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'We Are The World' to get an 'American Idol' alumni encore


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'We Are The World' to get an 'American Idol' alumni encore

 

2020-05-16T023504Z_1_LYNXMPEG4F024_RTROPTP_4_MUSIC-WE-ARE-THE-WORLD.JPG

FILE PHOTO: Recording artist Lionel Richie shows his hands after placing them in cement during a ceremony in the forecourt of the TCL Chinese theatre in Los Angeles, California, U.S., March 7, 2018. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni/File Photo

 

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "We Are The World," the celebrity-packed 1985 charity single, is getting an encore this weekend, courtesy of the stars of "American Idol."

 

"Idol" judges Lionel Richie, who co-wrote the song with the late Michael Jackson, Katy Perry and country singer Luke Bryan will perform it on Sunday alongside former stars and winners of the television talent show, broadcaster ABC said on Friday.

 

ABC said it will be the first television performance in 35 years of the song, which originally was written to raise money for African famine relief and featured musicians including Jackson, Diana Ross, Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Wonder, Bob Dylan and many others.

 

Sunday's singers will include "Idol" alumni Fantasia, Jordin Sparks, Katharine McPhee, Kellie Pickler, Lauren Alaina, Ruben Studdard and Scotty McCreery, as well as the top 11 finalists from the current season of the show.

 

The singing contest, which will crown this year's winner during the broadcast, has been produced remotely since mid-March when the coronavirus shutdown movie and television sets throughout the United States.

 

Richie said he had been "asked a thousand and one times" whether he was going to write another song that captures the coronavirus era.

 

"My answer is, exactly the lyrics I would have written for the new song are in the old song," he told television talk show host Jimmy Kimmel this week.

 

"The lyrics work perfectly," he added, referring to lines such as "We're saving our own lives."

 

Asked why he wanted the song sung by the "American Idol" family, Richie told Billboard on Friday, "We've done the all-star cast and it was historic. These kids inspire me with their talent and they reflect the diversity of the world."

 

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Daniel Wallis)

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2020-05-16
 
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Just shoot me now... Pj did a good bit about original:

PJ O'Rourke did the best summary of it in his excellent book Give War A Chance.

We are the world [solipsism], we are the children [average age forty].
We are the ones to make a brighter day [unproven], so let’s start giving [logical inference supplied without argument].
There’s a choice we’re making, so let’s start giving [true as far as it goes].
We’re saving our own lives [absurd].
It’s true we’ll make a better day [see line 2 above],
Just you and me [statistically unlikely].

That’s three palpable untruths, two dubious assertions, and nine uses of a first person pro-noun, not a single reference to trouble and anybody in it and no facts. The verse contains, literally, neither rhyme nor reason. And these musical riots of philanthropy address themselves to the wrong problems.
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17 hours ago, Emdog said:

Just shoot me now... Pj did a good bit about original:

PJ O'Rourke did the best summary of it in his excellent book Give War A Chance.

We are the world [solipsism], we are the children [average age forty].
We are the ones to make a brighter day [unproven], so let’s start giving [logical inference supplied without argument].
There’s a choice we’re making, so let’s start giving [true as far as it goes].
We’re saving our own lives [absurd].
It’s true we’ll make a better day [see line 2 above],
Just you and me [statistically unlikely].

That’s three palpable untruths, two dubious assertions, and nine uses of a first person pro-noun, not a single reference to trouble and anybody in it and no facts. The verse contains, literally, neither rhyme nor reason. And these musical riots of philanthropy address themselves to the wrong problems.

I don't know about all that ... but it was sh!t back in 85 and even with additions of "Fantasia, Jordin Sparks, Katharine McPhee, Kellie Pickler, Lauren Alaina, Ruben Studdard and Scotty McCreery"(I have heard of none of these "idols" ) I am still sure it will be sh!t.

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