Thursday, 28 August 2008

Jared wins big at rock awards

ACTOR-turned-rocker JARED LETO was the vainglorious winner at last night's Kerrang!
Awards.


The weekly rock powder magazine honoured Leto's band 30 SECONDS TO MARS with
the best single AND best international band titles.

Click below to see more than photos from the ceremony:


"He kept sending drinks over to her table, but she altogether shunned him and
went home with someone else. He's by all odds losing his touch."


Other winners on the night included METALLICA, who south Korean won the intake
award, and RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE, who picked up the hall of fame
chime.

AVENGED SEVENFOLD, SLIPKNOT, BULLET FOR MY VALENTINE and COHEED
AND CAMBRIA
also picked up prizes.



More information

Tuesday, 19 August 2008

�Mad Men�: The Secrets Are Out

Photo courtesy of AMC



The last � best? � episode of Mad Men pitted Don Draper against the nasty comedian Jimmy Barrett and his even-nastier ball breaker of a wife. Beaten down and practically molested, Don bottomed out, then bounced back, unleashing a desperate, violent retort to Mrs. Barrett that might be television�s most shocking moment this season. It was almost a perfect episode � except we missed Peggy and Pete. But now she�s back! And, though we get just a little of Pete, we do get to see him in tightie-whitie tennis shorts.




The Pitch:

The past isn�t even past.



The Campaign:
Mad Men has been teasing us with glimpses of Don�s past, since he doesn�t exactly blather about his secrets, not even to his wife. Meanwhile, Peggy � who increasingly seems to be Don�s true prot�g� � treats her present like Don�s past. At the office, Elisabeth Moss plays Peggy with lockjaw restraint, using nothing but the slightest shrug or modulated glance (and maybe we�re just imagining those) to indicate that she brings anything like her own life into her job. Nobody at Sterling Cooper has any clue about how fraught her life is at home.



At the start of episode four, Peggy practices that same stony restraint at her mother�s apartment, where her jealous sister and cloying mother host a meal for the cute visiting priest, played by Colin Hanks. Tom�s son looks a bit like Pete, with his boyish face and slicked-over hair, and he�s a Christian cool cat too, a godly man who plays the guitar, likes a drink, enjoys a cigarette, and, it seems, Peggy. He first catches her slipping out of a sermon about �hidden dangers� and then escorts her home after dinner, asking for her advice on selling ideas. �It�s Palm Sunday,� he says with flirty false modesty. �I mean, you�re on deck for Easter.�



Later, the priest stops by to see Peggy�s family and drops off a copy of his sermon for her, asking after her and slighting Peggy�s sister. Uh-oh. The next time we see Peggy�s sister, she�s in a confessional, speaking to the lovely Mr. Hanks. She apologizes for taking the Lord�s name in vain, stealing a few coins from the laundromat � and, oh yeah, did I mention my slut sister had a kid out of wedlock and is a total tramp? Yeah, that too. It�s a brutal scene � portraying Peggy�s sister as both utterly manipulative and seriously disturbed. Either way, when Peggy bumps into the cute priest on Easter Sunday, he calmly hands her an egg (oh, the fertility metaphors!) and says, �For the little one.� Then he walks away � gobsmacking the typically unflappable Peggy, perhaps because she, like us, isn�t sure if he�s disgusted by her loose ways or, perhaps, turned on?



Meanwhile, at the Draper household, Don and Betty tie one on with a little help from their midget bartenders, who have learned that the proper recipe for a Bloody Mary is nine parts vodka, one part tomato juice. Mom and Dad kick the kids out of the living room and dance to Betty�s favorite high-school tune (Ms. America loves Bing Crosby; Don says he �sounds like Christmas� and grabs her ass). On the couch, the sight of Betty reading Babylon Revisited is yet another echo of her husband�s affairs (the book was recommended by her stableboy friend), and it�s a reminder that the show uses books as indicators of private betrayal, a naughty way to disappear into some charged fantasy, even while sitting next to your spouse. Next thing they know, Mom and Dad are drunk on their bed, which Bobby breaks � and both kids are starving because the parents forgot to fix dinner. Oops! Happiness is a problem, yes, but so is maintaining this delicate balance. Every pleasure has its cost.



