Wednesday, 3 September 2008

Mp3 music: Cilvaringz






Cilvaringz
   

Artist: Cilvaringz: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Rap: Hip-Hop
Other

   







Cilvaringz's discography:


Cilvaringz-1
   

 Cilvaringz-1

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 21
Deja Wu
   

 Deja Wu

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 16
The Mental Chamberz
   

 The Mental Chamberz

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 17






Cilvaringz is a Wu-Family member from Tilburg, Holland. He is the selfsame number one international Wu-Tang member, gaining entranceway after several unsuccessful trips to New York attempting to address with RZA, the head of the Wu-Tang Clan. He finally succeeded by group meeting RZA's sister and convinced her to correct up a meeting. After hearing his work, RZA distinct to mark Cilvaringz to Wu-Tang Records. Cilvaringz has excessively released an instrumental album entitled The Mental Chamberz. In June 2007, and after much detain, Cilvaringz's first touchable solo record album, I -- which featured production crop and appearances by many Wu-Tang members and affiliates -- came out.





For Kid Rock, American Rock is where it's at

Thursday, 14 August 2008

Download Carly Simon






Carly Simon
   

Artist: Carly Simon: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Rock: Pop-Rock
Pop
Rock
Soundtrack
Other

   







Discography:


Into White
   

 Into White

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 14
Moonlight Serenade
   

 Moonlight Serenade

   Year: 2005   

Tracks: 11
Have You Seen Me Lately
   

 Have You Seen Me Lately

   Year: 2005   

Tracks: 11
Best of Carly Simon
   

 Best of Carly Simon

   Year: 2005   

Tracks: 10
Reflections: Greatest Hits
   

 Reflections: Greatest Hits

   Year: 2004   

Tracks: 20
Reflections: Carly Simon's Greatest Hits (Original version
   

 Reflections: Carly Simon's Greatest Hits (Original version

   Year: 2004   

Tracks: 20
Reflections - Carly Simon's Greatest Hits (International version
   

 Reflections - Carly Simon's Greatest Hits (International version

   Year: 2004   

Tracks: 20
Anthology
   

 Anthology

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 39
The Bedroom Tapes
   

 The Bedroom Tapes

   Year: 2000   

Tracks: 11
Torch
   

 Torch

   Year: 1999   

Tracks: 11
Spy
   

 Spy

   Year: 1997   

Tracks: 9
Playing Possum
   

 Playing Possum

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 10
Hotcakes
   

 Hotcakes

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 11
Clouds in My Coffee
   

 Clouds in My Coffee

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 58
Another Passenger
   

 Another Passenger

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 12
Clouds In My Coffee 1965-1995 (CD 3)
   

 Clouds In My Coffee 1965-1995 (CD 3)

   Year: 1995   

Tracks: 21
Clouds In My Coffee 1965-1995 (CD 2)
   

 Clouds In My Coffee 1965-1995 (CD 2)

   Year: 1995   

Tracks: 19
Clouds In My Coffee 1965-1995 (CD 1)
   

 Clouds In My Coffee 1965-1995 (CD 1)

   Year: 1995   

Tracks: 18
Carly Simon's Romulus Hunt: A Family Opera
   

 Carly Simon's Romulus Hunt: A Family Opera

   Year: 1993   

Tracks: 20
Working Girl
   

 Working Girl

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 10
Working Girl
   

 Working Girl

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 10
My Romance
   

 My Romance

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 12
Hello Big Man
   

 Hello Big Man

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 10
Greatest Hits Live
   

 Greatest Hits Live

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 11
Coming Around Again
   

 Coming Around Again

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 11
Carly Simon - Greatest Hits Liv
   

 Carly Simon - Greatest Hits Liv

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 11
Boys in the Trees
   

 Boys in the Trees

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 11
Anticipation
   

 Anticipation

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 10
No Secrets
   

 No Secrets

   Year: 1972   

Tracks: 10
Come Upstairs
   

 Come Upstairs

   Year:    

