Hear two new versions of Metallica’s “Nothing Else Matters” from Disney’s ‘Jungle Cruise’ soundtrack

Walt Disney Pictures

Today, you can hear Metallica as you’ve never heard them before — twice — on the soundtrack of the new Disney movie, Jungle Cruise.

The band worked with noted composer James Newton Howard to reimagine “Nothing Else Matters” for the film.  Two different instrumental versions of the song appear on the soundtrack: one is a mostly sedate, acoustic guitar-and-strings version that runs for about a minute-and-a-half, and the other is a much more rocking version featuring strings plus the Metallica thunder.

In a statement, the band says, “It was an honor to work with renowned, legendary composer James Newton Howard as we reimagined the song by performing his arrangement and creating a rendition we like to think is fit for an excursion through the Amazon.”

They add, “Not only are we big fans of Disney, but we couldn’t pass up the opportunity to work with Howard, an eight-time Oscar nominee who has been recognized for films such as The Fugitive, Michael Clayton, and The Village.”

Set around World War I, Jungle Cruise, which is now in theaters and on Disney+ Premier Access, stars Emily Blunt as an adventurer who hires an Amazon riverboat captain, played by Dwayne Johnson, to take her and her brother in search of a magical plant that can cure all illnesses.

Of course, if you want to hear even more versions of “Nothing Else Matters,” there are 12 different ones on the upcoming The Metallica Blacklist album, performed by everyone from Miley Cyrus and Phoebe Bridgers to My Morning Jacket and country star Chris Stapleton.

Disney is the parent company of ABC News.

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David Archuleta releases new track, “Movin'”; announces first children’s book

Zack Knudsen

David Archuleta wants to get you “Movin’” with his brand-new single.

The American Idol alum released the track Friday, along with a special “After Hours” remix of the song.

“‘Movin’’ was a song I wanted to have fun with and challenge myself by literally Movin’ with some choreography,” David says in a statement. “I wanted just a touch of Latin feel even though it’s not necessarily Latin music.”

He adds that he asked his producer, Nate Dodge, to “spice up” the original mix of the song and he ended up liking the remixed version so much that he decided to release both.

David also announced rescheduled dates for his OK, All Right 2022 tour. The six-week North American trek kicks off in February.

Aside from music, David will be releasing his first children’s book on October 12, based on his song “My Little Prayer.” It’s available for pre-order now.

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Dan + Shay aren’t “Lying”: They’ve got more new music coming your way right now

Warner Music Nashville

Dan + Shay are continuing to roll out new music off their upcoming album, Good Things. The country duo dropped their new tune, “Lying,” this week, a bouncy, piano-driven heartbreak tune that puts lead singer Shay Mooney’s vocal prowess front and center. 

To go along with their new song, the pair dropped a music video that the two band mates meeting in the dive-y, Western-themed Cactus Club, nursing their broken hearts with tequila before they hop on stage to perform.

Speaking of hopping on stage, Dan + Shay are planning to celebrate the release of Good Things with a special show at The Great Lawn in Centennial Park in Nashville. It’ll be the first major concert event to happen there, and will take place August 13, the same day that Good Things comes out.

Good Things will be the band’s fourth album to date. It includes the chart-topping “I Should Probably Go to Bed,” as well as “10,000 Hours,” Dan + Shay’s hit duet with Justin Bieber. When they announced their new album earlier this month, they also shared its title track.

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Check out previously unreleased alternate take of George Harrison’s “Isn’t It a Pity”

Credit: Barry Feinstein

A previously unreleased alternate version of George Harrison‘s classic song “Isn’t It a Pity” that will appear on the upcoming deluxe reissue of the late Beatles legend’s landmark 1970 solo album, All Things Must Pass, is now available as an advance digital track.

Two versions of “Isn’t It a Pity” are featured on the original album, while the expanded reissue offers three additional renditions — a demo recording and two alternate takes.

The newly released “Take 27” version features a slower and simpler arrangement than the best-known version of of “Isn’t It a Pity,” which was issued as a double-sided single with “My Sweet Lord.”

An animated music video for “Isn’t It a Pity (Take 27)” has debuted at Harrison’s YouTube channel in conjunction with the track’s release. The melancholy clip brings surreal and evocative painted images to life, including a windmill, grandfather clocks, hot air balloons, and a man rowing a boat followed by an old sailing ship, all inside of a bottle.

