Thursday, December 18, 2025
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“Band of Gold” Singer Freda Payne Drops a Hot Memoir and Reveals a Secret Affair with a US Senator

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EXCLUSIVE

You would have to guess that singer of “Band of Gold,” one of the great pop singles of all time, had a good romantic secret. After all, the story sung in “Band of Gold” is almost more debated than the one in Carly Simon’s “You’re So Vain.” Is the bride turning down her groom on their wedding night, or is he impotent or gay? Or all of the above!

So Freda Payne, a great elegant beauty with one of the most dynamic voices in pop or R&B history, has written a book. It’s called “Band of Gold” and it’s published officially tomorrow. There’s a book signing party tonight (Monday) at the Cutting Room.

I always remember that in Lillian Roxon’s “Rock Encyclopedia,” the bible of rock and roll, a reviewer wrote of “Band of Gold”: “Freda Payne could sing the Yellow Pages.” Or something to that effect.

The song was written by Eddie and Brian Holland, and Lamont Dozier, authors of dozens of Motown hits for the Supremes and Four Tops. They couldn’t use their real names because they were locked in a lawsuit with Motown’s Berry Gordy after leaving the label over a money dispute. (Everyone is friends now, 50 years later.)

Freda was from Detroit, also, and grew up with the Motowners. I’m sure I met her years and years ago through the late Mary Wilson. They were great friends, as were Mary and I.

I was 13 when “Band of Gold” came out. I didn’t know what was going on in it, but I loved the arrangement and Freda Payne’s voice. I played it over and over summer of 1970 at the Camp Greylock radio station. Freda had a bunch more hits including “Deeper and Deeper” and the anti-Vietnam war single, “Bring the Boys Home.” The latter was very controversial and banned on radio at first. It was good publicity.

Later in the 70s, Freda would marry singer Gregory Abbott. She divorced him right before he had his mega hit, “Shake You Down.” (They have a son.) She also had a relationship with Edmund Sylvers, lead singer of his family group. (His hit was “Boogie Fever.”)

There’s a lot more, but here’s the secret. Before the marriages, Freda writes that she had an affair with US Senator John Tunney. He was a big deal then, the son of boxer Gene Tunney. He was also married. But she met him through Frank Sinatra at a charity event. When Holland-Dozier-Holland didn’t pay Freda for her hits, Tunney helped get her a top Hollywood lawyer who came, guns blazing, and got her a big settlement.

It was Sinatra who pointed out to Freda that Tunney was head over heels for her. He was good looking and had just been elected to the Senate from California after six years as a Congressman. Freda, who’d become a star, moved to Los Angeles and took up residence in the former home of Movie Star Maureen O’Hara. She was living the life.

Freda writes that she fell in love with Tunney, which was a mistake. But she had other loves, too. :I was in love with Quincy Jones too. I was so in love with him.  Those were my three big love affairs: Quincy Jones, Eddie Holland, and John Tunney.” She was playing in the Big Time.

She writes of the affair:

It was starting to unravel at that point. When this happened,
Tunney and I had to take a break from seeing each other. After that,
our affair just started to fizzle and dissolve. I assumed he had been
approached about the knowledge of our love affair, and he figured
the relationship was way too risky, and could destroy his political
career.
Later on he had an affair with the actress Elizabeth Ashley, and
I became insanely jealous.
I remember thinking to myself, “What does he want with that
old bitch? She’s six years older than me!” Ah, to be 30 again!
Years later, when John Tunney’s re-election came up, he lost. So,
he didn’t stay in office too long as a Senator.

There’s more, lots of it, Mark Bego helped Freda put it together, he’s an expert at these things. I like this new world of people like Elton John, Demi Moore, Katie Couric, all telling the real stories in their books. After 50 years of this pop culture, we deserve some answers!

So welcome Freda to New York on Monday! She still looks like a million bucks, and the voice is better than ever!

