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Celebrity Tributes to Whitney Houston



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#376 Petra

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Posted 12 March 2012 - 11:42 AM

View Postremamamama, on 12 March 2012 - 11:08 AM, said:

Meat Loaf on Whitney Houston: "People don't show compassion anymore"

"I first saw Whitney in London in 1984 in a little room. I can't remember where it was, but it wasn't very many people. I was easily 15 feet from her," Meat Loaf told Digital Spy when asked about Whitney Houston, who died last month at the age of 48.

"There's a lot of great singers - a lot have great vocals. Then there's singers who know how to give you a song. Mick Jagger's not a great vocalist, but boy can he sing a song. I don't think Bono's a great vocalist but boy does he know how to sell a song. Freddie Mercury was one of the best rock singers in the world.

"But there are three singers that I know that have something ever so slightly different. They have what a professional golfer has... when the ball tees off it goes about 100 feet, then all of a sudden it's like it's got little jets on it.

"Aretha Franklin - I saw her live back in a club in Detroit in 1971. She would be singing along, and it's incredible, then all of a sudden she hits this overdrive and it's just whoah. Whitney had it. And there's one other singer that has it that I know of and that's Adam Lambert. They have that overdrive.

"I knew Whitney. I used to go to the Clive [Davis's pre-Grammys] parties. This year I was in Vancouver and I didn't want to fly back and I'm glad I didn't because after finding out I wouldn't have gone to the party.

"I'm not saying anybody's wrong for going, but I personally would not have gone. If I would have been here and dressed and ready to go and heard that on the news, I would have stayed home. I couldn't have gone.

"I'm an emotional kind of guy. When I heard about it, I cried. She had this amazing thing and then to have gone through what she went through on tour. People don't show compassion anymore. There's no compassion. There's no understanding. It's all about 'me' and 'what I want' and 'screw you and who cares what you're going through'.

If I would have paid and gone to see Whitney on the last tour I would have enjoyed it. I would have gone, 'You know what, she's up here, she's going for it, she's trying'. And confidence is a major, major player for any performer.

"Bruce Springsteen is full of confidence. In his brain he can do no wrong. And that's great. With Whitney I really believe it was a matter of confidence. Instead of everybody attacking her and tearing her down, she needed to be built up.

"The real fans of Whitney didn't do that. It's what I call tourists. They're not fans, they're tourists. They buy tickets to come to a show. 'Oh look, Whitney's here, let's go out'. They're not fans. Fans wouldn't do that. They're tourists through the world of life.

"That's how they are throughout their life. They have no foundation, they have no boundaries, they have no self esteem. They're miserable. And so, they need to do that. Instead of doing that, Whitney needed to be built up.

"I felt bad for her. Any time I see people struggling on TV with a performance, and you see it all the time, I empathize. I go, 'Oh man, that's horrible, they can't hear, the sound's not right, something's wrong'. When Bruce did the Super Bowl everybody praised it. But for two songs he was a quarter of a tone flat for both songs. I just went, 'Hey man, this is good, he's rockin''.

"People have a hard time. You don't put them down for it. You don't put somebody down because they lost their job and they're struggling. You don't write hate mail to them. People need more compassion."




What he said was great, except that part when he says there are basically only three greatest singers - Aretha, Whitney, and...Adam Lambert? Oh please. That boy can sing, but putting him in the same sentence as Aretha and Whitney? lol
i absolutely love this! wow! it's like it came from one of our own mouths..that's what people need to hear and know, that right there..

except for the adam lambert part :roflmao: i mean no disrespect, he can sing, but really? aretha and whitney? really? :D

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#377 Lisa

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Posted 12 March 2012 - 11:51 AM

I thought he was spot on. It made me angry when the "tourists" were being called fans. I'M A FAN. I'll always be a fan. But no one wants to listen to a fan when they can use a soundbite from an ugly Australian rat. Human nature in its lowest form.

