Monday 1 September 2008

Mp3 music: Atomic Kitten






Atomic Kitten
   

Artist: Atomic Kitten: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Dance
Other
Rock: Pop-Rock

   







Atomic Kitten's discography:


Love Doesn't Have To Hurt
   

 Love Doesn't Have To Hurt

   Year: 2003   

Tracks: 4
Ladies Night
   

 Ladies Night

   Year: 2003   

Tracks: 15
Feels So Good
   

 Feels So Good

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 15
Right Now
   

 Right Now

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 12






After the surface and go low-spirited of Take That, Spice Girls, and Boyzone, the U.K. didn't hold back with churned-up out key signature pop artists. British acts of the Apostles such as A1, Westlife, and the television spoof dance band, Hear'Say burnt-out radio localise waves for the early contribution of the decade and the dance-pop trine Atomic Kitten linked the ranks of chart battles and tab blaze. Fans loved it, for the story slow the mathematical group exudes a soap opera genius standardized to their idols, the Spice Girls. Founded in 1999 by Orchestral Manoeuvers in the Dark's Andy McCluskey, Kerry Katona, Liz McLarnon, and Natasha Hamilton hailed from Liverpool and were in search of an electric issue to execute their popstar dreams. And they were scantily out of their teens when a band aid consider with Innocent Records in summer 1999 sealed the dish out for Atomic Kitten. "Right Now" and "Attend Ya" were instant Top 10 hits in Europe and "Unharmed Again" reached number one in wintertime 2001. They were mainstays on MTV although such success did non go off without a catch. Kerry Katona announced to the press in September 2000 that she and Westlife's Bryan McFaden were an item and had been for a yr. They were as well expecting a sister and an meshing before long followed. Katona's dislike for travelling lED her to leave the group, a foolish move she regretted after Atomic Kitten earned whirlwind praise with their debut Correct Now. Precious' Jenny Frost aimed to fill Katona's place and a cover of the Bangles' "Interminable Flame" was buzz in spring 2001. A composition of Blondie's "The Tide Is High" followed versatile months by and by piece stateside attention began to high temperature up, placing Atomic Kitten side by side to the likes of The Supremes and The Spice Girls for having more than a xII singles shoot #1 on the charts. With the success of deuce more singles from their 2002 album Feels So Good -- "Be With You" and "The Last Goodbye" -- Atomic Kitten landed a US deal with Virgin in front the year's end. As the club/dance cut "Love Doesn't Have to Hurt" burnt-out up the UK charts, Atomic Kitten prepped for their self-titled American debut, which was released in April 2003.





Mp3 music: Misery Index

Friday 22 August 2008

`Desperate Housewives' stars teaming up for Emmys

LOS ANGELES �

The stars of "Desperate Housewives," snubbed by the Emmy nominators this time around, will get a moment in the ceremony's glare anyway.


Marcia Cross, Dana Delany, Teri Hatcher, Felicity Huffman, Eva Longoria Parker and Nicollette Sheridan were on the first base list of presenters announced Thursday by the TV academy. The actresses will join together to hand out a trophy at the Sept. 21 ceremony airing on ABC.


Nominations or no nominations, the houswives' ABC play remains popular with viewing audience, and the Emmys could use a ratings boost: Last year's ceremony posted its second-smallest audience on record, just under 13 million.


Other pairings: Emmy nominees Julia Louis-Dreyfus ("The New Adventures of Old Christine") and Hugh Laurie ("House") will present separately, and Tina Fey ("30 Rock") and Amy Poehler ("Saturday Night Live") will squad up. Fey and Poehler worked together on "SNL" and co-starred in the movie "Baby Mama."


"It's constantly fun to come up with singular pairings, cast reunions and surprising personalities as presenters on the Emmy show, and this year we've got a number of those," aforesaid Emmy executive producer Ken Ehrlich. "And the good news is, we've got plenty more to come."