Tracks: 9






Carly Simon was one of the most popular of the confessional singer/songwriters wHO emerged in the early '70s. The youngest child in an upper berth class New York consortium (her don, Richard Simon, co-founded the Simon and Schuster publication ship's company), Simon got her begin in music as power of a couple with her sister Lucy (world Health Organization by and by wrote the medicine for the Broadway carry witness The Secret Garden). The Simon Sisters had a graph single with "Winkin' Blinkin' and Nod" in April 1964. But Simon's solo debut did non come until the release of her self-titled first album in February 1971. It contained her first solo hit, "That's the Way I've Always Heard It Should Be," an anti-marriage song co-written with Jacob Brackman that reached the Top Ten. Simon's minute album, Expectancy (Nov 1971) (which went gold in two years), contained a Top 40 follow-up in the statute title song dynasty, and she won the 1971 Grammy Award for Best New Artist. Her third album, the gold number unitary No Secrets (November 1972), was produced by Richard Perry and contained the gold bit one hit "You're So Vain," which excited speculation about its theme. Mick Jagger, one of those suggested, panax quinquefolius musical escort on the recording. "The Right Thing to Do," a second single from the record album, made the Top 40. Simon marital boyfriend singer/songwriter James Taylor in November 1972. (They divorced in 1983.) Her fourth part record album, the Top Ten Hotcakes (Jan 1974), contained a atomic number 79 Top Ten remaking of the Inez & Charlie Foxx hit "Mimus polyglotktos" song dynasty dynasty with Taylor and the Top Ten strike "Haven't Got Time for the Pain"; it became her third base consecutive atomic number 79 LP. Playing Possum (Apr 1975), containing the Top 40 hit "Mental attitude Dancing," was some other Top Ten LP. Simon's sixth record album, Some other Passenger (June 1976), was a relation commercial disappointment. But in 1977, she american ginseng "Cypher Does It Better," the paper strain for the James Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me, resulting in a au Top Ten hit. Her seventh record album, Boys in the Trees (Apr 1978), was a million-selling success, buoyed by the Top Ten hit "You Belong to Me" and a Top 40 span overcompensate of "Devoted to You" with Taylor. Simon's eighth and ninth albums, Spot (June 1979) and Come Upstairs (June 1980), were less successful, though the latter contained the gold Top 40 hit "Jesse."


In October 1980, Simon collapsed of exhaustion onstage, later on which her concert appearances became rare. Her next record album, Torch (Sept 1981), was tending over to pre- and non-rock covers. In 1982, Simon scored a Top Ten U.K. hit with "Wherefore," a strain produced by the disco mathematical group Chic from the motion picture Soup for One. In 1983, she returned to the U.K. Top 40 as the uncredited vocalist on the Will Powers (Lynn Goldsmith) irony "Snuggling with Confidence." Simon's life history in the U.S. was in decline, notwithstanding, as the albums Hullo Big Man (September 1983) and Spoilt Girl (July 1985) were poor peter Sellers. She returned to the Top 40 in 1986 with some other flick melodic theme, "Coming Around Again," from Pyrosis (the Coming Around Again LP [Border district 1987] went atomic number 78) and had still another movie-related hit with the Grammy- and Oscar-winning "Get the River Run" from the film Working Girl in 1988. In 1990, Simon released both My Romance (Border district), some other record album of pop covers, and Get You Seen Me Lately? (September), an record album of original songs. She scored the film This Is My Life in 1992. In 1993, Simon's "family opera house," Romulus Hunt, premiered and was released on record. 1994 brought the vent of a young album, Letters Never Sent (Nov), and a three-CD/cassette box set retrospective, Clouds in My Coffee 1965-1995, appeared in November 1995. Film Noir followed two years later, and in the spring of 2000 Simon returned with her first book of original material in six old age, The Bedroom Tapes. In 2002 she released Christmas Day Is Almost Here, a compendium of holiday-themed material, followed by some other collection of new material, Moonlight Serenade, in 2005. Into White, which featured for the most portion versions of standards, was released in 2006.