As previously reported, the expanded 50th anniversary edition of All Things Must Pass will be released August 6 in multiple formats and configurations, including a Super Deluxe eight-LP or five-CD/Blu-ray-audio set.

The Super Deluxe reissue features a new mix of the original 23-track album, as well as 30 demos and various outtakes, alternate takes and studio jams. Forty-two of the tracks are previously unreleased.

The collection comes with a 60-page scrapbook curated by Harrison’s widow, Olivia, that features rare images and memorabilia, handwritten lyrics, diary entries and more. A replica of the original album poster also is included.

Released in November 1970, All Things Must Pass spent seven weeks at #1 on the Billboard 200.

Visit GeorgeHarrison.com for full details about the reissue.

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Willow Smith opens up on the challenges non-white women face in rock music

Courtesy of Red Table Talk

Willow Smith, who recently released her pop-punk album lately I feel EVERYTHING, says she wants to help create more space for women of color in rock music.

“I have seen it for so many years — just the hate that not even just Black women [experience] but people of different colors, that aren’t white, that want to come into rock music and into this space,” the 20-year-old told the BBC’s The YUNGBLUD Podcast. “I just hope that I can show young Black girls that… despite the fact that people are telling us ‘We shouldn’t listen to this music.  We shouldn’t dress this way.  We shouldn’t sing this way.’ — We do it and do it to the fullest!”

Agreeing that rock music embodies the spirit of rebellion and freedom, Willow continued, “Specifically what Black people had to experience in America — I can’t think of a better genre to scream and growl and be angry and express yourself than rock.”

“Back in the day, Sister Rosetta Tharpe was one of the first Black women to pick up the electric guitar and that was in, what, the 40s or the 50s,” Willow explained. “She was the grandmother of rock and roll and a lot of people don’t know about her!”

Noting of the many people of color who have contributed to rock over the decades — such as her mother, Jada Pinkett Smith, the former lead singer of the nu metal band Wicked Wisdom — Willow remarked, “We can’t leave those people out!”

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Lorde handles her hot sauce like a champ on latest episode of ‘Hot Ones’

Courtesy of First We Feast/Complex Networks

We already knew Lorde was an onion rings connoisseur, but now we know she also knows her way around some hot wings.

The singer appears on the latest episode of Hot Ones and conquers the increasingly spicy hot sauce lineup like a champ while answering questions from host Sean Evans. She talks about her upcoming album, Solar Power, her criteria for what makes a good onion ring, the coolest experience she’s ever had whale-watching in Antarctica, and more — all while barely breaking a sweat.

“I basically thought of the album as a sun worship album,” Lorde says of Solar Power in between bites of wing. “I’m not religious in any way, but my experiences in nature the last couple of years were as close to what I had experienced as religion, so it was like a sort of devotional record for me.”

She also discusses being unknowingly on-trend by including cicada sounds on the album.

“This year has Brood X, which is this big kind of boom of cicadas once you reached 17 years,” Lorde says. “The last time it happened was in 2004 when I guess JLo and Ben Affleck were together and now they’re back together, so people are like, Brood X is in the air, so I guess I am right on trend with my cicada moment.”

Solar Power drops August 20.

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Mötley Crüe releasing digital remaster of ‘Dr. Feelgood’ in September

Better Noise Music

This news will kickstart the heart of Mötley Crüe fans everywhere:  A digitally remastered version of the band’s classic album, Dr. Feelgood, is due out September 3.

The album, released in 1989, featured the hit title track, as well as “Kickstart My Heart,” “Same Ol’ Situation (S.O.S)” and “Don’t Go Away Mad (Just Go Away).” 

To date, Dr. Feelgood‘s sold more than six million copies worldwide, making it the Crüe’s best-selling release.

The new version, called a “refreshed sonic experience,” joins the previously released digital remasters of Girls, Girls, Girls and Theatre of Pain. All are part of the band’s year-long celebration of its 40th anniversary.

You can pre-order the remastered version now.

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Jay Pharoah and Sinqua Walls joke about their hostility toward Nick Cannon for his role in ‘Love Don’t Cost a Thing’

Courtesy of Netflix

In Netflix’s new romantic comedy Resort to Love, Jay Pharoah and Sinqua Walls play brothers who don’t seem to have that much in common besides their mutual interest in aspiring singer Erica, played by Christina Milian. The two actors, who admit they’ve been fanboys of Milian since her self-titled debut album in 2001, say they jumped at the opportunity to work with the talented star.