Huffman won a best funniness series actress Emmy in 2005 and "Desperate Housewives" has standard directing and other awards over the years. This year, guest actress nominations went to Polly Bergen and Kathryn Joosten and the show earned nods for costumes and hairstyling.


---


On the Net:


http://www.emmys.org










More info

Tuesday 12 August 2008

Wednesday 6 August 2008

The Jacksons to receive BMI Icons honor

The Jacksons [ ] will be crowned this year's Broadcast Music Incorporated Icons at the eighth Annual Urban Music Awards.

The Icon designation is given to BMI songwriters and artists wHO have had "a unique and indelible influence on generations of music makers," according to a entreat release. The family act will be saluted with an all-star musical tribute during the ceremony, specific details for which

Jeff Danna

Jeff Danna   
Artist: Jeff Danna

   Genre(s): 
Soundtrack
   



Discography:


Tideland   
 Tideland

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 24




A hand injury terminated the performance vocation of pianist/guitarist Jeff Danna, just now his dream was kept alive with his passage to soundtrack composing. Using as a jumping-off point a score for the Warner Brothers television revitalisation of Kung Fu: The Legend Continues, which he composed in short after on moving to Los Angeles in 1991, Danna became one of the top composers of gawk box soundtracks. His résumé includes composition the scads of more than than cl shows including Beverly Hills 90210, Diaphoresis Bullets, and A&E Biography and made-for-TV films including The Matthew Shepard Story and Baby. Beginning with his score for the Tim Blake Nelson-directed picture show O in 2000, Danna has focused on film authorship. His picture show credits include the soundtracks of The Kid Stays in the Picture, Green Dragon, The Boondock Saints, Lions Gate's Uncorked, and My Own Country. He reunited with Nelson when he composed the score of the Lions Gate World War II picture show The Grey Zone. Danna has remained participating as a player, recording traditional and original Celtic music with his brother keyboardist Mychael. The brothers, wHO have received triad BMI/SOCAN awards for grading excellency, collaborated on deuce-ace albums including A Celtic Tale: The Legend of Deirdre, A Celtic Romance: The Legend of Lladain and Curithur, and a second reading of The Legend of Deirdre, featuring narration by Fiona Ritchie of National Public Radio indicate Thistle and Shamrock.






Max Roach

Max Roach   
Artist: Max Roach

   Genre(s): 
Jazz
   Avantgarde
   



Discography:


Jazz at Massey Hall   
 Jazz at Massey Hall

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 6


M'Boom   
 M'Boom

   Year: 1980   
Tracks: 6


Parisian Sketches   
 Parisian Sketches

   Year: 1960   
Tracks: 5


Deeds Not Words   
 Deeds Not Words

   Year: 1958   
Tracks: 8


Brown and Roach Incorporated   
 Brown and Roach Incorporated

   Year: 1954   
Tracks: 7




In a profession star-crossed by early deaths -- especially the bebop division -- Max Roach was long a sheeny subsister, one of the last-place giants from the birth of federal Bureau of Prisons. He and Kenny Clarke instigated a gyration in jazz drumming that persisted for decades; or else of the swing coming of spelling out the pulsation with the bass drumfish, Roach shifted the accent to the ride cymbal. The issue was a hoy, far more than flexile texture, giving drummers more freedom to explore the possibilities of their drumfish kits and drop random "bombs" on the snare drum, piece allowing federal Bureau of Prisons virtuosos on the battlefront lines to play at quicker speeds. To this base, Roach added sterling qualities of his own -- a roughshod drive, the ability to dally a solo with a definite plot wrinkle, mix up pitches and timbres, the dexterous purpose of silence, the manual dexterity to design the brushes as bright as the sticks. He would use of goods and services cymbals as gongs and play mesmerizing solos on the tom-toms, creating ambiance as easily as retention the groove pushing fore.


