Whitney Houston Dead: Singer Dies At 48

MJfan01'

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Whitney Houston is dead at 48 years old, according to the Associated Press.

The superstar singer and actress's publicist, Kristin Foster, broke the news of Houston's passing to the AP, but thus far, no cause of death has been revealed. In recent years, she struggled with drug abuse.

Her self-titled debut album, released in 1985, sold 25 million copies worldwide. In total, she released seven albums and three film soundtracks; a winner of six Grammys, Houston sold over 200 million albums and singles worldwide. She earned 30 Billboard Awards, 22 American Music Awards and two Emmy Awards.

this is so damn sad. :crying
 

mz.mjqueen_101

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I just cant believe it. Everyone that had any real talent is gone.:( now all we have left is men who wear leopard print and green uggs and women who come out half dressed and sing about sex. Smh, not that I dont find them entertaining, but it's just that... Where is the substance? The meaning. Whitney will forever be missed:'(
 

LittleSusie50

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This don't make no damn sense! Another one!!!???

Now for the barrage of videos, tributes, and Johnny-Come-Latelys....again.
She has been a punch line 4 a long time.
Now, she's the greatest thing that ever lived...hmph!

Watch her record sales soar, bet people are downloading her music now!

RIP Ms. Houston. You were always a legend. God bless her family.
Rest in peace girl...we will always love you. :respect
 

MJfan01'

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back when talent meant talent. She didn't need autone to sound half way decent. One of the greatest vocalist of all time.
 

blargle

New member
And so it begins:



* Executives will discuss marketing strategy for music

* Nine albums, soundtracks featuring the pop singer

* Michael Jackson was also Sony music star

By Ronald Grover and Yinka Adegoke

LOS ANGELES, Feb 12 (Reuters) - Sony Music executives will meet this week in New York to determine a strategy for marketing the nine albums, soundtracks and compilations that feature Whitney Houston, the pop singer who died on Saturday at age 48, according to two people familiar with the plans.

Executives will also discuss stepping up marketing efforts for the upcoming film "Sparkle," a low-budget movie starring Houston that will be released in August, and for the accompanying soundtrack on which she sings two songs, added one of the people with knowledge of the conversations.

Houston's death is the second in three years for a top-tier Sony Music artist. In 2009, following Michael Jackson's death, the New York-based company aggressively marketed Jackson's prior albums, selling more than 8.2 million in the U.S. and more than 35 million worldwide, according to Billboard.

Sony executives are expected to wait until after the results of an autopsy are known before re-releasing albums or otherwise openly marketing the late singer, according to one of the people familiar with the conversations. A tribute concert featuring other Sony artists and those with whom Houston had worked in the past is also being contemplated, this person said.

"Michael Jackson's passing was the perfect storm for Sony because he was getting ready for a world tour that was already getting a lot of publicity," said Lance Grode, a former head of worldwide business affairs for MCA Records, now Universal Music. "You don't want to look too eager but you also want to capitalize on the attention the star is getting right now."

In 2010, Sony released a re-mastered 25-year anniversary edition of Houston's debut 1985 album "Whitney Houston," and the company will likely boost marketing of that record, said one of the people with knowledge of Sony.

Houston's Christmas album, "One Wish: The Holiday Album," currently listed on Amazon.com for $7.53, will almost certainly be re-issued this fall, said the person.

On Sunday, fans had already driven "Whitney Houston - The Greatest Hits" to the top of the charts on Amazon.com, and her signature hit single "I Will Always Love You," was the top download on iTunes.


NO LARGE REVENUE SHARE

Unlike Michael Jackson, who controlled much of his music, Houston did not enjoy a very large share of the revenues from her work. Sony's Legacy Records owns the catalog of her albums, and pays Houston, or her estate, royalties for her singing. Houston did not write her hit songs, and doesn't share in the revenues for publishing rights.

Clive Davis, Sony's chief creative officer and former CEO of Arista, stands to collect a share of the royalties as well for the three Houston albums on which he is credited as producer or executive producer. For those albums, he could get as much as 10 percent - or "points" - of the royalties, an accepted industry practice, according to one of the industry executives.

A Davis spokesman did not return calls. Sony would not comment beyond a statement in which the company said "Whitney Houston was an icon and a once-in-lifetime talent who influenced a generation of singers and brought joy to millions of fans around the world. She will be greatly missed."

Universal Music Group, a unit of Vivendi, will also share in the anticipated increase in Whitney Houston sales. In 2007, the company purchased the music publishing rights to songs such as "The Greatest Love of All," "Didn't We Have it All" and "Saving All My Love for You" from songwriter Michael Masser.

