• Monday, Aug. 31, 2020
Hans Zimmer, Jacob Shea pen score for "Planet Earth: A Celebration"
This July 10, 2019 photo shows composer Hans Zimmer posing for a portrait at the Montage Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif. Zimmer and Jacob Shea provide the score for “Planet Earth: A Celebration," premiering on Monday at 8 p.m. ET/7p.m. CT across BBC AMERICA, AMC, SundanceTV and IFC. (Photo by Rebecca Cabage/Invision/AP, File)

The man who composed the music to "The Lion King" is just as comfortable with real lions, too.

Oscar-winning composer Hans Zimmer scores such stunning nature sequences as goofy flamingos on parade and lions hunting in the Namib desert for "Planet Earth: A Celebration." The animals are acting on instinct and so is Zimmer, in a way. 

"I look at a moving image and I hear something in my head," he says. "And it's not necessarily right, but I do hear music. That is how I'm built." 

The one-hour special pulls together sequences from "Planet Earth II" and "Blue Planet II" with a new narration from Sir David Attenborough and a reworked score by Zimmer and Jacob Shea. 

The composers say they enjoy writing music for nature documentaries because the sequences have never been seen before and have no associated baggage.

"When you start watching the footage, you are seeing something that you didn't realize existed or was possible," Shea says. "It's all about getting caught up in the romance of what you're able to witness."

The TV special highlights various animals, from bottlenose dolphins surfing for joy to an octopus outwitting a pyjama shark and baby iguanas scampering past snakes in sequences more thrilling than any Hollywood action movie.

"You go from something which is hilarious to great tragedy constantly. The extremes in the material are so vast," Zimmer said.

Zimmer and Shea have tremendous respect for the camera crew members who risk their lives in dangerous environments to film the animal sequences.

"We're the guys sitting in a studio and the most dangerous thing that ever happens to us is that the deadline is just around the corner," Zimmer jokes.

The composers created new music and rearranged their scores for the TV special. They recorded with the BBC Concert Orchestra in London and were accompanied by rapper Dave, who performed on the grand piano. Revisiting their music gave them a chance to rework familiar sounds.

"It's nice to visit with old friends, even though sometimes they can be a bit contrarian and sometimes they can be a little bit boring," says Zimmer. "But most of the time, you get to look at them from a new perspective."

Zimmer is perhaps the best known contemporary film score composer, with credits including the "Pirates of the Caribbean" series, "Interstellar," "Gladiator," "Inception," "Dunkirk" and "The Dark Knight" trilogy, among others. He scored "The Lion King" in 1994 and returned to Pride Rock last year for the photo-realistic remake.

Shea was the music programmer for "Public Enemies," arranger for "Madagascar 2" and "Despicable Me," and composer of additional music for "Lone Survivor," "Transformers: The Dark of the Moon" and "Battleship."

Both composers say they start by watching the animal sequences and try to translate that into notes. If it's life and death at stake, the score is more ominous. Funner sequences get a lighter treatment. 

"One of the problems I think both Jacob and I have is that the images are so stunning and so amazing that they're basically challenging us each time," Zimmer says.

"It seems to come with a little note — that it doesn't actually come with — which basically reads: 'Yeah. Look at this. What are you going to do now?'"

Different animals pose different challenges. Shea says it's harder to understand some aquatic creatures because their facial expressions are so foreign. Zimmer is partial to birds and sea creatures. 

"There's something magical about the water. The movement is different. The rhythms are different," he says. "I find air and sea totally inspiring. And land is a little harder."

Both men are enchanted by the natural world — Arctic orcas feasting on herring, a snow leopard love triangle in the Himalayas or kelp forests in South Africa.

"We seem to know more about space and space travel and all that kind of stuff than we know about what's happening in the little pond behind your house," Zimmer says.

"I'm interested in the mysteries that are right in front of our eyes."

  • Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020
Police: Justin Townes Earle's death was probable overdose
In this July 31, 2011 file photo, singer-songwriter Justin Townes Earle performs at the Newport Folk Festival in Newport, R.I. Earle, a leading performer of American roots music known for his introspective and haunting style, has died at age 38. New West Records publicist Brady Brock confirmed his death, but did not immediately provide details. Earle was the son of country star Steve Earle. (AP Photo/Joe Giblin, file)
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- 

Nashville police said a preliminary investigation into the death of singer-songwriter Justin Townes Earle shows his death was a probable drug overdose. 

