Antham [1992 ? FLAC]
Antham [1992 ? FLAC] ::: https://urlca.com/2t8fkH
Thanks to re-entering the Hot 100 Airplay list at number 45 with 30 million listeners, Houston's 1991 Super Bowl version of "The Star Spangled Banner" re-visited the Billboard Hot 100 chart at number 50, with the marks for Gold certification and 12 weeks on, the issue date of September 29, 2001.[59] It also debuted for the first time on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks chart at number 54 in the same week.[60] On its first week of retail release, the song re-entered the Billboard Hot 100 Singles Sales chart at number two, and the following week topped the chart in the October 20 issue, becoming her third chart-topper, after "I Will Always Love You" in 1992 and "Exhale (Shoop Shoop)" in 1995.[61][62] In the same week, the single reached number 13 and a peak of number 30, on the Hot 100 and Hot R&B/Hip-Hop chart, respectively.[63][64] On the Billboard October 27, 2001 issue, Houston set another historic Hot 100 record with "The Star Spangled Banner" which reached number six on the chart. She became the first and only artist to make the national anthem Top 10 hit since 1958, when Billboard premiered the Hot 100 chart, and the third overall in music history, following Margaret Woodrow Wilson who hit number seven with it in 1915 and Irish tenorJohn McCormack who made the tune number one in 1917.[22][65] It stayed on the chart for a total of 27 weeks, combined a fresh-16-weeks with 1991's 11 weeks.[66] The single gave an impressive performance on the Hot 100 Singles Sales chart, spending six weeks on the top of the chart from October 20 to November 24, 2001 and 94 weeks on the chart by May 2003.[67][68] In October 2001, RIAA certified it Platinum for shipments of 1,000,000 copies, making it Houston's seventh Platinum single.[57] According to Nielsen SoundScan, as of 2007, it sold 1,200,000 copies in the US alone.[69]
The Florida Orchestra's contribution to the performance was virtually ignored by the public and the media.[citation needed] That did not cause a problem until the performance was determined to release as a single and donate any proceeds to a war-related charity by Arista Records. Although Ashley Sanford, a representative of Arista in New York, said everyone associated with the performance had been consulted before announcing plans for the recording, the plan came as a surprise to the orchestra. Kathryn Holm, then acting executive director for the orchestra, told St. Petersburg Times that "We were informed indirectly. We had heard something about it. But we didn't know anything had been decided." Arranger John Clayton was surprised as well, saying "I had heard some talk something might happen." Unlike Clayton, who was paid for his work, the orchestra was paid only for its expenses. The musicians and music director Jahja Ling donated their services. According to Holm, their contract gave permission only for a single broadcast of the performance. Holm said "I'm not an expert in this, so I don't know whether the radio or television stations have permission to broadcast it or not." The orchestra's original contract with the NFL, signed December in 1990, didn't even mention subsequent releases. Holm demanded proper compensation from Arista for the contribution of the orchestra, then faced financial trouble and wanted a share of any profits from its Super Bowl performance, telling the Times that "Nobody anticipated the reaction, but part of the anthem's impact came from the arrangement behind it, so we believe our musicians deserve some restitution."[71][82] Eventually, the orchestra received royalty payments in 1991 and 1992 of about $100,000, the St. Petersburg Times reported.[83]
On December 14, 2001, the Florida Orchestra sued Arista Records for royalties from copies of the song re-released after Sept. 11 and placed on a Whitney Houston Greatest Hits album and videocassette. Leonard Stone, then orchestra executive director, said "It is a pity that we have to go to court on something so honorable and uplifting as the national anthem. [...] I suspect that Whitney Houston, if she knew, would be deeply hurt and offended as well. She was a friend of the orchestra," filing the lawsuit in Hillsborough Circuit Court asked a judge to enforce the terms of a 1991 agreement that requires Arista to pay the orchestra royalties on all sales worldwide of her rendition of "The Star-Spangled Banner." Under the agreement, the orchestra would get royalties of 5 percent on the suggested retail price of all copies of the song sold in the United States. The royalties would range from 2.5 to 4.25 percent in foreign countries. According to Stone, Arista was supposed to send the orchestra quarterly reports on the album's sales but the orchestra never received them, and no one at the orchestra knew that Houston's rendition of the song had been released in 2000 on her greatest hits album.