Singer Dolly Parton controls the publishing rights, which enables her to license music, to "I Will Always Love You." Parton wrote and recorded the song in 1973.

"When Whitney did it, I got all the money for the publishing and for the writing, and I bought a lot of cheap wigs," Parton told CNN's Anderson Cooper in an interview in January.

Warner Brothers, a unit of Time Warner, controls the rights for the 1992 film "The Bodyguard," which stars Houston as a singer and actress and Kevin Costner as her bodyguard and lover. The movie earned $121 million in U.S. theater ticket sales and $410 million worldwide, according to the Internet site Box Office Mojo.

Sony controls the rights to the soundtrack, which has sold more than 44 million copies worldwide, and it will almost certainly be re-released soon, said one of the people with knowledge of Sony's plans. Nielsen Soundscan says it is the best-selling soundtrack of the last 20 years and the sixth best-selling album since Soundscan began measuring sales in 1991.

"When a star first dies, fans are desperate for one last performance," said Mark Young, a University of Southern California business professor and author of the book "The Mirror Effect: How Celebrity Narcissism is Seducing America."
 

MJfan01'

New member
too bad she didn't write and control more of her music. :angry: i know Sony is going to make a lot off her death.
 

LittleSusie50

New member
Good God I hope she had an up to date WILL!!!!!!!!!
This is just too sad!
Jennifer Hudson had me crying last night!
God bless Cissy Houston, Bobbi Kristina, and the entire family.
Wow...so sad. :unsure: :respect :mellow: :crying
 

MJfan01'

New member
funeral service

WESTFIELD, N.J. (AP) - Whitney Houston is being laid to rest at a private ceremony in New Jersey.

Houston died Feb. 11 in California at age 48. No cause of death has been determined.

She is being buried Sunday at the cemetery in Westfield where her father was interred in 2003. Onlookers were gathering along the route to her gravesite as the police-escorted motorcade headed toward it and the hearse carrying her casket entered the cemetery.

The pop star was mourned at a funeral Saturday at the church in Newark where she sang in the choir as a child. The invitation-only service featured a tribute by some of the biggest names in the music, including Stevie Wonder and Alicia Keys. Kevin Costner and music mogul Clive Davis were among those who spoke.
 

Jingles

New member
Although, they defiantly deserve the love now, society always seems to forget just how talented someone is until after they have passed on. All the love showered upon them "after the fact" would probably have done them a lot of good while they were still with us. I do think that society likes to put people on a pedestal just so they can kick it out from under them. And now we watch once again as people fight over the "proverbial remains" just looking to make a quick buck off of this. People defiantly deserve to be celebrated and honored, but the all too familiar pattern just tends to make me a bit heart-sick. My thoughts and prayers go out to all of her loved ones. RIP Whitney -- Give Michael a hug and kiss for us o.k.
 

LittleSusie50

New member
Watched it all day Saturday...it just wore me out!

So sad, but dignified and uplifting at the same time.
My eyes were bloodshot by the time it was over.
And when they put the casket on their shoulders, and Ray J reached
out to touch it, her Mom was walking behind it crying, and those
ladies were on either side of her, I just lost it.

Damn... :unsure: :( :pacify
 

MJfan01'

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Whitney Houston

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Whitney Houston's official cause of death was due to accidental drowning, a source close to the investigation tells PEOPLE.

The singer, 48, was also found to have cocaine in her system at the time of her death, the source confirms. Contributing factors of her death included heart disease and cocaine use, an investigation found.

The Los Angeles County coroner's office confirmed the news Thursday after PEOPLE reported the findings. The report also found that Houston had marijuana, Benadryl and other medication in her system.

"[Houston] could've passed out first due to the intoxication from the cocaine, or she could've had a heart attack and then drowned," coroner assistant chief Ed Winter tells PEOPLE. "It's probably one of those two scenarios."

Winter declined to comment whether cocaine was found at the scene or how much cocaine was found in her system.

Houston was found unresponsive and underwater in a bathtub at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on Feb. 11, a day before the Grammy Awards, and was pronounced dead at the scene soon afterward.

Coroner officials previously confirmed that prescription pill bottles were found in her room, but the number of pills were "not in alarming amounts."


PHOTOS: Whitney Houston: Her Life in Pictures


Houston, who had long battled drug addiction, was laid to rest on Feb. 19 at the Fairview Cemetery in Westfield, N.J., alongside her father, following a star-studded memorial the day before
 
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