Police spokesman Don Aaron said officers did a welfare check at Earle's home on Sunday where he was found dead. A friend called police after no one had heard from the 38-year-old since Thursday. Aaron said there were no signs of a struggle or foul play. Autopsy results are pending. 

Earle was a leading performer of American roots music known for his introspective and haunting style. He was the son of country star Steve Earle, although the younger Earle was mostly raised by his single mother, Carol-Ann. 

A conscious throwback to old-time country and blues music, Earle released such albums as "Harlem River Blues" and "The Saint of Lost Causes" and was named Emerging Act of the Year at the 2009 Americana Honors & Awards ceremony. He wrote often of loneliness, flight and forgiveness, and he was open in interviews about his rough childhood and his addictions. 

  • Thursday, Aug. 20, 2020
Sound credit initiative put forth by CAS, MPSE, & AMPS
An example of a proposed card listing movie credits for audio professionals
LOS ANGELES -- 

The Cinema Audio Society recently joined together with the Motion Picture Sound Editors and The Association of Motion Picture Sound in sending an open letter to the entertainment industry regarding grouping together key sound professionals and positioning them in the credits in proximity with other key roles. 

“This is a multi-organizational effort by the overall sound community to change the culture of recognition towards the art and craft of sound for picture,” said CAS president Karol Urban. “It also complements the new Academy Awards structure of honoring sound editorial and mix under than same designation by presenting the key members of the sound team in solidarity to the viewer.”

The Cinema Audio Society, a philanthropic, non-profit organization, was formed in 1964 for the purpose of educating and informing the general public and the motion picture & television industry that effective cinematic sound is achieved by a creative, artistic and technical blending of diverse sound elements. 

The letter reads in part: 

“Though film is often considered a visual medium, removing the sound component will demonstrate exactly how movies ‘tell’ the story, thrill audiences, and become the ‘voice’ of the Filmmaker. As George Lucas has famously been quoted, ‘Sound is 50 percent of the movie-going experience.’

“Production Sound Mixing, Sound Editing, and Re-recording Mixing all contribute to the complete sound experience and are eligible for recognition of major awards. It is remarkable that these persons who receive nominations for numerous international awards, including those from AMPAS and BAFTA, are generally not afforded prominent screen credits that are representative of their creative contribution to the film. We seek your help in correcting this imbalance.

“We believe that the complete sound design ofthe film is the responsibility and ownership of these key sound roles. The Production Sound Mixer, Supervising Sound Editor(s), Re-Recording Mixer(s), should share a single card and be appropriately positioned within the same proximity of the other key roles, such as Director of Photography, Film Editor, Production Designer, Costume Designer, Unit Production Manager, 1st Assistant Director.

“Such a screen credit would assure that individuals who were principally responsible for the creative direction of the soundtrack would be clearly identified and acknowledged by the audience.” 

The letter then concluded with an example centered on Once Upon A Time In Hollywood in which a single card following UPM(s), 1st and 2nd AD credits would appear as:

Production Sound Mixer     Mark Ulano CAS AMPS
Supervising Sound Editor   Wylie Stateman MPSE
Re-Recording Mixers          Michael Minkler, CAS
                                             Christian P. Minkler CAS

  • Saturday, Aug. 8, 2020
MTV VMAs scraps indoor performances, moves to outdoor sets
The MTV Moon Man appears on the red carpet at the MTV Video Music Awards at Radio City Music Hall on Aug. 20, 2018, in New York. MTV says it is changing its plans for indoor performances for its upcoming Video Music Awards, opting for outdoor shows spread throughout New York City instead. Organizers had planned for some performances inside Brooklyn's Barclays Center for the Aug. 30 show, but say they will follow the guidance of state and local officials to move them outside. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File)
NEW YORK (AP) -- 

MTV says it is ditching plans for indoor performances for its upcoming Video Music Awards, opting for outdoor shows spread throughout New York City instead.

Organizers had planned for some performances inside Brooklyn's Barclays Center for the Aug. 30 show, but say they will follow the guidance of state and local officials to move them outside.

The shift announced Friday is in response to the coronavirus pandemic. New York City was one of the first U.S. cities hit hard by the virus, but cases have leveled off and some restrictions are being loosened.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo's announcement in June that the VMAs  would be held at Barclays surprised many and was a signal of the city's turnaround in its fight against the virus.

