Saturday 6 September 2008

Download Max Mutzke mp3






Max Mutzke
   

Artist: Max Mutzke: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Other
Rock: Pop-Rock

   







Discography:


...aus dem Bauch
   

 ...aus dem Bauch

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 12
Max Mutzke
   

 Max Mutzke

   Year:    

Tracks: 13






Heavily influence by America's '70s casimir Funk, Max Mutzke got his start in music drumming for the German casimir Funk band Project 5. Mutzke's first-class honours degree appearance as a solo creative person was on a German television system extra showcasing the country's finalists for the 2004 Eurovision Song Contest. His "Can't Wait Until Tonight" took first class honours arcdegree position.





Breastfeeding Could Reduce Risk Of Aggressive Form Of Breast Cancer That Disproportionately Affects Black, Younger Women

Wednesday 27 August 2008

Live: Radiohead at the Hollywood Bowl

AN ELECTRIC drone wafted through the air before Radiohead took the stage Sunday at the Hollywood Bowl. It was the ideal transonic prologue to the dearest English group's latest Los Angeles appearing. Atonal and abstract, the drone invoked contemporary classical music, scarce as the curtain of long tubes encircling the band's equipment suggested the churchy stateliness of a pipe organ. But the fuzzy sound also had an sharpness, hinting at guitar freakouts to come.

This is the tautness Radiohead rides, especially in its storied live shows: The sound it creates onstage is serious and complex, simply it as well delivers the whomp of more conventional rock. At the Bowl, beginning a two-night point of view signaling the end of a long summer of touring and festival dates, Radiohead was completely comfortable flexing both aspects of its muscle. Its 25-song set rapturous its acolytes while exposing the mutually exclusive desires this band stimulates: for live music as a once-in-a-lifetime experience, and for rock'n'roll as ritual, providing reliable release.

Grinning and waving as they took the point, singer Thom Yorke and his couple looked ready to relax and stretch out, merely the twitchy, mutant rhythms of "15 Step," from the 2007 album �In Rainbows,� recalled that for Radiohead, every stretch demands an match contraction. Yorke jerked back and forward doing what some fans call his "psycho bunny dance" as the song unfolded, each element sharp-edged yet just aligned.





Radiohead's sound relies on each player's careful carrying out of a distinct line or rhythmical sequence that interlocks with every other part. It's a bodily structure more rough-cut in greco-Roman music and jazz than in rock candy, in which one riff or chord sequence is usually pushed to the forefront. (Dance music, a big Radiohead influence, is also based in pattern-making.) There's a lot to hear in most Radiohead songs; that's one reasonableness they seat sometimes feel vague.

Live, the band's commitment to complexness is bodied by frantic multi-instrumentalist Jonny Greenwood, wHO leapt from guitar to drum to keyboards to various effects boxes Sunday as the set progressed. Greenwood, who's also becoming known as an orchestral composer, represents the band's artiest ambitions. Whether obeisance his guitar on "Pyramid Song" or triggering shards of sampled dialogue on "The National Anthem," he fulfilled his role as the group's ultimate music geek.

If Greenwood represents Radiohead's flowering as an artistic creation project, Yorke brings the band drama. Self-effacing and serious in civilian life, onstage he's a natural, if overstrung, showman. As a songwriter, he specializes in emotional extremes -- the most altered states that rise internally when ordinary tribe face deathrate, wrestle with unresolved desires or take into account frustration to go too far.

"I'm an animal at bay in your parked gondola," he sang in "All I Need," his kind of love song. Yorke's back was to the crowd as he played piano, and he brought his careening tenor to a murmur; yet he still came across as intense. Like many initially awkward performers who've mellowed in time, Yorke has found a way to reconcile his dislike of rock-star poses with his impulse to put on a indicate. His gracelessness now seems reflective of the human condition, not just eccentricity.

The band's other members offer crucial livelihood -- non an easy labor in this ambitious group. The rhythm incision of Colin Greenwood on bass and Phil Selway on drums interact with the music's electronic rhythms in shipway that raise and expand upon them. On guitar and personal effects pedals, Ed O'Brien was not only Greenwood's able second, he provided some of the basic elements that associate Radiohead to traditional rock.

Sunday's set included enough aged songs to show how much the band's guide has changed since former albums like "OK Computer." The 1997 hit "Paranoid Android," performed as part of the encore, is a multi-part song suite that's challenging to execute, but it does provide a conventional climax and some rousing chances to sing on. Songs from "In Rainbows" proved attention-getting but not as releasing, getting people dancing simply earning fewer passionate cheers.