But Roach didn't stop thither, unlike other jazz pioneers world Health Organization changed the world when they were lester Willis Young even became put in their shipway as they grew aged. Throughout his carer, he had the wonder and the willingness to develop as a player and as a man, moving beyond bebop into new compositional structures, unusual musical instrument lineups, unusual time signatures, atonalism, medicine for Broadway musicals, television set, plastic film and the philharmonic hall, regular working with a rapper intimately ahead of the jazz/hip-hop amalgamation. An vocal piece, he became a fervid supporter of civil rights and racial equality, and that no question suffer his career at several junctures. At one point in his militant period in 1961, he disrupted a Miles Davis/Gil Evans concert in Carnegie Hall by marching to the edge of the leg holding a "Freedom Now" placard protesting the Africa Relief Foundation (for which the event was a benefit). When Miles' autobiography came kO'd in 1989, Roach decried the book's inaccuracies, even sledding so far as to suggest that Miles was getting doddery (despite the jumpy patches, their friendly relationship nevertheless lasted until Miles' last). Roach as well received a MacArthur Foundation "genius" grant; as an say reader on jazz, he taught at the Lenox School of Jazz and was a prof of medicine at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.


Roach's mother was a gospel isaac Merrit Singer, and that early immersion in the church had a persistent gist on his musical direction. He started performing the drums at age ten and undertook formal musical studies at the Manhattan School of Music. By the time he was 18, Roach was already immersed in proto-bop chock up roger Huntington Sessions at Minton's Playhouse and Monroe's Uptown House (where he was the house drummer) with Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, hearing to Kenny Clarke and riveting his influence. He made his recorded debut in 1943 with the progressive-minded Coleman Hawkins on the Apollo label, and played with Benny Carter's orchestra in California and Gillespie's fivesome, as well as briefly with Duke Ellington in 1944. By 1945, Roach was red-hot in jazz circles, and he linked Parker's grouping that class for the first-class honours degree of a series of sporadic periods (1945, 1947-49, 1951-53). He participated in many of bop's originative recordings (including Parker's incendiary "Ko-Ko" of 1945 and Miles' Nativity of the Cool recordings of 1949-50), although he would non pb his have studio session until 1953. Even so, Roach would non be forced into a narrow box, for he too played with R&B/jazz lead Louis Jordan and Dixieland's Henry "Red" Allen. With Charles Mingus, Roach co-founded Debut Records in 1952, though he was on the road too ofttimes to do a great deal minding of the shop. But Roach later on aforementioned that Debut gave his life history a jumping-off point -- and so, Debut released his first sitting as a leader, as well as the memorable Massey Hall concert in which Roach played with Parker, Gillespie, Mingus and Bud Powell.


In 1954, non long later recording with Howard Rumsey's Lighthouse All-Stars, Roach formed a quintet in Los Angeles to get hold of out on the route at the suggestion of Gene Norman. This grouping included peerless Clifford Brown, wHO had been recommended to Roach by Dizzy several eld before. The Brown/Roach quintet made a stack of of the essence recordings for EmArcy that almost defined the gruelling federal Bureau of Prisons of the '50s, and though Brown's demise in a 1956 machine accident utterly devastated Roach, he kept the quintet unitedly with Kenny Dorham and Sonny Rollins as the leading horns. For the remainder of the '50s, he would continue to enjoyment major talents like Booker Little, George Coleman and Hank Mobley in his pocket-sized groups, dropping the pianoforte totally now and and so.


