Monday, 30 June 2008
Transformer Man
Artist: Transformer Man
Genre(s):
Breakbeat
Discography:
SVN002 Vinyl
Year: 2004
Tracks: 2
Massi Breaks and Inasanity Groove Vinyl
Year: 2004
Tracks: 2
Dirty Girlz (AS001BR) VLS
Year: 2004
Tracks: 2
88 Mph Vinyl
Year: 2004
Tracks: 2
 
Starsplash
Wednesday, 25 June 2008
The Greenhornes
Artist: The Greenhornes
Genre(s):
Alternative
Discography:
Dual Mono
Year: 2002
Tracks: 12
The Greenhornes
Year: 2001
Tracks: 12
 
Amy Winehouse’s reps deny she’s to jet to Israel for rehab
Wednesday, 18 June 2008
Mad Lion
Artist: Mad Lion
Genre(s):
Reggae
Discography:
Real Ting
Year:
Tracks: 18
Weaving a unseamed portmanteau of reggae and rap music, Mad Lion (innate Oswald Priest) created one of the most influential sounds of the past deuce decades. The recipient of the 1994 Source honor as Reggae Artist of the Year, Mad Lion has inspired similar-sounding recordings by such artists as Ini Kamoze, Capleton, and Rayvon.
A native of London, Mad Lion was raised in Jamaica. Shortly after moving to Brooklyn, NY, he met reggae performer Super Cat at Super Power Records. At Super Cat's proffer, he adopted his professional diagnose, an acronym for Musical Assassin Delivering Lyrical Intelligence Over Nations. Mad Lion's earliest success came in the mid-'80s when he applied his rap music rhythms to Shabba Ranks' hit single "Block." He later appeared, along with Queen Latifah, on Salt-N-Pepper's 1997 album Mark New.
Entry his possess label, Spinners Choice, Mad Lion was working on his debut album when he met and convinced producer KRS-One to work with him. The quislingism proved fruitful as Mad Lion's single, "Burgeon forth to Kill," sold more than century,000 copies. His side by side single, "Subscribe to It Easy," did fifty-fifty better, prodigious the 300,000 sales event print.
After cathartic an album, Real Ting, in 1993, Mad Lion made multitudinous edgar Guest appearances on such albums as The New Jersey Drive and D&D Project, compilations, and produced a tune for Born Jamericans. His instant album, Ghetto Gold & Platinum Respect, was released in 1997. Three years by and by, his third album, Predatah or Prey, which also included an interactive game, arrived.
Monday, 16 June 2008
Ixohoxi and Numina
Artist: Ixohoxi and Numina
Genre(s):
Ambient
Discography:
Starfarer's Tales Volume 2
Year: 2004
Tracks: 6
Starfarer's Tales Volume 1
Year: 2004
Tracks: 4
 
Windmill Signs With Friendly Fire Recordings In The U.S.
Newsman Tim Russert Dead At 58
One of the most recognized faces of U.S. television news, Tim Russert, has died of a suspected heart attack while preparing his weekly show, aged 58.
The newsman, most noted for his NBC show 'Meet The Press', was the network's Washington Bureau chief. Time magazine had named him one of the 100 most influential people in the world this year.
According to a report on NBC's website, Russert collapsed while recording voiceovers for his Sunday show, and was rushed to Sibley Memorial Hosptial in Washington.
His physician, Michael Newman, said that resuscitation efforts were unsuccessful, and that the actual cause of death is not yet known.
President Bush issued a statement immediately saying that Russert was "an institution in both news and politics for more than two decades.”
He is survived by his wife Maureen Orth and their son Luke.
NEXT: R. Kelly Found Not Guilt Of Child Porn
Photo courtesy of NBC.
