Peter White Television EditorRoom 104 returns for its fourth and final season on HBO this evening, Friday July 24.
14.07.2020 - 16:49 / etcanada.com
Margo Price addressed the recent Lady A name dispute during her televised performance on “The Grand Ole Opry” Saturday.
Lady A recently announced they were dropping the Antebellum from their name due to its ties with slavery amid the Black Lives Matter movement.
Seattle-based blues singer Anita White then came out and said she’d been calling herself Lady A for years.
Price belted out the Henson Cargill track “Skip a Rope”, which addresses racism, abuse, and more, during Saturday’s performance,
Peter White Television EditorRoom 104 returns for its fourth and final season on HBO this evening, Friday July 24.
Steven Severin has been a staple in the Seattle music industry for more than 20 years.
Russell Wilson is going to have to keep an eye on his throwing hand when Ciara welcomes her third child.
Andrew Barker Senior Features WriterThe Seattle grunge scene of the 1980s and early ’90s suffered no shortage of press coverage in its heyday, and has seen no shortage of books attempting to grapple with its legacy.
Russell Wilson has some serious concerns about returning to the gridiron amid the coronavirus pandemic. The Seattle Seahawks quarterback took to Twitter to express his apprehension.
Russell Wilson has some serious concerns about returning to the gridiron amid the coronavirus pandemic. The Seattle Seahawks quarterback took to Twitter to express his apprehension.Wilson, 31, explained his concern largely revolves around his wife, Ciara, being pregnant with their second child together, and how the start of NFL training camp could pose a health risk to his family.«I am concerned.
There is only one Beatles for a reason. Acts rarely, if ever, share a name. And although Seattle-based blues singer Anita White
Margo Price is making her voice heard in the dispute over the musical moniker "Lady A." The name has made headlines following the announcement that the country band Lady Antebellum would now be called Lady A due to the previous name's reference to a pre-abolition South. However, a Black blues singer named Anita White had been using the name for her own music and pushed back against the name change.
Chris Willman Music WriterIn a televised live appearance on “The Grand Ole Opry” Saturday night, Nashville-based singer-songwriter Margo Price offered an unexpected bit of advocacy between songs, name-checking the group formerly known as Lady Antebellum before suggesting that the show should book Anita White, whom she called “the real Lady A.”Price made the suggestion immediately after performing a cover of “Skip a Rope,” a No.
Anita “Lady A” White released a lengthy statement to explain her side in the lawsuit the country band previously known as "Lady Antebellum" has filed against her in an attempt to make her drop the name she’s performed under since 1987.
The legal battle between Lady A and Lady Antebellum is heating up, but the former wants to tell her side of the story. Entertainment Weekly says that the Seattle artist, Lady A, has been using the name for approximately 30 years, and she plans on keeping it that way.
When country music trio Lady Antebellum announced last month that they were changing their name to Lady A due to the word “antebellum” being tied to slavery, it was a big surprise to blues singer Anita White, who has been performing in Seattle as Lady A for more than 20 years. According to People magazine, both Lady Antebellum and Lady A had a discussion about “continued coexistence” where both musical acts could perform under the moniker Lady A.
First Country is a compilation of the best new country songs, videos and albums that dropped this week.
July 10, 2020, Seattle, WAI first heard about Lady Antebellum's planned name change after they went public on June 11, 2020, at which point I was shocked and taken aback. During initial calls with the members of the band – Hillary Scott, Charles Kelley, and Dave Haywood – I hoped that we could reach an agreement that left both sides whole.
Margo Price shared her unfiltered thoughts on the legal name dispute between the band Lady A, formerly known as Lady Antebellum, and the blues singer Anita "Lady A" White," after the first camp filed a lawsuit over the matter."sooooo they changed their name but does the 'A' stand for antebellum or a--hole," Price wrote on Twitter Wednesday (July 8) when the news of the suit first broke.
Chris Willman Music WriterYou can take the girl out of the country, and maybe you can also take the country out of the girl. Or perhaps that’s taking it a bit far, but Margo Price isn’t paying undue fealty to the traditional country feel that first brought her to the dance now that she’s on her third album.