There are so many people, ourselves included, who never abandoned Whitney and wanted her to know how much she was loved and appreciated. It makes me sick that the most vile people in the world are given a megaphone.
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#378 liz06

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Posted 12 March 2012 - 12:01 PM

He had some nice words for Whitney, i was all good until I read that "the real fans didn't do that, it's what I call tourists". NO! No, the REAL FANS, like those of us here, are NOT like tourists. We did not tear her down and we did try to build her back up! This is the BLEEP! that really BLEEP! makes me so BLEEP! mad. How's he going to call her real fans tourists? We never left. During her last tour most of us didnt get enough sleep because of discussing and watching the latest performance. When she wasn't in the spotlight we were still here, optimistic about Whitney, always.

I'm mad.

#379 Mind Speaker

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Posted 12 March 2012 - 12:15 PM

View Postliz06, on 12 March 2012 - 12:01 PM, said:

He had some nice words for Whitney, i was all good until I read that "the real fans didn't do that, it's what I call tourists". NO! No, the REAL FANS, like those of us here, are NOT like tourists. We did not tear her down and we did try to build her back up! This is the BLEEP! that really BLEEP! makes me so BLEEP! mad. How's he going to call her real fans tourists? We never left. During her last tour most of us didnt get enough sleep because of discussing and watching the latest performance. When she wasn't in the spotlight we were still here, optimistic about Whitney, always.

I'm mad.

Don't be, Liz. You misunderstood him. He was saying people that went to the concerts with the SOLE purpose of just seeing how she sounded, those that walked out, the Australian press that drug her through the mud are the tourists. Not us.

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#380 liz06

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Posted 12 March 2012 - 12:31 PM

View PostMind Speaker, on 12 March 2012 - 12:15 PM, said:

View Postliz06, on 12 March 2012 - 12:01 PM, said:

He had some nice words for Whitney, i was all good until I read that "the real fans didn't do that, it's what I call tourists". NO! No, the REAL FANS, like those of us here, are NOT like tourists. We did not tear her down and we did try to build her back up! This is the BLEEP! that really BLEEP! makes me so BLEEP! mad. How's he going to call her real fans tourists? We never left. During her last tour most of us didnt get enough sleep because of discussing and watching the latest performance. When she wasn't in the spotlight we were still here, optimistic about Whitney, always.

I'm mad.

Don't be, Liz. You misunderstood him. He was saying people that went to the concerts with the SOLE purpose of just seeing how she sounded, those that walked out, the Australian press that drug her through the mud are the tourists. Not us.

Oh.....well alright. I think I jumped too soon. As you can see I dont like when I think people are talking BLEEP! about real fans lol

#381 KSL415

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Posted 12 March 2012 - 01:51 PM

View PostPetra, on 12 March 2012 - 11:42 AM, said:

View Postremamamama, on 12 March 2012 - 11:08 AM, said:

Meat Loaf on Whitney Houston: "People don't show compassion anymore"

"I first saw Whitney in London in 1984 in a little room. I can't remember where it was, but it wasn't very many people. I was easily 15 feet from her," Meat Loaf told Digital Spy when asked about Whitney Houston, who died last month at the age of 48.

"There's a lot of great singers - a lot have great vocals. Then there's singers who know how to give you a song. Mick Jagger's not a great vocalist, but boy can he sing a song. I don't think Bono's a great vocalist but boy does he know how to sell a song. Freddie Mercury was one of the best rock singers in the world.

"But there are three singers that I know that have something ever so slightly different. They have what a professional golfer has... when the ball tees off it goes about 100 feet, then all of a sudden it's like it's got little jets on it.

"Aretha Franklin - I saw her live back in a club in Detroit in 1971. She would be singing along, and it's incredible, then all of a sudden she hits this overdrive and it's just whoah. Whitney had it. And there's one other singer that has it that I know of and that's Adam Lambert. They have that overdrive.

"I knew Whitney. I used to go to the Clive [Davis's pre-Grammys] parties. This year I was in Vancouver and I didn't want to fly back and I'm glad I didn't because after finding out I wouldn't have gone to the party.

"I'm not saying anybody's wrong for going, but I personally would not have gone. If I would have been here and dressed and ready to go and heard that on the news, I would have stayed home. I couldn't have gone.

"I'm an emotional kind of guy. When I heard about it, I cried. She had this amazing thing and then to have gone through what she went through on tour. People don't show compassion anymore. There's no compassion. There's no understanding. It's all about 'me' and 'what I want' and 'screw you and who cares what you're going through'.

