is the year the Arctic Monkeys formed in Sheffield, where all four members were pupils of Stocksbridge High School.
Turner and guitarist Jamie Cook had only received their first guitars a year earlier, as Christmas presents from their parents. The first song they wrote was called "Matt Dave Rock Song" - named for a singer who subsequently left the band, and which they subsequently described as "junk" and "total crap".
But they progressed at speed, developing a sharp, nervy sound full of searing riffs and witty, literate lyrics. By 2005, people were eagerly swapping bootlegs, demos and gossip on dedicated message boards.
When their first album, Whatever People I Say I Am, That's What I'm Not, arrived in 2006 it became the UK's fastest-selling debut of all time, just weeks after Turner's 20th birthday.
Arctic Monkeys were suddenly the most written-about, talked-about rock band of their generation.
They responded by closing ranks.
Back-slapping events like the Brit Awards were avoided, the band accepting prizes in mailed-in videos, dressed as characters from The Wizard of Oz. When they played Radio 1's Live Lounge, they subverted their "rock saviour" image by covering Katy B's On A Mission and Girls Aloud's Love Machine.
"I can't really remember the impetus behind that decision," reflects Turner, "but it was a lot of fun".
Musically, Arctic Monkeys went from strength to strength, particularly on the hard-hitting Humbug (2009) and the leather-jacketed rock of AM (2013).
They last graced the charts in 2018 with the space-jazz concept album Tranquillity Base Hotel & Casino, which explored themes of consumerism and politics through the concept of a luxury resort on the moon.
Turner composed its languid, meandering songs on piano, declaring the guitar "had lost its ability to give me ideas".
Critics were divided. Rolling Stone called the album "indulgent", but Q Magazine thought it was "strange and wonderful". Fans sent the album to number one, but it's the only Arctic Monkeys record not to be certified platinum.
Released on Friday, The Car is tighter and more immediate than its predecessor but it spins in the same sonic universe.
Opening track There'd Better Be A Mirror Ball is all woozy keyboards and staccato string stabs, while Jet Skis On The Moat sees Turner slip on his velvet jacket for a brooding lounge-pop ballad.
"I made a big deal about the piano on the last record," says the singer, "but when I look at it now, the shift in sound between that record and the one before [AM] is more to do with the fact that my writing process [changed] around that time".
In the Arctic Monkeys' first decade, he explains, he'd take a song "into a rehearsal room and work out how it goes with the band". That's gradually become more insular, with Turner building up songs in his home studio until he feels they're ready.
"So the piano had a part in it, but being able to record myself and write to those recordings is perhaps what got us into this mess."
That's not the only thing that's changed.
"I can vaguely remember times in the past where I've been struck with the inspiration and written something quite quickly, but it feels like that happens less these days," he says. "But I'm not worried if it takes a little bit longer."
In fact, some of the musical motifs on The Car percolated for three years before he "persuaded them to be a pop song".
Among them was the instrumental refrain of Big Ideas, a gorgeous electric piano melody that "felt like it had aspirations to be a movie theme".
"It hung around for ages, that melody, and I'd play it whenever I found myself sitting at a piano [until] one of the band asked, 'Is that one of yours?'
"And that's about as excited as they get," he jokes.
Their enthusiasm encouraged him to build the passage into a song that describes a songwriter's (favourite) worst nightmare.
"I had big ideas... the kind you'd rather not share over the phone," Turner sings. "But now the orchestra's got us all surrounded and I can't for the life of me remember how they go."
It's one of many lyrics that hint at instability and dislocation.
The music, meanwhile, reflects his emotional turbulence. The band often sound like they're fighting to be heard - bursting through an orchestral swell to gasp for air, only to be dragged under the surface again.
"There was much discussion and deliberation" about those "push and pull dynamics", Turner says.
Some tracks, like Sculptures, were recorded with several different arrangements, then reconstructed in the mix.
The track was born when guitarist Jamie Cook wired a Moog synthesizer up to a drum machine, creating an ominous, industrial sound. Then it "went on its own journey", evolving into a full-band recording, before the original idea reasserted itself.
On the finished version, "it's almost like there's a button for the band and you press it and they step in for a bar, then they disappear back and you're in that synthesizer place," Turner explains.
"That, of course, is not the kind of idea that I would have had before we started. That's something that revealed itself during the process.
"So I'm thrilled that you mentioned the dynamics because that's something we attempted to explore and get a handle on this time. And yeah, I think I think we did a better job in that respect, than we did last time around."
