Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Fall Out Boy - Wentz Fall Out Boy Is Like Wizard Of Oz


FALL OUT BOY star PETE WENTZ has compared his bandmates to the cast of classic film THE WIZARD OF OZ.

The bassist insists that every member of the group has a very different role to play and they are all comparable to characters from the 1939 movie starring Judy Garland.

He tells MTV.com, "The way it works is, Patrick (Stump, singer) is kind of like Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz, and we're all the supporting characters.

"I'm like the Tin Man, (drummer, Andy) Hurley is Toto, and (guitarist, Joe) Trohman is definitely the Lion, because he's got big hair and he's very boisterous."





See Also

Sunday, 22 June 2008

George Clooney's Ex Lands New Model Deal

George Clooney's ex-girlfriend Sarah Larson is enjoying a career boost after her high-profile romance with the Hollywood actor - she's been named the face of fashion designer Christian Audigier's new line.
The model and former waitress is alleged to have been dumped by Clooney in May, although neither party has officially confirmed the split.
But Larson has now landed a deal with Audigier's fashion firm to front a new line of couture dresses.
Audigier tells People.com, "She is a fresh, elegant and classy girl. I saw her on a red carpet and liked her style and European look."
Larson's agent, Kenya Knight, adds, "Sarah was picked by Christian Audigier because she looks fabulous in everything she wears."
Larson had her first fitting for the range on Thursday in Los Angeles, and she had a photo shoot for the advertising campaign on Friday.
The ads will be unveiled later this month.

Saturday, 21 June 2008

Rizwan-Muazzam Qawwali

Rizwan-Muazzam Qawwali   
Artist: Rizwan-Muazzam Qawwali

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


A Better Destiny   
 A Better Destiny

   Year:    
Tracks: 6




 





Big Brother - Big Brother Lisa Predicts Struggle With Fake Couple Task

REVIEW: Adulthood (15)

We’ve all had rough upbringings. Where I was raised we didn’t even have a Bagel Factory – we had to fend for ourselves and mummy would often have to make sandwiches from scratch. Holidays were limited to two a year and some of the boys at prep school were absolute rotters.

Six years after killing Trife, Sam Peel is released from prison and soon finds out that people have long memories. Some have moved on and tried to build a life for themselves, others are still living with the past, but everyone remembers. Sam nearly gets killed within hours of his release and wants to put a stop to the violence – meanwhile, the rest of Ladbroke Grove and Latimer Road are busy dealing, shagging, working, robbing and using.
The journey begins, and Sam takes us on a tour of the world six years on from where he left off. This is a film which pulls no punches and if you’re used to watching Eastenders as your alleyway into London’s rough gritty realism this will literally make you wince.

There is no such thing as a childhood around these parts – the urban warfare means learn to duck and hit back quickly. Santa does exist, it’s just that he steals your presents and smells of whiskey.  Adulthood is just as devoid of magic. Sam encounters trouble on every corner and you’re left with that sense of tension well after the credits roll.

No-one thought Gary Oldman would do a sequel to Nil-By-Mouth – but these seem to be the kind of films which would benefit from a little more exploration – gruesome, difficult to pigeon-hole characters brought to life by Britain’s best actors and actresses. Kidulthood was the same – dealing with difficult issues and forcing us to take a good look at London’s grottier side of life.
The sequel will excite and repel in equal measures and although some scenes seem hurried and flat, others fizz with energy and menace and if half of what is depicted is true, I’m selling my properties in West London.

Ra Ra Riot, Islands added to Siren lineup

Ra Ra Riot and have been added to the lineup for the 2008 Siren Festival, taking place July 19 at Coney Island.

They join previously announced acts Stephen Malmus And The Jicks, Broken Social Scene, Annuals and The Dodos at the event which takes place over two stages along the boardwalk at the famous New York pleasure beach.

The Helio Sequence, Beach House, Times New Viking, Jaguar Love, Film School, Parts & Labor, These Are Powers and Dragons Of Zynth will also play this year�??s festival, the future of which has been up in the air since the Astroland amusement park was sold to developers in 2006.

The legendary Cyclone roller coaster remains the property of the Albert family, who will continue to operate it even after the redevelopment.

--By our New York staff.
Find out more about NME.

Celebrity psychic loses lawsuit over ex-Elvis home

MEMPHIS, Tenn. —

Celebrity psychic Uri Geller and two partners have lost a federal lawsuit claiming the former owners of Elvis Presley's pre-Graceland house breached an eBay contract to sell the Memphis home.


