Support our efforts, sign up to a full membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Pop / Rock 21/12/2001

Michael Jackson, Alicia Keys, Craig David Turn Heads At KIIS' Jingle Ball

Hot Songs Around The World

Stumblin' In
Cyril
200 entries in 16 charts
End Of Beginning
DJO
238 entries in 22 charts
We Can't Be Friends (Wait For Your Love)
Ariana Grande
209 entries in 24 charts
I Like The Way You Kiss Me
Artemas
249 entries in 25 charts
Too Sweet
Hozier
222 entries in 22 charts
Espresso
Sabrina Carpenter
185 entries in 26 charts
Lose Control
Teddy Swims
575 entries in 25 charts
Beautiful Things
Benson Boone
450 entries in 26 charts
Texas Hold 'Em
Beyonce
286 entries in 23 charts
Fortnight
Taylor Swift & Post Malone
149 entries in 25 charts
Lunch
Billie Eilish
82 entries in 23 charts
Grustnyi Dens
Artik & Asti
175 entries in 2 charts
Until I Found You
Stephen Sanchez
239 entries in 16 charts
Unwritten
Natasha Bedingfield
341 entries in 22 charts
LOS ANGELES (AP) - No balls were jingled Wednesday (Dec. 19) night at the annual KIIS-FM/L.A. Jingle Ball Christmas concert, where last year Cedric "K-Ci" Hailey flashed the young and impressionable crowd while onstage with partner Jo-Jo.

But Michael Jackson exposed a body part even more shocking: The new nose he apparently tried to hide during his tribute concerts to himself at New York's Madison Square Garden in September. Accepting something called a KIIS-FM L.A. Legend Award, the self-anointed King of Pop took the Staples Center stage to reveal what looked like a newborn chick's beak just below his eyes. This teeny triangle pointed almost due north with its distorted tip, which probably explains why Jackson covered his face with his hand so much while performing three months ago.

Making his only West Coast appearance this year, Jackson waved and threw kisses at the cheering crowd of 16,000 as the opening strains of his hit "Butterflies" filled the arena. It looked as though station jock Rick Dees and his co-presenter, Magic Johnson, were trying to coax him into singing along. Yet he only gave a quick speech.

"To the public, to the fans, I love you from the bottom of my heart," Jackson said after thanking his hosts. "Merry Christmas." After his exit, a "Mi-chael" chant began, but did not coax him back.


Alicia Keys
Other than this sideshow, the sold-out concert was standard yuletide radio grade. A seasonally bedecked stage revolved to reveal the best and worst in pop from the past year. Each act performed four or five songs. Among the best was Alicia Keys, all silky voice and confidence beneath her burgundy felt hat. She dazzled with her unique mix of R&B, hip-hop, and classical music, plunking out "Beethoven's Fifth Symphony" on her Kurzweil electric piano before launching into her deliciously melodic extension of Erykah Badu feminism, "A Woman's Worth."

Backed by a 10-piece band, headliner Shakira was also engaging, as she served up Arabic-flavored Latin pop confections such as "Objection," the hit "Whenever, Wherever," and the song she announced would probably be her next single, "Underneath Your Clothes." Shakira also conveyed a sense of female empowerment - at least if you think that's what strippers convey. The long-locked Colombian gyrated in painted-on pants and a man's shirt and necktie that was promptly removed to reveal a zebra-striped bikini top.


Craig David
But the hands-down best set was Craig David's. The British R&B singer floored the arena by showing up with just an acoustic guitarist and filling in for his missing band with only his voice. Weaving it in and out of the strums of "Time to Party" and his hit, "7 Days," David shifted it seamlessly back and forth between superfast rap and super slinky soul, even adding a bit of human beat box.

Lifehouse singer Jason Wade navigated his Eddie Vedder intensity through his band's hit, "Hanging by a Moment," and introduced a muscular new rock song, "Take Me Away," that he promised would appear on the next Lifehouse album. And, Sugar Ray made its pop crossover officially complete. There is officially no longer a trace of the self-effacing L.A. band's former hard-rock self. Singer Mark McGrath dedicated "Fly" to ailing Lakers announcer Chick Hearn and the new "When It's Over" to a girlfriend he claimed to have broken up with at a party the night before (after she dumped a vodka-and-cranberry on him for dancing with a Latin woman).

The Jewel-like Michelle Branch and hip-hop diva-in-training Toya each showed growing room. While Branch had mike problems that were not her fault, neither seemed comfortable onstage and clearly needed better material to get the crowd going.


Five For Fighting
LFO was just plain awful. Displaying what amounted to justified insecurity, the Boston band relied on covers of other songs such as Aerosmith's "Walk This Way" and Green Day's "When I Come Around" to coax the audience into its rap-lite pabulum.

The night's Sept. 11 moment was provided by Five for Fighting (really just one guy, John Ondrasik, who seems pretty peaceful). With 10 L.A. firemen standing behind him, the L.A. native performed "Superman," a piano ballad that's proved therapeutic since the tragedy.






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2024
top40-charts.com (S6)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.6834760 secs // 4 () queries in 0.0033652782440186 secs


live