“Hesitant?! No, it was no hesitation,” Pharoah tells ABC Audio of working with Milian.

“It was ‘AM to PM,'” he quips, referencing Milian’s lead single from Christina Milian. “I said, ‘Yes, let’s do it.’ I ain’t even gonna lie, growing up I had a crush on Christina. So, I always wanted to show the chops there.”

Pharaoh recalls that he was also a bit jealous of Nick Cannon when Nick got to play Milian’s love interest in the 2003 teen comedy Love Don’t Cost a Thing.

“I was always looking at Nick Cannon like, ‘Meheh. One day, Nick. One day too I shall be in that position,'” he jokes, remembering Cannon in the film.

The same can be said of Walls, who says he also accepted the gig with “no hesitation.” 

“I was like, ‘Well, this is not a bad way to spend my summer,'” he laughs, before adding that he “too wanted to hit Nick Cannon in the kneecaps a couple of times.”

After some peels of laughter, Pharoah straightens up. “Salute to Nick Cannon,” he says. “It’s all love.”

“Shout to Nick,” Walls interjects. “I hope your kneecaps are all intact.”

Making note of Cannon’s recent family additions, Pharoah then adds, “I was about to say, if [his kneecaps aren’t] hurting by now — goddangit! All that running around at different houses he got to do.”

Resort to Love is available on Netflix.

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Madonna calls out DaBaby for controversial AIDS comments: “Know your facts”

Jason Koerner/Getty Images; Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Pride Island

Madonna is the latest celebrity to call out DaBaby for the remarks he made about HIV/AIDS at last weekend’s Rolling Loud Festival in Miami.

“If you’re going to make hateful remarks to the LGBTQ+ community about HIV/AIDS then know your facts,” the singer wrote on Instagram alongside a video of the rapper making the controversial comments.

Madonna then proceeded to clear up some misconceptions about the disease, noting “decades of hard won scientific research.”

“I want to put my cellphone lighter up and pray for your ignorance, No one dies of AIDS in 2 or 3 weeks anymore. Thank God,” she wrote.

DaBaby had told the crowd, “If you didn’t show up today with HIV, AIDS, any of them deadly sexually transmitted diseases that’ll make you die in two or three weeks, put your cellphone light in the air.”

Madonna went on to call out some of DaBaby’s other comments at the show, calling them “sexist.”

“People like you are the reason we are still living in a world divided by fear,” she wrote. “All Human beings should be treated with dignity and respect regardless of race, gender, sexual preference or religious beliefs.”

On Wednesday, DaBaby apologized for the comments after widespread outrage.

(Video contains uncensored profanity.)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Madonna (@madonna)

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DaBaby responds to Questlove’s criticism over homophobic comments

Cain

DaBaby has responded to Questlove calling him out for the homophobic comments he made while performing at Rolling Loud Miami. 

Taking to Instagram Stories, DaBaby shared a post in which Questlove scribbled out DaBaby’s name from his “dream list” of artists to perform at Summer of Soul and condemned the rapper for his rhetoric. Underneath, DaBaby wrote, “I ain’t even tryna be funny when i say …. i do NOT KNOW WHO DIS N**** IS DAWG.”

The “Masterpiece” rapper added, “& do not care about losing you as a fan my boy lol @questlove.”

DaBaby declared himself a “standup” guy and that others can’t influence people to stop being a fan of his because he is “the INFLUENCE.” He then suggested that the haters “hit the studio or [something].”

In a final slide, the 29-year-old accused “lame and burnt tf out” people of using the LGBT community to make a comeback. 

“The LGBT community don’t need ya’ll. Ya’ll need them,” he wrote. 

DaBaby has been on a downward spiral after making some controversial HIV/AIDS remarks while onstage at the Rolling Loud festival in Miami last weekend, declaring, “If you didn’t show up today with HIV, AIDS, any of them deadly sexually transmitted diseases that’ll make you die in two or three weeks, put your cellphone light in the air.”

Since then, artists including Dua LipaDemi LovatoMadonna and Elton John have criticized DaBaby, while others like T.I. and Boosie have come to DaBaby’s defense. 

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