Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Kanye West leads Grammy nominations, ahead of Adele

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Pippa Middleton, Kardashians among "most fascinating" of 2011

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

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Tim McGraw released from record label

NASHVILLE | Wed Nov 30, 2011 8:14pm EST

NASHVILLE (Reuters) - A judge on Wednesday ruled that country singer Tim McGraw can now sign with a new record label or record for his own company, releasing him from his longtime distributor Curb Records following a court battle.

Davidson County Chancery Court Chancellor Russell Perkins ruled in favor of McGraw in a legal tussle over the unreleased album "Emotional Traffic" that the singer completed but which the record label believed was not ready for release.

The Grammy winning singer, whose hits include "Live Like You Were Dying," "Southern Voices" and "Something Like That," signed with Curb Records in the early 1990s and has never recorded for another label.

The label filed a breach of contract suit in Davidson County, Tennessee in May, claiming McGraw violated his contract by turning in the new album too soon after his previous greatest hits album was released. The record label claimed the material wasn't topical or new, and said few singles were good enough to air on radio.

Curb asked for another record, meaning McGraw would owe them an additional album beyond "Emotional Traffic."

McGraw countersued, asking for advance payment for the album, reimbursement of some recording expenses, unspecified damages and a jury trial. McGraw also asked that "Emotional Traffic" be declared his final album for Curb.

It was not clear whether the album would ever be released.

Wednesday's ruling means McGraw can now move forward with his recording career, and another hearing was set for July 2012 on the damages portion of the lawsuit.

Ironically, Curb released a new McGraw single on Wednesday from "Emotional Traffic" called "Better Than I Used To Be," saying it is the first new music from the singer in 11 months.

McGraw's prior single, "Felt Good On My Lips," was a three-week No. 1 hit, and originally turned in as part of the "Emotional Traffic" album. The song, however, was released as part of a "Number One Hits" package.

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



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Sundance unveils key films for 2012 festival

LOS ANGELES | Wed Nov 30, 2011 5:37pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The Sundance Film festival, the top U.S. gathering for independent cinema, on Wednesday unveiled its competitive lineup for 2012, some of which will become the most talked-about movies of the upcoming year.

The 58 movies, both narrative features and documentaries, cover a range of topics, but festival organizers said at least one theme emerged among the 16 U.S. features in competition: characters are searching for deeper meaning to their lives in an often confusing and troubling world.

"(Filmmakers) seem to be questioning the idea of marriage and family, the whole notion of what family is. I found that a lot -- questioning ideas of the American Dream," festival director John Cooper told Reuters.

Overall, 4,042 features films from around the world were submitted for the festival that is backed by Robert Redford's Sundance Institute for filmmaking and is the premiere U.S. event for movies made outside Hollywood's major studios.

Each year, many movies that screen at Sundance will become the darlings of critics in art houses, and some will compete for honors in Hollywood's awards season. Big successes from previous Sundance festival's include comedy "Little Miss Sunshine" and documentary "An Inconvenient Truth."

Cooper said weak economies around the world have challenged filmmakers to search wider and dig deeper for funding to make movies, and that fact has led to more creative thinking and greater focus in the stories heading to silver screens.

"In times of economic crisis, art tends to thrive. I'm not sure why that is, but it seems it just happens," he said. "A creative bar is set by each year as filmmakers see the films that are successful commercially and with critics, and filmmakers are aware they have to be a little bit better."

DAY ONE, AND BEYOND

The upcoming 2012 Sundance kicks off on January 19 with a series of "Day One" screenings comprised of one feature and one documentary from each of the U.S. films and world cinema sections -- movies made outside the United States.

The U.S. first day feature is director Todd Louiso's "Hello I Must Be Going," which tells of a 35-year-old woman who moves back into the home of her parents. The Day One U.S. documentary is "The Queen of Versailles," which tells of a wealthy couple building the biggest house in America -- 90,000 square feet -- until it is foreclosed upon.

Other feature film titles in the U.S. competition include "The End of Love," which looks at one young father whose life unravels at the death of his wife, and "Middle of Nowhere" about a woman who struggles to maintain her marriage and sense of self after her husband lands in jail.

U.S. documentaries include "Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry" about the Chinese artist and political activist and "ME at the ZOO," which tells of video blogger Chris Crocker.

The feature films in the world cinema competition are a wide-ranging bunch that include the title "L," a Greek movie about a man who lives in his car and is troubled by motorcycle riders, and "The Last Elvis" ("El Ultimo Elvis"), which tells of an Elvis impersonator in Buenos Aires.

Cooper said many of world cinema documentaries take on big topics, especially among documentaries where titles include "1/2 Revolution" about this year's overthrow of the Egyptian government, and "China Heavyweight" which uses boxing to look at changing lifestyles in that fast-growing country.

They are "saying here's solutions and telling us what we can do," said Cooper. "I think that's the optimistic part. There are a lot of calls to action, which is exciting."

The competition movies earn much of the attention at Sundance, but there are sections for world premieres that will include major stars, as well as ultra low-budget movies, short films and other movies whose selection will be named in coming days.

Overall, this year's festival will feature 110 movies from 31 countries and 46 first-time filmmakers. The festival begins on January 19, 2012 and runs through January 29.

(Editing by Jill Serjeant)



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Hospitalized George Michael "improving"

LONDON | Wed Nov 30, 2011 7:17am EST

LONDON (Reuters) - British singer George Michael's health is improving, doctors treating him in Vienna for pneumonia said in a statement Wednesday.

The 48-year-old former Wham! frontman was Hospitalized in the Austrian capital and diagnosed with severe pneumonia, forcing him to cancel the remainder of his European tour.

"The latest development in Mr. Michael's case -- which has evolved from a severe pneumococcal infection -- necessitated intensive care due to its severity and extension," said professors Gottfried Locker and Christoph Zielinski.

"We are happy to announce that Mr. Michael is improving steadily with an impressive regression of pneumonic symptoms and follows a steady rate of improvement as hoped.

"As we said previously, complete rest and peace and quiet are mandatory."

The doctors also appeared to address speculation in the British tabloid press that Michael was suffering further, potentially serious health complications and that he was receiving state-of-the-art treatment during his stay at the Vienna General Hospital.

"There are no other health issues with regards to the patient other than the underlying pneumonic disorder, and no further measures had to be taken," they said.

"Michael is receiving precisely the same treatment as any ordinary patient in Austria would receive at the hospital for this disease."

The Grammy award-winning singer found fame in the 1980s with Wham! before going on to pursue a successful solo career. He has sold an estimated 100 million records and has a personal fortune estimated at 90 million pounds ($140 million).

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)



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