A statement by MTV and the Barclays Center promised the show would "pay homage to the incredible resiliency of New York with several outdoor performances around the City with limited or no audience."

The show plans to return to Barclays for its 2021 edition.

The ceremony bestows new awards focused on live performances and music videos created at home during the pandemic. Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande are the leading nominees with nine apiece.

BTS, Doja Cat and J Balvin are among the performances announced so far by MTV.

  • Thursday, Aug. 6, 2020
Yessian documentary "An Armenian Trilogy" released in 5 languages
Dan Yessian
DETROIT -- 

“I See Wings,” the symphonic ballad recorded by Detroit performing artist Kenny Watson and featured in the documentary An Armenian Trilogy, has been released on iTunes, Apple Music and Spotify. The film about American composer Dan Yessian’s journey from advertising music creator to writing his first classical composition in remembrance of the 1915 Armenian Genocide victims, has also now been released with subtitles in French, Arabic, Russian, Spanish and Eastern Armenian on Vimeo.  The film was recently released on Amazon. Yessian composed “I See Wings” in collaboration with his longtime songwriting partner David Barrett, who is known for composing the NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship anthem “One Shining Moment.”

“The song “I See Wings” is a memorial to all souls lost to the atrocities of hate,” explained Yessian. “While the Armenian Genocide happened a century ago, the age-old question of why people harm others due to differences remains too relevant today. My hope is the language of music can provide some healing.”

Watson said, “The lyrics are about a connection to ancestors and for me that would be to my African heritage. The song is beautiful, moving and calls out to anyone whose relatives have suffered unjustly.”

Yessian, who is of Armenian descent, was asked by his priest to write a classical composition to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, when 1.5 million Armenian citizens were massacred by the Turkish Ottoman Empire from 1915-1922. The three movements of the composition, called “An Armenian Trilogy--The Freedom, The Fear and The Faith,” were originally written for piano and violin before being fully orchestrated. The documentary follows Yessian from his childhood as a budding clarinet player, to the early years of his business, through the success of his international music company, and then to Armenia where his composition was performed by the world-renowned Armenian National Philharmonic Orchestra.  The film has been shown at festivals throughout the U.S. and won Best Score, Audience Choice and Exceptional Merit awards. 

Yessian is the founder of Yessian Music Inc., with offices in Detroit, L.A., NY and Hamburg, Germany. He was inducted into the Adcraft Hall of Fame in 2018. The company creates TV commercial music for brands such as United Airlines, Ford, Macy’s, McDonald’s, Taco Bell, Nintendo, Disney, Walmart and Toyota. 

  • Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2020
Neil Young sues Trump campaign, deriding use of famous tunes
In this Saturday, May 25, 2019, file photo, Neil Young performs at the BottleRock Napa Valley Music Festival at Napa Valley Expo in Napa, Calif. Young has sued President Donald Trump's reelection campaign, saying he doesn't want his music used as a theme song for what he calls a divisive un-American campaign of ignorance and hate. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP, File)
NEW YORK (AP) -- 

Neil Young sued President Donald Trump's reelection campaign Tuesday for copyright infringement, saying he doesn't want his music used as a theme song for a "divisive un-American campaign of ignorance and hate."

The Grammy-award winning Canadian-born musician filed the lawsuit through his lawyers in Manhattan federal court, seeking up to $150,000 in statutory damages for each infringement.

A message seeking comment was left with a campaign spokesperson.

The legendary singer cited repeated use of two songs: "Rockin' in the Free World" and "Devil's Sidewalk."

The campaign has used the tunes numerous times at rallies and political events, including on June 20 in Tulsa, Oklahoma, the lawsuit said.

Young said he was not suing to "disrespect the rights and opinions of American citizens, who are free to support the candidate of their choosing," the lawsuit said.

"However," it added, "Plaintiff in good conscience cannot allow his music to be used as a 'theme song' for a divisive, un-American campaign of ignorance and hate."

Young first complained about the use of the 1990 single, "Rockin' in the Free World," in June 2015, when the song accompanied Trump's announcement of his presidential campaign, according to the lawsuit.

The campaign's insistence in a statement then that it had obtained permission to use the music only proved that it was aware it needed permission, the lawsuit said.

It said Young has voiced continuous and public objections to the use of the music.

