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News
Headlines
July/August 2003
Page 1
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Two Members Of Backstreet Boys In Car Accident
back up
Source: MTV
From July 2003
By: Jennifer Vineyard
Two members of the Backstreet Boys were involved in a three-vehicle accident Monday night in Lexington, Kentucky.
Upon leaving a charity golf tournament at the University of Kentucky, a car in which A.J. McLean and Brian Littrell were passengers was sideswiped by a car that had been struck by another car. According to Lexington police, who described the incident as a "very simple fender bender," the Toyota Camry driven by Littrell's mother, Jackie, and containing McLean, Littrell, Littrell's wife, Leighanne, and their son, Baylee, was stopped at a light on Leestown Road. As they proceeded into the intersection, the car beside them was struck by another vehicle attempting a left turn, causing their Camry to be hit as well.
Only minor injuries such as soreness were reported, and damage to all three vehicles was minor. The other vehicles had flat tires, while the Camry's front bumper suffered some damage, Sgt. Rick Curtis said, but not enough to set off air bags.
The charity tournament they had attended, "Golfing With Brian!," was the second annual fundraising event for Saint Joseph's Hospital and the Brian Littrell Healthy Heart Club for Kids.
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Nick Carter in
T.O. back
up
Source: Much Music
From July 2003
Nick Carter is currently in Toronto working on his second solo album with none other than ex-Motley Crew bad boy Tommy Lee. The boys had kept a low profile until this week when Nick Carter appeared on stage with Snow during Toronto's Canada Day concert at Downsview Park. The appearance has sparked rumours that the two are teaming up in the studio. According to a source they are currently "hanging out" and are working towards a collaboration.
As far as the Backstreet Boys go, the guys will regroup soon to begin work on their next album for Jive Records. Meanwhile, Howie Dorough plans to record a solo album and Kevin Richardson recently completed his Broadway run in the musical Chicago.
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Backstreet Boy aims to sell advice
back up
Source: The Cincinnati Enquirer
Music academy to open in Ky.
By: Joshua Hammann The Associated Press
From July 2003
LOUISVILLE - For Kevin Richardson, the road to pop superstardom had to start in Florida.
The Backstreet Boy left his native Kentucky as a teenager for a job at Walt Disney World before auditioning for an Orlando-based vocal group that would eventually become the Backstreet Boys.
Richardson, now 31, hopes aspiring singers, songwriters and producers won't have to leave Kentucky to break into the music industry.
Richardson, along with childhood friend and songwriter Keith McGuffey, are opening a music academy in downtown Louisville next month. Tentatively called The Music Workshop, the offices will be a catchall for those curious about a career in music.
"When me and Keith were growing up in central Kentucky there wasn't any real outlet for us. If we wanted to get information about the music industry, we had to travel to get any real solid input," Richardson said from his home in Los Angeles.
The workshop will offer classes for anyone wanting to tweak the knobs on a sound board, strum a guitar or even negotiate a sweet royalty rate. McGuffey is a certified Pro Tools instructor, Richardson said, and will teach classes on digital recording and production equipment.
Eventually, the workshop will include a full recording studio, giving students the opportunity to learn how to record an album and how to get the music in the right hands.
"You'll learn how to record a demo, how to shop a demo and who you need to get it to," Richardson said. An unsolicited tape, Richardson said, "90 percent of the time it just goes in the trash."
Also, McGuffey said, students can learn how to avoid bad management and lopsided contracts.
"When someone offers you a contract and they say, 'We're gonna make your dreams come true, all you have to do is sign this contract,' who's not going to sign it?" McGuffey said. "They don't realize until after they sold a few million albums that they don't have any money and they're still driving a beat-up Honda Civic."
McGuffey, also 31, speaks from experience. As the rapper Trey D, McGuffey toured with the Backstreet Boys and played around the country. But he says bad contracts kept him from cashing in on his success.
"We're trying to prevent people from becoming a Behind the Music," McGuffey said, referring to the VH1 series that documents the rise and fall - and sometimes rise again - of popular music acts.
The workshop will begin accepting students in September, McGuffey said.