[83][84] Stone added that "the orchestra learned of the alleged contract breach after the anthem was reissued following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and quickly became a hot-selling single." Following the song's release after Sept. 11, orchestra attorney Frank Jakes began looking into the issue. Jakes, who negotiated the agreement with Arista in 1991, said that he sent Arista's general counsel letters and faxes but got no response, recalling how unwilling Arista had been to pay the orchestra a decade ago.[85] However, thanks to both sides' efforts for resolution of the dispute, three days later (December 17, 2001), the suit was withdrawn by the orchestra voluntarily. The Arista spokesperson said "it was an administrative oversight from [Houston's] Greatest Hits album." An Arista representative assured Jakes who claimed that the non-profit organization had not received quarterly royalty statements since mid-1992, that the issue could be settled without legal action.[83][86]
LISTA DE ÁLBUNSÁLBUNS DE ESTÚDIO:1985 - Anthem [Reissued 1992, Japan, Nexus KICS 2122] (00:49:05)1985 - Anthem [Remastered 2005, Japan, King Records KICS 1172] (00:52:40)1986 - Tightrope [Remastered 2005, Japan, King Records KICS 1173] (00:58:29)1987 - Bound To Break [Remastered 2010, Japan, Nexus KICS 91174] (00:41:56)1988 - Gypsy Ways [Remastered 2010, Japan, Nexus KICS 91175] (00:46:40)1989 - Hunting Time [Remastered 2005, Japan, King Records KICS 1176] (00:40:40)1990 - No Smoke Without Fire [Remastered 2005, Japan, King Records KICS 1177] (00:47:22)1992 - Domestic Booty [Remastered 2005, Japan, Nexus KICS 1178] (00:59:24)2000 - Heavy Metal Anthem [Japan, Victor VICP 60992] (00:51:01)2001 - Seven Hills [Japan, Victor VICP 61464] (00:47:24)2002 - Overload [Japan, Victor VICP 62023] (00:42:27)2004 - Eternal Warrior [Japan, Victor VICP 62775] (00:51:10)2006 - Immortal [Japan, Victor VICP 63550] (00:47:42)2008 - Black Empire [Japan, Victor VICP 64529] (00:45:43)2011 - Heraldic Device [Deluxe Edition, Japan, Victor VIZP 107] (00:58:58)2012 - Burning Oath [Japan, Thunderball667 UICN 9006] (00:47:03)2014 - Absolute World [Japan, Thunderball667 UICN 9026] (00:50:20)
SINGLES & EPS:1990 - Love On The Edge [CDS, Japan, Nexus KIDS-2] (00:10:30)1992 - Special [CDS, Japan, Nexus 8SSX 57] (00:08:22)2000 - Gypsy Ways (Win, Lose Or Draw) [CDS, Japan, Victor VICP 60979] (00:14:16)2001 - Grieve Of Heart [CDS, Japan, Victor VICP 61446]2002 - The Voices [CDS, Japan, Victor VICP 61975] (00:12:20)2004 - Onslaught [CDS, Japan, Victor VICP 62689] (00:14:27)2006 - Immortal Bind [CDS, Japan, Victor VICP 63489] (00:09:00)2008 - Heat Of The Night [CDS, Japan, Victor VICP 64576] (00:13:26)2012 - Evil One [CDS, Japan, Thunderball667 UICN 5001] (00:13:36)
COMPILAÇÕES:1990 - Best [Compilation, Japan, Nexus KICS 39] (00:59:48)1992 - Best II [Compilation, Japan, Nexus KICS 234] (01:04:26)1998 - The Very Best Of Anthem [Compilation, Japan, King Records KICS 2812] (01:16:36)2001 - Anthem Ways [Compilation, Japan, Nexus KICS 870] (00:49:08)2005 - Official Bootleg [Compilation 2CD, Japan, Nexus KICS 1168] (02:20:50)2007 - Core [Compilation, Japan, Victor VICP 63831] (01:19:43)2012 - Ultimate Best Of Nexus Years [Compilation 2CD, Japan, Nexus KICS 1838] (02:33:11)2015 - Anthems 2000-2011 [Compilation 2CD, Japan, Victor VIZP 135] (02:10:33)2015 - Blazing Faith ~ Revisited [Compilation, Japan, Thunderball667 UIXN 9002] (00:43:38)
AO VIVO:1987 - The Show Carries On! [Live, 1st Press, Japan, Nexus K32Y 2100] (00:48:38)1987 - The Show Carries On! Complete Version [Live 2CD, 2005, Japan, King Records KICS 1170] (01:29:16)1992 - Last Anthem [Live, Japan, Nexus KICS-235] (01:00:13)2003 - Live' Melt Down [Live, Japan, Victor VICP 62308] (01:08:28)2005 - Prologue Live Boxx I [Live 3CD, Japan, Victor VICP 63112] (02:09:02)2010 - Prologue Live Boxx 2 [Live 2CD, Japan, Victor VICP 64838] (01:29:07)2015 - Trimetallic [Live 3CD, Japan, Virgin Records UICN-1082] (02:38:08)
LISTA DE ÁLBUNSÁLBUNS:1985 - Anthem1986 - Tightrope 1987 - Bound to Break 1988 - Gypsy Ways 1986 - Hunting Time 1990 - No Smoke Without Fire 1992 - Domestic Booty2000 - Heavy Metal Anthem2001 - Seven Hills 2002 - Overload 2004 - Eternal Warrior2006 - Immortal 2008 - Black Empire2011 - Heraldic Device2012 - Burning Oath2014 - Absolute World2017 - Engraved 2019 - Nucleus 2020 - Explosive!! -Studio Jam-
COMPILAÇÕES:1990 - Best 1981-1990 1992 - Best II 1981-1992 1998 - The Very Best Of Anthem 2001 - Anthem Ways2005 - Official Bootleg 2007 - Core2012 - Ultimate Best of Nexus Years 2015 - Anthems 2000-2011 (2CD)2015 - Anthology Of Anthem2015 - Blazing Faith ~ Revisited 2b1af7f3a8