¤|...:::Mobile:::...|¤

Home

...:::Lyrics:::... | :::...Band Members...::: | :::...Poll's...::: | ...:::Wallpapers:::... | :::...Biography...::: | ...:::Tour Dates:::... | :::...News and Gossip...::: | ...:::Related Links:::... | :::...Contact Me...::: | ...:::Photos:::...
:::...News and Gossip...:::

Here's the scoop...

News

New Album!


Avril Lavigne will release the follow-up to her best-selling debut album, 'Let Go', with a new release due out in stores on Tuesday, May 25th, 2004 on Arista.

The confirmed album title is 'Under My Skin'. A track listing has yet to be revealed.

The first single from the album, "Don't Tell Me", will ship to radio on February 16th. The single was produced by Butch Walker and Tom Lord Alge. Details of a video have yet to be confirmed.

Stay tuned!

By: Avril-Lavigne.com

News

Avril's Back with something NEW!

Her new full-length concert DVD "MY WORLD" is in stores Nov. 4th!!

This new DVD gives you a front row seat to Avril's Buffalo, NY concert during her "Try to Shut Me Up Tour," over 45 minutes of behind-the-scenes footage, outtakes, a photo gallery and five of Avril's hot music videos!!

BE SURE TO PICK IT UP!
 

News

Avril Lavigne Stages Successful Revolt At Tour Opener

TORONTO, Demurely clad in a simple yellow T-shirt and black bondage pants, Avril Lavigne didn't need to frolic about in choreographed routines to impress her minions.

A simple rock show, devoid of flash and fancy moves, demonstrated her back-to-basics intentions, and the audience, composed mostly of straight-haired teenage girls at their very first concert (with chaperones, of course), responded like it was watching the Beatles on "The Ed Sullivan Show" in 1964.


"I touched her hand, the one with the blue wristband!" gushed Madison, 10, from Toronto. It wasn't the last time she and the dozens like her rushed down the aisle for a closer glimpse whenever Lavigne drew near.

Thousands of "Avrilutionaries" flooded Toronto's Air Canada Centre for the kickoff of Lavigne's first North American headlining tour Wednesday, and if the term coined by the Web site www.avrilution.com holds any relevance as a revolt against pop's old guards Britney, Christina and their dance pop ilk, the teenage rocker staged a successful pop overthrow.

Lavigne wasted no time in giving her fans her signature "Sk8er Boi," off her five-times platinum debut, Let Go, and jumped right into the hip-hop inspired "Nobody's Fool" without so much as a "Hello, Toronto." Instead, she leapt onto the shoulders of someone standing in front of the stage for a much more personal greeting to those in the first few rows.

Strapped with an acoustic guitar for the first of what would be several times in the set, Lavigne strummed her way through "Mobile" with surprising capability. If previous performances were marred by criticism that she sang/shouted off-key and used the guitar as a credibility crutch, the pint-sized dynamo has since remedied the situation.

Even her stage presence showed improvement as she played around Matthew Brann's drum riser for her definitive tune "Anything but Ordinary." Later, she sat cross-legged on the riser, accompanied by guitarist Jesse Colburn, for a somber rendition of the wistful ballad "I'm With You." Apparently, holding lighters aloft isn't as common practice as it once was at least not when your parents are around.

It wasn't all straight-laced performances, however. A newfound showmanship emerged when she invited two fans, 21-year-old Ryan and 12-year-old Courtney, to assist on her breakthrough single, "Complicated." Courtney, for the record, rocked, but why the uninformed Ryan even volunteered remains a mystery. A note-for-note homage to the punk rock Avril was reared on, Green Day's "Basket Case," also brought some fun to an otherwise stiff set.

A two-song encore capped the show, with "Things I'll Never Say" drawing more than a few "oh, my"s from parents shocked at the pregnant pauses within the love song's lines "I want to blow you ... away" and "I want to see you go down ... on one knee." In reaction, many fans responded with an even louder sing-along, much to the dismay of their blushing chaperones, an example of rebellion in its most sterile form.

