Saturday, 6 September 2008

Queen of pop beats Queen of England

Pop star Kylie Minogue would have no trouble finding a seat on a tramcar, train or bus, according to a survey of Melbourne commuters.



But Queen Elizabeth II would possibly get hold herself standing.


A survey of Melbourne's populace transport users found that given a choice, they would rather sit next to Minogue on the tram, take aim or double-decker, than Megan Gale, Barry Humphries, Kevin Rudd, Eddie McGuire, the Queen or Lance "Buddy" Franklin.


While Minogue was the most popular figure picked across all age groups, the Queen failed to rank as most democratic for any age group.


Men would to the highest degree like to sit next to mannikin Megan Gale, but if that wasn't possible they would choose AFL football player Buddy Franklin.


Commuters aged over 50 precious to share their seat with Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, while those earning less than A$30,000 (NZ$37,069.07) wanted to sit next to the man world Health Organization came from the outer suburbs and became a television star, Eddie McGuire.


Women's pick of the caboodle was, in his have persona, comic Barry Humphries.


The survey conducted this month, was of 401 Melburnians, who were offered choices from well-known Melbourne people. �







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Wednesday, 27 August 2008

Download La Sonora Carruseles mp3






La Sonora Carruseles
   

Artist: La Sonora Carruseles: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Latin: Dance

   







Discography:


Salsa
   

 Salsa

   Year:    

Tracks: 4






Colombian Sonora Carruseles bust into the local tropical scene playing Afro-Caribbean rhythms, including a traditional dash known as salsa brava, originated in the 1960s. Formed in 1995 by composer/producer Diego Galé and Mario Rincón, the group became a boogaloo and original salsa revival confluence, taking all over Latin America, the U.S., and Europe afterwards cathartic 1998's Heavy Salsa and 1999's Salsa y Fuego.






Sunday, 17 August 2008

Pick of the week: Clubs

Fubar's fifth Birthday
Joshua Brooks, Manchester
Saturday 16
Homeless breaks night resurfaces, just in time for the fifth birthday, offering hardcore, previous school, jungle and drum'n'bass with Mark XTC and Altern-8.

Contort Yourself
The Roadhouse, Manchester
Saturday 16
Harsh electronic

Thursday, 7 August 2008

I Kissed An Heiress and I Liked It

A match of fame whores were out in full effect in the Thirty Mile Zone -- where Danity Kane hoochie Aubrey O'Day staged a little girl-on-girl action with Lydia Hearst, Patty's girl.
Star  Catcher:  Click  to watch
Katie Price, aka Jordan, returned to L.A. to get her two biggest assets reduced, Ed Norton learned the third time's a charm at LAX and our photog flirted with disaster when he put down one of the most dangerous guys around.




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Tuesday, 1 July 2008

Rocky Votolato

Rocky Votolato   
Artist: Rocky Votolato

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


Makers   
 Makers

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 12




Singer/songwriter Rocky Votolato was born in 1978, expenditure his childhood on a 50-acre knight grow in rural Frost, TX (population 647), set one C miles south of Dallas. Growing up amidst a financial support soundtrack of Willie Nelson, Steve Earle, and Johnny Cash, he had a semi-unconventional upbringing, as his founding father was a extremity of the Dallas-based bike work party the Scorpions, rivals to the Hell's Angels. Rocky's female parent stirred the syndicate to Seattle in his early teens and he was divine to start playacting guitar by his older brother Sonny. Expanding on his country music roots, Rocky spent high school discovering the resistance goon and indie rock scenes, soon starting his offset set, Runaway Laughing, with some senior high buddies. He as well fronted Lying on Loot, which included his friend and drummer Rudy Gajadhar. When the latter dance orchestra skint up in 1996, the deuce (under the influence of Fugazi) started the acclaimed though emo-stigmatized punk rock outfit Waxwing with bassist Andrew Hartley and Rocky's jr. brother Cody on s guitar; Cody as well played in the art-damaged hard-core combo the Blood Brothers. The stripe recorded three full-lengths together ahead officially disbanding in late 2005.


While Waxwing were noneffervescent active, Rocky had begun seeking another exit for his lyrical musings outside of the band's dynamic and hard-hitting approach path. An eponymic solo record hence appeared in 1999 through Status that institute him playing subtle and acoustic tribe songs not so dissimilar from Elliott Smith. A 7" with Seth Warren was released that same year on Redwood before the EP A Brief History was issued in 2000 through Your Best Guess. The record featured backing members of Sharks Keep Moving and Red Stars Theory, and garnered him favourable reviews. Produced by Matt Bayles (Fuckup, the Blood Brothers), Burning at the stake My Travels Clean was side by side released in 2001 and marked Rocky's first-class honours degree for Second Nature Recordings; what would become Waxwing's net album, Cipher Can Take What Everybody Owns, was released shortly afterwards in 2002.