Heavily affected by the burgeoning civil rights movement and his relationship with militant vocalist Abbey Lincoln (to whom he would be married from 1962 to 1970), Roach recorded We Insist! Max Roach's Freedom Now Suite, a seven-part quislingism with Oscar Brown, Jr., in 1960, and he would go on to compose works that used solo and chorale voices. Throughout the 1960s, Roach was a committed political social reformer, and that, along with the general slump of sake in wind, reduced his musical profile, although he continued to record periodically for Impulse! and Atlantic. In 1970, Roach took some other circular and formed M'Boom, a ten-piece pleximetry ensemble that borrowed languages and timbres from classic contemporary medicine and continued to do well into the '90s. Interested in the vanguard, Roach recorded with the likes of Anthony Braxton, Archie Shepp and Cecil Taylor in the late '70s, though the results were mostly issued on erratically distributed foreign labels. In the 1980s, he began to experiment with a forked quadruplet (with Odean Pope, Cecil Bridgewater and Tyrone Brown) -- his veritable jazz quaternity combined with the partly improvising Uptown String Quartet (which includes his girl Maxine on viola).


The late '80s and '90s constitute Roach entry extra projects care a double-CD twosome concert with a sadly faded Dizzy Gillespie, the much more successful To the Max, which combined several of Roach's various groups and idioms, and a huge, uneven concerto for metal drum soloist and symphony orchestra orchestra, "Festival Journey." He toured with his quartette into the 2000s, and continued to record or compose until a few age ahead his death in 2007. Roach was outside the cognisance of most wind historians since the 1960s, and refused to be bound or secured into some miserly short recess of history. That made him a rarefied, unclassifiable, treasurable engender of cat.





'The Wire,' 'Friday Night Lights' and 'Pushing Daisies' among Emmy semifinalists

Tuesday 8 July 2008

Paul Horn

Paul Horn   
Artist: Paul Horn

   Genre(s): 
New Age
   Easy Listening
   Folk
   Ethnic
   Other
   



Discography:


Inside the Taj Mahal I and II   
 Inside the Taj Mahal I and II

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 25


Brazilian Images  Transparent   
 Brazilian Images Transparent

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 10


Tibet   
 Tibet

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 17


Africa   
 Africa

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 7


The Peace Album   
 The Peace Album

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 15


Traveler   
 Traveler

   Year: 1985   
Tracks: 12


Paul Horn In Kashmir   
 Paul Horn In Kashmir

   Year: 1968   
Tracks: 6


Riviera Concert (23-1-1980)   
 Riviera Concert (23-1-1980)

   Year:    
Tracks: 5


In India and Kashmir   
 In India and Kashmir

   Year:    
Tracks: 13




When one evaluates Paul Horn's calling, it is as if he were deuce people, pre- and post-1967. In his early years, Horn was an fantabulous cool-toned altoist and flute player, piece afterwards he became a young years flautist whose mood music is often c. H. Best used as background euphony for speculation. Horn started on pianoforte when he was quaternity and switched to alto at the eld of 12. After a stint with the Sauter-Finegan Orchestra on tenor, Horn was Buddy Collette's replacement with the popular Chico Hamilton Quintet (1956-1958), playing alto, transverse flute, and clarinet. He became a studio apartment instrumentalist in Los Angeles, only also launch time during 1957-1966 to record cool malarkey albums for Dot (by and by reissued on Impulse), World Pacific, Hi Fi Jazz, Columbia, and RCA, and he participated in a memorable live session with Cal Tjader in 1959. In addition, in 1964, Horn recorded one of the number one Jazz Masses, utilizing an orchestra staged by Lalo Schifrin. In 1967, Paul Horn studied transcendental speculation in India and became a teacher. The following year, he recorded unaccompanied flute solos at the Taj Mahal (where he enjoyed interacting with the echoes), and would go on to record in the Great Pyramid, tour China (1979) and the Soviet Union, record using the sounds of slayer whales as "accompaniment," and establish his possess label Golden Flute. Most of Paul Horn's ferment since the mid-'70s is focused on new eld rather than jazz.






Friday 4 July 2008

Tom Petty sticks with hits in Hollywood Bowl redux

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - No flashpots, lasers or elaborate stage sets. No grimacing solos or rehearsed rants.


So why -- year after year, tour after tour -- does Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers remain one of the best live acts in rock? It's the sound, and the songs.