"The campaign has willfully ignored Plaintiff's telling it not to play the Songs and willfully proceeded to play the Songs despite its lack of a license," according to the lawsuit.

New York attorney Ivan Saperstein, who filed the lawsuit on Young's behalf along with attorney Robert S. Besser of Santa Monica, California, declined comment. 

On July 3, Young lodged a complaint on the "Neil Young Archives" website, where a copy of Tuesday's lawsuit was also posted, after Trump visited Mount Rushmore for an event.

"I stand in solidarity with the Lakota Sioux & this is NOT ok with me," he said in support of over 100 protesters who forced the closing of a road leading to the landmark.

He complained after "Like a Hurricane" and other songs were played when Trump visited the site.

"Imagine what it feels like to hear 'Rockin' in the Free World' after this President speaks, like it is his theme song," Young said on the website. "I did not write it for that."

Other artists have also complained after their songs were played at Trump's events.

In June, the Rolling Stones threatened to sue after the 1969 classic "You Can't Always Get What You Want" was played at Trump's Oklahoma rally, where critics said the indoor event threatened to spread the coronavirus.

The family of the late rock musician Tom Petty said it had issued a cease-and-desist order after Trump used the song "I Won't Back Down" in Tulsa.

"Trump was in no way authorized to use this song to further a campaign that leaves too many Americans and common sense behind," the statement said. 

Associated Press Writer Jonathan Lemire contributed to this story.

  • Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2020
Roc Nation partners with Brooklyn's LIU to launch new school
In this July 23, 2019, file photo, Jay-Z makes an announcement of the launch of Dream Chasers record label in joint venture with Roc Nation, at the Roc Nation headquarters in New York. Jay-Z’s Roc Nation entertainment company is partnering with Brooklyn’s Long Island University to launch the Roc Nation School of Music, Sports & Entertainment. The new school will begin enrolling students for the fall 2021 semester, and 25% of the incoming freshmen class will receive Roc Nation Hope Scholarships. (Photo by Greg Allen/Invision/AP, File)
NEW YORK (AP) -- 

Jay-Z's Roc Nation entertainment company is partnering with Brooklyn's Long Island University to launch the Roc Nation School of Music, Sports & Entertainment.

The new school will begin enrolling students for the fall 2021 semester, and 25% of the incoming freshmen class will receive Roc Nation Hope Scholarships. Hope Scholars will graduate without any debt.

Jay-Z, a 22-time Grammy winner and entertainment mogul, was born and raised in Brooklyn. He launched Roc Nation in 2008 and the company has worked with some of the top players in music, including Rihanna, Alicia Keys, DJ Khaled, J. Cole, Shakira, Megan Thee Stallion, Lil Uzi Vert and more.

Roc Nation Sports was founded in 2013 and has worked with many athletes as well as the NBA, MLB and NFL, even co-producing this year's Emmy-nominated halftime show with Shakira and Jennifer Lopez.

Roc Nation CEO Desiree Perez called the new partnership with LIU "a true investment in our community and young people in Brooklyn, in New York City, and beyond." 

"We're excited that The Roc Nation School of Music, Sports & Entertainment will provide unique insight, knowledge and experiences for students and introduce the world to the next generation of unmatched talent," Perez continued in her statement Tuesday.

The Roc Nation School of Music, Sports & Entertainment will offer undergraduate degrees in music, music technology, entrepreneurship and production, and sports management. The school will begin accepting applications this fall for the fall 2021 semester and Roc Nation Hope Scholarship recipients will be selected from a group of academically competitive, need-based first-time freshmen from New York.

"Our proximity in and around New York City's epicenter of music and sports clearly positions us to offer unparalleled experiential learning and access to professional opportunities that will launch students to success," LIU President Dr. Kimberly Cline said in a statement. "We look forward to joining with Roc Nation to offer an unprecedented educational resource that opens up the entertainment and sports world to a new and eager generation."

In addition to learning from professors, students will also engage with guest artists and lecturers and will gain hands-on experience through internships.

The school will also offer resources to high school students and those younger: Starting in spring 2021, the school will launch summer residential camps for high schoolers and Saturday programs for students ages 10-18 that focus on music and sports management. Those programs will begin in spring 2021 and scholarships will be available for need-based students.

