Source: http://www.crazydaysandnights.net

This foreign born A list song producer was yelling at this A/A- list singer/actress because he thinks she is going to die like Amy Winehouse, not that he ever helped Amy when he had the chance.

Oscars

Mark Ronson

Lady Gaga

Amy Winehouse tells Mark Ronson: ‘You’re dead to me’ in Twitter outburst

The Twitter update was written at 5.16am and gave every impression of being pounded out furiously using clenched fists: “ronson you’re dead to me; one album i write an you take half the credit – make a career out of it? don’t think so BRUV.”

The author was Amy Winehouse, the 27-year-old singer with an illustrious history of falling out with people. During a still relatively brief career she has had differences with everyone from photographers to her own fans, even a husband. But now the target was a man who is not only a key musical collaborator but, by all accounts, one of the most agreeable men in pop music.

Relations with Mark Ronson, the DJ-turned musician who co-produced Winehouses’s biggest album, Back to Black, soured late on Friday when BBC2 broadcast his brief interview with Jools Holland on the latter’s eponymous music show.

Asked to define exactly what a music producer did, Ronson gave an example: “Working with someone like Amy Winehouse, she would come to me with just a song on an acoustic guitar and then you’d kind of dream up the rhythm arrangements and the track around it, all sorts of things. It’s really different, artist to artist.”

This might not sound too incendiary but Winehouse saw things differently. About four hours later she sent the Twitter missive on amyjademermaid, a semi-official personal message stream running for a year with 40,000 followers. Winehouse’s record company confirmed tonight that it is genuine.

The pair’s collaboration had been mutually fruitful. After giving Back to Black its much-praised Motown-styled backing Ronson used Winehouse to sing Valerie, the biggest hit on Version, his own successful 2007 album, which gave similar retro reworkings to modern pop covers.

The consolation for those hoping Ronson will helm Winehouse’s long-delayed follow-up to 2006’s Back to Black is that as fast as she falls out with people she tends to patch things up.

Ronson and Winehouse reportedly rowed after her well-documented drug use scotched a collaboration on the theme song to the James Bond film Quantum of Solace. But in July the singer joined Ronson’s band on stage at a London club. – Source