Of course, Betty�s still clashing with the kids � �I�m here all day, outnumbered,� she screams � and she wants Don to spank her son. And as the momentum builds at home � Bobby breaks the hi-fi and burns his face on the griddle � Mrs. Barrett reemerges (!!), apparently still turned on by Don�s dominating, crotch-grabbing performance, and she convinces him to lock the office door behind them (Don�s definitely got his mojo working again). More important, the American Airlines crew bumps up their meeting to Good Friday and Don has to scramble, scheduling an impromptu

Saturday, 9 August 2008

Coalesce

Coalesce   
Artist: Coalesce

   Genre(s): 
Rock: Hard-Rock
   



Discography:


There Is Nothing New Under The Sun   
 There Is Nothing New Under The Sun

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 7


Functioning On Impatience   
 Functioning On Impatience

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 7


Give Them Rope   
 Give Them Rope

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 11




Coalesce's medicine has systematically pushed the boundaries of the hard-core and metallic element genres, forging a mind-boggling compulsion with unusual, shifting tempos with power, noise, vallecula, and a creativity paralleled only by the band's peers in Dillinger Escape Plan and Botch. The origins of Coalesce stern be traced indorse to a caboodle called Breach -- a grouping not to be at sea with the European outfit that shares their call. Breach formed in January of 1994 with Jes Steineger on guitar, Stacy Hilt on bass, and drummer James Redd. After a few unsuccessful attempts at finding a musical direction with a different singer, yeller Sean Ingram -- later of the band Restrain -- was invited to join the sheepcote.


As Coalesce, the quartette began to define its own heavy, bridging together odd meter signatures, an abrasive vocal style, and erratic guitar noise. They wrote quintet songs together and performed for free in basements, finally releasing a self-titled 7" individual through Chapter Records that speedily blew through its initial 1,000-copy pressing. The buzz generated by the single and the band's increasingly fickle live performances drew the attention of metallic element powerhouse label Earache, which invited Coalesce to suit the tierce lot aboard their fugacious New Chapter imprint. The resulting record was a CD interlingual rendition of their three-song 002 demo. A year by and by on, Coalesce released a split-CD EP with Britain's long-running Napalm Death. The two Earache releases were supported by a six-week circuit with likewise minded Florida stripe Bloodlet and Krishna-core mavens 108.


Upon reversive place, Coalesce skint up for the number one clip, with Redd exit sour to college in Baltimore shortly later. In 1996 the band re-formed, this time with frenzied James DeWees aboard. The fresh invigorated band signed a take with Philadelphia's Edison label, which released Coalesce's debut full-length album, Give Them Rope. It was a bludgeoning affair molded with Ingram's increasingly deep solomon Bellow and lyrical musings, personal polemics unlike many of the band's contemporaries. Split singles with Boy Sets Fire and the Get Up Kids followed, with Coalesce coupling up with each band to "reinterpret" 1 another's songs. Nathan Ellis replaced Hilt in the band around the time that Functioning on Impatience was released through band sidekick Dan Askew's Second Nature Recordings. The record saw the band streamlining their sound, sacrificing a bit of musical barbarism in party favor of a subtle handiness, all the patch left fabulously originative. The like label too released a record that presented freshly recorded versions of the 002 songs alongside tracks from a prospicient out of print undivided, titling it A Safe Place/002.


A trip to Red House Studios to record an album's worth of '70s tilt songs resulted in septet Led Zeppelin covers alternatively, as Coalesce became so beguiled by the smattering of Zeppelin songs they had primitively elected to platter that they distinct to pay tribute exclusively to them. The songs were released as There Is Nothing New Under the Sun through Boston's Hydra Head label, the same company that issued the split with Boy Sets Fire. All of these releases, conjugate with a smattering of live appearances, culminated in several larger metal-oriented labels pursuing the isthmus. After narrowing it down pat to two labels, Coalesce single-minded to go with Relapse, decision making to break up formerly once more before the recording of their newfangled label debut had even begun.