  • Saturday, Jul. 25, 2020
Fleetwood Mac blues guitarist Peter Green dies at 73
In this file photo dated Saturday, April 7, 2001, British rock and blues guitarist Peter Green, a founding member of Fleetwood Mac, warms up backstage before performing with his own band, Peter Green's Splinter Group, at B.B. King Blues Club & Grill, in New York. Lawyers representing the family of Peter Green, say in a statement Saturday July 25, 2020, that he has died, aged 73. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, FILE)
LONDON (AP) -- 

Peter Green, the dexterous blues guitarist who led the first incarnation of Fleetwood Mac in a career shortened by psychedelic drugs and mental illness, has died at 73.

A law firm representing his family, Swan Turton, announced the death in a statement Saturday. It said he died "peacefully in his sleep" this weekend. A further statement will be issued in the coming days.

Green, to some listeners, was the best of the British blues guitarists of the 1960s. B.B. King once said Green "has the sweetest tone I ever heard. He was the only one who gave me the cold sweats."

Green also made a mark as a composer with "Albatross," and as a songwriter with "Oh Well" and "Black Magic Woman." 

He crashed out of the band in 1971. Even so, Mick Fleetwood said in an interview with The Associated Press in 2017 that Green deserves the lion's share of the credit for the band's success.

"Peter was asked why did he call the band Fleetwood Mac. He said, 'Well, you know I thought maybe I'd move on at some point and I wanted Mick and John (McVie) to have a band.' End of story, explaining how generous he was," said Fleetwood, who described Green as a standout in an era of great guitar work.

Indeed, Green was so fundamental to the band that in its early days it was called Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac.

Peter Allen Greenbaum was born on Oct. 29, 1946, in London. The gift of a cheap guitar put the 10-year-old Green on a musical path.

He was barely out of his teens when he got his first big break in 1966, replacing Eric Clapton in John Mayall's Bluesbreakers — initially for just a week in 1965 after Clapton abruptly took off for a Greek holiday. Clapton quit for good soon after and Green was in.

In the Bluesbreakers he was reunited with Mick Fleetwood, a former colleague in Peter B's Looners. Mayall added bass player McVie soon after.

The three departed the next year, forming the core of the band initially billed as "Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac featuring (guitarist) Jeremy Spencer."

Fleetwood Mac made its debut at the British Blues and Jazz festival in the summer of 1967, which led to a recording contract, then an eponymous first album in February 1968. The album, which included "Long Grey Mare" and three other songs by Green, stayed on the British charts for 13 months. 

The band's early albums were heavy blues-rock affairs marked by Green's fluid, evocative guitar style and gravelly vocals. Notable singles included "Oh Well" and the Latin-flavored "Black Magic Woman," later a hit for Carlos Santana.

But as the band flourished, Green became increasingly erratic, even paranoid. Drugs played a part in his unraveling.

On a tour in California, Green became acquainted with Augustus Owsley Stanley III, notorious supplier of powerful LSD to the The Grateful Dead and Ken Kesey, the anti-hero of Tom Wolfe's book "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test." 

"He was taking a lot of acid and mescaline around the same time his illness began manifesting itself more and more," Fleetwood said in 2015. "We were oblivious as to what schizophrenia was back in those days but we knew something was amiss."

"Green Manalishi," Green's last single for the band, reflected his distress.

In an interview with Johnny Black for Mojo magazine, Green said: "I was dreaming I was dead and I couldn't move, so I fought my way back into my body. I woke up and looked around. It was very dark and I found myself writing a song. It was about money; 'The Green Manalishi' is money."

In some of his last appearances with the band, he wore a monk's robe and a crucifix. Fearing that he had too much money, he tried to persuade other band members to give their earnings to charities.

Green left Fleetwood Mac for good in 1971.

In his absence, the band's new line-up, including Christine McVie, Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham, gained enormous success with a more pop-tinged sound. 

Green was confined in a mental hospital in 1977 after an incident with his manager. Testimony in court said Green had asked for money and then threatened to shoot out the windows of the manager's office. 

Green was released later in the year, and married Jane Samuels, a Canadian, in 1978. They had a daughter, Rosebud, and divorced the following year. Green also has a son, Liam Firlej. 

Green returned to performing in the 1990s with the Peter Green Splinter Group. 

In 1998, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame along with other past and present members of Fleetwood Mac.

AP writer Bob Barr died in 2018.

