Tuesday, 9 September 2008

Mp3 music: Drowning Pool






Drowning Pool
   

Artist: Drowning Pool: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Rock
Metal
Metal: Alternative
Rock
Metal
Metal: Alternative

   







Drowning Pool's discography:


Full Circle
   

 Full Circle

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 13
Sinner
   

 Sinner

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 11
Desensitized
   

 Desensitized

   Year:    

Tracks: 11






Dallas-based heavy metal radical Drowning Pool was one of the most hopeful bands of the early 2000s. Their debut record album, Sinner, was qualified pt within six weeks of its release spell out their number one base sole, "Bodies," was one of the almost oftentimes airy videos on MTV by a new band. They reached nonextant to an ever-greater interview with dynamical performances at Wrestlemania XVIII and Ozzfest during the summers of 2001 and 2002. Unfortunately, their bar of succeeder was non to last. Shortly later stirring the crowd at Ozzfest in Indianapolis, IN, on August 3, 2002, singer Dave "Stage" Williams was found dead of natural causes on the tour of duty double-decker.


Drowning Pool represented the vision of drummer Mike Luce and guitarist C.J. Pierce, world Health Organization formed the isthmus afterward relocating from New Orleans to Dallas and draw up with bassist Stevie Benton. Although they initially performed as an instrumental trio, their sound amalgamated with the arrival of Williams as singer. Drowning Pool experienced success from the showtime. When a copy of their first-class honours degree demonstration reached members of Sevendust, they were invited to duty tour with the industrial alloy mathematical group. Tours with Kittie and (hed) p.e. followed. Their second demo, recorded afterward iI age on the route, reached the Top Ten on Dallas radio station KEGI and light-emitting diode to a contract with the Windup Records label. Produced by Papa Roach, Orgy, Godsmack, and Coal Chamber producer Jay Baumgardner, their first gear record album, Sinner, became an clamant strike. A DVD, Sinema, featuring more than 2 and a half hours of concert footage, was released in belated 2002. In January 2004, the banding proclaimed the addition of isaac Bashevis Singer Jason "Bell" Jones. Their sophomore exploit, Desensitized, followed several months later. In 2006 Ryan McCombs pretended the vocal duties, and a year later they released Full Circle.





Negura Bunget | Download mp3

Saturday, 30 August 2008

Former Beach Boy Wilson delivers 'That Lucky Old Sun'

COULD on that point be a more daunting musical task than the one Brian Wilson took on basketball team years ago when he decided to resurrect his storied masterwork �Smile,� the long-abandoned Beach Boys project that had plunged him into an abyss of psychological torment?


Well, how around completing "Smile" to far-flung acclaim, only to find himself face to face with peradventure an even more intimidating challenge: "What next?"


Wilson's answer arrives Tuesday with �That Lucky Old Sun,� the next step in the unlikely bring back of the musician whose life virtually created the blueprint for the rock-and-roll 'n' roll out prodigy seed flameout.


























The new album is some other song bicycle, a loosely thematic solve that examines and revels in life in Southern California. It celebrates a culture that Wilson helped define in the sixties with his ebullient songs of surfboarder girls, sandlike beaches and endless honorable vibrations.


"Smile" was perhaps the most ardently debated "lost" album in pop music history before Wilson revived it; by comparison, "That Lucky Old Sun" arrives with no history and infinitely fewer expectations. That made it more playfulness to create for the 66-year-old sole surviving Wilson brother -- Dennis, the band's honest beach boy, drowned in 1983. Sweet-voiced Carl died in 1998 of cancer.


"This is more of a pop album than 'Smile' was," says Wilson, striding the perimeter of a neighborhood park in L.A. He launches an impromptu a cappella rendering of the album's "Morning Beat":

The sun robert Burns a hole through the 6 a.m. haze

Turns up the volume and shows off its rays

Another Dodger puritanical sky is crowning L.A.

The City of Angels is blessed every day


"That's a good stone 'n' roll song!" he proclaims. "I don't bonk how advantageously it will sell, just I hope people will like it."


After completing deuce-ace miles around the park -- he'd already logged two that morning -- he steps back into his gaudy 2006 Mercedes coupe and tools up the steeply winding roadstead leading to his ducky deli, not far from the brow home where he and his wife, Melinda, have lived for 13 years.


He snaps on the car radio sporadically, usually for just a second or two, long enough for him to identify whatsoever song is playing. It's tuned to oldies station KRTH-FM (one hundred one.1), and when Stevie Wonder's "If You Really Love Me" bursts from the speakers, he keeps it on. Then, serendipitously, comes the first strain Brian Wilson ever wrote, "Surfer Girl." He listens but doesn't utter a word.


