Thursday 19 June 2008

Leo

Leo   
Artist: Leo

   Genre(s): 
Pop
   



Discography:


Lo Mejor De Leo   
 Lo Mejor De Leo

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 14


Iniciando Sesion   
 Iniciando Sesion

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 11




 






Wednesday 11 June 2008

Michael Fortunati

Michael Fortunati   
Artist: Michael Fortunati

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Alleluia   
 Alleluia

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 12




 





H2O

Thursday 5 June 2008

Andy Moor vs. Orkidea

Andy Moor vs. Orkidea   
Artist: Andy Moor vs. Orkidea

   Genre(s): 
Trance
   



Discography:


YearZero - Promo Vinyl   
 YearZero - Promo Vinyl

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 3




 





Eddie Murphy marries film producer

Tuesday 3 June 2008

George Clooney 'Relieved' to be Single

George Clooney and Sarah LarsonGeorge Clooney is said to be relieved he's single again after splitting from his former cocktail waitress girlfriend Sarah Larson.


A friend claims the actor dumped Larson, who he has been dating for a year, because they had "little in common".


"George is relieved to be single again," said the insider. "He thinks Sarah is sweet and that is why it was so hard to break up with her.


"The truth is they had little in common and he just doesn't want to be tied down," the source claims.


The couple were last photographed together at a bash designer Giorgio Armani threw for the Michael Clayton star's 47th birthday on May 6 in New York.


Another pal said that Sarah had recently moved her things out of Clooney's Los Angeles home.


George first met Larson four years ago, when she was working as a cocktail waitress in a Las Vegas bar.


Larson, 29, has previously spoken out about the pressures of dating a world famous sex symbol, saying: �Every now and then I run away and hide for a few weeks."


George's rep has refused to confirm the break-up.




See Also

Lockjaw

Lockjaw   
Artist: Lockjaw

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Arrive and Escape   
 Arrive and Escape

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 11




 






Swedish pop pixie takes it all too seriously

I'm Good, I'm Gone, Lykke Li

It's not often you get a pop star who combines good looks with a voice of elfin beauty and the ability to write her own wacky songs, so it's no surprise to find that every blogger and broadsheet this side of Stockholm is going nuts for 22-year-old Swede Lykke Li. While I'm not denying the brightness of her star quality, there is an off-the-wall side to her that rankles with me. Li clearly enjoys messing with the conventions of pop music; loudspeakers are employed, handclaps are scattered over traditional percussion, and there's even a saxophone solo nestled in the folds of I'm Good, I'm Gone. But there's an aloofness too, that means her bouts of experimentalism come off sounding cold and tactical. Her determination to be innovative appears to have overridden her judgment on this song, which leaves I'm Good, I'm Gone sounding about as avant-garde as skiffle, and leaves its singer sounding like she takes it all just a little too seriously.












Lollipop, Lil' Wayne feat Static Major

While it's difficult to find evidence of Lil' Wayne's claim that he's the "best rapper alive" when you actually listen to his rhymes - limited here to little more than grunts, distorted vocals and a New Orleans drawl that sees "hair" become "hurr" - there's no denying that he knows his way round a sluggish bounce beat or two. Lollipop is a massive hit in the States already, proving that, unlike 50 Cent's remonstrations, America hasn't yet had its fill of lascivious candy-orientated hip-hop. This is good news for Lil' Wayne, who's combination of groans, talk of "lady lumps" and promise to "make it juicy for her" accumulates to such an explicit degree that you wonder why he bothers with the lollipop metaphor and doesn't just come right out and say he really likes blow jobs.

Epic Last Song, Does It Offend You, Yeah?

Given that Epic Last Song revolves around rousing chord changes and the poignant refrain "Baby, babe, I've loved you a long time, I grow happy knowing that you're alright", you'd be forgiven for thinking you've stumbled across a new-rave remix of the latest single by the Feeling, as opposed to that of Berkshire power-nerds Does It Offend You, Yeah? While it may make them sound like wholesome chart-pop boys, the absence of druggy synths and hyperactivity on Epic Last Song appears intent on showing the world that there's more to this band than a satirical mash-up of techno, metal and anything else earsplitting. Happily, the relative calm also reveals sincerity in the band's lyrics, albeit one normally buried beneath the chaos.

10,000 Nights, Alphabeat

"I was not looking for arty-farty love," sing duo Anders SG and Stine Bramsen as an introductory reminder that you can always trust a Dane's fundamental grasp of the English language when it comes to writing pop lyrics. You can't, however, rely on them to avoid clich�s like "you came like a thief in the night and stole my heart". Neither is a lack of lyrical originality the worst thing about this song. Shrill and juvenile, there's little in this dollop of ecstatic pop to differentiate Silkborg's Alphabeat from the likes of S Club 7, except that, unbelievably, music like this exists without the malignant influence of Simon Fuller. It's either a stroke of genius or an unintentional irony that 10,000 Nights is a paean to deep and everlasting love, neatly packaged in a disposable, superficial and entirely forgettable pop song. I'll leave it up to you to decide which.