Conflate reassembled long enough to make 0:12 Revolution in Just Listening. It was arguably their topper elbow grunge by that point -- accentuated by Ingram's now unmistakable lyric prose, Steineger's now signally Jimmy Page-like approach to riffian writing (albeit combined with his possess outlandish time signatures), Ellis' runny basslines, and DeWees' scattershot and powerhouse drumming. Hydra Head asked for one last birdcall dynasty to include on the CD interpretation of the Boy Sets Fire split, so Ingram, Ellis, and producer Ed Rose improvised over an old acoustic track, creating "Bob Jr." A final depict, dubbed Last Call for the Living, was discussed much up to now never materialized. Members stayed busy -- DeWees with the Get Up Kids (for whom he had begun playing keyboards) and Reggie and the Full Effect; Ellis fronting a band called the Casket Lottery on guitar and vocals (together with the guy rope he replaced in Coalesce, Hilt). Ingram was tangled with various projects -- including a live appearance screaming for a then singer-less Dillinger Escape Plan at Krazy Fest 4 in Louisville, KY, and a long-discussed project with members of Seattle's Training for Utopia called the American Spectator.


A collection of old Coalesce recordings surfaced as a vinyl-only release through Florida's No Idea, with the band re-forming once over again in 2001. This time the card included Ingram, a returning Hilt on bass, DeWees, and a modern guitar player named Cory White. Operation on Impatience was the first record album released under this card, arriving on Hydra Head Records during the following summertime.





House Passes $118.7B Military Construction-Veterans Affairs Appropriations Bill

Tuesday, 1 July 2008

Divination

Divination   
Artist: Divination

   Genre(s): 
Ambient
   Electronic
   



Discography:


Akasha: Ambient CD1   
 Akasha: Ambient CD1

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 4


Ambient Dub Volume II - Dead Slow   
 Ambient Dub Volume II - Dead Slow

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 6




Divination is some other one of Bill Laswell's many projects, brought to lifespan to make a mixture of ambient and beat (dub, house, jungle), simply later on a few releases, the speech rhythm aspect was left field away. Like many of Laswell's projects, Divination can't be seen as a banding or a grouping; the lineup changes from album to album, and some of these ar regular collections.


The first base album, Ambient Dub Volume I, was released on Subharmonic in 1993. Teaming up with Liu Sola, Jeff Bova, Nicky Skopelitis, Buckethead and Robert Musso, Laswell created a blend betwixt ethereal ambience and potent house rhythms. The followup, Ambient Dub Volume II: Dead Slow, was released a year later, this time with Bova, Jah Wobble and Mick Harris on board. The record album was darker, heavier on ambiance and the rhythms were more quiet. Both discs were released in a two-CD define highborn Light in Extension, which featured iI additional tracks; it was issued by Stoned Heights/4th & Broadway the same year in the U.K. only. In 1995, Akasha was released. The two-CD go down features one ambient disk (featuring one track each by Laswell, Haruomi Hosono, Anton Fier and M.J. Harris) which is selfsame light and gossamer in tone, and one spaced-out calendar method magnetic disc, which mixes the ambience with jungle and drum n'bass rhythms. Two tracks were done by Laswell with DXT, and one was created by Hosono (with considerable stimulant by Laswell).


After the break 'tween Laswell and Subharmonic owner John Matarazzo, the 1996 two-CD go down Distil was released on SubMeta. Now concentrating solely on the ambience, the album was in fact a collection (though non of antecedently released material) of eight-spot tracks, done by eight-spot different ambient artists: Paul Schutze, Pete Namlook, Hosono, Mick Harris, Thomas Koner, Anton Fier, Tetsu Inoue and Laswell. Two age by and by, the Divination story got another turn with the release of Forfeit on Meta, which presented a reflective soundscape created by Laswell and electric zithern histrion Laraaji. By now, Laswell seems to have turned the Divination project into an ambient outfit, only still it's out of the question to tell what the next album will be like.