May 2003's Light and the Sound EP served as a herald to the eventual freeing of his third full-length, Felo-de-se Medicine, that September. The album was his most focused feat so far, touching on country, rock music, and folk influences amidst his motionless stripped sound. Though Rocky had taken solely about iI weeks to chassis out each of his old full treatment, he devoted a twelvemonth and a half of writing and recording in the home studio of co-producer Casey Foubert (Pedro the Lion) to dispatch his fourth part record and Barsuk debut. With Rocky now a married sire of iI, the resulting album was a fuller-sounding and matured album of country-tinged family line tunes that recalled his Texas roots. Makers was issued in January 2006 to the praise of fans and critics alike, and its leash track, "White Daisy Passing," was featured on an episode of the pop stripling drama The OC. Various circuit dates followed, including a fall run supporting Lucero.





Potential Bad Boy and MC Fats

Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Envelope-pushing comedian George Carlin mourned as a counterculture hero








LOS ANGELES - Seven Words You Can Never Say on Television. Some People Are Stupid. Stuff. People I Can Do Without.

George Carlin, who died of heart failure Sunday at 71, leaves behind not only a series of memorable routines, but a legal legacy: His most celebrated monologue, a frantic, informed riff on those infamous seven words, led to a Supreme Court decision on broadcasting offensive language.

The counterculture hero's jokes also targeted things such as misplaced shame, religious hypocrisy and linguistic quirks - why, he once asked, do we drive on a parkway and park on a driveway?

Carlin, who had a history of heart trouble, went into St. John's Health Center in Santa Monica on Sunday afternoon complaining of chest pain and died later that evening, said his publicist, Jeff Abraham. He had performed as recently as last weekend at the Orleans Casino and Hotel in Las Vegas.

"He was a genius and I will miss him dearly," Jack Burns, who was the other half of a comedy duo with Carlin in the early 1960s, told The Associated Press.

The actor Ben Stiller called Carlin "a hugely influential force in stand-up comedy. He had an amazing mind, and his humour was brave, and always challenging us to look at ourselves and question our belief systems, while being incredibly entertaining. He was one of the greats."

Carlin constantly breached the accepted boundaries of comedy and language, particularly with his routine on the "Seven Words" - all of which are taboo on broadcast TV to this day.

When he uttered all seven at a show in Milwaukee in 1972, he was arrested on charges of disturbing the peace, freed on $150 bail and exonerated when a Wisconsin judge dismissed the case, saying it was indecent but citing free speech and the lack of any disturbance.

When the words were later played on a New York radio station, they resulted in a 1978 Supreme Court ruling upholding the government's authority to sanction stations for broadcasting offensive language during hours when children might be listening.

"So my name is a footnote in American legal history, which I'm perversely kind of proud of," he told The Associated Press earlier this year.

Despite his reputation as unapologetically irreverent, Carlin was a television staple through the decades, serving as host of the "Saturday Night Live" debut in 1975 - noting on his Web site that he was "loaded on cocaine all week long" - and appearing some 130 times on "The Tonight Show."

He produced 23 comedy albums, 14 HBO specials, three books, a few TV shows and appeared in several movies, from his own comedy specials to "Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure" in 1989 - a testament to his range from cerebral satire and cultural commentary to downright silliness (sometimes hitting all points in one stroke).

"Why do they lock gas station bathrooms?" he once mused. "Are they afraid someone will clean them?"

In one of his most famous routines, Carlin railed against euphemisms he said have become so widespread that no one can simply "die."

"'Older' sounds a little better than 'old,' doesn't it?," he said. "Sounds like it might even last a little longer. ... I'm getting old. And it's OK. Because thanks to our fear of death in this country I won't have to die - I'll 'pass away.' Or I'll 'expire,' like a magazine subscription. If it happens in the hospital they'll call it a 'terminal episode.' The insurance company will refer to it as 'negative patient care outcome.' And if it's the result of malpractice they'll say it was a 'therapeutic misadventure."'

Carlin won four Grammy Awards for best spoken comedy album and was nominated for five Emmys. On Tuesday, it was announced that Carlin was being awarded the 11th annual Mark Twain Prize for American Humor, which will be presented Nov. 10 in Washington and broadcast on PBS.