Geller, who gained fame in the 1970s for his alleged power to bend spoons and other objects with his mind, and his partners bid $905,100 for the ranch-style home in a 2006 auction.


But the deal fell apart. Hazen said Geller's group altered terms of the real estate deal so that it was unacceptable. Geller said Hazen and Freeman reneged on the deal in order to sell it for more to Nashville record producer Mike Curb, who bought the house for $1 million.


on Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Jon McCalla ruled that the eBay auction was more of an advertising vehicle than a binding sale.


Even if was a contract, the judge said, Geller and his partners breached it when they altered the closing terms after the sale.


"I'm relieved that this is all over," Hazen told the Memphis newspaper The Commercial Appeal.


Presley bought the four-bedroom, 3,000-square-foot house in 1956 with his early song royalties. The singer, his parents and grandmother lived there for 13 months before throngs of fans forced them to move to more secluded Graceland in 1957.


Curb plans to let Rhodes College use the home as part of a new Mike Curb Music Institute.


---


Information from: The Commercial Appeal, http://www.commercialappeal.com








See Also

Styx

Styx   
Artist: Styx

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   Rock: Pop-Rock
   Pop: Pop-Rock
   Rock: Hard-Rock
   



Discography:


Cyclorama   
 Cyclorama

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 14


Extended Versions: The Encore Collection   
 Extended Versions: The Encore Collection

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 10


The Singles Collection (CD 2)   
 The Singles Collection (CD 2)

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 14


The Singles Collection (CD 1)   
 The Singles Collection (CD 1)

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 14


Brave New World   
 Brave New World

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 14


Return To Paradise Cd2   
 Return To Paradise Cd2

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 11


Return To Paradise Cd1   
 Return To Paradise Cd1

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 9


Greatest Hits   
 Greatest Hits

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 16


Edge Of The Century   
 Edge Of The Century

   Year: 1990   
Tracks: 10


30 Greatest Hits (CD 2)   
 30 Greatest Hits (CD 2)

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 15


30 Greatest Hits (CD 1)   
 30 Greatest Hits (CD 1)

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 15


Mr. Roboto   
 Mr. Roboto

   Year: 1984   
Tracks: 9


Caught In The Act Cd1   
 Caught In The Act Cd1

   Year: 1984   
Tracks: 7


Kilroy Was Here   
 Kilroy Was Here

   Year: 1983   
Tracks: 9


Paradise Theater   
 Paradise Theater

   Year: 1981   
Tracks: 11


Cornerstone   
 Cornerstone

   Year: 1979   
Tracks: 9


Best Of   
 Best Of

   Year: 1979   
Tracks: 11


Pieces Of Eight   
 Pieces Of Eight

   Year: 1978   
Tracks: 10


The Grand Illusion   
 The Grand Illusion

   Year: 1977   
Tracks: 8


Crystal Ball   
 Crystal Ball

   Year: 1976   
Tracks: 7


Equinox   
 Equinox

   Year: 1975   
Tracks: 8


Man Of Miracles   
 Man Of Miracles

   Year: 1974   
Tracks: 10


The Serpent Is Rising   
 The Serpent Is Rising

   Year: 1973   
Tracks: 10


Styx II   
 Styx II

   Year: 1973   
Tracks: 8


Styx 2   
 Styx 2

   Year: 1973   
Tracks: 8


Styx   
 Styx

   Year: 1972   
Tracks: 6


Styx I   
 Styx I

   Year:    
Tracks: 5


Big Bang Theory   
 Big Bang Theory

   Year:    
Tracks: 14




Although they began as an artsy prog-rock band, Styx would finally transform into the virtual arena rock epitome by the late '70s and early '80s, imputable to a fondness for declamatory bikers and soaring ability ballads. The seeds for the band were deep-seated in another Chicago band during the late '60s, the Tradewinds, which featured brothers Chuck and John Panozzo (world Health Organization played freshwater bass and drums, severally), as well as acquaintance Dennis DeYoung (vocals, keyboards). By the dawn of the '70s, the group had changed their key to TW4, and welcomed aboard a pair of guitarists/vocalists, James "JY" Young and John Curulewski -- securing a recording concentrate in 1972 with Wooden Nickel Records (a subsidiary company of RCA). Soon after, the group opted to change their key once more, this time to Styx, named after a river from Greek mythology that ran through the 'land of the dead' in the underworld.