Back on stage in Alexandra Palace, Arctic Monkeys are still figuring out how to play the new material live, taking a couple of passes at the funky, sqawkbox riffs of I Ain't Quite Where I Think I Am before they're satisfied.
Without a string section, the songs become harder, more full-blooded - giving an idea of how they'll nestle up to Fluorescent Adolescent and RU Mine on tour.
And while some bands (cough, Radiohead, cough) abandon their old hits when they settle on a new sound, Turner has no such inclination.
"There's certain numbers from the early records that I should think we would continue to keep playing. And there are other numbers we haven't played for a while that we could imagine knocking the dust off. "
"Nothing has been ruled out," he concludes. "Although Love Machine might be a stretch."
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britneymyheart · 1 year
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Britney Spears no Grammy Awards de 2002 em um vestido vermelho e um penteado inspirado em Pretty Woman. Ela estava adiantada o suficiente em sua carreira para ter todos os olhos nela no show. 😍 Brit até compartilhou sobre isso no Instagram em um post de retrocesso. 27 de Fevereiro 2002.
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lvd3v · 1 year
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kylie minogue "can’t get you out of my head live (2002) brit awards
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lindsaywesker · 1 year
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Good morning! I hope you slept well and feel rested? Currently sitting at my desk, in my study, attired only in my blue towelling robe, enjoying my first cuppa of the day. Welcome to Too Much Information Tuesday.
Mastrophobia is a fear of boobs. (Go figure!)
Nicolas Cage was once stalked by a mime.
Brits send over 64 million pointless emails a day.
Wiz Khalifa spends about $10,000 on weed every month.
A female ‘cock block’ is called a ‘clam jam’.
The Musée du Louvre has its own dedicated fire brigade.
Average penis size has increased over the last 30 years.
The awards for excellence in obituary writing are called the Grimmys.
The Candy Crush app makes about $850,000 per day.
‘Baby Got Back’ by Six Mix-a-Lot has made over $100,000,000 since its release.
The inventor of the bra, Caresse Crosby, had a pet whippet called Clytoris.
‘Misspell’ is one of the most commonly misspelled words in the English language.
In 2007, Scotland spent £125,000 devising a new national slogan. The winning entry was: ‘Welcome to Scotland’.
Everyone has at least 50,000 thoughts a day but 95% of them are the same as the day before.
When a male honey bee climaxes during sex, his testicles explode and he dies.
In 2007, a woman from New Zealand was fired for using caps lock too often in work emails.
The Institute for the Future predicts that 85% of jobs which will exist in 2030 haven’t yet been invented.
On average, people who get out of bed by 7.00 a.m. perform better at work, tend to be happier, less stressed and thinner.
The traffic is so bad in Moscow that some wealthy residents have bought Ambulances to speed up their journeys.
In the late 19th century, you could buy heroin through the Sears department store catalogue.
In 2002, the average user spent 46 minutes on the Internet a day. In 2012, the average user spent four hours on the Internet every day.
The penis of the blue whale is known as a dork. Blue whales have an average penis length of 98 inches.
The world's poorest president is of the country of Uruguay because he donates 90% of his salary to charity.
In 1970, a woman in Arizona filed a lawsuit against God after a lightning bolt struck her home. She won the case by default after the defendant failed to turn up in court.
Shackleton’s Antarctic expedition found a stowaway onboard who was allowed to stay on condition he’d be the first to be eaten in an emergency.
A ‘verbal vampire’ is someone whose incessant, boring talk is so stultifying that it drains the life out of anyone who is forced to listen to them.
In 1674, the ‘Women’s Petition Against Coffee’ called for a ban on coffee, suggesting that it made men too talkative and rendered them “unfruitful” in the bedroom.
Limping was briefly fashionable in 18th century England. The Prince of Wales' wife, Alexandra of Denmark had a limp and other ladies imitated her. Shopkeepers sold pairs of shoes with one high and one low heel.
Perissology is the unnecessary use of rather more words than are necessary to get the meaning of the words across to the majority of people in a meaningful manner or way to make sure they really understand what you mean to make sure they don't misunderstand what you are saying.
In 1978, a woman in Prague decided to end her life after finding out her husband was cheating. She walked to the balcony of her apartment and jumped but she didn't hit the ground. She landed on and crushed her husband who was returning home. He died from the impact, she survived.