Box Office: “Dune” Is Making Money Very Slowly, Hitting Just $69 Million in 2 Weeks of Release

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Most movies, if they made $69 million in two weeks studio executives would be popping open Champagne.

But with “Dune,” Denis Villeneuve’s epic, it’s a much different story. “Dune” is a glacier at the box office.

Costing somewhere between $150 and $200 million, “Dune” is a slow starter out of the gate.

So far, through today, “Dune” has earned $69 million in the US. Most epics in wide release would have done that in 1 week, or faster.

But “Dune” is long, three hours almost, and it’s also available on HBO Max. Those two things are slowing it down.

This past weekend, “Dune” made $15 million. It’s not a disaster yet. But it’s plodding along to the $100 million mark. So it’s break even point is way in the distance.

Warner Bros. was smart in releasing “Dune” internationally before letting it hit here. The result is a foreign box office so far of $222.7 million. They’re close to $300 million worldwide.

But fear not: “Dune 2” is coming in two years, and there will be HBO Max spin off series, so way down the line– way, way, down the line — they will break even and maybe turn a profit. We will all be long gone. But we’ll read about in the clouds, I’m sure!

Broadway: Bob Dylan Musical Still Headed for Tonys–in 2022, Michael Jackson Musical Hires a “Ringer” from Met Opera

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I returned to the Belasco Theater on Saturday afternoon, my first show on Broadway since the start of the pandemic. It was also one of the last shows I saw before the pandemic: Conor McPherson‘s “Girl fron the North Country.”

McPherson wrote and directed, and used songs from the Bob Dylan catalog, to tell a Depression era tale set in Dylan’s Minnesota. I know my review from opening night was glowing, but a lot of time has passed and I wanted to see this musical again.

What a treat it is, too, a gem that is so moving, profound and entertaining I can’t urge you enough to put on a mask and head on over to the Belasco. “Girl from the North Country” is like a spiritual awakening. There are three nominal stars — Mare Winningham, Jay O. Sanders, Robert Joy, and Marc Kudisch. But there is also a cast full of lesser knowns who should be stars in their own right including Todd Almond, Kimber Elayne Sprawl, Jeannette Bayardelle, Luba Mason, Tom Nelis, and Matt McGrath.

McPherson infuses a kind of bleak narrative of people struggling to survive the Depression with two dozen or song Dylan songs re-arranged gorgeously for theater in gospel, R&B, and country settings. Dylan should sending McPherson roses every day because the playwright-director has revived Dylan’s catalog in the most exciting possible way. The songs include “Like a Rolling Stone” and “I Want You” and even the more recent “Make You Feel My Love.” The orchestration is so exact that even bits of other songs float through instrumentally, like “Lay Lady Lay.”

You will not want to miss Mare Winningham’s “Like a Rolling Stone.” Or Todd Almond’s left curve solo from heaven. Or Luba Mason singing like Janis Joplin and playing drums. Or the heavenly voices of Kimber Elayne Sprawl, Jeannette Bayardelle.

I said back in March 2020 “Girl from the North Country” was the best musical of that season. The show opened, but the Tony Awards cut off didn’t include it with that year’s shows. So it will be a force to reckon with in 2022. I can’t wait to see it again!

UPDATE ABOUT THE MICHAEL JACKSON MUSICAL “MJ”: This is really goofy. Last week, the Michael Jackson musical “MJ” announced the casting of Michael as a child with the Jackson 5.

The main child cast is named Walter Russell III. No one said a word about who he was, and his name sailed right by me.

Guess what? Little Walter, who is 13, is a STAR already. He is literally STEALING the show at the Metropolitan Opera in Terence Blanchard’s “Fire Shut Up in My Bones.” 

I was there two weeks ago. Walter gets a standing ovation. If he’s half as good leading the Jackson 5, “MJ” is going to be a hit no matter how screwy the script is (and I’m hopeful it’s okay. Really.)

Weird that no mention was made of Walter’s career so far, his rave reviews. From the Met to Michael. Now I’m really curious about this musical. It’s going to be good.