Early on, Styx's music reflected such then-current prog bikers as Emerson, Lake & Palmer and the Moody Blues, as evidenced by such releases as 1972's self-titled debut, 1973's River Styx II, 1974's The Serpent Is Rising, and 1975's Man of Miracles. While the albums (as well as nonstop touring) helped the radical progress a substantial following locally, Styx failed to offend through to the mainstream, until a track originally from their sec album, "Lady" started to get substantial airplay in late '74 on the Chicago wireless station WLS-FM. The vocal was presently issued as a single countrywide, and speedily shot to number six-spot on the singles chart, as Styx II was certified gold. By this clip, however, the group had grown disenchanted with their record label, and opted to sign on with A&M for their twenty percent sack overall, 1975's Equinoctial point (their other label would emergence innumerous compilations over the geezerhood, culled from tracks off their early releases). On the eve of the tour in backup of the album, Curulewski dead left the band, and was replaced by Tommy Shaw (unhappily, Curulewski would go across away from an aneurysm in 1988). Shaw proven to be the missing spell of the puzzle for Styx, as to the highest degree of their subsequent releases passim the late '70s earned at least platinum authentication (1976's Crystallization Ball, 1977's The Grand Illusion, 1978's Pieces of Eight, and 1979's Cornerstone), and spawned such hit singles and classic rock'n'roll radio receiver standards as "Do Sail Away," "Renegade," "Risque Collar Man," "Casual Yourself," and the power ballad "Baby."


Despite the enormous success of "Baby," it caused tension within the grouping -- specifically betwixt Shaw and DeYoung (the latter of which was the song's writer), as the guitarist treasured Styx to go along in a more hard rock-based counselling, spell DeYoung sought to prosecute more melodic and theatrically-based works. This lED to DeYoung existence briefly ousted from the group (although it was unbroken completely undercover at the prison term), before a rapprochement was met. The band distinct that their first spillage of the '80s would be a construct record album, 1981's Paradise Theater, which was generally based on the resurrect and fall of a once-beautiful house (which was supposedly exploited as a metaphor for the state of the U.S. at the clip -- the Iranian surety place, the Cold War, Reagan, etc.). Shangri-la Theater became Styx's biggest dispatch of their career (selling over trey meg copies in a three-year menstruation), as they became one of the U.S. top rock acts of the Apostles due to such big score singles as "Too Much Time on My Hands" and "The Best of Times." But the behind-the-scenes pettifoggery only intensified in the waken of the album's success, as DeYoung was now convinced that a more theatrical glide path was the next direction for Styx. Shaw and the rest of the group begrudgingly went along, and spell the resulting follow-up was some other score, 1983's sci-fi based Kilroy Was Here (which told the tale of a future where rock 'n' roll & roll out was outlaw, well-nigh a carbon paper copy of the story line of Rush's 2112), the record album would finally lead to the group's breakup -- as the ensuing prop-heavy turn seemed to focus more on written dialog and prolonged films than undecomposed old careen & roll.


A forgettable lively album, Caught in the Act, was issued in 1984, ahead Styx went on hiatus, and the legal age of its members pursued solo projects passim the remainder of the decennium. DeYoung issued 1984's Defect Moon (which spawned a moderate hit individual with its ruminative form of address track), 1986's Back to the World, and 1988's Boomchild, Young released 1986's City Slicker, while Shaw put forth several solo sets -- 1984's Girls With Guns, 1985's What If?, 1986's Alive in Japan, and 1987's Ambition. Shaw then formed Damn Yankees along with late Night Ranger bassist/singer Jack Blades, guitarist Ted Nugent, and drummer Michael Cartellone, a group wHO enjoyed commercial success right turned the bat with their self-titled debut in 1990 (due to the hit power lay "Senior high Enough"), ahead issuing an unsuccessful soph crusade two geezerhood later, Don't Tread. During Shaw's tenure with Damn Yankees, Styx had re-formed with fledgling Glen Burtnik pickings the position of Shaw -- issue a new studio album in 1990, Bound of the Century, which spawned hitherto some other hit powerfulness ballad, "Show Me the Way." But the Styx reunion was a fugitive one, as its members went their divide slipway concisely thereafter -- with DeYoung loss on to toy Pontius Pilate in a revival of Jesus Christ Superstar (and issue an record album of Broadway establish tunes, 1994's 10 on Broadway), while Young issued a pair of solo discs (1994's Out on a Day Pass and 1995's Brocaded by Wolves), and Shaw teamed up with Jack Blades for the ephemeral outfit, Shaw Blades (issue a lone recording in '95, Hallucination).