Monday, 16 June 2008

Regal Theaters Adds 3d Technology


Regal Theaters, the largest U.S. movie chain, will install 3D technology in an additional
1,500 auditoriums, bringing the total number of Regal screens equipped with the technology
to more than 3,500, the exhibitor said Tuesday. The projection equipment is manufac
tured by Beverly Hills, CA-based RealD. Regal said that it was making the investment
in 3D equipment to take advantage of the unprecedented number of 3D movies being
released in coming months. Theaters charge a premium -- usually around $3.00 --
for movies shown in 3D and attract bigger crowds than theaters showing the same film
the conventional way.






21/05/2008




See Also

Saturday, 14 June 2008

Beatles - Fascinating Fact 5442


The hand-painted bass drum featured on THE BEATLES' 1967 album SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND is expected to fetch over $300,000 (GBP150,000) when it is auctioned off in London in November (08).





See Also

Devo

Devo   
Artist: Devo

   Genre(s): 
New Age
   Rock: Punk-Rock
   



Discography:


Oh No It's Devo - Freedom of Choice   
 Oh No It's Devo - Freedom of Choice

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 25


Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!   
 Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!

   Year: 1990   
Tracks: 11




One of new wave's well-nigh innovative and (for a time) successful bands, Devo was likewise perchance one of its nigh misunderstood. Formed in Akron, OH, in 1972 by Kent State fine art students Jerry Casale and Mark Mothersbaugh, Devo took its name from their conception of "de-evolution" -- the thought that instead of evolving, human beings has actually regressed, as evidenced by the disfunction and ruck brainpower of American society. Their music echoed this survey of guild as strict, repressing, and mechanical, with appropriate touches -- jerking, robotlike rhythms; an fixation with engineering and electronics (the group was among the low gear non-prog rock bands to make the synthesiser a core constituent); frequently unkeyed melodies and chord progressions -- all of which were filtered through the perspectives of geeky misfits. Devo became a cult sensation, helped in parting by their cooccurring vehemence on highly conventionalized visuals, and concisely stone-broke through to the mainstream with the crush individual "Whip It," whose ensuant picture was made a staple fiber by the fledgling MTV meshing. Sometimes resembling a less forbidding version of the Residents, Devo's simple, basic electronic pop sound proved selfsame influential, only it was too slightly limited, and as other bands began expanding on the group's ideas, Devo seemed unable to keep pace. After a serial publication of mostly uninteresting albums, the ring called it quits early in the '90s, and Casale and Mothersbaugh concentrated on other projects.


Gerald Casale and Mark Mothersbaugh both attended art school at Kent State University at the outset of the 1970s. With friend Bob Lewis, wHO united an early version of Devo and later became their manager, the theory of de-evolution was developed with the aid of a book entitled The Beginning Was the End: Knowledge Can Be Eaten, which held that man had evolved from mutant, brain-eating apes. The trio altered the theory to fit their opinion of American society as a rigid, dichotomized instrument of repression which ensured that its members behaved like clones, march through living with mechanical, assembly line precision and no tolerance for ambiguity. The unhurt conception was treated as an refine jocularity until Casale witnessed the notorious National Guard killings of educatee protesters at the university; suddenly thither seemed to be a legitimate distributor point to be made. The low gear incarnation of Devo was formed in devout in 1972, with Casale (bass), Mark Mothersbaugh (vocals), and Mark's brothers Bob (lead guitar) and Jim, world Health Organization played homemade electronic drums. Jerry's brother Bob coupled as an additional guitarist, and Jim left the band to be replaced by Alan Myers. The group honed its profound and approach path for several geezerhood (a flow chronicled on Rykodisc's Hardcore compilations of home recordings), releasing a few singles on its possess Booji Boy label and inventing more gonzo concepts: Mothersbaugh spiffed up in a baby-faced mask as Booji Boy (marked "boogie-woogie male child"), a symbol of childish simple regression; there were revenant images of the white potato as a subaltern vegetable without individualism; the band's costumes presented them as identical clones with processed hair; and all sorts of transonic experiments were performed on records, victimisation real and homemade synthesizers as well as toys, distance heaters, toasters, and other objects. Devo's heavy pause came with its score for the unretentive celluloid The Truth About De-Evolution, which north Korean won a pillage at the 1976 Ann Arbor Film Festival; when the film was seen by David Bowie and Iggy Pop, they were impressed sufficiency to procure the mathematical group a contract with Warner Bros.


