Tuesday 1 January 2013

Hot Guys Photos


Source(google.com.pk)
Hot Guys Photos Biography
Before Hot Chelle Rae “fueled up the Jeep with bubbly elasti-funk and breezy hip-hop swagger” (as Entertainment Weekly put it) with their brand new single “I Like It Like That,” the Nashville-based quartet scored a bonafide breakthrough smash hit over the last several months with “Tonight Tonight.” Declared “one of the catchiest pop-rock anthems of the summer” by USA Today, “Tonight Tonight” crashed into the Top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in July like an unruly teenager, shot to No. 1 at Hot AC radio in September, was certified double-platinum in the U.S., and certified platinum in Canada and Australia. Meanwhile, its hilarious video (featuring a cameo by guitarist Nash Overstreet’s brother, Glee’s Chord Overstreet) has racked up nearly 30 million views online, energizing the group’s active, devoted fan base. But it wasn’t until Jon Stewart sang a snippet of its chorus on The Daily Show that the band realized just how thoroughly “Tonight Tonight” had penetrated the mainstream.

“That was crazy,” recalls frontman Ryan Follese. “I was in my bunk on the bus when Jamie shouted, ‘Jon Stewart just sang our song!’ I love The Daily Show so much, I couldn’t believe it. The episode was airing again later in the night, so we stayed up to watch.” Adds Jamie: “I don’t know if Jon Stewart even likes the song, but I don’t care because it was so awesome. As long as he knows it, I am extremely happy.”

What’s not to like? With its once-heard-never purged melody, “la la la” refrain, and sly references to Zach Galifinakis, the song is a shameless crowd-pleaser. It has also been a game-changer for this hard-working young band, which formed in 2005, released its debut album, the dance-rock oriented Lovesick Electric, in 2009, and has been waiting for its break-out moment ever since. Hot Chelle Rae’s time has arrived with the band’s new album, WHATEVER — an unstoppable fireball of radio-ready tunes that finds them embracing who they really are: a band unabashedly in love with pop music.

“It's funny because the music we listen to has always centered around pop,” Nash says. “And I think the success of ‘Tonight Tonight’ showed us that we could go in that direction and put out an album of music that we would listen to as well as play.”

“It created a lane for us,” Ryan adds. “We like the idea of being a band amid all these solo acts on the radio. It challenges you to write great songs. You know these artists are out there writing ‘Just The Way You Are’ and ‘Teenage Dream’ and you think, ‘I’ve got to beat that.’ They’ve set the bar really high.” Hot Chelle Rae began working on WHATEVER at the end 2010, traveling from Nashville to Los Angeles and New York for writing and recording sessions with various collaborators, including Emanuel Kiriakou (Jason Derulo, Selena Gomez), Evan Bogart (Adam Lambert, Rihanna), S*A*M & Sluggo (Boys Like Girls, Cobra Starship, Gym Class Heroes) and rising star production trio Andrew Goldstein, Dan Book, and Alexei Misoul. They emerged with a clutch of fizzy sing-alongs, like the current single “I Like It Like That” (featuring hip-hop duo New Boyz and inspired by memories of crazy nights out in Nashville), quirky break-up song “Honestly,” be-yourself anthem “Beautiful Freaks,” finger-snapper “Radio,” as well as heartfelt tracks like “Keep You With Me” and “Why Don’t You Love Me.”

Through it all, the band keeps the melodies sleek, the harmonies tight, and the performances solid on WHATEVER, whose title is a playfully ironic comment on the hard work that went into writing and recording it. “The hardest thing to do is write is a simple pop song,” Ryan says. Adds Nash: “I read something this songwriter Jim Collins once said that stuck with me. He said, ‘If you can't write a melody on piano with one finger, then it's too complex for anyone to latch on to.’” The band took that idea to heart, but made sure the other elements in the songs could pull their weight. “One of my favorite things about pop music is, obviously, the simplicity of the melodies, but the underlying tracks have to be really entertaining for the song to be any good,” Ian says.
Hot Guys Photos
Hot Guys Photos
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Hot Guys Photos
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Hot Guys Photos
Hot Guys Photos
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