A re-recording of their early hit, "Lady" (highborn "Lady" '95"), for a Sterling Hits compilation, lastly joined Shaw with his former Styx bandmates, which light-emitting diode to a full-on reunion term of enlistment in 1996. But drummer John Panozzo fell earnestly ill at the time (ascribable to a long fight with drunkenness), which prevented him from joining the legal proceeding -- as he passed forth in July of the same year. Although bereaved, Styx persevered with new drummer Todd Sucherman pickings the position of Panozzo, as the Styx reunion hitch became a surprise sold-out achiever, resulting in the release of a live album/video, 1997's "Give to Paradise," while a whole new generation of rock candy fans were introduced to the la-di-da sounds of Styx via a humorous car ad which secondhand the rail "Mr. Roboto," as well as songs used in such TV shows as South Park and Freaks & Geeks. The group even stuck around long sufficiency to outcome a new studio record album, 1999's Brave New World, ahead detrition between bandmembers set in once once again. With the other Styx members deficient to soldier on with farther albums and tours, DeYoung was forced to take a break when he developed an rare viral ill, which made the singer extremely sensitive to light-colored. DeYoung was able to eventually get over his upset, but non earlier Shaw and Young opted to engage new singer Lawrence Gowan and issue a pair off of live releases in the early twenty-first hundred -- 2000's Arch Allies: Live at Riverport (schism 50-50 betwixt Styx and REO Speedwagon) and 2001's River Styx World: Live 2001. DeYoung began touring as a solo creative person at the same time, and finally attempted to sue Shaw and Young over the use of the name Styx (the suit was eventually settled in former 2001). Around the same time, Chuck Panozzo confirmed rumors that he had contracted AIDS (simply was battling the virus successfully), while the roiling career of Styx was told in an entertaining episode of VH1's Behindhand the Music.


In the fountain of 2003, a new studio album featuring Gowan arrived in stores. For Cyclorama, Styx consisted of Shaw, Young, Burtnik, Sucherman and Gowan. It too featured invitee appearances from John Waite, Brian Wilson, and histrion Billy Bob Thornton. By the last of the year, Burtnik was out of the band and replaced by former Bad English and Babys phallus Ricky Phillips, although Panozzo did play with the group on prime alive dates. Come Sail Away: The Styx Anthology from 2004 did an first-class job of representing the band's career in deuce CDs piece 2005's double disk The Complete Wooden Nickel Recordings gathered the band's first tetrad albums. That same year, the band recorded their picks from the "Heavy Rock Songbook" and released the track edition filled Big Bang Theory.






Halloween

Halloween   
Artist: Halloween

   Genre(s): 
Metal: Heavy-Metal
   



Discography:


Horror Fire   
 Horror Fire

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 19




 






Grayson Capps

Grayson Capps   
Artist: Grayson Capps

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


Wail and Ride   
 Wail and Ride

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 12


If You Knew My Mind   
 If You Knew My Mind

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 12




A literate and ardent songster whose vocal characters ar ofttimes caught scarcely hanging on at the edges of American aliveness, Grayson Capps is a bit like a New Orleans-version of Tom Waits, albeit more of a roots rocker in real musical execution. Capps was innate April 17, 1967 in Opelika, AL the logos of a Baptist sermoniser and an Auburn University student. After his birth, both of his parents concluded up existence teachers in Brewton, AL. They touched to Fairhope, AL when Capps was in the 7th grad, and it was at that place that he developed a womb-to-tomb fascination with theater, finally earning a fond learnedness to Tulane University in New Orleans to study acting, graduating with a BFA in 1989. But performing wasn't the only thing Capps studied at Tulane. He likewise erudite to play guitar and joined a band called the House Levellers, wHO specialized in what the striation called "flail folk." The grouping signed with Tipitina Records in 1990 when Capps was barely 21-years-old, and following a whirlwind and musically quite successful year, Capps left the dance band, choosing to remain and do his nursing home in New Orleans. He started a new dance band with John Lawrence called Stavin Chain and they sign-language with Thomas Ruf's Germany-based Ruf Records in 1998, cathartic a single album, simply called Stavin Chain, in 1999, earlier disbanding. Capps met Shainee Gabel, a young music director world Health Organization was filming a documental called Anthem, and she terminated up using several of his songs in the finished celluloid. Capps had told Gabel about an unpublished novel his father, Everett Capps, had written and once Gabel read it, she knew she had to plastic film it. She wrote a screenplay and the end termination was the 2004 film A Love Song for Bobby Long, which featured Capps in a piece part and as well used quaternity of his songs as constituent of the soundtrack. The regionally released Grayson Capps album appeared in 2005 on Hyena Records followed by a solo debut proper, If You Knew My Mind, by and by that same year. During this time Capps continued to make his base in New Orleans just the Katrina disaster at summer's fill up in 2005 forced him to leave the city, at least temporarily. A second solo project, Howl & Ride, also on Hyena, came out in 2006. Ruf Records re-released Stavin' Chain in 2007.