Pushing its consultation to listen in new ways, Radiohead has earned its reputation as one of the era's majuscule live acts of the Apostles. But that old craving for songs with big hooks and stomping choruses lingers, and the band is bright to serve it too. That organ set turned out to be the background for a selfsame impressive arena-rock light show; several Beatles-esque riffs and soulful melodies made it into the mix too.

And you know what? There was noneffervescent plenty of room for drone.

ann.powers



More information

Sunday 17 August 2008

Cangen Biotechnologies Inc. And Dai Nippon Printing Co., Ltd. Move Forward With Development Of An Early Stage Lung Cancer Diagnostic

� Cangen Biotechnologies, Inc. and Dai Nippon Printing Co., Ltd. (DNP) of Japan are pleased to announce that they testament move

Thursday 7 August 2008

Patti Smith: Dream of Life

The music of Patti Smith slaps you in the side with its energy, temerity, and fearlessness. Its raw intensity of uncharted punk, the incantatory ritual poesy of her lyrics, and Smith's lone wolf, damning presence remindful of mid-'60s Dylan all fuse into an atom bomb explosion of incendiary rock and transcendent poetry, a true icon of rock, or, as Smith ruefully remarks in Steven Sebring's reverent profile, Patti Smith: Dream of Life, "How does it palpate to be a rock icon? I always think of Mount Rushmore."


Sebring fatigued 11 years filming Smith, from her Gone Again comeback record album after going away music behind to raise a family (husband Fred Sonic Smith and iI children Jackson and Jesse) in a home in Detroit up to a few days ago, where she is seen hot against the criminal acts of the Apostles of George W. Bush. The center point of the cinema is a cluttered room filled with memorabilia from Smith's living, the way getting more than and more cluttered with detritus (like the address of Bringing It All Back Home) as the years and the cinema wear on and she comments on her lifetime and times.


Sebring impressionistically mixes footage of that room with snippets of concerts, travels to cities around the globe, and visits with friends and crime syndicate, all shot in granular 16mm colouration and pitch-black and white, Sebring cut with a swath betwixt both. Like Bruce Weber, Sebring is a fashion photographer, his film carriage hints of Weber's Chet Baker homage Let's Get Lost just with Sebring also photographing Smith in the cryptic and symbolic style of Maya Deren's Meshes in the Afternoon, making the film a well-shot hallucinatory hagiographa.


During one of the cuts to Smith in concert, she sings, "I was free/needed nobody/it was beautiful/it was beautiful" zeroing in on all the limitations Sebring brings to his film. In the press notes, Sebring says that he was unfamiliar with Smith's music and that he came up with the idea for the take during an assigned photograph shoot with Smith. In Patti Smith: Dream of Life, he also of necessity nobody as he trains his photographic camera on Smith to the exclusion of anything else -- her art, her culture, her significance. What we see of Smith in Sebring's film is more like a schizophrenic case study -- offstage, a warm, kind woman from South Jersey world Health Organization loves her family and waxes nostalgic over a dress she wore as a kid to a feral, hot wire jingle of nerves, spew, and unfettered furiousness onstage.


Sebring cuts between the two Smiths with incoherent smacks. She is in New Jersey visiting her parents ("Do you still feed the squirrels, Daddy?" she asks he beginner) and bonding with her kids ("Mommy? I love you, Mommy." "I sexual love you, Jesse."), or Smith is peal around on tombstones throughout the

Tuesday 1 July 2008

Anne Dudly and Jaz Coleman

Anne Dudly and Jaz Coleman   
Artist: Anne Dudly and Jaz Coleman

   Genre(s): 
Retro
   



Discography:


Songs from the victorious city   
 Songs from the victorious city

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 10




 






Wednesday 25 June 2008

CASSANDRA WILSON

Loverly (Blue Note): B-

Sure, it’s great to hear Wilson’s lush, torn-velvet voice tackling standards again after a long but fruitful detour through blues, folk and soul. And, yes, both the all-star cast (Jason Moran, Reginald Veal, Herlin Riley, etc.) and the program she’s chosen suit her well. But Wilson’s habit of tackling most numbers from way behind the beat and s-l-o-w-i-n-g others to an utter crawl persists. A kick in the pants sometimes seems as appropriate a response as a round of applause. Download: “Caravan.”


Thursday 19 June 2008

Liv Tyler - Tyler Wont Watch Her New Movie


Actress LIV TYLER refuses to watch herself in new horror film THE STRANGERS, because scary movies terrify her.

The star claims she was put off the genre after watching 1974 horror classic Texas Chainsaw Massacre.

Tyler says, "When I was a kid, I was obsessed with horror movies but then I watched Texas Chainsaw Massacre and it really scared me, so I was like, 'OK, I'm done with horror movies.'"