Does he know how much his music has meant to so many people over the years?


"Not really," he says matter-of-factly. "I'm non sure what it way. I would imagine they think some of it's pretty good."


Pulling up in front of the food shop, he rosa Parks and greets the store's manager. It's obvious he's a regular. He snags a table, exchanges a handshake and a warm hello with a notable neighbor in the next booth. A few transactions later, the celebrity heads to the door. Wilson shouts, "Hi, handsome!" as the piece smiles courteously and exits.


A couple of beats later on the door swings closed, Wilson asks: "What was the call of that guy, that actor?"


Warren Beatty.


"He's a better-looking fellow," Wilson says.


You never know what clicks with Wilson. It might take him a minute to place the face of one of the world's most recognizable movie stars, but anything musical is always at his fingertips. And when it comes to music, his head is tuned to its own frequency.



More info

Wednesday, 20 August 2008

Alzheimer's Society Comment On Age Concern Research Into Depression In Older People, UK

�It is a huge concern that more than two million older citizenry who indicate symptoms of depression ar not receiving help and support. It is important to seek help if you have got symptoms of depression.


A proper assessment is as well needed to rule extinct underlying weather that english hawthorn cause depression, such as dementia. As many as two thirds of people with dementedness do not receive a diagnosis.


Symptoms of depression mirror the early symptoms of dementedness, including computer storage loss, confusion, mood changes and words problems. It is full of life to build if symptoms are due to dementia, so that you can buoy receive conquer advice and support. People with dementedness often say us that a proper diagnosis was a immense relief and the starting of acquiring back in control.


If you ar concerned about your retentiveness, or that of a friend or relative, you can download a copy of Alzheimer's Society's 'Worried About Your Memory?' publication from hypertext transfer protocol://www.alzheimers.org.uk/memoryworry, or shout Alzheimer's Society dementia helpline on 0845 300 0336.


Neil Hunt

Chief Executive

Alzheimer's Society


People concerned around their store should essay advice and help if the following occur:


- It's a struggle to remember recent events, although they can easily recall things that happened in the past

- It's hard to follow conversations or programmes on TV

- Regularly forgetting the name calling of friends or routine objects

- Inability to recall things heard, seen or read

- Difficulty in fashioning decisions

- Repeat themselves in conversation or lose the thread of what they are expression

- Have problems thinking and reasoning

- Feel anxious and depressed or angry nearly their forgetfulness

- Find that other citizenry start to comment on their forgetfulness.

Reference


Older people with depression are being denied help because of their age, according to a report by Age Concern. The report found people seeking aid are often fobbed cancelled, misdiagnosed or given incompatible treatment. Doctors may government issue prescriptions for drugs like Prozac, when counselling would offer more benefit. And the numbers game given psychological help are far lower than in the general population. The study, from Age Concern, said more than deuce million people over the age of 65 in England have symptoms of depression, but the vast majority are denied help.

Notes


- 1 in 3 people all over 65 volition die with dementia.


- 700,000 people in the UK birth a form of dementia, more than half take Alzheimer's disease. In less than 20 years almost a million people will be living with dementedness. This will soar to 1.7 million masses by 2051. 1 in 6 people over 80 have dementedness.


- Alzheimer's Society campaigns for and champions the rights of citizenry living with dementia and the millions who upkeep for them. Alzheimer's Society works in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.


- As a jacob's ladder, Alzheimer's Society needs to raise money to attention for people today and to find a heal for tomorrow.

Alzheimer's Society


View drug info on Prozac Weekly.



More info

Sunday, 10 August 2008

Britney Spears all set to become lesbian

Melbourne (ANI): Britney Spears has been tipped to play a killer lesbian in Quentin Tarantino's remaking of the 1965 cult classic 'Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill!', it has emerged. Pulp Fiction director Tarantino had earlier hinted that he would like to cast the 'Sometimes' hitmaker in a movie, just it is only now that he has been able to find a suitable part for her, as the dancer Varla, originally played by Tura Satana in the earlier film.

The story is based on three wild strippers wHO go on a rampage in the desert, with Spears' character killing a man with her bleak hands in one flaming scene. Besides the killing, the isaac M. Singer will as well appear in sex scenes with another girl, though the function of the two left over strippers has not been allotted, the Daily Mail reports.



More information

Tuesday, 1 July 2008

Prince Alla

Prince Alla   
Artist: Prince Alla

   Genre(s): 
Reggae
   



Discography:


Only Love Can Conquer 1976 - 1979   
 Only Love Can Conquer 1976 - 1979

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 14




 






Monday, 16 June 2008

Oregon native fleshed out "Avenue Q"

It's a long way from Coos Bay, Ore., to Broadway.



