Friday, 5 September 2008

Mp3 music: Anne Briggs






Anne Briggs
   

Artist: Anne Briggs: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Folk

   







Anne Briggs's discography:


The Time Has Come
   

 The Time Has Come

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 13






In the annals of pop and tribe music, there ar few sagas unknown than that of Anne Briggs. An awesomely talented singer of traditional English folk music music, possessing of as pure and breathtakingly beautiful a voice as matchless could hope to deliver, she was the single most important influence on a grouping of female British folksingers that includes Sandy Denny, Maddy Prior, June Tabor, and Linda Thompson. Even Norma Waterson, herself a staggeringly important figure in the British folk music revitalisation of the mid-'60s, admits to being influenced by Briggs' twaddle, and notes that Anne Briggs singlehandedly changed the means that English women folksingers american English ginseng. What makes this tarradiddle so odd is that Briggs' entire recorded turnout consists of virtually 30 songs. She stopped-up tattle at the old age of 27, purportedly because she despised the sound of her recorded voice. As folk medicine music became electrified and more and more popular, and bands such as Fairport Convention and Pentangle were reinventing the British folk music custom, and more and more women (Arenaceous Denny, et al.) were spill the beans in a style started by Briggs, her caption flourished, yet she refused to spill the beans.


Briggs was born in Nottinghamshire in 1944 and began tattle tribe music spell still in her teens. Within a mates of days she was a unconstipated at local tribe clubs, getting her bad break as a resultant of the Centre 42 circuit of 1962. The Centre 42 circuit was an attack by musicians and other artists (backed and supported by trade unions) to deliver politically collectivist cultural activities to areas outside of London. Part of Centre 42's invoke was that in each city, local talent would hearing for a slot as a support act. It was hither that Briggs got her crack and was observed by British phratry caption Ewan MacColl. She was so good that MacColl positive her to leave school and conjoin the lie of the tour. While touring with Centre 42, Briggs began working with MacColl's friend and co-architect of the British phratry music revival, Bert Lloyd. Briggs considers him the to the highest degree significant influence on her exercise, and her debut EP, The Hazards of Love, had Lloyd's fingerprints all over it. But he was non a simple Svengali trying to take advantage of a teen folksinger; he treasured to give her the direction (as well as the songs) she needed to become a brobdingnagian talent. Lloyd was smart enough to understand that this was an extraordinary, once-in-a-lifetime type of isaac Bashevis Singer, and he treated her with kid gloves, acquiring her to loose (Briggs was notorious for her jumpiness) and serving her phonograph recording some marvelous music. But Briggs had a job with recording her singing -- she detested doing it and hated the way she sounded, so much so that she retired from music, iII years shy of 30, already touted as the sterling legend in English phratry music. Briggs still lives semi-reclusively in England and is still not recording or vocalizing in public, merely her influence remains potent. As guitar player Martin Carthy so capably arrange it: "She didn't mess about. There were no histrionics. There was no posing. There was no self-aware style. She sang fluidly, well, with howling passion."






Tuesday, 26 August 2008

Pick of the week: Rock and pop

N*E*R*D
Carling Academy, Sheffield, Monday 18
Academy 1, Manchester, Wednesday 20
Funking rock from the Neptunes spin-off world Health Organization, having channelled the energies of dead souls, ar now eyesight sounds.

Leeds Festival 2008
Bramham Park, Wetherby
Friday 22
An emo and indiepunk friendly throwaway, with the likes of Feeder and Slipknot brush up against the Cribs and Conor Oberst. It's all about hoods and trainers, kids.

Solfest
South Bay Beach, Wigton
Friday 22
Strangely marvelous mix of hula-hooping, knitathons and willow-making workshops among the likes of Supergrass and R�is�n Murphy. Not at the same metre, mind.