Friday, 27 June 2008

Ivan Ferreiro

Ivan Ferreiro   
Artist: Ivan Ferreiro

   Genre(s): 
Latin
   



Discography:


Las Siete y Media   
 Las Siete y Media

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 8


Versiones Y Rarezas   
 Versiones Y Rarezas

   Year:    
Tracks: 23


Dias azules   
 Dias azules

   Year:    
Tracks: 1




Spanish rocker Iván Ferreiro was long-familiar ahead embarking on his solo career. For 13 age ahead contact out on his possess he was the vocaliser and bandleader for the rock en español staple chemical group Los Piratas. Toward the end of 2003, Los Piratas split, and Ferreiro distinct to contract a break from professional music. For playfulness, he and his blood brother started playing a weekly gig at a pub in their hometown of Vigo. Without whatever promotion, the brothers' shows were quickly well-attended. They played in the main covers of artists such as Los Planetas, Andrés Calamaro, and Alaska y Dinarama. They began adding in their have substantial, and it wasn't long before on that point were sufficiency original tunes to disk an record album. Canciones Para el Tiempo y la Distancia (2005) generated enough buzz that the brothers Ferreiro presently toured throughout Spain, pickings on drummer Karlos Arancegui. In November of 2005, Ivan had the idea to tear a house in Buenos Aires for deuce weeks with a mathematical group of musician friends, and pass iI weeks writing entirely new material. The project produced a record entitled Las Siete y Media, which was released in October of 2006. The musicians involved took their new material on circuit starting in the latter months of that twelvemonth, playing all all over Spain and Latin America.






Thursday, 19 June 2008

Ashlee Simpson 'not engaged' yet

Singer Ashlee Simpson is "not engaged", despite being pictured with a diamond ring on her wedding finger.
According to People magazine, the 23-year-old, who is currently dating Fall Out Boy star Pete Wentz, dismissed the rumours during a recent visit to Fuse TV.
Simpson said that she was wearing a promise ring from her boyfriend, explaining by saying: "It just means that he hasn't asked my dad yet."
A representative for the singer said: "She is not engaged."

Saturday, 14 June 2008

'American Idol' Recap: Jason Castro Visits The Hall Of Shame, David Archuleta Sweeps Rock-Hall Night




It only took them 12 weeks, but on Tuesday night, "American Idol" finally found a theme that would allow the contestants to truly shine. No Broadway curveballs, no Mariah mountains to climb, no Beatles tunes to desecrate. Nope, instead the top four had access to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's list of 500 (!) songs "that shaped rock," and with artists as varied as Elvis Costello, Arrested Development and Dion and the Belmonts represented, there was no excuse for any of the remaining singers to pick a loser. (Although, admittedly, if I were a finalist on "Idol," I'd be tempted to turn Kraftwerk's 20-plus-minute German opus "Autobahn" into a 90-second nugget of trainwreck television.)

Ryan Seacrest opened the show by noting that three out of the four singers standing onstage have been the top vote-getter in previous weeks, so it's anyone's game. Anyone except that fourth odd duck, who is totally like the 10th dentist who hates Trident for some reason. Seacrest also reminded viewers Paula that the judges will be critiquing every single performance, so don't expect an encore performance from Abdul the Soothsayer this week. ("Jason, things are hazy but I'm seeing a Bugles binge and a "Boobah" marathon in your future!")

Before I go on a rant about how I nearly choked on a pretzel when the "Idol" producers replaced John Lennon's photo with Syesha's mug in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, let's get to the performances!

David Cook

Song: Duran Duran's "Hungry Like the Wolf" and the Who's "Baba O'Riley"

Verdict: Who are you?

I've always considered Simon Le Bon more of a pretty boy than a brilliant vocalist, but after hearing David Cook hiccup and grunt his way through the Duran Duran anthem, I owe Bon Bon an apology. David's sloppy performance teleported me to MTV circa 1999, back when instead of "Top Model" and "Hills" marathons, we aired "Say What? Karaoke" all the time. All David's rendition needed was a cloudy Bahamas sky, three bikini-clad Jersey-girl backup dancers and Devon Sawa as a celebrity judge.

The resident rocker shook off the judges' mixed reviews and tried a little harder in round two by taking the Who's "Baba O'Riley" and playing it at half speed. Actually, his chopped and screwed take sounded so zonked out on cough syrup, I wouldn't be surprised if Slim Thug stole it as a sample for his next mixtape.

Unfortunately, the slow Cook'ed arrangement didn't really sizzle like it did with, say, "Hello" or "Billie Jean," and you could tell that David knew he was having an off night, but it was still good enough to turn Paula into the Cookie Monster. Instead of saying, "C is for cookie, that's good enough for me," she said, "I just want more, I want more, I, I, I, I, I want more, I want more Dave Cook." Also important to note: She put her hands over her face and said, "Om nom nom nom," while crumbs fell out of her mouth. (OK, not really.)