Cynics disgusted with Lavigne's music and choice to dress in bondage pants, blue-collar Ts (Napanee Hardware shirts were popular among the crowd) and wristbands (she's long since ditched the necktie) need to lighten up. To her fans, whose average age at this show had to be about 14, Lavigne serves as a role model and welcome diversion from growing up on a diet of the dance pop so prolific in the last few years. After all, does it really matter if she didn't know David Bowie when, were it not for the media scalping that followed, so many of her young fans wouldn't either?

Fellow countrymen Gob were surprisingly well received for an opening band. Sure, their cover of the Rolling Stones' "Paint It Black" probably appealed to the parents more than their kids, but songs from the quartet's latest album, Foot in Mouth Disease, such as "Oh! Ellin," and the first single, "Give Up the Grudge," got the crowd bouncing.

Joe D'Angelo
By MTV News

Avril Lavigne Explains Sk8er Boi

Interviewed recently at the Top Of The Pops Awards, nominee Avril Lavigne said that the lyrics to her song Sk8er Boi reflected her experience at high school. She said that it analysed how different people were perceived by the way they dressed and their interests. Avril, a skater who sported baggy clothes, thought that she was looked down upon by the preppier kids.

Contributed by Ezpz.com

Gossip

august_10_web_009.jpg

"Anything but Ordinary" Avril Lavigne joins the growing list of artists using Sennheiser Evolution Wireless systems. 

OLD LYME, CONNECTICUT: Demonstrating that she's anything but ordinary, Avril Lavigne is taking the sound of Sennheiser on the road as she and her band circle the globe in support of her platinum-selling debut album, "Let Go." Mark LeCorre, production manager and FOH engineer for the 17-year-old Canadian skater-punk/pop artist, reports that the entire band is using Sennheiser and Neumann wired and wireless microphones.
Lavigne, whose album is currently in the top ten of the Billboard 200, is using the evolution wireless 565 microphone, which comprises the ME 865 super-cardioid pattern electret condenser mic head and SKM 500 handheld transmitter. LeCorre, who had used the microphone previously while working with U.K. singer Dido, selected it again when he began working with Lavigne. "I started using the Evolution Wireless with Avril during rehearsals last April, and she's been using the 565 since day one."
LeCorre notes that the ew 565 microphone is ideally suited to Lavigne's vocals. "The 565 sounds really good with Avril. It's got a nice sweet top end and is quite a fat sounding microphone, which works for a woman's voice as it beefs it up a little bit. If there's too much it seems like it's easier to take it out than to put it back if it isn't there."
With nearly 1300 switchable UHF frequencies available in the ew 500 Series system, true diversity operation and interference free operation, LeCorre relates, "There are lots of frequencies to choose from, so we've never had any problems from drop-outs. It's worked out really well for us."
LeCorre notes that, with the exception of the snare drum mic, "We're using just about all Sennheiser or Neumann microphones. I've got the Neumann 184s on overheads and hi-hat. I can't say enough good things about them." The KM 184 cardioid compact miniature mic has become a standard in such applications, both onstage and in the studio.
The rest of the drums are miked with Sennheiser, LeCorre continues: "I'm using an e 602 on kick drum, a 509 on the bottom of the snare, and MD 504s on the toms. They're working out great for us." Additionally, all of the other singers in the band are using Evolution 835 wired vocal microphones and all guitars are hooked-up via Sennheiser evolution 100 wireless guitar and bass systems.
Capitalizing on her new found success, Lavigne is travelling the globe. "It's the endless promo," laughs LeCorre. "We were in Europe for a few weeks, back to America for a week, then in Japan for 10 days, now it's three weeks in America and off to Europe.
Established in 1945 in Wedemark, Germany, Sennheiser is the acknowledged world leader in microphone technology, RF-wireless and infrared sound transmission, headphone transducer technology, and most recently, in the development of active noise-cancellation. Sennheiser Electronic Corporation is the U.S. wholly-owned subsidiary, with headquarters in Old Lyme, Connecticut. 

468x60my_world.gif

Be sure to let me know what you hear and I'll add it to this page!