Monday, 8 September 2008

Mp3 music: Shadow King






Shadow King
   

Artist: Shadow King: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Rock

   







Shadow King's discography:


Shadow King
   

 Shadow King

   Year: 2006   

Tracks: 10






Shadow King was a transient sports stadium rock/hard rock candy band that was lED by Foreigner vocalist Lou Gramm. When Gramm (natural May 2, 1950, Rochester, NY) formed Shadow King in 1991, he was taking a result of absence from the multi-platinum Foreigner. The vocalist had been doing well as a solo artist -- his 1989 solo






Friday, 29 August 2008

St. Jude Medical Announces CE Mark Approval And FDA Clearance For New Family Of HIFU Surgical Ablation Products

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Tuesday, 19 August 2008

Chicago

The tarradiddle of the 1968 Democratic Convention riots and the trial that followed would seem to have it all, with no want for sexing up. There were riots in the streets (circularize live on TV, regular), youthful heroes with a zest for the theatrical, scowling villains with slight regard for decency, and the sense that the future of America was hanging in the balance. That wasn't enough, though, for director Brett Morgen (The Kid Stays in the Picture), who said that with Chicago 10 he wanted to make a film that "resonates with kids today" by being done "in a language they understand� without talk heads and a teller and all those furnishing." Thus: Rage Against the Machine on the soundtrack and all that sporty animation. The first sign, of course, that somebody will be wholly unable to efficaciously communicate with kids today is when they refer to them as "kids today."


Morgen's conceitedness with Chicago 10 -- commixture archival footage of the riot and its aftermath with alive recreations of the trial -- is not the film's problem. In fact, by break away from the shopworn documentarian's path of narration and flashback, Morgen does opens interesting doors for other filmmakers to trace. But the filmmakers (Morgen's main angel was Vanity Fair editor and periodic political dilettante Graydon Carter) have such a deficiency of trust in their own subject's inherent power that it all ends up more a catch than a bold new direction in non-fiction filmmaking. Medium Cool 2008 it's not.


The gimmickry is most vociferous in the courtroom scenes, where the Yippies are being frog-marched through a howlingly unjust mockery of a tryout. Although the dialogue is taken straight from the transcript, Morgen can't help oneself but ham it up his deal. So prosecuting officer Tom Foran's lines come out in Nick Nolte's frighteningly smothered squawk, spell judge Julius Hoffman (whose ludicrous contempt citations were later tossed out by an appeals court) is voiced as pure malefic villainy by the recent Roy Scheider. The defendants get more than human voicing (Hank Azaria as Abbie Hoffman, Mark Ruffalo as Jerry Rubin) and as well the opportunity to jambon it up, Yippie-style. The stark life renders everyone in the courtroom equally stiff, but Morgen swoops his photographic camera through the confined blank to lend it a dynamism that initially impresses but eventually distracts. No surprise then that such a surface-oriented film is so interpreted with Hoffman and Rubin's freaking-the-straights antics, a trivial of which goes a very long way. Their clown poses seem fifty-fifty more derisory when placed against the sight of Bobby Seale (Jeffrey Wright) literally indentured and gagged by Judge Hoffman; a sickening display of thuggish authoritarianism that makes the Yippies' funniness riffs the film is so potty of seem pathetic as a response.


Where Chicago 10 does impress is in the depth of its research. With tV audience accustomed to seeing the Chicago riots in a few banal clips shoehorned into 1960s retrospectives, the looping collages that comply the protestors flooding into Lincoln Park and the eruptions of violence later on will be a revelation of Saint John the Divine. What becomes clear is not merely the protestors' lack of central planning (once collected in Lincoln Park and denied a permit to march, the crowds and their Yippie leaders seem lost) merely how their buoyant optimism faded to terror in the face of the police and National Guard's machine-like conclusion to sweep the metropolis clean. Moments briefly bite with the haunt of incipient fascism: Allen Ginsberg chanting with shaking fear over a loudspeaker, blue-shirted police swarming through the trees with nightsticks flailing. But their power is lost through a mussy editing construction and a strangely abrupt conclusion.