Kasey strikes right chord
KASEY Chambers and husband Shane Nicholson flew to Melbourne last month for a showcase performance to christen their new record deal with Michael Gudinski's Liberation label. It was a landmark moment for the couple away from their new business arrangement -- it marked the first night they'd been apart from their nine-month-old son Arlo, who had been left with grandparents. Chambers had mentioned the story before her performance and was greeted with sighs of sympathy. As it turns out, the compassion was misplaced. ‘‘Everyone's saying ‘Oh, poor you' but we're thinking ‘Woo-hoo! We get to sleep','' Chambers joked on the night, before turning to her husband and noting, ‘‘I'm going to have a few drinks, you might even get lucky tonight''. Luck of a different kind has fuelled Chambers' and Nicholson's first musical collaboration. Ironically, for married songwriters, they had a child together before they wrote a song together. The first, Rattlin' Bones, has also christened their first album together. ‘‘That song just came out,'' Chambers says. ‘‘It showed there was some chemistry there. I was dreading the first song we wrote together would be a dud.'' Though Nicholson -- who had a solo career and stint as frontman of rock band Pretty Violet Stain on his CV pre-Chambers -- was no stranger to co-writing songs, it was new territory for Chambers.‘‘I've always wanted to write with someone else but I was so nervous about it,'' she says. ‘‘Shane's always been one of my favourite songwriters, so to co-write with him was a huge thrill. By that time we were husband and wife so it felt a little easier than five years ago when I was just a fan.'' Chambers has been vocal about the fact she has married one of her favourite songwriters. In comparison, Nicholson became aware of Chambers as part of researching her brother Nash as a potential producer of his first solo album. ‘‘My first instinct was ‘Isn't he country?','' Nicholson recalls of Nash. ‘‘So I got all Kasey's records so I could listen to the production. That's how I was introduced to her music. I did a crash course on Kasey Chambers in a week.'' Nicholson had an unexpected Kasey Chambers moment during the writing of Rattlin' Bones. They wrote the bulk of the album together, but a handful of songs were written separately. Chambers played one of her solo compositions, The Devil's Inside My Head, to her husband for his reaction.‘‘I remember thinking ‘Oh, that's right, you're Kasey Chambers','' Nicholson says. ‘‘I'd kind of forgotten. I was just thinking I was writing songs with my wife for a year, then she played me this bluegrass song she wrote on her own and I was reminded who I was writing with. You forget sometimes.'' The project was inspired by a covers band Chambers and Nicholson formed with her dad Bill. The Lost Dogs played songs by Ryan Adams, Steve Earle, Bob Dylan, Lucinda Williams, Gillian Welch and Neil Young. Each of the trio would take turns singing -- a communal approach to vocals which informed Rattlin' Bones, which they are keen to point out isn't a duets album, rather a band with two singers who just happen to be one of Australia's highest-profile musical couples. ‘‘It was something we put together for fun because we weren't touring, that'd give us something to do each week,'' Chambers says of The Lost Dogs.‘‘But playing other people's songs really added to the sound of this record. We really got to know each other musically more than ever. We've worked together long before we were together, but sitting side by side we'd swap songs all night. ‘‘We were only singing the lead to every third song. It taught each of us how to be in a band, how to be in the background and sing harmonies, which added to this record.'' Chambers says she's learnt more about the craft of songwriting in the past year than in her entire career. But the pair's writing methods are still poles apart. ‘‘Shane likes to sit there and write quietly,'' Chambers says. ‘‘That's his personality. I'm the loud, annoying one. That's how I write. I like to play the song over and over again until something falls out. It must have been frustrating for him.'' The ultra-country sound of Rattlin' Bones was something the couple weren't expecting -- with Chambers keen to give credit where it's due. ‘‘Shane probably influenced me more on this record musically as far as songwriting goes,'' Chambers says.‘‘But because it's come out such a country record people will probably think it's the other way round. It's so far away from the record Shane normally makes. Shane has always listened to Ryan Adams. One of his favourite records is Neil Young's Comes a Time. That's as country as you can get, more country than anything that comes out of Nashville these days.'' Nicholson says: ‘‘This is a country record and I haven't been known for doing a lot of country in the past, that's Kasey's area, but I love country music.