Chainsaw, Daniel Merriweather

Last heard assisting Mark Ronson in giving the Smiths' suitably dour Stop Me If You Think That You've Heard This One Before a fresh and funky makeover, it was only a matter of time before Australian singer Daniel Merriweather moved from cover versions to original material. He hasn't yet graduated from Ronson's tutelage, whose slicker-than-slick production is slapped all over this unassuming R&B jam. Taking his cue from a pleasant stretch of Hammond organ, Merriweather croons his way through a remarkable number of chainsaw metaphors with all the confidence of a man fully aware that he's sitting on a radio-friendly goldmine. Sadly, he also seems to be unaware that this is because Chainsaw sounds like it was written by Mike and the Mechanics.

MySpace of the Week: Telepathe

Brooklyn-based experimentalists Telepathe mess around with drones, high frequencies and spooky sounding harmonies, so when they say that their music is like "the future", it doesn't come off as far-fetched. Neither is it a surprise that with a brilliant batch of tunes, such as Chromes On It and Bells up their sleeve, the band's current UK tour is earning them praise and fans in heaps. See them in a town near you for the rest of May, or simply listen to them.


See Also

Bruce Willis game for Lionsgate's 'Kane'

Simon Crane set to direct





Bruce Willis is in negotiations to star in Lionsgate's "Kane & Lynch," a video game adaptation that veteran stunt coordinator and second unit director Simon Crane will helm.


The game follows Kane (Willis), a death row inmate who, along with a schizophrenic killer named Lynch, is sprung by Kane's former team so that he can retrieve a stolen fortune. Kane travels to Los Angeles, Japan and Cuba, with Lynch acting as the team's watchdog in order to save his wife and daughter.


The game was developed by IO Interactive and published by Eidor Interactive.


Kyle Ward wrote the screenplay.


Daniel Alter and Adrian Askarieh are producing.


The movie is eying a fall start, with a hunt now on to find an actor to play Lynch.


Willis, repped by CAA, is shooting "The Surrogates," which Jonathan Mostow is directing for Disney. Crane is the stunt coordinator and second unit helmer on the sci-fi movie.


Crane, who has been looking to make the move to directing for some time, has a stuntman CV that includes James Bond movies, the "Alien" franchise, "Mr. & Mrs. Smith" and the upcoming "Hancock." He is repped by ICM and Media Talent Group.



See Also

Audioslave

Audioslave   
Artist: Audioslave

   Genre(s): 
ROck: Alternative
   Rock
   Alternative
   Rock: Hard-Rock
   Punk: Grunge
   



Discography:


Be Yourself   
 Be Yourself

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 3


Live in Milan   
 Live in Milan

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 15


Camden, NJ   
 Camden, NJ

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 13


Audioslave   
 Audioslave

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 14


Audioslave EP   
 Audioslave EP

   Year:    
Tracks: 5




When Zack de la Rocha left Rage Against the Machine in October 2000, the band's future was place into head. Within months rumors flew that ex-Soundgarden frontman Chris Cornell would replace de la Rocha. And chit-chat fueled sojourner Truth, for Cornell united the pillow of Rage in the studio in May 2001. The merge was expectant and a musical shackle was in the making: Cornell, Tim Commerford, Brad Wilk, and Tom Morello spent the future year writing and recording. By springtime 2002, the quaternary were no yearner going by the Rage Against the Machine name and signed on for Ozzfest. But before the summer turn even got underway, Cornell throw in the towel the new propose. He claimed it wasn't moving forth in the direction he'd hoped for. The breakdown didn't final, for Cornell rejoined by early fall. After tossing about the mind of being called Civilian, they settled on Audioslave. The single "Cochise," named for the outstanding American Indian chief world Health Organization died release and unbeaten, hit radiocommunication in September 2002, and Audioslave's Epic full-length debut was released that November. The self-titled record album finally went multi-platinum on the strength of "Cochise" and the dwight Lyman Moody rocker "Like a Stone," and Audioslave supported it with gigs that included 2003 Lollapalooza dates. Cornell, Morello, Wilk, and Commerford returned in May 2005 with Verboten of Exile, which debuted at number i on Billboard. That same month they played an historic show in Havana, Cuba, that pronounced that country's low gear outdoor testify by an American stone band (that fall cathartic the whole shebang on the Live in Cuba DVD). Expatriate continued the band's platinum-selling slipway -- singles like "Be Yourself" and "Doesn't Remind Me" went to the top side of the charts -- and the guys emaciated no time following up with album number threesome, Revelations, in early September 2006. Work on the album took solely five-spot weeks, since well-nigh of the songs had been fleshed stunned live over the premature year. In 2007, presently after the members of Rage announced that they would reunify for that year's Coachella festival, Cornell left Audioslave, citing both personal and musical differences, and leaving the doS of Audioslave incertain.






Kutcher to play serial womaniser

Ashton Kutcher is to play a serial womaniser in a new sex comedy called 'Spread'.
Variety reports that the film also stars Jennifer Jason Leigh as a thwarted lover.
Kutcher's company Katalyst is producing the new film, which will be directed by 'Hallam Foe', 'Asylum' and 'Young Adam' director David MacKenzie.
Shooting on 'Spread' begins in Los Angeles later this month.

Bills' Player: Possible Hit and Running Back

TMZ has confirmed with Buffalo Police that a 2008 Porche registered to Buffalo Bills' running back Marshawn Lynch was involved in a hit-and-run early Saturday morning.

A lady was struck by the automobile around 3:30 AM EST in Buffalo's entertainment district. She was taken to a hospital and later released. It's unknown whether or not Lynch was driving the car, or even in it.

An investigation is already underway.

A call to the Bills has not yet been returned.



See Also