If I would have paid and gone to see Whitney on the last tour I would have enjoyed it. I would have gone, 'You know what, she's up here, she's going for it, she's trying'. And confidence is a major, major player for any performer.

"Bruce Springsteen is full of confidence. In his brain he can do no wrong. And that's great. With Whitney I really believe it was a matter of confidence. Instead of everybody attacking her and tearing her down, she needed to be built up.

"The real fans of Whitney didn't do that. It's what I call tourists. They're not fans, they're tourists. They buy tickets to come to a show. 'Oh look, Whitney's here, let's go out'. They're not fans. Fans wouldn't do that. They're tourists through the world of life.

"That's how they are throughout their life. They have no foundation, they have no boundaries, they have no self esteem. They're miserable. And so, they need to do that. Instead of doing that, Whitney needed to be built up.

"I felt bad for her. Any time I see people struggling on TV with a performance, and you see it all the time, I empathize. I go, 'Oh man, that's horrible, they can't hear, the sound's not right, something's wrong'. When Bruce did the Super Bowl everybody praised it. But for two songs he was a quarter of a tone flat for both songs. I just went, 'Hey man, this is good, he's rockin''.

"People have a hard time. You don't put them down for it. You don't put somebody down because they lost their job and they're struggling. You don't write hate mail to them. People need more compassion."




What he said was great, except that part when he says there are basically only three greatest singers - Aretha, Whitney, and...Adam Lambert? Oh please. That boy can sing, but putting him in the same sentence as Aretha and Whitney? lol
i absolutely love this! wow! it's like it came from one of our own mouths..that's what people need to hear and know, that right there..

except for the adam lambert part :roflmao: i mean no disrespect, he can sing, but really? aretha and whitney? really? :D

Hah, I was saying the same ish. Adam Lambert? Geez, c'mon now!
I ain't saying no more! lol
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#382 Zolas

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Posted 12 March 2012 - 02:10 PM

Wow. That is some powerful stuff. Thanks Meatloaf!

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#383 ttse92

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Posted 12 March 2012 - 05:45 PM

Madonna on Whitney Houston in the Sun:

http://www.thesun.co...th-The-Sun.html

Then last month Whitney Houston was found dead in her hotel bath in the Beverly Hilton in LA. She was 48.

Like all music fans, Madonna was shocked by the deaths before their time.
She said: "I, probably like everybody else, was hit by this shocking sense of disbelief – especially with Whitney Houston.
"It had not been a secret, the struggles Amy had been through — both brilliant, brilliant artists and obviously both huge losses.
"But when these things happen, I'm always shocked by the first thing you say — 'It's such a loss' — which doesn't quite cover it.
"Then you reflect and you think, 'How did it happen? How did the people around them allow it to happen?'
"We've lost so many great artists that way when you think about it. So history just kind of repeats itself over and over.

"One thing I was struck by with Whitney Houston is I remember she sort of came out as a singer around the same time I did.
"I remember looking at her singing and hearing people talk about her, and just thinking, 'Oh my God. She's such a beautiful woman and my God, what an incredible voice. I wish I could sing like that.'
"I just remember being extremely envious of her and also touched by her innocence.
"I was watching a documentary about Serge Gainsbourg, the French songwriter, and there's a famous talk show he did that happened a while back when Whitney was just starting.
"It was funny, because I'd just watched it the week before she died, where he was making a kind of play for her on national television and he was basically saying in French that he wanted to 'f' her — and the look of shock on her face...

"I mean, she was so innocent and so young, and so cute, and really she blushed.
"And I was thinking, 'We are all innocent at one stage in our life. It's just interesting, the paths our lives take.'
"I was struck by that — how well she started and where she ended up and the tragedy of it."

#384 Tejay06

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Posted 12 March 2012 - 10:01 PM

View Postttse92, on 12 March 2012 - 05:45 PM, said:

Madonna on Whitney Houston in the Sun:

http://www.thesun.co...th-The-Sun.html

Then last month Whitney Houston was found dead in her hotel bath in the Beverly Hilton in LA. She was 48.