‘‘But there's more country I don't like than I do.'' Chambers adds: ‘‘I feel the same way too.'' She points to a line in Sweetest Waste of Time that Nicholson wrote -- ‘‘If I could shine a light on your cold, cold heart'' -- as proof of his country credentials. ‘‘That's the countriest line I've ever heard,'' Chambers says with a laugh. ‘‘People don't know it yet, but Shane's a hillbilly.'' Nicholson prefers to point out his youthful inspiration from folk singers such as Bob Dylan and Joan Baez. ‘‘In folk the songs are almost an accompaniment to getting the story across. Country is similar to that, the song is really important. Having spent my musical life dabbling in the pop/mainstream world it's really refreshing to worry more about songs than anything else. ‘‘That Lost Dogs year reminded me of that, playing songs we love just for the sake of playing them. ‘‘It's reminded us all of the importance of the song. ‘‘This record was back to that, not worrying about anything else that goes along with making a record. ‘‘It was really liberating writing this record. We didn't give a toss about what genre this record would fit into, it didn't matter if it got played on radio or TV -- none of the stuff that goes on with a normal record. Not that we worry about that stuff anyway . . .'' ‘‘But less so than ever,'' Chambers adds. ‘‘Because we didn't have a record company when we made the record we didn't have to go through anyone.'' After 2006's Carnival, Chambers' contract with EMI finished. The label had signed her as an unknown country act who flirted with the mainstream with her 1999 debut The Captain. But the flirtation became a fully fledged love affair when Chambers scored an unlikely No.1 hit with Not Pretty Enough from 2001's Barricades and Brickwalls. An array of platinum records and awards followed, as well as more than 900,000 album sales in Australia alone. That's a costly loss to EMI -- Chambers joins the Living End and Radiohead as key recent departures from the label.‘‘We left on good terms,'' Chambers says of EMI. ‘‘We just wanted something different, we were going down a different path.'' Nicholson says: ‘‘It felt like because this was a new project we wanted everyone working on it to see it as something new, not an extension of what we'd done before.'' Chambers says: ‘‘This isn't the new Kasey Chambers or Shane Nicholson album, it's a joint project.'' The pair paid for the recording of Rattlin' Bones themselves, funded a video and album shoot, and then planned to shop it around record companies. ‘‘We didn't have to go through a whole lot of other people to make decisions,'' Chambers says. After Nash Chambers produced the latest Jimmy Barnes album, Kasey was introduced to Gudinski's Liberation family. ‘‘It was never a money thing,'' Chambers says. Nicholson says: ‘‘These days with record companies it's not a money thing, it's a passion thing. ‘‘It's a grim, dark story but everybody's getting a little worried, it's all up in the air. It's great when you meet people who, irrespective of all that, are still really excited about music and passionate about what they do, regardless of the fact it's difficult to sell records.'' One song on the album, One More Year, really ignited the passion in Chambers. Nicholson had written the song by himself and it wasn't intended for Rattlin' Bones -- until Chambers got involved.‘‘I stole it,'' she says. She remains so possessive of the song she jokes it will be part of a custody battle should they ever split.‘‘I've told him, if it comes down to that, I'll keep the song and he can have the kids.'' Rattlin' Bones (Liberation) out April 19. Kasey Chambers and Shane Nicholson acoustic tour, Eva Gaspar Theatre, Warrnambool, May 7, $54, ph: 5559 4999; Costa Hall Geelong, May 8, $53.30, ph: 5225 1200; Ballarat Woolshed, May 9, $55.60, Ticketmaster; Horsham Town Hall, May 10, $53.30, ph: 5381 1782; Swan Hill Town Hall, May 11, $50, ph: 5036 2444; Shepparton Eastbank Centre, May 14, ph: 5832 9511; Barooga Sports Club, May 17, ph: 5873 4448
Natalie Merchant
Artist: Natalie Merchant
Genre(s):
Rock: Pop-Rock
Discography:
The House Carpenter's Daughter
Year: 2003
Tracks: 11
Ophelia
Year: 1998
Tracks: 11
Tigerlily
Year: 1995
Tracks: 11
Motherland
Year:
Tracks: 12
First rising to fame at the helm of the popular folk-rock band 10,000 Maniacs, Natalie Merchant after enjoyed regular greater success as a solo performer as her mournful vocals and literate, socially witting songs established her among the leading female performers in present-day pop. Born October 26, 1963 in Jamestown, NY, Merchant joined 10,000 Maniacs at the geezerhood of 17, promptly decorous the band's driving artistic force; after a pair of successful independent releases, they signed to Elektra in 1985, and in the days to follow emerged among the about popular acts in alternative rock, shooting into the Top 40 with 1987's superb In My Tribe. However, round the time of recording 1992's Our Time in Eden, Merchant gave her bandmates deuce long time notice, and after the release of 1994's MTV Unplugged publicly proclaimed she was departure their ranks. Her 1995 solo debut, Tigerlily, debuted just shy of the Top Ten, grading a hit with the unmarried "Funfair; " it was followed in 1998 by Ophelia. Live in Concert, recorded at New York's Neil Simon Theatre, appeared a class later. A large social militant, Merchant as well regularly campaigned in the diagnose of such hot-button issues as fauna rights, domestic violence, and homelessness. In 2000 Merchant toured with her band and members of progressive kinsfolk group The Horseflies playacting folk traditionals. She returned with the Motherland LP in 2001. Two days later Merchant left Elektra and formed the Myth America to issue House Carpenter's Daughter, a assembling of traditional and contemporaneous tribe music performed on the 2000 tour. 2004 proverb Rhino release Campfire Songs, a 10,000 Maniacs retrospective, and a year later Merchant tallied her ten-year solo career with Retrospective.