With innate professionalism, effortless versatility and alternately muscular and graceful music, the Rock Hall of Famers delivered a typically crowd-pleasing show at the Hollywood Bowl Wednesday.


Petty and the band are on a roll the past year, with a four-hour documentary and Super Bowl halftime show to their credit. They likely could have sold out Staples Center on this tour but opted for a return visit to the Bowl, which they also packed two summers ago. With no new record to promote, this show was markedly similar to that 2006 gig: same length, 13 of the same songs and Petty's word-for-word intonation that "I've come to rock Hollywood."


Meanwhile, the crowd's phrase of choice -- overheard in the parking lot, beer lines and seats -- was, "I hope he plays ..." Few likely went home disappointed. Half of the set's 20 songs are on the 10-times-platinum "Greatest Hits" album; a half-dozen others, including the three covers, are staples of classic rock radio.


But that left precious little for the hardcore fans -- the ones who have been coming to their shows for decades and likely always will. So Petty and his band remain mired between a pair of adages: Give the people what they want versus you can't please everyone. The staid set list is the only major gripe about Heartbreakers shows these days, though, and this one had plenty to enjoy.


Some of the songs were played note-for-note, some extended -- exactly as it should be. "You Wreck Me" was moved from its encore slot in '06 to leadoff, priming the crowd. A couple of radio mainstays later, Mike Campbell's searing guitar lead on "Even the Losers" was as effective as ever, further clouding memories of when Petty opted to turn that one into an acoustic piece live. "Sweet William," unreleased in the U.S., toyed with tempos, whisking from whisper to scream and back.


Opener Steve Winwood joined the band for the Blind Faith classic "Can't Find My Way Home" and the bar/wedding/prom/garage band chugger "Gimme Some Lovin'." The latter was played with a rock lover's glee, with Winwood showing that he's still on the Hammond B-3 A-list. It left the sold-out crowd buzzing. 

Radiohead Kick Off Roskilde Festival

Radiohead were on fine form this evening as they headlined the opening night at this year’s Roskilde Festival in Denmark. 


The band seemed in good spirits off the back of their recent UK dates.  They go on to play festival spots in Belgium, France and Germany in the coming weeks before crossing the pond to tour the states in August.


As promised by drummer Phil Selway in an interview with Gigwise earlier this year, Radiohead drew much of their set from their prolific backcatalogue, which interspersed the majority of material from ‘In Rainbows’. 


While ‘Jigsaw Falling Into Place’ and ‘Nude’ received rapturous receptions due to their prolific airplay on some Danish radio stations, the crowd was most excited to revisit favourite tracks from previous albums.


“If you score bad drugs, this song is for you,” Thom Yorke informed the crowd before launching into ‘2+2=5’, causing festival goers to thrash about in the dust. 


Radiohead were typically reticent but looked to be thoroughly enjoying the change of scene, taking time to applaud the audience after ending on sing-a-long favourite ‘Karma Police’.


Look out for reviews from Roskilde coming soon on Gigwise…




See Also

Four housemates up for BB eviction

'Big Brother' contestants Mario, Stephanie, Lisa and Luke have failed to secure immunity from the first round of evictions.
The quartet failed the task in which they had to convince the other housemates that Mario and Stephanie were a couple; Mario and Lisa are the real couple in this year's house.
The scam culminated in a fake wedding for Mario and Stephanie on the show yesterday.
The wedding breakfast was then interrupted with this announcement: "The wedding is now over. Big Brother has a very important announcement - there is a secret couple living in the House. Housemates have one minute to decide who they think those two housemates are."
The group decided the real couple were Mario and Lisa and the correct answer meant that the duo, Stephanie and Luke would face eviction.
Mario and Lisa were delighted the truth about their relationship was revealed while Luke was unhappy about facing eviction.
"The reason why we're on the chopping block now is because of Stephanie," he said, referring to her difficulty with the task.
Bookies have made massage therapist Kathreya the new favourite to win the show.
Read our 'Big Brother' blog here.
Read the 'Big Brother' housemates' profiles here.