Classes will run for a few hours a day for between four and 12 weeks and will cost $300 to $450 per session, Richardson said.
Although the classes will be open to every age group, the program focuses more on teenagers, with Richardson hoping to build dormitories for out-of-state students and, even farther down the road, get the courses accredited to count toward a college degree.
Richardson said the workshop will be for new talent rather than established artists, some of which have emerged from Kentucky in recent years.
Acts such as Tantric and Nappy Roots, who scored a hip-hop hit with "Awnaw," a funky ode to country living, have proven there is viable talent in Kentucky. R&B singer and writer Athena Cage, a Russellville native, has plans to open a recording studio in Bowling Green.
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Backstreet Boy brings music business to Louisville
back up
Source: WHAS11.COM
From July 2003
By: JOSHUA HAMMANN / Associated Press
For Kevin Richardson, the road to pop superstardom had to start in Florida.
The Backstreet Boy left his native Kentucky as a teenager for a job at Walt Disney World before auditioning for an Orlando-based vocal group that would eventually become the Backstreet Boys.
Richardson, now 31, hopes aspiring singers, songwriters and producers won't have to leave Kentucky to break into the music industry.
Richardson, along with childhood friend and songwriter Keith McGuffey, are opening a music academy in downtown Louisville next month. Tentatively called The Music Workshop, the offices will be a catchall for those curious about a career in music.
"When me and Keith were growing up in central Kentucky there wasn't any real outlet for us. If we wanted to get information about the music industry, we had to travel to get any real solid input," Richardson said from his home in Los Angeles.
The workshop will offer classes for anyone wanting to tweak the knobs on a sound board, strum a guitar or even negotiate a sweet royalty rate. McGuffey is a certified Pro Tools instructor, Richardson said, and will teach classes on digital recording and production equipment.
Eventually, the workshop will include a full recording studio, giving students the opportunity to learn how to record an album and how to get the music in the right hands.
"You'll learn how to record a demo, how to shop a demo and who you need to get it to," Richardson said. An unsolicited tape, Richardson said, "ninety percent of the time it just goes in the trash."
Also, McGuffey said, students will learn, hopefully, how to avoid the trappings of bad management and lopsided contracts.
"When someone offers you a contract and they say, 'We're gonna make your dreams come true, all you have to do is sign this contract,' who's not going to sign it," McGuffey said. "They don't realize until after they sold a few million albums that they don't have any money and they're still driving a beat-up Honda Civic."
McGuffey, also 31, speaks from experience. As the rapper Trey D, McGuffey toured with the Backstreet Boys and played around the country. But he says bad contracts kept him from cashing in on his success.
"We're trying to prevent people from becoming a 'Behind The Music,'" McGuffey said, referring to the VH-1 series that documents the rise and fall — and sometimes rise again — of popular music acts.
The workshop will begin accepting students in September, McGuffey said.
Classes will run for a few hours a day for between four and 12 weeks and will cost $300-$450 per session, Richardson said.
Although the classes will be open to every age group, the program focuses more on teenagers, with Richardson hoping to build dormitories for out-of-state students and, even further down the road, get the courses accredited to count toward a college degree.
Richardson said the workshop will be for new talent rather than established artists, some of which have emerged from Kentucky in recent years.
Acts such as Tantric and Nappy Roots, who scored a hip-hop hit with "Awnaw," a funky ode to country living, have proven there is viable talent in Kentucky. R&B singer and writer Athena Cage, a Russellville native, has plans to open a recording studio in Bowling Green.
"Louisville has a budding rock scene right now," Richardson said.
Richardson, who will play in the London production of the musical Chicago, plans to be in Louisville for the Aug. 1 grand opening, but will leave the day-to-day operations to McGuffey, a Danville native and Louisville resident.
Louisville may also be the headquarters for Richardson's record label, for which he has been scouting Kentucky talent for the past two years. Richardson is searching for a distributor for the still-unnamed label, but says the label and workshop will be separate.
"We don't think people should have to go to Nashville or L.A. to make connections in the music industry," he said.
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