Like all music fans, Madonna was shocked by the deaths before their time.
She said: "I, probably like everybody else, was hit by this shocking sense of disbelief – especially with Whitney Houston.
"It had not been a secret, the struggles Amy had been through — both brilliant, brilliant artists and obviously both huge losses.
"But when these things happen, I'm always shocked by the first thing you say — 'It's such a loss' — which doesn't quite cover it.
"Then you reflect and you think, 'How did it happen? How did the people around them allow it to happen?'
"We've lost so many great artists that way when you think about it. So history just kind of repeats itself over and over.

"One thing I was struck by with Whitney Houston is I remember she sort of came out as a singer around the same time I did.
"I remember looking at her singing and hearing people talk about her, and just thinking, 'Oh my God. She's such a beautiful woman and my God, what an incredible voice. I wish I could sing like that.'
"I just remember being extremely envious of her and also touched by her innocence.
"I was watching a documentary about Serge Gainsbourg, the French songwriter, and there's a famous talk show he did that happened a while back when Whitney was just starting.
"It was funny, because I'd just watched it the week before she died, where he was making a kind of play for her on national television and he was basically saying in French that he wanted to 'f' her — and the look of shock on her face...

"I mean, she was so innocent and so young, and so cute, and really she blushed.
"And I was thinking, 'We are all innocent at one stage in our life. It's just interesting, the paths our lives take.'
"I was struck by that — how well she started and where she ended up and the tragedy of it."

Maybe it's me, but I didn't like what she said. I don't like when ppl make assumptions about how she passed. Unless Maddy is good judies with coroner - she need to keep her mouth shut or simply say: "She was a much better, bigger, and extraordinary talent - than I ever will be - she will be missed." That my love is an acceptable statement. #knowyourplace
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#385 NippyFanNy779

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Posted 13 March 2012 - 10:27 AM

I hate the automatic jump to substance abuse it’s unfair. Whitney admitted her demons and dealt with them. Her passing is sudden and tragic but there is no evidence that it had anything to do with her past. The media and so called peers and industry friends are being negligent and irresponsible in assuming anything in regards to why she passed.

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#386 ILoveYouBack

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Posted 13 March 2012 - 10:40 AM

It's so interesting and comforting to hear other musicians and artists pay the kind of respects to Whitney that Meatloaf did. I don't know a lot of Meatloaf songs, but it is safe to say his music was not in Whitney's "genre." But he knew she was a stelar talent. And he felt grief for her passing. It makes me think highly of him.

I am absolutely certain some of his fans dismissed Whitney and her music. I hope they read his amazing comments and realize that, all in all, artists truly respect one another. And he would probably feel pretty disgusted if one of his fans (or tourists) spoke ill of Whitney or refused to recognize the great loss music and the world has suffered.

It also makes me want to be less of a tourist for other musicians...people with true talent that I often dismiss. Thank you, Meatloaf, for that humbling, candid, sensitive response.

#387 ILoveYouBack

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Posted 13 March 2012 - 10:47 AM

View Postremamamama, on 12 March 2012 - 06:08 AM, said:



Why, why, why did things like this not happen when she was alive. Crying all over again...

#388 PontusFromSweden

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Posted 13 March 2012 - 05:43 PM

Was about suspicious since its "funny or die" but it was cute.


#389 remamamama

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Posted 14 March 2012 - 01:12 PM

Video: Jordin Sparks Speaks On ‘Sparkle’, Remembers Whitney Houston

Jordin Sparks was one of many celebs on hand at this weekend’s 2012 Disney Dreamers Academy hosted at the Walt Disney World Resort in Florida. Moving the crowd with her soaring vocals, the songbird paused for questions from the audience and was greeted with a number of questions concerning the status of her motion picture debut ‘Sparkle’ opposite late pop icon Whitney Houston.

Speaking on the film, due August 17th, and its forthcoming promotions, the ‘Battlefield’ beauty lent word on her expectations for the film as well as detailing the influence Houston had on her. Honored by assisting Houston in her final role, find out what else Sparks shared:

http://thatgrapejuic...ton/#more-69722

http://soundcloud.co...s-dreamers-2012



That's what I call epic fail. lol Whitney was not 22 when Bodyguard came out. But I love her words about Whitney.

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#390 remamamama

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Posted 15 March 2012 - 10:00 AM

Adam Levine
"We all love her so much and she was so...I mean, I'm not sure there's anybody with a voice like that. We miss her."


Edited by remamamama, 15 March 2012 - 10:01 AM.

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