PS Twitter handle @andjustice4some notes that Walter shares the same birthday as Michael Jackson. That’s a good omen!

 

 

Paul McCartney Uncommonly Generous to Michael Jackson (Who Later Bought the Beatles’ Publishing Rights) in Recollection of Recording “Say Say Say”

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EXCLUSIVE Paul McCartney recorded three songs with Michael Jackson in the early 80s including “The Girl Is Mine,” “Say Say Say,” and “The Man.” The latter appeared on Paul’s “Pipes of Peace” album but gets short shrift even though I think it’s the best of the trio.

“Say Say Say” is the only one of the three documented in Paul’s “The Lyrics” two volume memoir of songs that will be published on Tuesday. Considering what happened after these sessions– Michael bought the Beatles catalog out from under McCartney — Paul is very generous to Michael in the recollection.

Initially Paul says he thought the high pitched voice on the other end of the phone was someone else. “I thought, This is a fan girl, and how the hell did she get my  number?” Quickly Paul realized it was Michael Jackson, who asked him, “Do you want to make some hits?”

Paul writes that Michael flew to London, and they met in his office. “We were both quite excited to work together, and the song came together quickly,” McCartney recalls in “The Lyrics.” He says: “I let him lead quite a bit, and I think a lot of the sensibility of the song was Michael’s. ‘Baptised in my tears’ — that’s a line I wouldn’t have used.”

McCartney says of writing, “It’s a time of discovery, and that’s what I love about it.”

There are two versions of “Say Say Say.” One was the hit, and the other was an outtake in which they reverse the singing parts. If you know the original, this other one is cooler.

 

Searchlight Dimmed as “French Dispatch” Dispatched in Wide Release, “Antlers” is A Moose, er, Mess

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It was a rough weekend for Searchlight/Disney, formerly Fox Searchlight.

Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” went wide and didn’t catch the ball. The omnibus film with a large celebrity cast had a big Friday with just over $1 million. But then reality set in as word of mouth must not have been good. Saturday and Sunday each showed successive declines. In 788 theaters after 2 weeks, “French Dispatch” stands at under $5 million. C’est la vie!

Searchlight also introduced “Antlers,” a horror movie from Scott Cooper, best known as the director of Jeff Bridges’ “Crazy Hearts.” The hope was for $5 million for the weekend. But “Antlers” was a moose– a mess- at just $4.1 million. And that’s on Halloween weekend. Certainly terrifying.

Something is wrong. Either Disney isn’t helping Searchlight, or Searchlight isn’t smart as a Fox anymore. Their “Eyes of Tammy Faye” is also dead at the box office. And the doc “Summer of Soul” may not qualify for the Oscars because it has so much previously released material. (It will do well with the Critics Choice Doc Awards, though.) Time to re-group for next year!

PS Also dead is “The Last Duel,” a possible $150 million write off for Fox-Disney. Total is now $10 million.

James Bond “No Time to Die” Could Be Lowest Grossing Movie in Franchise Since 2002 “Die Another Day”

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It’s not like they didn’t try everything. But the last Daniel Craig film as James Bond, “No Time to Die,” is not a massive hit at the US box office.

This weekend, “No Time to Die” made $7.8 million in theaters completing 24 days of release. This brings its total to $136 million.

For most movies, this would be a relief. But for “No Time to Die,” which was delayed for a year and cost closer to $200 million, it’s not that great.

Indeed, “No Time to Die,” if it gets to $150 million, will come in the lowest for a Bond film since 2002’s “Die Another Day” at $160 million. The number the Bond producers would probably like to get to is $200 million, where “Spectre,” landed in 2015. That’s a very long shot. And they won’t get near the massive high of “Skyfall” in 2012.

As I said, it wasn’t for lack of trying. But the pandemic coupled with the film’s length of nearly 3 hours made box office heights impossible to achieve.

Rock Hall Finally Inducts Tina Turner, Billy Preston, Carole King, Gil Scott Heron, Charley Patton, Todd Rundgren

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The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame fixed some mistakes last night at their annual induction ceremony in Cleveland.