In 2017, a North Korean man decided he'd had enough and attempted to escape. After driving at speed into the border, he ran for his life. He was shot five times but reached South Korean soil and collapsed on the ground. Despite his injuries, he made a full recovery and lives happily in South Korea.
Okay, that’s enough information for one day. Have a tremendous and tumultuous Tuesday! I love you all.
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i-should-be-so-lucky · 9 months
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Kylie Minogue performing Can't Get Blue Monday Out Of My Head at the BRIT Awards on February 20th , 2002
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nonesuchrecords · 2 years
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The first-ever vinyl edition of Philip Glass's award-winning soundtrack to The Hours is out now! You can get here.
"Was there ever a more perfect film for Glass’s lyrical manner?” asked Gramophone. “Such a feeling of fragile beauty is a rare achievement.”
The release coincides with the 20th anniversary of the film and album and Glass’ 85th birthday concert season. Originally released in December 2002, Glass’s score to the Academy Award–winning film was itself nominated for an Academy Award, as well as a Golden Globe and a Grammy, and went on to win a BAFTA and a Classical BRIT. Based on Michael Cunningham’s 1999 Pulitzer Prize–winning novel, the film was directed by Stephen Daldry with a screenplay by David Hare and stars Meryl Streep, Julianne Moore, and Nicole Kidman.
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qnewslgbtiqa · 2 months
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Kylie: even a global icon enjoys a shoey
New Post has been published on https://qnews.com.au/kylie-even-a-global-icon-enjoys-a-shoey/
Kylie: even a global icon enjoys a shoey
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Kylie Minogue has won her fourth BRIT Award, crowned a Global Icon. The Aussie singer enjoyed a shoey in celebration. She also performed a medley of her hits to close the show.
Kylie has a shoey
Presenter Roman Kemp challenged the singer to partake in an Australian cultural tradition during the show.
“It would be amiss of me to not go with an Aussie tradition of a shoey, so will Kylie Minogue do a shoey with me at the Brits?”
She did.
@sbsnews_au Watch the moment Kylie Minogue does a ‘shoey’ at the Brit Awards. The Australian singer received the Brits’ global icon award, and marked the occasion by drinking beer out of her stiletto. Read more @sbsnews_au (link in bio) #kylieminogue #brits ♬ original sound – SBS News
Padam Padam anyone?
THE ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL KYLIE MINOGUE CLOSING THE BRIT AWARDS 2024 SHE IS AN ICON ❤️❤️❤️ #BRITs #BritAwards2024 #KylieMinogue pic.twitter.com/61uGS6kchH
— Lee Hood (@Mofoman360) March 2, 2024
That entrance paid tribute to Kylie’s iconic 2002 BRIT Award performance
kylie minogue coming on stage as an ejected CD from an oversized CD player at the 2002 brit awards is iconic pic.twitter.com/7DlpN62YxJ
— 2000s (@PopCulture2000s) March 2, 2024
All the Lovers
kylie minogue performs ‘all the lovers’ at the 2024 brit awards #BRITs pic.twitter.com/kjpkRVqF5a
— Minogue Updates (@MinogueUpdates) March 3, 2024
Global Icon Award
Kylie Minogue accepting her Global Icon Award at the 💥⭐💫♨️ #BritAwards2024.#BritAwards #awardshow pic.twitter.com/cSz9HSYGoM
— Ɗɑɳisɦ (@highfromhighsea) March 3, 2024
Accepting the Global Icon Award, Kylie thanked everyone who was part of her journey.
“There’s a part of me that’s still the 14-year-old girl dreaming in her room of making music and being in this industry.
“Here I am with this and everything’s possible, so thank you to each and every person who has been a part of my journey.”
Kylie Minogue jumps for joy after she wins a Grammy Award.
Kylie Minogue predicted to chart in the Triple J Hottest 100.
2024 Grammys: are you Team Kylie or Team Troye?
For the latest LGBTIQA+ Sister Girl and Brother Boy news, entertainment, community stories in Australia, visit qnews.com.au. Check out our latest magazines or find us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.
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eseemeese · 2 months
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Kylie Minogue - Can't Get You Out of My Head (Live Brit Awards 2002) HD
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spacemen2001 · 3 months
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Kylie Minogue - Can't Get You Out of My Head (Live Brit Awards 2002) HD
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Kylie Minoque - Can't Get You Out my Head (Live BRIT Awards 2002)
#KylieMinogue
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