More information

Saturday, 16 August 2008

Download Happy Mondays






Happy Mondays
   

Artist: Happy Mondays: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Rock
Indie
Other

   







Discography:


Uncle Dysfunktional
   

 Uncle Dysfunktional

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 13
Step On
   

 Step On

   Year: 2005   

Tracks: 3
Greatest Hits
   

 Greatest Hits

   Year: 1999   

Tracks: 15
Bummed
   

 Bummed

   Year: 1999   

Tracks: 10
Pills 'N' Thrills and Bellyaches
   

 Pills 'N' Thrills and Bellyaches

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 10






Along with the Stone Roses, Happy Mondays were the leadership of the late-'80s/early-'90s terpsichore club-influenced Manchester view, experiencing a brief here and now in the spotlight before collapsing in 1992. While the Stone Roses were based in '60s belt down in the mouth, adding simply a little hint of dance music, Happy Mondays immersed themselves in the golf-club and rave culture, finally decent the most recognisable isthmus of that drug-fueled view. The Mondays' music relied heavily on the legal and calendar method of birth control of house music, spiked with '70s soul licks and swirling '60s psychedelia. It was brilliant, colourful medicine that had fractured melodies that never rather gelled into cohesive songs.


Inadvertently or not, Happy Mondays personified the atrocious face of gush culture. They were thugs, purely and simply -- they brought proscribed the latent violence that put down to a lower place the airfoil of any dose finish, even one as seemingly beatific as England's late-'80s/early-'90s mouth off scene. Under the leadership of vocaliser Shaun Ryder, the radical sounded and acted like thugs, peculiarly in comparison with their peace-loving peers, the Stone Roses. Ryder's lyrics were twisted and surrealistic, crocked with outlandish pop acculturation references, drug slang, and forbidding gender. Appropriately, their music was as convoluted. Happy Mondays were one of the first rock bands to integrate hip-hop techniques into their music. They didn't sample, but they borrowed melodies and lyrics and, in the process, attached rock and roll profanation. For a band that historied their vulgarity and excess, Happy Mondays appropriately were undone by their addictions, just they left behind a surprisingly influential bequest, patent in everyone from dance bands like the Chemical Brothers to rock & rollers like Oasis.


With their indorsement album, 1988's Bummed, Happy Mondays became British superstars, in particular Ryder. Pills 'n' Thrills and Bellyaches, released in 1990, marked the height of the band's popularity, creativity, and influence; although the disc made the Top hundred albums chart in America, it didn't establish them as stars in the U.S. After that, the fall was ready. By the time they released their next studio album, Yes, Please, Manchester had disappeared from public knowingness; it sold respectably, but the group didn't get the commercial impact that they had hardly deuce years earlier. Besides the want of public interest, Shaun Ryder had become addicted to diacetylmorphine, watering the dance band aside in the action. At a upper-level record undertake coming together, Ryder walked verboten for some "KY Fried Chicken," which was the band's slang for diacetylmorphine. He never returned and the group apace fell aside.


Ryder and the Mondays' full-time social dancer, Bez, re-emerged in the mid-'90s with Black Grape. The band released its critically acclaimed debut, It's Great When You're Straight...Yeah, late in the summer of 1995. Black Grape's sound chased the same way as the Mondays, only with a harder, grittier boundary to their sound and lyrics. In 2007, 15 days since their last record, the band (negative about half the original members, including guitarist Mark Day) released their one-fifth studio record album, Uncle Dysfunktional.





Dreams Of Freedom

Thursday, 7 August 2008

Eva Mendes' nipple too hot for TV

An advertising featuring Hollywood star Eva Mendes rolling around on a bed naked has been prohibited from screening on TV in America.



The ad, for Calvin Klein's new sweetness Secret Obsession, was prohibited because Mendez flashes her nipple in one scene.


"Between love and madness lies obsession," Mendes, 34, says in the ad. "Love ... madness. It's my secret."


An edited version is covering on cable TV in America.


The prohibition has seen the ad�become a strike on the internet, with more than 360,000 views on YouTube in just deuce days.


Calvin Klein president Tom Murry

Monday, 30 June 2008

Witness says R. Kelly, girl were in sex tape

CHICAGO (Reuters) - R&B superstar R. Kelly and a girl who described him as her godfather and was about 13 or 14 are the two people on a pornographic tape Kelly is accused of making, the girl's former best friend testified on Wednesday.


Simha Jamison, now 24, said in the second full day of the Grammy Award-winning artist's trial that she recognized her friend Roshona Landfair on the videotape from her face and from a "mullet" haircut the two girls had gotten together.


"I saw (the tape) in late February 2002," said Jamison, a Chicago hair stylist.


"Who did you believe was the female on that tape?" asked prosecutor Shauna Boliker of the Cook County state's attorney's office.


"I believed it was my best friend, Roshona," she replied.


And the man on the tape, which Jamison was shown again on Wednesday before court?


"Her godfather, R. Kelly," she said, explaining that's how Roshona had introduced the singer.