Recorded under the protection of pioneering producer Brian Eno, Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo! was seen as a call to arms by some and became an resistance strike. Others ground Devo's sound, imaging, and material minacious; Rolling Stone, for exercise, called the group fascists. But such critique lost the full point: Devo dramatized ossification, emotional repression, and dehumanisation in order to attack them, not to pay tribute to them.


Piece 1979's Duty Now for the Future was another solid effort, the band stony-broke through to the mainstream with 1980's Freedom of Choice, which contained the gold-selling single "Flog It" and delineated a peak in their sometimes temperamental songwriting. The tV for "Worst It" became an MTV smash, juxtaposing the band's low-budget futuristic look against a down-home farm setting and hints of S&M. However, Devo's commercial success proved to be transient. 1981's New Traditionalists was darker and more serious, not what the populace treasured from a band widely perceived as a fallal act, and Devo somehow seemed to be running out of new ideas. Problems plagued the band as well: Bob Lewis successfully sued for larceny of rational property after a tape measure of Mothersbaugh was ground acknowledging Lewis' role in creating de-evolution philosophy, and the roger Sessions for 1982's Oh, No! It's Devo were marred by an ill-judged effort to utilisation poetry written by manque Ronald Reagan assassin John Hinckley, Jr. as lyric material.


As the '80s wore on, Devo ground itself relegated to cult status and critical phlegm, non at all helped by the depress timber of albums like 1984's Shout and 1988's Total Devo. With the band's switch toward electronic drums, Alan Myers had asleep in 1986, to be replaced by ex-Sparks and Gleaming Spires drummer David Kendrick. Devo recorded some other album of new material, Smooth Noodle Maps, in 1990, after which its members began to condense on other projects. Mark Mothersbaugh stirred into composition for commercials and soundtracks, writing subject music for MTV's Liquid Television, Nickelodeon's Rugrats, Pee-Wee's Playhouse, and the Jonathan Winters situation comedy Davis Rules. He also played keyboards with the Rolling Stones, programmed synthesizers for Sheena Easton, and american ginseng backup with Debbie Harry. Buoyed by this success, Mothersbaugh open a profitable yield company called Mutato Muzika, which employed his fellow Devo bandmates. Jerry Casale, meanwhile, wHO directed nearly of the band's videos, directed video clips for the Foo Fighters' "I'll Stick Around" and Soundgarden's "Burn out Up the Outside World." No reunions were expected, simply as Devo's fable grew and other bands acknowledged their influence (Nirvana covered "Reversal," while "Missy U Want" has been recorded by Soundgarden, Superchunk, and even Robert Palmer), their minimalistic electro-pop was eventually disposed new vulnerability on six-spot dates of the 1996 Lollapalooza circuit, to enthusiastic fan reply.


The following year, Devo released a CD-ROM biz (The Adventures of the Smart Patrol) and sequent music soundtrack, in increase to playing selected dates on the Lollapalooza circuit. 2000 saw the release of a pair of double-disc Devo anthologies: the number one was the half-hits/half-rarities Pioneers Who Got Scalped: The Anthology (on Rhino), patch the mo was the limited edition mail order freeing Recombo DNA (on Rhino's Handmade label), the latter of which was comprised alone of previously unreleased demos. In 2001, the Mothersbaugh and Casale brothers reunited under the nominate the Wipeouters for a one-off surf release, P Twaaang. Expectedly, at that place was no load-bearing go, as the bandmembers returned back to their full-time jobs at Mutato Muzika.