"Nobody was funnier than George Carlin," said Judd Apatow, director of recent hit comedies such as "Knocked Up" and "The 40-Year-Old Virgin." "I spent half my childhood in my room listening to his records experiencing pure joy. And he was as kind as he was funny."

Carlin started his career on the traditional nightclub circuit in a coat and tie, pairing with Burns to spoof TV game shows, news and movies. Perhaps in spite of the outlaw soul, "George was fairly conservative when I met him," said Burns, describing himself as the more left-leaning of the two. It was a degree of separation that would reverse when they came upon Lenny Bruce, the original shock comic, in the early '60s.

"We were working in Chicago, and we went to see Lenny, and we were both blown away," Burns said, recalling the moment as the beginning of the end for their collaboration if not their close friendship. "It was an epiphany for George. The comedy we were doing at the time wasn't exactly groundbreaking, and George knew then that he wanted to go in a different direction."

That direction would make Carlin as much a social commentator and philosopher as comedian, a position he would relish through the years.

"The whole problem with this idea of obscenity and indecency, and all of these things - bad language and whatever - it's all caused by one basic thing, and that is: religious superstition," Carlin told the AP in a 2004 interview. "There's an idea that the human body is somehow evil and bad and there are parts of it that are especially evil and bad, and we should be ashamed. Fear, guilt and shame are built into the attitude toward sex and the body. ... It's reflected in these prohibitions and these taboos that we have."

Carlin was born on May 12, 1937, and grew up in the Morningside Heights section of Manhattan, raised by a single mother. After dropping out of school in the ninth grade, he joined the Air Force in 1954. He received three court-martials and numerous disciplinary punishments, according to his official Web site.

While in the Air Force he started working as an off-base disc jockey at a radio station in Shreveport, La., and after receiving a general discharge in 1957, took an announcing job at WEZE in Boston.

"Fired after three months for driving mobile news van to New York to buy pot," his Web site says.

From there he went on to a job on the night shift as a deejay at a radio station in Fort Worth, Texas. Carlin also worked variety of temporary jobs, including carnival organist and marketing director for a peanut brittle.

In 1960, he left with $300 and Burns, a Texas radio buddy, for Hollywood to pursue a nightclub career as comedy team Burns & Carlin. His first break came just months later when the duo appeared on Jack Paar's "Tonight Show."

Carlin said he hoped to emulate his childhood hero, Danny Kaye, the kindly, rubber-faced comedian who ruled over the decade Carlin grew up in - the 1950s - with a clever but gentle humour reflective of the times.

It didn't work for him, and the pair broke up by 1962.

"I was doing superficial comedy entertaining people who didn't really care: Businessmen, people in nightclubs, conservative people. And I had been doing that for the better part of 10 years when it finally dawned on me that I was in the wrong place doing the wrong things for the wrong people," Carlin reflected recently as he prepared for his 14th HBO special, "It's Bad For Ya."

Eventually Carlin ditched the buttoned-up look for his trademark beard, ponytail and all-black attire.

But even with his decidedly adult-comedy bent, Carlin never lost his childlike sense of mischief, even voicing kid-friendly projects like episodes of the TV show "Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends" and the spacey Volkswagen bus Fillmore in the 2006 Pixar hit "Cars."

Carlin's first wife, Brenda, died in 1997. He is survived by wife Sally Wade; daughter Kelly Carlin McCall; son-in-law Bob McCall; brother Patrick Carlin; and sister-in-law Marlene Carlin.

-

Associated Press writer Christopher Weber contributed to this report.










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Monday, 23 June 2008

Ilis

Ilis   
Artist: Ilis

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


New Morning   
 New Morning

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 6




 






Sunday, 22 June 2008

The Radha Krishna Temple

The Radha Krishna Temple   
Artist: The Radha Krishna Temple

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Goddess Of Fortune   
 Goddess Of Fortune

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 7




 






Searching High & Lowe for Nanny 3.0?

With two former nannies accusing Rob of sexual harassment, it seemed fair to ask if he'd be going with a manny in the future.
Rob Lowe: Click to watch






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Kills, These New Puritans set for joint London and Paris event

The Kills, These New Puritans, Neon Neon and Har Mar Superstar are set to take place in a joint London and Paris music event.

The bands will take part in the Stage Of The Art event which has already seen the likes of Dirty Pretty Things playing gigs in both capitals.