Kelly is charged with 14 counts of videotaping, producing or soliciting child pornography with a 26-minute tape featuring oral sex, masturbation and other explicit acts. If convicted of all charges, the 41-year-old performer, whose given name is Robert Kelly, could be sentenced to up to 15 years in prison. 

Tuesday, 24 June 2008

Coldplay - Martin Obama As President Would Change Americas Image


COLDPLAY frontman CHRIS MARTIN is desperate to see presidential hopeful BARACK OBAMA win the race to the White House - claiming it would completely transform America's global image.

The Yellow hitmaker is rooting for the recently crowned democratic party leader to land the role as the U.S.'s next president, and first black president, insisting it would boost the nation's flailing image as a world superpower.

And the singer is keen to see the U.S. return to its former glowing reputation as a well-run country - because he is a huge fan of the American people.

He tells U.S. magazine Rolling Stone, "If Obama was to be president, it would immediately change the whole outside world's opinion of America overnight.

"America's public image at the moment is really bad. And it's a bummer, because over half of Americans are the coolest people on the planet. But they've been so misrepresented."

The British musician is married to American actress Gwyneth Paltrow, who is the mother of his children, Apple, four, and Moses, two.





See Also

Saturday, 21 June 2008

The future of TV is written in Internet leaks









LEAKED: Somebody at my favourite TV blog -- TVtattle.com -- must have let their curiosity do the (net)surfing for them, because they discovered that at least two of this fall�s big new shows have already been leaked to online file-sharing networks, months in advance of their premieres. J. J. Abrams new X-Filesesque Fringe is out there, as is True Blood, Alan �Six Feet Under� Ball�s new vampire show for HBO.

The TVtattle blogger found them on a site called Insomniac Times, whose proprietor posts about alternate energy tech and other geeky stuff along with the odd leaked file that's making its way onto sharing sites like Pirate Bay. A quick search on btjunkie revealed that both shows have already been disseminated pretty widely, with hundreds of �seeders� for True Blood alone.

Now, I realize that I�m being a naughty boy by even talking about this stuff, but the fact is that screeners get leaked all the time and if you�re really hot to see a show, either a few weeks or months after it�s aired or even just as long in advance, chances are you�ll probably be able to find it out there in the internet�s capacious grey zones. The media is usually blamed, but by the time newspapers and magazines have been serviced with sneak previews of new shows, they�ve usually already made their appearance online, put there by someone a bit higher in the screener food chain at the studios or their production and duplication houses.

Having finished product available long before it�s supposed to be broadcast � even if it�s theoretically meant for a select audience � is the real problem, since simple laws of supply and demand, not to mention human nature, means that leaks will happen no matter how much security is put in place. Lawsuits won�t work either, Hollywood homies � just ask your depressed buddies in the music business.

What�s required at this point is a whole new way of looking at production and programming. A change that�s basically revolutionary, if you�re a network executive working with a business model that hasn�t changed since Burns And Allen was a radio show. Forget broadcasting, fall debuts, even seasons; with a pilot in hand, the networks � or any producer with access to a distribution network online � can make a show available and gauge audience response accordingly, all at a fraction of the cost of producing episodes in advance of demand.

Every fall, shows fall by the wayside after just a handful of aired episodes, while even more are in the can. Networks then scramble for replacements for the now-vacant time slot -- much to the consternation of advertisers. Every year, this system looks more and more precarious and the sense of dissatisfaction and anxiety increases, while the audiences have already begun consuming programming the way they want � at their leisure. The future, at least for TV, is now � somebody just has to tell the networks.











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Oscar-winning special-effects guru Stan Winston dies at 62

LOS ANGELES — Hollywood special-effects maestro Stan Winston has died at age 62.



The Oscar-winning visual-effects artist died at his home Sunday evening surrounded by family after a seven-year struggle with multiple myeloma, according to a representative from Stan Winston Studio.



Winston won visual effects Oscars for 1986's "Aliens," 1992's "Terminator 2: Judgment Day" and 1993's "Jurassic Park."



Winston is survived by his wife, Karen; a son, daughter, brother and four grandchildren.