Die Verbannten Kinder Eva's

Die Verbannten Kinder Eva's   
Artist: Die Verbannten Kinder Eva's

   Genre(s): 
Ethnic
   



Discography:


In Darkness Let Me Dwell   
 In Darkness Let Me Dwell

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 9


Come Heavy Sleep   
 Come Heavy Sleep

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 10


Die Verbannten Kinder Eva's   
 Die Verbannten Kinder Eva's

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 14




 






Armik

Armik   
Artist: Armik

   Genre(s): 
New Age
   Other
   Instrumental
   Latin: Flamenco
   Pop
   Jazz
   



Discography:


Desires  The Romantic Collection   
 Desires The Romantic Collection

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 14


Mar De Sueos   
 Mar De Sueos

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 11


Mar De Suenos   
 Mar De Suenos

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 10


Mar De Suecos   
 Mar De Suecos

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 11


Cafe Romantico   
 Cafe Romantico

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 11


Treasures   
 Treasures

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 11


Romantic Dreams   
 Romantic Dreams

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 11


Piano Nights   
 Piano Nights

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 10


The Best Of Armik   
 The Best Of Armik

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 14


Best of Armik   
 Best of Armik

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 14


Amor de Guitarra   
 Amor de Guitarra

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 11


Rain Dancer   
 Rain Dancer

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 10


Lost in Paradise   
 Lost in Paradise

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 11


Spanish Memories   
 Spanish Memories

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 14


Guitar Romance   
 Guitar Romance

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 16


Rosas Del Amor   
 Rosas Del Amor

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 12


Hit Collection   
 Hit Collection

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 14


Gypsy Flame   
 Gypsy Flame

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 13


Brisas De Pamplonita   
 Brisas De Pamplonita

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 14


Souvenir   
 Souvenir

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 15


Malaga   
 Malaga

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 12


Rubia   
 Rubia

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 12


Isla Del Sol   
 Isla Del Sol

   Year:    
Tracks: 12




New flamenco guitarist Armik displayed an interest in and passion for euphony while still a young child. When he was just sevener years old, he pawned his watch for a classical guitar, which he hid and practised on in the basement. Formal music lessons followed and Armik completed the Rudolph Solphege syllabus in iI years; at 12, he was a professional recording artist. While his early vocation focused largely on jazz, Armik observed the beauty and passionateness of flamenco spell visiting and perusal in Spain during the '70s. He moved to Los Angeles to pursue this new direction, acting with other artists lively and in the studio.


By 1994 he released his solo debut album, Rain Dancer, a critical and commercial success that he followed with 1995's Romany Flame. At this point, Armik's reputation as a performer and pupil of flamenco was such that technical Spanish luthier Pedro Maldonado created an musical instrument for him, the Rubia; Armik's 1996 album was recorded with and named later it. The following yr saw the release of Malaga, and his fifth album, Isla del Sol, appeared in 1999, followed by Rosas del Amor in the spring of 2001. Released in 2002, Helpless in Paradise showed him making a fleshly and elegant album that offered a different claim on his traditional gypsy dancing.


His releases have systematically reached Top Ten positions on Billboard's charts of top-selling new age euphony, and during the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, deuce tracks from Armik's recordings were played during the floor exercises to go with gymnast Daniela Sofronie of Romania. That year, Armik released his first gear album on his have Bolero imprint, Wild-eyed Dreams. Releases such as March de Sueƃ±os and the compilation Desires: The Romantic Collection followed.





Chance to Win My Boy Elvis Tickets