Saturday 14 November 2009

'falls down stairs' to Lily Allen


Lily Allen was reportedly nearly forced to withdraw from this week's Children In Need gig.
The singer fell down a flight of stairs and hurt her ankle just before she was due to go on stage, Yahoo reports.
However, Allen managed to limp her way through a performance of The Beatles's hit 'Hey Jude', with Paul McCartney, Robbie Williams and Take That.
Earlier this year, the star said that she thought she was paralysed following a fall in Scandinavia.

Wednesday 4 November 2009

Lily Allen is not a singer


Lily Allen is "more of a personality than she is a singer", Joss Stone said this week, dismissing Allen's polemic against filesharing. "(Lily) needs to sell records because she's not a singer, and that's not an offence to her because I think that she knows that too," Stone told the Press Association.
Whereas Stone is "making real music (and) people (will) come to the show" for "artist[s] like Lily ... it's about the track, their personality and their celebrity".
All this is a response to Allen's increasingly militant stance against illegal filesharers. "Filesharing is a disaster," Allen wrote on her blog, "as it's making it harder and harder for new acts to emerge".
"She's not going to win [the] fight [over downloads]," Stone said. "None of us will win that fight. So let's just accept it and see it as something that can be beautiful and might change music for the better. It might sort the weeds from the flowers."
Stone's unconventional career path has informed her perspective on music – and its loudmouths. Discovered on the BBC's Star for a Night, she became a major label star and then went rogue. During a disagreement over her fourth album, Stone pleaded with EMI to be released from her contract, and while the row has since been resolved (and the album released), Stone still complains that she has to "ask ... for approval on every single section of everything that [I] do".
For Stone, musicians shouldn't seek to amass as big a fortune as possible – but simply support themselves. "Who said that musicians have to be millionaires?" she asked. "Who made this a rule? We don't need that much money. We only need enough to make music, eat and go on tour."