  • Thursday, Jul. 23, 2020
AMP Awards names Curatorial Committee, renews commitment to Musicians Foundation
An image from this year's AMP Awards show opening, created by Ataboy Studios and scored by Mophonics
NEW YORK -- 

The AMP Awards for Music & Sound is getting ready to take the digital stage as it preps for its new show date of July 30. That’s when the winners of the 2020 competition for the best in music and sound for branding and marketing will be revealed during its virtual online presentation, according to Georg Bissen, president of the Association of Music Producers and owner of MetaTechnik in New York.

The show will also feature a very special musical performance from a Grammy-nominated artist whose music has topped the charts in over 20 countries.

Streaming the AMP Awards show is free, thanks to the generous support of its sponsors, but RSVPs are required here to receive a Zoom link.    

In addition to setting a new date for its virtual show--originally scheduled for July 14--the AMP Awards also released the names of its 2020 Curatorial Committee, which met late last month to review the finalists for the awards. Led by Show chair Jay Russell, chief creative officer of GSD&M, the AMP Awards Curatorial Committee finalized the winners and selected a single entry that will be presented with this year’s top honor, the Ryan Barkan Award. Named in honor of the late music supervisor at Droga5, it will be used this year to honor the Best in Show.

Comprised of agency creatives and music producers as well as executives from music production and music publishing companies, the AMP Awards Curatorial Committee included Kristen Barnard, director of integrated production, Tracy Locke; Joanna Batemits, executive producer, Carousel; Khrisana Edwards, director of integrated production, Indeed.com; Stephanie Diaz-Matos, head of supervision & library, Raedio; Jack Epsteen, SVP, director of production, GSD&M; Michael Frick, VP, brand partnerships & creative synch, Position Music; Karen Gereffi Goodman, VP, creative director, MullenLowe; Robby Hurd, VP of sales, Musicbed; David Lapinsky, VP, music producer, Grey/Townhouse; Alec Stern, director of music, DDB; and Rani Vaz, executive producer, RNDM ORDR.

And in keeping with the spirit of giving that’s become especially important during this challenging pandemic, the AMP Awards has renewed its commitment to the Musicians Foundation, the non-profit group that assists musicians in need. AMP members are urged to make donations to the foundation, and can do so on a special AMP donation page located here.

Less than a week after nationwide closures and cancellations of venues, studios and festivals, Musicians Foundation established its CV19 Emergency Relief Aid Grant Program. Eligible musician-applicants can receive modest, one-time grants up to $200 to help put food on the table, pay a utility bill, or cover other essentials during this difficult time. Since mid-March, the Foundation has sent nearly 1000 emergency grants to musicians in almost every state in the country.

“AMP’s work to advocate for quality musicianship and strengthen the professional community is essential for the industry as a whole,” said Jeremy Morrow, head of outreach and development for Musicians Foundation. “As the charitable partner for this year’s AMP Awards, Musicians Foundation is honored to be involved with the Association as we continue to reach more performers, educators, and composers in need.”

  • Tuesday, Jul. 21, 2020
Singer, songwriter, activist Baez named Guthrie recipient
Joan Baez arrives at the Latin Grammy special merit awards on Nov. 13, 2019, in Las Vegas. The singer, songwriter, activist and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame member is this year’s recipient of the Woody Guthrie Prize, an award that recognizes artists who speak out for the less fortunate. Baez will be honored with a virtual ceremony on Aug. 16. She was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2017. (Photo by Eric Jamison/Invision/AP, File)
TULSA, Okla. (AP) -- 

Singer, songwriter, activist and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame member Joan Baez is this year's recipient of the Woody Guthrie Prize, an award that recognizes artists who speak out for the less fortunate.

Baez will be honored with a virtual ceremony on Aug. 16 during this year's virtual edition of the Philadelphia Folk Festival. She was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2017.

Woody Guthrie Center Director Deana McCloud noted Baez's activism that included marching for civil rights and opposing the Vietnam War. 

"A staunch activist, Ms. Baez has consistently been on the front lines in the fight for social justice, peace, and equality," McCloud said in a statement.

Baez said in the statement that she has followed in the footsteps of Guthrie.

"It has been my mission to use my music as a voice for those who cannot be heard or have been silenced by fear and powerlessness," Baez said. 

Past recipients of the award include Chuck D, John Mellencamp, Norman Lear, Kris Kristofferson, Mavis Staples and Pete Seeger.

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