See Also

Pugwash

Pugwash   
Artist: Pugwash

   Genre(s): 
Drum & Bass
   



Discography:


Liquid Recordings (LIQUID006)   
 Liquid Recordings (LIQUID006)

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 2


Liquid (LIQUID005)   
 Liquid (LIQUID005)

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 2




 





China Dreams

Amrit Vela

Amrit Vela   
Artist: Amrit Vela

   Genre(s): 
Easy Listening
   



Discography:


Sadhana Chants   
 Sadhana Chants

   Year:    
Tracks: 7




 





Broadway's "Cry-Baby" to close

Kiss - The Things They Say 8611


"We're like herpes I guess." KISS star PAUL STANLEY jokes that the band are hard to get rid of from the live music scene.





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Emeril to be on cover of Everyday Food

NEW YORK —

The customary culinary eye candy on the cover of Martha Stewart's Everyday Food magazine has been replaced by something that might have readers shouting "Bam!"


Instead of the usual recipe cover shot, readers of the July/August issue will see a picture of Emeril Lagasse and Stewart, marking the first time in the magazine's five years that people, not food, have graced the cover.


The move marks a further development in the relationship between Lagasse and Stewart, whose company in February bought the rights to Lagasse's franchise of cookbooks, television shows and kitchen products from him.


Lagasse will be a regular columnist in Everyday Food. His "Kick It Up - Everyday with Emeril" column will focus on easy, innovative recipes. His first column includes recipes for ribs, macaroni salad and Caribbean chicken.








See Also

Milk Inc.

Milk Inc.   
Artist: Milk Inc.

   Genre(s): 
Dance
   



Discography:


Milk Inc. EP   
 Milk Inc. EP

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 3


Closer   
 Closer

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 14


Apocalypse Cow   
 Apocalypse Cow

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 13




 






Brosnan's Beach Karaoke Concerts Pay Off For Mamma Mia!

Pierce Brosnan prepared for his musical role in upcoming summer blockbuster Mamma Mia! by performing to the ocean on the beach near his Kauai, Hawaii retreat. Too nervous to belt out the Abba songs he performs for the film's soundtrack to friends, family and holidaymakers, the former James Bond hit the shore as the waves were crashing around him - with his iPod. He tells U.S. magazine Parade, "I walked up and down the coast and sang karaoke to my own voice for about six weeks." But his beach rehearsals failed to impress when he had to perform in front of producers and castmates for the first time: "I went to New York for the first rehearsals, and I sounded dreadful. I quietly freaked out... and I made a pig's ear of it." But he refused to give up, went back to Hawaii and worked even harder on hitting the high notes. He adds, "In the end they liked it so much they added a verse to my big song."


See Also

RuPaul

RuPaul   
Artist: RuPaul

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


Supermodel of the World   
 Supermodel of the World

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 13




A major media presence thanks to his outgoing persona and camp theatrics, RuPaul was a popular attracter on '90s dancefloors as well, scoring several club hits with Hi-NRG Euro-disco pop. Born Rupaul Andre Charles, he grew up in San Diego, eruditeness fashion tips from his mother and iII sisters. After some time dog-tired in Atlanta as a secondhand car salesman, RuPaul affected to New York and grew interested in the Manhattan ball club scene of the '80s. By the early '90s, he had begun acting and signed a narrow in 1991 with the hip-hop judge Tommy Boy Records. Though RuPaul's debut album, Supermodel of the World, was released in 1993, it failed to score with pop audiences until the following year, when the club success of the individual "Supermodel (You Better Work)" carried o'er to a spot just international of the Top 40. His twosome with Elton John, "Don't Go Breaking My Heart," as well placed on the American charts but proved more successful in Europe, where the 2 co-hosted England's Brit Awards and RuPaul taped a popular Christmas special. He as well appeared in deuce films, The Brady Bunch Movie and Spike Lee's Crooklyn; the exposure gained him his possess show for VH1, The RuPaul Show. After moving to Rhino for his second album, Guileful Lady, RuPaul scored in the clubs once once more with the unmarried "Shot." In 2000 RuPaul was in Times Square, New York City, for the entry of his Madame Tussaud rise replication. In 2001 he was approached by both the A&E and Bravo networks for profiles of his life. It was wearying complementary both and RuPaul simply watched one earlier falling into a bass, monthlong depression. When he came kayoed of it, he mat free to go on to act terzetto of his animation. Ready to share his creativeness with the world over again, RuPaul released the album Red Hot in 2004 on his possess RuCo, Inc. label. The 2006 freeing Reworked featured remixes of tracks from Bolshie Hot along with a new version of "Supermodel."