By shearing away the standard documentary props in the interest of non boring those darn kids, Morgen has unfortunately left wing himself with a dilemma: how else to institute the setting for the riots? Assuming that Chicago 10 is targeted at today's politically mindful youth (there's at least two or three out there), and wants to educate them about the American left's radical past, it seems to require on faith that they will have a effective grasp on the national mood, circa 1968. The film gives the barest dash of background on where the Vietnam War was during the time, but whatever unschooled youths (the ones Morgen hopes to lure by acting Eminem's "Mosh" during footage of i march) inquisitive why the liberals were protesting the Democrats will be left out in the stale. Chicago 10 is a photographic film that makes history (literally) into a cartoon.




And bewilder out of his cubic yard, too.

Saturday, 9 August 2008

Siebenburgen

Siebenburgen   
Artist: Siebenburgen

   Genre(s): 
Metal: Death,Black
   Other
   Metal
   



Discography:


Darker Designs and Images Digipak   
 Darker Designs and Images Digipak

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 13


Darker Designs and Images   
 Darker Designs and Images

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 13


Plagued Be Thy Angel   
 Plagued Be Thy Angel

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 13


Delictum   
 Delictum

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 10


Grimjaur   
 Grimjaur

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 10


Loreia   
 Loreia

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 10




 





Lindsay Lohan says her gayness no business of LA's top cop

Tuesday, 1 July 2008

Tea and Symphony

Tea and Symphony   
Artist: Tea and Symphony

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Asylum for the Musically Insane   
 Asylum for the Musically Insane

   Year: 1969   
Tracks: 9




 





Kate Moss Avoids Pete Doherty At Glastonbury - Video

Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Billie Piper: 'I Fear I've Ruined My Career With Topless Scenes'

Billie Piper fears she may have blown her chances of Hollywood stardom by going topless in a role as a high-class prostitute.


The 'Doctor Who' actress' Diary Of A Call Girl series, in which she stars as Belle de Jour, has pulled in record viewing figures in the US.


But Piper, 25, fears she went too far for the American audience.


She explains, "Someone said the other day, rather viciously, 'What A-list stars get their t**s out?'


"And then I started thinking, 'Oh, my God, what have I done? I've ruined my future career.'


"You know, you get photographed on the beach topless. After all, they�re only breasts."


But a boss at US cable channel Showtime, which screened the series, said, "Billie has the looks and ability to make it very big in Hollywood."


Pregnant Billie is now filming a second series.




See Also

Wednesday, 18 June 2008

Dangerous Summer

Dangerous Summer   
Artist: Dangerous Summer

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


If You Could Only Keep Me Alive   
 If You Could Only Keep Me Alive

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 7




Melodic and attention-getting emo rock dance band the Dangerous Summer formed in Ellicott City, Maryland in August 2006. Guitarist Cody Payne stirred back into township after a brief clock time in Florida, recruiting trey of his longtime high schooltime buddies to bring together up with him upon his return. Taking their name from the classic Ernest Hemingway novel and look to groups like the Starting Line, Third Eye Blind, U2, and Name Taken for influence, the group -- which further included AJ Perdomo (leash vocals, bass), Bryan Czap (guitar) and Tyler Minsberg (drums) -- reach the studio that December to lay down their first tracks together. The resulting EP There Is No Such Thing As Science was self-released in January 2007 (limited to 1,000 copies), and the Dangerous Summer supported it on the road whenever school would admit, hooking up on shows with like-minded bands the Ataris, Cartel and Hit the Lights. The EP finally made its way into the ears of California-based Hopeless Records courtesy of the band's hometown friends All Time Low. A cover with the label was subsequently inked that spring. High school graduation followed for three-fourths of the Dangerous Summer ahead their following EP (and Hopeless debut), If You Could Only Keep Me Alive, appeared in August, which contained quartet songs from the previous Science EP and troika new ones. Guitarist Etay Pisano replaced Czap before long afterwards.