They finally welcomed Tina Turner, Billy Preston, Carole King, Gil Scott Heron, Todd Rundgren, and Charley Patton.

Rundgren didn’t bother to show up or send a video, but that’s him. Hello? It’s him. He has not seen the light.

Tina couldn’t travel from Switzerland. This morning on Twitter she wrote: “As you can surely tell from my beaming smile: I am thrilled to now be officially inducted into the @rockhall as a solo artist. What an honor! I am grateful to so many people who stood by me on my journey here – especially you, dear fans. Keep on rocking”

Billy Preston, the Fifth Beatle, was inducted by Ringo Starr via video. Paul McCartney, who was there to induct the Foo Fighters, didn’t get involved in that, although he did play a little “Get Back” reportedly at the end of the night– well after midnight– with Dave Grohl.

Keith Urban had to substitute at the last minute for Bryan Adams, whose COVID test came back positive. Talk about fortuitous! And Keith brought wife Nicole Kidman, which classed up the event a million times.

Other inductees included Jay Z, we won’t get into that, and LL Cool J, again, the whole idea of the Hall of Fame is changing into a Music Hall of Fame. The best LL Cool J song was “I Need Love.” No one ever mentions it.

This ceremony cleaned up a lot of old business for the RRHOF. New CEO John Sykes, taking over from the now missing Jann Wenner, is righting a lot of wrongs. Next year let’s hope we see Carly Simon, Bryan Ferry and Roxy Music, Carla and Rufus Thomas, the late Mary Wells from Motown, J Geils Band (now an embarrassing situation), and Sting as a solo artist. And, of course, Chubby Checker.

Paul McCartney’s Favorite Of All His Songs: Not “Let it Be,” “Yesterday,” or “Hey Jude”

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Read also: Paul changes Lennon-McCartney to McCartney-Lennon

Paul McCartney writes recollections of 154 of his songs in his two volume mega memoir, “The Lyrics.” The books come in a gorgeous box set and are released on Tuesday.

So many hits, more than anyone: “Yesterday,” “Let it Be,” “Hey Jude,” and on and on. So what’s his favorite? Or, in English, favourite?

McCartney has said in years past that he listens to the most to “Let it Be.” He’s joked around about that single’s B Side, “I Know Your Name (Look Up My Number” as his best. But that wasn’t serious.

In “The Lyrics,” McCartney settled on one song as his all time favourite: “Here, There, and Everywhere.”

“Now when I sing it, I look back at it and think, ‘The boy’s not bad.'”

The Beatle says in coming up with the lyrics, he wanted to come up with a preamble a la Cole Porter. Hence the opening couplet: “To lead a better life/I need my love to be here.”

He says that the song is directly influenced by the Beach Boys’ “God Only Knows,” which he thinks is ironic since that group’s album, “Pet Sounds,” was influenced by the Beatles’ “Revolver.”

There are so many insights and revelations in “The Lyrics,” it’s overwhelming. He writes that his favourite line from the song is “Changing my life with a wave of her hand.” He says: “I look at that line and wonder where it came from? What was it?”

Earlier in “The Lyrics,” McCartney writes in his introduction of the mystery surrounding the Beatles’ recordings, compositions, and successes. He says he’s happy to let it remain a mystery in the end.

Paul McCartney Finally Gets His Way, Reverses Lennon-McCartney Byline for Songs He Wrote in “The Lyrics” Mega Memoir

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EXCLUSIVE For years, Paul McCartney has wanted to change the byline on songs he wrote for the Beatles. And now he’s done it.

McCartney and John Lennon had a deal they made when they met that the byline for all their songs would be Lennon and McCartney. I guess the consolation was their original publishing entity was called Maclen.

But Paul complained just recently that in the digital age, when credits appeared on a screen, his name didn’t fit, so it looked like ‘written by John Lennon and…”

A few years ago, Paul floated the idea and fans went nuts. No one wanted the change even though some early Beatles records actually have labels that read “McCartney-Lennon.” One early single actually reads “McCarthy- Lennon.” So there is precedent for this decision.

