The Friday Five

This week, it’s all about money.
Well, every week, the music business is somehow about money, but this week it’s even more obvious.
Which heavy metal icon is pimping a band-branded wine?
Where in the world is heavy metal getting a little more love?
What infamous producer is set to make a tonne of cash while sitting behind bars?
Get your answers now in this week’s Friday Five.
Spector’s millions
Despite the fact he’s currently serving a 19 years-to-life sentence for second-degree murder, infamous music producer Phil Spector is set to make a whole lot of money.
The 71-year-old’s 1960s-based back catalogue is set to be reissued by Sony Music next month, according to Canoe.ca. The reissues will include a seven-disc box set, four greatest hits collections and a Christmas album.
Spector is expected to earn hundreds of thousands in royalties from the reissues, regardless of the fact that he’s currently imprisoned for the 2003 murder of actress Lana Clarkson, for which he was convicted in 2009.
It’s money for an appeal.
Or more likely, new prison wigs.
Courtney Love fills a hole
Grunge rocker Courtney Love wants to set the record straight.
The 47-year-old former wife of Grunge god Kurt Cobain recently signed a deal with William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, to write a memoir for Fall 2012.
According to RollingStone.com, the book is expected to detail Love’s life with Cobain, her time as an actress and musician, and her strained relationship with daughter Frances Bean Cobain.
It’s money for another lawsuit.
Or a new habit.
Junos get more metal
Canadian headbangers learned of one more reason to cry, “Rock on!” this past Wednesday.
That’s when the Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences announced the addition of the hard rock/heavy metal category to next year’s Juno Awards, to be held on April 1st.
Submissions for next year’s Juno Awards open on Saturday October 1st, according to CTV.ca.
Chances are, the band that wins won’t be considered metal by 90% of the headbanger community.
Still, more recognition & more press means more money for more metal. That’s not a bad thing.
Still on the dark side
Following this week’s release of the Pink Floyd Dark Side of the Moon Immersion box set, a new article from Rolling Stone Magazine sheds light on the fact that things still aren’t rosy between the band’s former members.
Guitarist David Gilmour claims that he hasn’t heard a word from former bandmate Roger Waters since his appearance at London’s O2 Arena in May, to perform “Comfortably Numb” as part of Waters’ performance of The Wall live.
Rogers Waters himself reminisced about the criticisms he faced from Gilmour, drummer Nick Mason and keyboardist Rick Wright during the recording of 1973′s The Dark Side of the Moon.
“(They) were at great pains to point out how I couldn’t sing and how I was tone-deaf,” said Waters. “And there’s this bollocks that Rick had to tune my bass. And you only have to look at the body of work to realize that this is not the case. Maybe their way of keeping me from being totally overwhelming was to point out that I might have vocal and instrumental inadequacies.”
At least they’ve each got their millions to comfort them.
What about a Motörhead merlot?
Following in the footsteps of bands like AC/DC and KISS, heavy metal mainstays Motörhead are releasing their very own brand of wine.
Motörhead Shiraz launched last year in Scandinavia and sold 130 thousand bottles, according to Revolver Magazine.
Produced in Australia and endorsed by frontman Lemmy Kilmister, Motörhead Shiraz is also available in Germany and the United Kingdom, and resellers are being sought for the North American market.
“My advice is—approach it with caution,” said the 65-year-old metal icon. “I mean, wine is deceptive, anything can happen.”
If this endorsement from Lemmy surprises, this little ditty should clear up any misconception about Kilmister’s priorities.
The Friday Five appears on the same day every week here at JasonWard.ca. Guess which day!

October? Already?!?

Any band releasing a movie about itself to celebrate its twentieth anniversary would, by most sensible people, be deemed pretentious and self-indulgent.
Another day, another update.