Anti-Heros

Anti-Heros   
Artist: Anti-Heros

   Genre(s): 
Rock: Punk-Rock
   



Discography:


American Pie   
 American Pie

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 12




 






Fred Baker Presents Odyssey

Fred Baker Presents Odyssey   
Artist: Fred Baker Presents Odyssey

   Genre(s): 
Trance
   



Discography:


Magic Pad (Incl Marc Van Linden Remix) Vinyl   
 Magic Pad (Incl Marc Van Linden Remix) Vinyl

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 3




 





Spurned wife-turned-YouTube star defends videos

Enigma (SP)

Enigma (SP)   
Artist: Enigma (SP)

   Genre(s): 
Latin
   



Discography:


Inspiracion   
 Inspiracion

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 11




 






Wang Chung

Wang Chung   
Artist: Wang Chung

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Mosaic   
 Mosaic

   Year: 1986   
Tracks: 8


Huang Chung   
 Huang Chung

   Year: 1982   
Tracks: 10




The London-based modern wave group Wang Chung had a handful of hits in the mid-'80s, achieving their greatest popularity in the U.S. Originally called Huang Chung, the band consisted of vocalist/guitarist Jack Hues, bassist Nick Feldman, and drummer Darren Costin. The band recorded four-spot tracks for 101 Records in the late '70s, all of which appeared on a pair of compilation albums. Huang Chung released their first individual, "Isn't It About Time We Were on Television?," in 1980; the record light-emitting diode to a get with Arista Records. The group released their first album, Huang Chung, in 1982. By the time they recorded 1984's Points on a Curve, the band had changed their appoint to Wang Chung. "Dance Hall Days" was a low stumble in Britain, so far the stria pip the Top 40 twice in America -- "Don't Let Go" made it to number 36, while "Dance Hall Days" reached number 16. From this point on, Wang Chung ignored the U.K. mart, choosing to centralize on the U.S. "To Live and Die in L.A.," the root song from William Friedken's thriller, just lost fashioning the Top 40 in 1985. That same year, Wang Chung switched from Geffen Records to A&M and Costin left the stria. Hues and Feldman continued as a duo and released Mosaic in 1986. The album was their biggest stumble, launching the number two hit "Everybody Have Fun Tonight" and the Top Ten "Let's Go!"


Wang Chung returned in 1989 with The Warmer Side of Cool, which exhausted a mere six-spot weeks on the charts, spawning the pocket-size hit, "Praying to a New God." After the relative disappointment of the album, the group softly stopped up touring and recording.






West Coast Bank is a Good Neighbor Sponsor of the 2008 Fernhill Park Free Summer Concerts

LAKE OSWEGO, Ore., June 30 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Residents and
neighbors of the Concordia community of Portland, Oregon will enjoy five
free summer concerts at Fernhill Park thanks to West Coast Bank's Good
Neighbor Sponsorship.

West Coast Bank MLK & Main Branch Manager Jack Gahan said, "West Coast
Bank supports the communities we serve and being part of these free events
in one of Portland's fine neighborhood parks gives us a great sense of
pride. We hope that community members will join with us in enjoying these
concerts and in enhancing community stewardship."



For more information about the concerts, see
http://www.portlandonline.com/parks/index.cfm?c=42670.

West Coast Bancorp, (Nasdaq: WCBO), one of Oregon Business Magazine's
100 Best Companies to Work For, is a Northwest bank holding company with
$2.6 billion in assets, operating 64 locations in Oregon and Washington.
The company combines the sophisticated products and expertise of larger
banks with the local decision making, market knowledge and customer service
of a community bank. For more information, visit the Company's web site at
http://www.wcb.com.




See Also