But now, after 60 plus years, Paul gets his way. In his new two volumes called “The Lyrics,” covering 154 songs, Paul has reversed the byline. All the songs he wrote or primarily wrote, are credited Writers: Paul McCartney and John Lennon. Those songs include all the obvious ones including “Yesterday,” “Hey Jude,” “Let it Be,” “Long and Winding Road,” and even “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.”

There are plenty of others, too, from “Paperback Writer” to “She’s a Woman” and “Obla Di Obla Da.” Paul doesn’t do it to songs Lennon wrote, or that they collaborated on.

“The Lyrics” covers all the Beatles hits and most of Wings’ chart toppers. I will say this two volume set is an invaluable artifact. It’s everything you want to know, at least from Paul’s point of view, about some of the greatest works in popular music history. (Plus the photographs are insanely good, and special.)

Every Beatles fan will want this collection, in addition to the new “Get Back” book that accompanies Peter Jackson’s documentary. We are awash in fascinating information about the Beatles!

My only frustration with “The Lyrics” is that some of the songs are so obscure even I haven’t; heard of them. And their glaring omissions, like a great McCartney song such as “Daytime Nighttime Suffering.” Or “My Brave Face,” his collaboration with Elvis Costello. And sometimes he’s light on information I would have preferred, like how he got the ideas for “Get Back,” and what it was like to have Billy Preston join the band.

Don’t worry– there are plenty of little minute revelations that may have been out there in universe or not, I don’t know. It’s like sifting through sand for gold, but when you finf it, hallelujah! Admiral Halsey was a real person, for example. “When I’m Sixty Four” was influenced by poet Louis MacNeice. (The ‘Chuck’ of grandchildren ‘Vera, Chuck and Dave’ was either Chuck Berry or Chuck Connors of “The Rifleman.”) Shakespeare lurks behind “Let it Be” and “With a Little Help from My Friends,” and others.

I’ve already told you in another item about “Eleanor Rigby.” McCartney mentions her in his telling of one of his greatest and most underrated singles, “Another Day,” his first solo chart hit. Paul says now the song was based on his idea of Linda living alone in New York City before she met, waiting for the “man of her dreams to take her away. The single was produced by the great Phil Ramone, who I was lucky enough to call a friend.

One more story here: Badfinger wanted to “put their spin” on Paul’s demo for “Come and Get It.” Paul refused, adamantly. He told them, “I want you to do it faithfully, because this is the hit formula. You’ve got to do it this way.” He adds he was afraid if he gave them credit, they would “cock it up.” As usual I am fascinated by McCartney the Creator. He always knew exactly what he wanted.

There are more little stories, and I will pull some out for another item or two. But I don’t know how a Beatles fan will be able to live without these volumes. They’re going to be used forever by biographers going forward. Grade: A Plus Plus Plus.

PS I was already down a rabbit hole reading the entire transcript of “Let it Be” from the “Get Back” book now on the bestsellers list. It is absolutely stunning to read how “Let it Be” was really a preamble for the master masterpiece, “Abbey Road.” In this book you can actually read how the songs were written in real time, and then we’ll see it in the Jackson documentary.

How am I ever going to get any other work done?

 

Sting Begins Long Awaited Fall Residency Tonight at Caesar’s Palace, And It’s 99% Sold Out

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Sting finally begins his fabled long awaited residency tonight in Las Vegas.

The first group of shows runs from tonight through November 13, and those suckers are way sold out. Just a few seats remaining. He is the hot ticket.

The next time he sits down in Vegas won’t be until June.

Lucky fans will probably be hearing all his hits plus maybe one or two tracks from Sting’s new album, “The Bridge,” coming November 19th. The single, “Rushing Water,” is all over FM radio and Sirius XM right now.

Look forward to seeing some social media videos from the first night. Wish I could be there! Or anywhere!