Altan
Artist: Altan
Genre(s):
Celtic
New Age
Folk
Discography:
Local Ground
Year: 2005
Tracks: 13
The blue idol
Year: 2002
Tracks: 13
Another Sky
Year: 2000
Tracks: 13
Altan's Finest
Year: 2000
Tracks: 14
Live
Year: 1999
Tracks: 8
Runaway Sunday
Year: 1997
Tracks: 14
Best Of Altan
Year: 1997
Tracks: 16
Blackwater
Year: 1996
Tracks: 12
The First Ten Years: 1986-1995
Year: 1995
Tracks: 15
The Red Crow
Year: 1994
Tracks: 11
Island Angel
Year: 1993
Tracks: 13
Horse with a Heart
Year: 1993
Tracks: 12
Harvest Storm
Year: 1993
Tracks: 13
Altan
Year: 1993
Tracks: 13
Ceaol Aduaidh
Year: 1983
Tracks: 14
With their Northern Ireland-style counterpart piddling and piano accordion melodies accented by acoustic guitar and bouzouki, Altan has adult into one of the tip traditional bands in Ireland. The divine guidance for Altan was sparked when Donegal-born violinist and vocalist Mairéad Nà Mhaonaigh met Belfast-born flute participant Frankie Kennedy. Nà Mhaonaigh had erudite the traditional style of piddling from her father, Francie, world Health Organization had lettered it from his mother, Roise. Influential Irish violinist Dinny McLaughlin, world Health Organization frequented her puerility nursing home, added to her knowledge of the instrument. Kennedy, world Health Organization studied flute as a tiddler, was passing concerned in Irish music and made several trips to Ireland during school vacations. Meeting during an cozy block sitting, Nà Mhaonaigh and Kennedy began to play together at every chance. Although they both took jobs as trainee teachers at St. Patrick's College in Dublin, music remained their shared out passion.
In 1979, the deuce musicians made their recording debut as accompanists for Gaelic isaac M. Singer Albert Fry on his self-titled debut album. Two age later, Nà Mhaonaigh and Kennedy graduated from college and were married. Together with bouzouki player Donal O'Hanlan and Mairéad's comrade Gearóid Ó Maoinaigh, wHO played guitar, Nà Mhaonaigh and Kennedy formed a band, Ragaime. Although they recorded for RTE, the radical disbanded by the time that Gael-Linn released Nà Mhaonaigh and Kennedy's debut album, Ceol Aduaidh, in December 1983. One track on the album, "An Clar Bog Dell," featured Enya, then known as Eithne Nà Bhraonáin, on Prophet-5 synthesizer.
In 1987, Nà Mhaonaigh and Kennedy recorded their second record album as a duo, Altan, named after a lake in nW Donegal. Produced by Dónal Lunny, the record album featured accompaniment by Ciarán Curran on bouzouki, Mark Kelly on guitar, and Mairéad's sister Anna Nà Mhaonaigh, then a member of the all-woman mathematical group Macella. Shortly later the windup of the record album, the musicians agreed to continuing working unitedly. During the summertime of 1988, Altan began work on their low record album as a band, which now included Paul O'Shaughnessy on twin Falls play. Produced by Phil Cunningham and released in 1989, the record album, Gymnastic horse with a Heart, featured a more dynamic well-grounded than its predecessors.