Syesha Mercado

Song: Ike and Tina Turner's version of Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Proud Mary" and Sam Cooke's "A Change Is Gonna Come"

Verdict: Cryesha's river of tears

Before I go any further, I think it's important we review a few guidelines from the "What Not to Do in an Interview" chapter of the "American Idol" bible.

1. Never remind viewers that the song you're picking has been covered more than 100 times.

2. Don't speak in the third person, even ironically.

3. Do not, under any circumstances, equate your struggle on a reality-TV competition to the friggin' civil-rights movement!

I find it necessary to go over these since Syesha broke all three commandments during the night's two interview packages. She also told Ryan, during a Coke moment, that she couldn't wait to go on tour, because she wanted to finally meet all her fans. Honey, you're gonna be sorely disappointed, because I don't know one person who's saying, "I can't wait to hear Syesha's voice amplified!" Even the Syesha sign-holders in the audience look bored beyond belief each week.

Boring is the last word I'd use to describe Syesha's first song, however. She crammed more hip-pops and sashays into two minutes than "Pussycat Dolls Present: Girlicious" attempted in 13 episodes. (Her head-snaps need to improve if she's going to try and pull this song off again, though.) In the end, I had to agree with Simon. It still boiled down to just a copycat performance of Tina Turner's signature tune, which had my eyes rolling, rolling, rolling on the river. So scratch the first word of this paragraph and replace it with "Original." That's more like it.

Round two had a tenacious Syesha belting "A Change Is Gonna Come." She connected with the song best during the second verse, when her quivering and cracked voice exposed a sincere vulnerability not seen since Brooke White forgot Evita's death song. And like the recently departed nanny, Syesha was overcome with emotion during judging and shed a tear or two (thousand). Sy's cry wasn't because of Randy's bad review (which, in my opinion, wasn't as off the mark as Simon said it was), it was more because of Paula's standing ovation and Simon's reaffirmation.

I wish Syesha didn't bring up the civil-rights movement a second time after judging. It reminded us how tasteless her initial comparison was and added plenty of fuel to the message-board fires, whose readers had cries of their own. "She's an actress! She's faking! She's pandering for votes like Kristy Lee Cook singing about the USA!" Well, I say to the haters, at least this was her real cry, as opposed to that freaky "baby cry" she kept doing earlier in the season.

Jason Castro

Song: The Wailers' "I Shot the Sheriff" and Bob Dylan's "Mr. Tambourine Man"

Verdict: Up in smoke

On Tuesday, Jason Castro's anti-establishment attitude came to a giant head as he derailed his "Idol" chances in the most awesome crash-and-burn way ever. First, he openly mocked Seacrest's overly dramatic "This ... is American Idol." Then he made the "I'm singing Bob Marley, go figure" joke before I could. His goofy grin made several appearances onstage as he bounced and pounced through "I Shot the Sheriff" with unabashed glee. Like Sanjaya at the height of his absurdity, the judges' negative comments were a moot point. In fact, Jason flipped Simon's "What were you thinking?" into the climax of his "Fight the Power" narrative by retorting, "I was thinking Bob Marley!" This gonzo performance couldn't have been more tailored to his rabid fanbase unless it was covered in patchouli and shot using black lights.

Jason's second song wasn't as aggressively terrible as round one. His vocals were on point ... that is, until he forgot the lyrics. (And in a Bob Dylan song, if you don't have the lyrics, what else is there?) In a move that was sure to drive "Idol" addicts nuts, Jason reacted to the judges' lashing by cranking up the Spicoli charm and acting like he didn't give a crap.

I guess that recent Entertainment Weekly article about Castro saying he's ready to leave the show was accurate. But Jason's reckless display was so disrespectful to the more deserving "Idol" contestants (like Carly, who was looking pretty miffed), that I'm now tempted to vote for him just to torture him another week! Did anyone else catch Jason mouthing the words "Don't vote!" while Seacrest read off his phone numbers? Who knew the folk singer was such a subversive punk?

