Adele, David Bowie and Take That are among the artists who have contributed live performances to a new charity DVD.
Other famous performances on the disc come from Queen, Spice Girls, Radiohead and Muse. All profits from the release will be donated to Save the Children.
1. David Bowie - 'Ziggy Stardust' live at Hammersmith Odeon, 1973
2. The Who - 'Won't Get Fooled Again' live at Shepperton Studios, 1978
3. Queen - 'Radio Gaga' live at Wembley Stadium, 1986
4. Orbital - 'Chime' live at Glastonbury Festival, 1994
5. Pulp - 'Common People' live at Glastonbury Festival, 1995
6. Spice Girls - 'Wannabe'/'Who Do You Think You Are?' live at BRIT Awards, 1997
7. Radiohead - 'Karma Police' live at Glastonbury Festival, 1997
8. Robbie Williams - 'Let Me Entertain You' live at Knebworth, 2003
9. Muse - 'Knights Of Cydonia' live at Wembley Stadium, 2007
10. George Michael - 'Faith' live at Earls Court, 2008
11. Blur - 'Tender' live at Glastonbury Festival, 2009
12. Adele - 'Someone Like You' live at BRIT Awards, 2011
13. Coldplay - 'Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall' live at Glastonbury Festival, 2011
14. Take That - 'The Flood' live at City of Manchester Stadium, 2011
Bonus track: Amy Winehouse 'Back to Black' live at iTunes Festival, 2007 (available on iTunes download only)
She has to go to the BMA and perform there.
Also I REALLY hope she will perform in the AI finale. Which is five days after the BMA, which means high sales one more time
Please let it happen.
(Reuters) - Record label XL was the big winner at the Music Week Awards late on Thursday, picking up four prizes mainly for its work on Adele's chart-topping "21".
At a ceremony in central London, music business publication Music Week honored XL Recordings with the A & R Award, the artist marketing campaign prize for 21 and the best record company award.
Richard Russell, XL Recordings boss, also picked up the outstanding contribution prize, while Adele turned up to present her manager Jonathan Dickins with his manager of the year award.
XL, which is independent but dubbed a "mini-major" by the music trade after it's huge success with Adele and other acts, began in 1989 as a specialist rave label.
The big breakthrough came in 1997 with The Prodigy's hit album "The Fat of the Land", which reached number one in 26 countries including the United States.
The label branched out to other genres, signing artists like Dizzee Rascal, The White Stripes and, crucially, Adele.
The British singer's second album "21" has sold more than 20 million copies worldwide, earned her a raft of major music awards and turned her into one of the biggest names in pop.
Among the other winners on the night was BBC's Radio 6 program, which picked up the radio station and radio show awards, the latter going to DJ Steve Lamacq.
Following is a list of the main Music Week Awards:
- Live Music Venue: 02 Shepherd's Bush Empire
- A&R Award: XL Recordings
- Manager Of The Year: Jonathan Dickins, September Management
- Publisher of the Year - Singles: EMI Music Publishing
- Publisher of the Year - Albums: Universal Music Publishing
- Independent Publisher: Kobalt
- High Street Retail Brand: HMV
- Online Retail Brand: iTunes
- Independent Retailer: Sound it Out Records
- Non-Retail Digital Music Service: Spotify
- Radio Station: 6Music
- Radio Show: Steve Lamacq, 6Music
- TV Show Featuring Music: Later ... with Jools Holland
- Promotions Team: Atlantic
- Sales Team: PIAS
- Distribution Team: Proper Distribution
- Catalogue Marketing Campaign: Rhino for The Smiths Complete
- Artist Marketing Campaign: XL Recordings for 21 by Adele
People in North-America and Europe are getting sick of Adele's songs, well at least those who listen to radio, but they don't hate Adele anyway. South-America and Asia, Australia & Oceania are still growing markets for her.
Well, my point is, that Adele's next album shouldn't sound anything like these first two. It should be fresh, cross-genre, happy and it should still keep her elder audience somehow connected.
We all know, that Adele will sell a lot with "her name". People will buy it, because it's made by Adele, and that's what all modern pop stars use all the time. (Quantity over quality.) It doesn't matter how long it takes to do that new album, as long as it sounds nothing like what we've heard so far!
People in North-America and Europe are getting sick of Adele's songs, well at least those who listen to radio, but they don't hate Adele anyway. South-America and Asia, Australia & Oceania are still growing markets for her.
Well, my point is, that Adele's next album shouldn't sound anything like these first two. It should be fresh, cross-genre, happy and it should still keep her elder audience somehow connected.
We all know, that Adele will a lot with "her name". People will buy it, because it's made by Adele, and that's what all modern pop stars use all the time. (Quantity over quality.) It doesn't matter how long it takes to do that new album, as long as it sounds nothing like what we've heard so far!
We don't know if people will accept a new sound from Adele. But I have ideas of what I want her next album to sound like...
People in North-America and Europe are getting sick of Adele's songs, well at least those who listen to radio, but they don't hate Adele anyway. South-America and Asia, Australia & Oceania are still growing markets for her.
Well, my point is, that Adele's next album shouldn't sound anything like these first two. It should be fresh, cross-genre, happy and it should still keep her elder audience somehow connected.
We all know, that Adele will sell a lot with "her name". People will buy it, because it's made by Adele, and that's what all modern pop stars use all the time. (Quantity over quality.) It doesn't matter how long it takes to do that new album, as long as it sounds nothing like what we've heard so far!
I know this would disappoint many of her fans but I honestly think she should wait a good few years (maybe until 2015) before releasing another album. 21 has been so huge that she really needs this era to die down completely and have a few years' gap so that people are feverishly anticipating a new release from her, rather than thinking 'oh God we've just finished with Adele's last album/songs and now more are coming out'.
Like MJ waited almost 5 yrs after Thriller to release Bad. (And yes I comparing 21 with Thriller)
Michael Ashton @michaelashton
feeling very relaxed after my @DecleorUK bubble bath Kit packed / Lashes & Liner - Locked & Loaded for filming with Dusty tomorrow !!
Michael Ashton @michaelashton
feeling very relaxed after my @DecleorUK bubble bath Kit packed / Lashes & Liner - Locked & Loaded for filming with Dusty tomorrow !!
Michael Ashton @michaelashton
feeling very relaxed after my @DecleorUK bubble bath Kit packed / Lashes & Liner - Locked & Loaded for filming with Dusty tomorrow !!
I don't get it. Does this have anything to do with Adele?
I'm under the presumption that he's talking about Adele hopefully. If he's talking about filming something tomorrow I would hope it has something to do with her.