See Also

The Black Keys plot another 'Attack' on US venues

The Black Keys [ tickets ] have extended their summer tour into fall as the indie-rocking duo continues to lay down roadwork behind its recently released album, "Attack & Release."The Ohio natives, who were previously slated to stay on the road into August, have now lined up a steady run of dates through the first week of October. Guitarist/vocalist Dan Auerbach and drummer Patrick Carney will kick off the outing with a July 5 appearance at rural Michigan's Rothbury Festival. Dates are below.The pair launches a run of shows in Australia and New Zealand this week. Full details can be found at the band's website.The pair worked with Gnarls Barkley principal Danger Mouse on "Attack & Release," which debuted at No. 14 on The Billboard 200 chart."It was sweet working with Danger Mouse," Auerbach said in a recent interview with LiveDaily. "He's a cool guy. Above everything else, we got along as friends. It was really easy to work with him when we got into the studio. Everybody had their equal say and could throw out ideas.""Danger Mouse was just another guy to bounce ideas off of," Auerbach added. "If we'd get stuck in a rut, he could keep us moving forward, keep us focused. When we were just doing fine on our own, he would just stand back and let us work. It was perfect."The album, which follows 2006's "Magic Potion," features guest appearances from a pair of frequent Tom Waits collaborators: guitarist Marc Ribot and multi-instrumentalist Ralph Carney. The set also features vocal contributions on the closing track from 18-year-old bluegrass singer Jessica Lea Mayfield.

Pamela Anderson And Tommy Lee Back Together

Motley Crue rocker Tommy Lee has revealed that he has reconciled with his ex-wife Pamela Anderson saying, "it's awesome" to have the family living under the same roof again.

Rolling Stone caught up with Lee at a studio in Hollywood, where the band are rehearsing for their upcoming tour, when he dropped the news about Anderson and their two sons Brandon and Dylan.

“Pamela and the kids have moved in with me. It’s awesome, man. It’s definitely working. You can tell on the kids’ faces — they’re happy when we’re together.”

With the couple having travelled the reconciliation path on numerous occasions before, Lee made light of the situation saying, “We’ve only given it a try 800 times — 801, here we go.”

NEXT: Doctor Issues Apology To Tom Cruise Over Comments

Photo courtesy of VH1.



'Harry Potter' Prequel To Be Handwritten By J.K. Rowling For Charity Auction




You haven't seen the last of Harry Potter and the gang. After wrapping up the epic adventure series of best-selling books about the boy wizard, author J.K. Rowling has penned a prequel to the tale that will be auctioned off for charity.

According to CNN, Rowling is working on an 800-word handwritten prequel that will be signed and auctioned off at a June 10 auction to benefit the Dyslexia Action charity and the English PEN writers' association. The story is being penned on a small "storycard" (5.75 by 8.25 inches), signed "JK Rowling 2008" and ending with the words, "From the prequel I am not working on — but that was fun!"

Rowling is among a group of 13 authors participating in the auction, which will also include cards written by literary stars Margaret Atwood, Sebastian Faulks, Nick Hornby and Tom Stoppard.

"We never dreamed that J.K. Rowling would donate something so precious, and we're incredibly grateful," said Gerry Johnson, managing director of Waterstone's, the bookstore that is hosting the event. "I can't begin to guess how much it will raise at auction."

The card comes a year after the final book in the "Potter" series hit shelves. Authors were told they could submit anything they wished, including sketches, doodles or ideas for a new story, but organizers were shocked when Rowling offered up the prequel to the series, which has sold more than 375 million copies worldwide.

CNN reported that a 93-word card from Rowling that referred to the "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" book sold at auction in 2002 for $53,000, and one of seven handwritten copies of a new work, "The Tales of Beedle the Bard," sold for $3.9 million in 2007.

Though the lucky auction winner will get to keep the "Potter" rarity, Waterstone's will display copies of all the cards in all its U.K. stores and online just after the auction. A printed book containing all of them will go on sale in August.






See Also

Implant Pentru Refuz

Implant Pentru Refuz   
Artist: Implant Pentru Refuz

   Genre(s): 
Folk: Moldavian and Romanian
   



Discography:


Culori   
 Culori

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 5




 





Kiss and Tell: Rock Legend Gene Simmons

Back In Baroque: The String Tribute To Ac-Dc

Back In Baroque: The String Tribute To Ac-Dc   
Artist: Back In Baroque: The String Tribute To Ac-Dc

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Back In Black   
 Back In Black

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 10




 






Coolest Dads!






See Also

Adan Chalino Sanchez

Adan Chalino Sanchez   
Artist: Adan Chalino Sanchez

   Genre(s): 
Latin
   



Discography:


El Unico   
 El Unico

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 12


Siempre y Para Siempre   
 Siempre y Para Siempre

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 11




 





Jack Nicholson is courtside at NBA finals