David Archuleta

Song: Ben E. King's "Stand by Me" and Norah Jones' version of Elvis Presley's "Love Me Tender"

Verdict: The velvet crusher

ArchAngels rejoice! Little David easily dominated the night, starting with a self-assured and surprising "Stand by Me." The prodigy proved that you can run all over a simple melody but still make it recognizable (take note, Josiah!). Then, just to keep us on our toes, David slipped in a line from Sean Kingston's "Beautiful Girls," instantly making the ancient track sound fresh and new without relying on flashy distortion or emo-whine. (Am I the only one who read Arch's quick reworking as a subtle jab at competitor David Cook?) Looks like all those hours spent alone in his room singing "Stand by Me" to himself "or to [his] dog or something" paid off. On a side note, what 16-year-old boy locks himself in his room only to sings oldies to himself? Maybe that explains all the awkward post-performance panting?

I wasn't as blown away by "Love Me Tender," but I still give ArchAdorable points for a brilliant song choice. You could practically hear his fans melting across America as he purred the lyrics over a simple piano accompaniment. I was hoping David would keep it restrained and quiet throughout, but I suppose any serious romantic encounter ends with a loud climax.

Hasty Predictions

It's pretty much a done deal that Jason "I Don't Give a F---" Castro will be returning to the quad Wednesday night, isn't it? Syesha was in the running towards becoming America's Next Top Model-Slash-Idol-Fourth-Runner-Up, but she pulled the Brooke White Meltdown card, so she's safe this week. Plus, Jason seemed to go out of his way to get voted off, all but ensuring a Syesha/David/David showdown. But is it possible that Simon's harsh Jason slams rallied viewers behind the Dreadhead? (I can't remember the last time Cowell compared a finalist to an early-round audition reject.) Will the buzz of Jason bombing so bad make viewers forget about the mediocre David Cook, thus making him vulnerable to elimination? Maybe it's not a done deal at all. ... This show kills me!

What did you think of "Songs That Shaped Rock" Night? Did you find Jason's behavior awesomely subversive or inexcusably childish? Are you going to watch Ace Young get decapitated on "Bones" too? And does Luke Menard live at the "Idol" studio, or what? Comment me below!

Get your "Idol" fix on MTV News' "American Idol" page, where you'll find all the latest news, interviews and opinions. And relive six seasons of "Idol" hot messes and high notes in six minutes with our video timeline.






See Also

Sunday, 8 June 2008

Bruce Willis Is Raising ‘Kane’

Photo: Getty Images, Courtesy of IO Interactive
Kane & Lynch & Bruce: Bruce Willis is in negotiations to star as Kane in the video-game adaptation Kane & Lynch for Lionsgate. The game's story follows the exploits of death-row inmate Kane and schizophrenic killer Lynch, who escape from prison to find a stolen fortune. It must be kind of depressing for Willis to realize how much he looks like a rendered texture-mapped polygonal video-game character. [HR]

De Palma Gets a Grip: Brian De Palma — dipping into a previously unexplored genre — will direct The Boston Stranglers, based on Susan Kelly's nonfiction account of 1960's Boston killings and the questionable conviction of Albert DeSalvo, for Valhalla Motion Pictures. "This is exciting for me because I've never done a movie about a notorious murder," is what De Palma definitely didn't say. [HR]

The Damon Factor: Matt Damon joins Morgan Freeman in Clint Eastwood's Human Factor, the story of Nelson Mandela and rugby player Francois Pienaar, who together rallied the entire country of South Africa around the Springboks rugby team in 1985. Expectations are high, since the last movie we saw about a rugby team had a bitchin' plane crash and ended with dudes literally eating each other. [Variety]



Sherlock's the Guy: It seems like every time we bet that Guy Ritchie will never direct another movie, some crazy exec goes and hires him. Next up for Madonna's husband? Sherlock Holmes for Warner Bros., a reinvention of the classic sleuth, only now he's "more adventuresome" and uses "his skills as a boxer and swordsman." Too bad Guy Ritchie doesn't have many "skills as a director." [Variety]

Boardwalk in Winter: Sopranos writer Terence Winter will pen Martin Scorsese's Boardwalk Empire for HBO, based on Nelson Johnson's book about the birth, growth, and corruption of Atlantic City. Expect Donald Trump and the tic-tac-toe-playing chicken to play equally important roles in this sordid tale. [Variety]


Tuesday, 3 June 2008

Switched

Switched   
Artist: Switched

   Genre(s): 
Metal
   



Discography:


Subject to Change   
 Subject to Change

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 12