The shows are:

Har Mar Superstar, Neon Neon - Paris Palais De Tokyo (July 1)
The Kills - Paris Palais De Tokyo (July 9)
These New Puritans, Nelson, Zombie Zombie - London ICA (11)

To check the availability of Stage Of The Art tickets and get all the latest listings, go to NME.COM/GIGS now, or call 0871 230 1094.

Attention Shoppers, Washboard Abs on Aisle 5!

The only thing the pappers were in the market for at a Ralph's grocery store in Malibu yesterday was some Grade A beef -- aka Matthew McConaughey.
Matthew McConaughey: Click to watch
We tried asking about his wild and crazy trip to Nicaragua ... but don't the pictures speak for themselves?





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Jerry Hall - Halls Wedding Dress Goes Under The Hammer


LATEST: Supermodel JERRY HALL has raised $56,000 (GBP28,000) for charity after auctioning off items including the wedding dress she wore for her nuptials to SIR MICK JAGGER 18 years ago.

Thirty-one designer lots from Hall's vast wardrobe went under the hammer on Tuesday (10Jun08) to raise cash for Emmaus, a homeless charity in the U.K.

The white lace minidress she wore at her 1990 wedding to the Rolling Stone star sold for $4,840 (GBP2,420) to vintage fashion dealer Steven Philip, earning five times more than its estimated price of $600-$1,000 (GBP300-GBP500).

Hall, 51, said of her marital garment: "I hope someone else has more luck than I did."

The couple's marriage was annulled in 1999 after lawyers declared their Bali wedding ceremony was not legally binding.





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Liverpool named England's 'most musical city'

Liverpool has been hailed as England's most musical city, beating Sheffield in an Arts Council poll.

The current European Capital Of Culture took 49 per cent of the vote, with Sheffield second and Manchester in third.

As part of the poll, unsigned Liverpool band The Affection will play this year's End Of The Road Festival in Dorset.

So did Liverpool deserve to win for the likes of The Beatles, The La's and even The Zutons, or should the likes of Arctic Monkeys and Pulp have pushed up Sheffield's ranking?

Plus, what about Oasis and New Order in Manchester, or other cities with vibrant scenes like Bristol or London? Have your say on the vote by commenting below.

Nerina Pallot

Nerina Pallot   
Artist: Nerina Pallot

   Genre(s): 
Pop
   



Discography:


Fires   
 Fires

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 11


Dear Frustrated Superstar   
 Dear Frustrated Superstar

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 14




Torch song-pop singer/songwriter Nerina Pallot was natural in London on April 26, 1975. As a kid she taught herself piano, later adding guitar to her repertory earlier studying violin and opera at boarding school day. After signing to Polydor, Pallot issued her debut LP, Dear Frustrated Superstar, in the summer of 2001, releasing the singles "Patience" and "Stranger." After management secured her the opening one-armed bandit on rocker Bryan Adams' forthcoming arena circuit, the label pulled the album from stores with an eye to reissuing the phonograph recording complete with a new single, "Photograph." But an appearing on the British children's tv set syllabus Unrecorded and Kicking proved fateful when young man node Faye Tozer of pop up radical Steps unintentionally pushed Pallot off the show's couch; the bad luck airy alive and made Pallot the cigarette of lots jocose, and Polydor all over her contract but a few weeks by and by, never reverting Earnest Frustrated Superstar to retail. Outside of conducive lead vocals to electronic duet Delerium's 2003 individual "Truly," Pallot exhausted the next quadruplet years out of vision, eventually resurfacing in the spring of 2005 with Fires, issued on her own Idaho label. The LP proved a critical and commercial front-runner and was reissued in updated form a year later on the Warner underling 14th Floor Records, reaching telephone number 21 on the U.K. album charts. The individual "Everybody's Gone to War" became a Top 20 arrive at.





Tim Vincent leaves Dancing on Ice

Nixon & Davis Undergo Surgery?

Sex And The City star Cynthia Nixon has laughed off reports she has gone under the knife in a bid to maintain her youthful looks. According to the New York Post's gossip column Page Six, both Nixon and her co-star Kristin Davis checked into Roosevelt Hospital in the Big Apple separately earlier this month for minor surgical procedures. A source tells the publication, "Cynthia had a breast augmentation and soon after, Kristin had the varicose veins on her legs removed. "They both made sure they did it on the quietest day of the week." But Nixon's spokesperson has denied the rumours, insisting there is no truth to the claims. Davis' representative has yet to comment on the allegations.


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