As the band's touring schedule expanded, O'Shaughnessy and Kelly were forced by their day jobs to limit their activeness with Altan to transcription and performances close to home. During the band's U.S. tours, their places were taken by DaÃthà Sproule on guitar and Ciarán Tourish on fiddle. Altan reached top contour with their 1990 record album Red Crow, which received a NAIRD accolade as Best Celtic Traditional Album. Their next album, Harvest home Storm, released in 1992, received the award as good.
All news was not secure for the band, however. In 1991, Kennedy was diagnosed with cancer the Crab. Although he was hospitalized the following year, he recovered sufficiently to come back the band's tour. On September 19, 1994, he succumbed to his unwellness and passed away. Altan has continued to bring their euphony to the outside stage. Accordion player Dermot Byrne, wHO had played on Bolshevik Crow and on Altan's 1993 record album, Island Angel, united the mathematical group officially in 1994. 1996's Blackwater and 1997's Runaway Sunday were released on the Virgin label before the mathematical group jumped to Narada for 2000's Some other Sky. Numerous compilations and collections followed, as good as Profane Idol in 2002 and Local Ground in 2005, once again for Narada.
"Sex and the City" film poses "big" question
Callenish Circle
Artist: Callenish Circle
Genre(s):
Metal: Death,Black
Rock
Metal
Discography:
Pitch.Black.Effects
Year: 2005
Tracks: 10
Forbidden Empathy - Disc 2 - Drift Of Empathy
Year: 2005
Tracks: 14
Forbidden Empathy - Disc 1 - Graceful... Yet Forbidding
Year: 2005
Tracks: 15
My Passion-Your Pain
Year: 2003
Tracks: 11
Flesh_Power_Dominion
Year: 2002
Tracks: 11
Graceful
Year: 2001
Tracks: 15
Graceful... Yet Forbidding
Year: 1999
Tracks: 10
Escape
Year: 1998
Tracks: 4
Drift Of Empathy
Year: 1996
Tracks: 9
Lovelorn (Demo)
Year: 1995
Tracks: 5
Forbidden Empathy (CD 2)
Year:
Tracks: 14
Forbidden Empathy (CD 1)
Year:
Tracks: 15
Dutch last metal band Callenish Circle pink wine from the ashes of an to begin with band named Genocide circa 1992. Singer Patrick Savelkoul and guitar player Jos Evers worked with countless different lineups ahead finding stability two age later on with the arrival of guitar player Ronny Tijssen, bassist John Gorissen, and drummer Gavin Harte. After fleshing out their sound for another year or so, the quintuple recorded 1995's "Lovelorn" demo, which was voted demonstration of the month by Holland's most well-thought-of heavy metal publication, Aardschok, and quickly sold out the 1,000 copies they'd had printed. This surge of interest group didn't go unnoticed and Holland's have Hammerheart Records shortly offered them a one-album treat, resulting in Callenish Circle's 1996 debut, Drift of Empathy. Although its songs displayed a aptly executed melodic death metal sound elysian by the Swedish scene to the magnetic north, the album failed to take fire practically consumer interest outside their fatherland, and both dance orchestra and pronounce decided it was in their best pursuit to part ways.
While they attempted to reorganise, Evers and Gorissen were replaced by guitar player Remy Dieteren and bassist Roland Schuschke, severally, afterwards which the band recorded 1998's Escape EP and released it through midget Polar Bear Records. Then, in an attempt to gain more restraint over their life history, Callenish Circle decided to self-finance their sophomore uncut, 1999's Graceful...Yet Forbidding, in front sign language with til now another independent mark called DSFA, which right away went proscribed of business enterprise as well. Despite these frustrative business blunders, Callenish Circle's fan base continued to maturate steadily, fifty-fifty as their musicianship and songwriting abilities bit by bit improved with each pleasure trip, and they were finally rewarded for their efforts when renowned leaden metal ball of fire Metal Blade came calling with a four-album trade in hand. The quintette didn't have to think twice, at once sign-language on the dashed line of work, and then delivered its third album, 2002's outstandingly strong and mature Flesh Power Dominion, in front striking the road with labelmates Amon Amarth. Verboten Empathy, a two-disc aggregation of corporeal from their pre-Metal Blade years arrived in 2005, followed by their quarter uncut recording, Toss Black Effects, in January of 2006.
Bob Dylan