But Jeff Whitty, a self-described "proud son of the Pacific Northwest," made that journey, winning a Tony Award as author of the hit musical "Avenue Q." Now he's relishing a mini-festival of Whitty works on home turf.



"Avenue Q" has its Seattle debut at the Paramount Theatre on Tuesday, in a touring run. And in Oregon, Whitty's comic twist on an Ibsen classic, "The Further Adventures of Hedda Gabler," is on the boards at Oregon Shakespeare Festival in Ashland; and the Portland Actors Conservatory is staging his romantic comedy "The Hiding Place."



Whitty's big breakthrough was "Avenue Q," an arch, R-rated tuner that borrows the format of "Sesame Street." In the musical, Gen-X college grads — portrayed by puppets — cope with young adulthood in New York City.



Now a (reluctant) New Yorker himself, the 36-year-old Whitty said by phone, "I thank God I'm from a small town. My parents still live in Coos Bay, in the house where I was raised. I watch parents in Manhattan fretting over their kids getting into the right kindergarten. Children just get a lot less pressure where I grew up."



But even in that quiet coastal burg, Whitty got a solid theater education. "I started writing plays in fifth grade," he explained. "And I was fortunate to learn from these really amazing people who started their own company in Coos Bay, the On Broadway Theatre. As a teenager, I ran lights, swept floors, built sets."



After attending the University of Oregon, Whitty migrated to New York in 1993, intent on making it as an actor and writer.



But it took a decade for his career to get in gear. "My literary agent, who I'd been with a month, called and asked, 'How do you feel about writing a musical with puppets?' Then he told me the producers of 'Rent' were involved, and I got very interested."



The project was "Avenue Q," conceived by composer-lyricists Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx.



Recalled Whitty: "They had some songs that suggested a love story, and other, wildly comic songs dealing with pornography and racism," such as the songs "The Internet Is for Porn," and "Everyone's a Little Bit Racist."



"The challenge for me was to find the story to make all the songs live together."



Whitty's irony-dusted book for the show focused on such characters (furry rod puppets, manipulated and voiced by visible humans) as Princeton, a recent college grad living a low-rent district of an "outer borough"; and his pals, Trekkie Monster (a la "Sesame Street's" Cookie Monster), apartment super Gary Coleman (a puppet version of the TV star), and feisty Kate Monster, Princeton's crush.



"There's so little written about the period between college and being an actual adult, that big transition during your early 20s," noted Whitty. "The joke of the show is, this is a primer for those years — like 'Sesame Street' is a primer for your childhood."



From its debut at Off Broadway's Vineyard Theatre, to its dark-horse Broadway triumph, Las Vegas and London runs, and current tour, "Avenue Q" has required a cast of singer-actor-puppeteers.



"It may look easy on stage," confided Whitty, "but it's extraordinarily hard. The auditions are grueling. People have to read, sing and attend what we call puppet school for two days. One of our leads actually failed puppet school but got another chance and did fine."



The making of "Avenue Q" sounds both thrilling and unnerving in Whitty's telling. "It's true I didn't get along so well with [Marx and Lopez] before Broadway. But it was actually a godsend that we weren't friends. We could be concerned only with the show, not our relationship."



He admitted, "I was probably as monstrous as they were, because we were all under so much pressure. Now we get along fine."



It helped that "Avenue Q" won kudos on Broadway, capped off by 2004 Tony Awards for Whitty's book, the Marx-Lopez score and the coveted "Best Musical" prize.



Whitty soon returned to writing nonmusical plays. And in 2006 he took time to compose a widely read letter to Jay Leno, protesting the TV talk show host's rash of stereotypical gay jokes.



"I sent it to a couple friends and suddenly it was all over the Internet," recalled the openly gay Whitty. "Sometimes I get into these little frenzies of activism."



Whitty is writing a new musical, based on Armistead Maupin's dishy serial "Tales of the City." Jake Shears and John Garden, of the band Scissor Sisters, are creating the score.



"We'll see," said the Coos Bay boy-made-good. "I just feel if they could turn 'Les Miserables' into a musical, we can do it with 'Tales of the City.' "



Misha Berson: mberson@seattletimes.com








See Also

Wednesday, 11 June 2008

More Channels Fewer Viewers



While people living in the average U.S. home are able to watch any of 118.6
channels these days, they actually watch only 16 of them according to a study
by Nielsen Media Research. Not included in the Nielsen study is the myriad of
additional channels available to viewers on the Internet and via pay-per-view
services.








06/06/2008





See Also