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Saturday 30 August 2008

Download Fuse mp3






Fuse
   

Artist: Fuse: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Techno

   







Discography:


Substance Abuse
   

 Substance Abuse

   Year: 1991   

Tracks: 3






Fuse made a little-known album for Epic at the end of the '60s, and is in the first place remembered for including deuce future members of Cheap Trick: Rick Nielsen and Tom Petersson. The record album is an median, maybe reasonably infra medium, late-'60s heavy rock'n'roll recording. It looks onward to some facets of '70s alloy and aesthetic production rock candy in its overwrought vocals, tandem unvoiced rock guitar riffs, and classical-influenced keyboards. It was reissued, with iI fillip tracks from a single, by Rewind in 2001.


Blend was in the beginning the Grim Reapers, and ablaze interest from Epic subsequently they were seen load-bearing Terry Reid in Chicago in mid-1968. Changing their name to Fuse, they recorded a self-titled album in late 1968 under the unlikely aegis of producer Jackie Mills, world Health Organization later produced The Brady Bunch. The album did virtually goose egg, and although they did have sufficiency material for a second record album, they would not expiration another LP prior to their separation in 1970.






Thursday 21 August 2008

Bloc Party Intimacy Album Announced

Bloc Party have appalled fans by announcing they will acquittance their third base album 'Intimacy' this Thursday August 21.


The album testament be uncommitted in three ways - a digital download available on Thursday, a CD with extra songs that will be delivered to fans on October twenty-seventh, or as a CD & MP3 package.


Pre-orders are being interpreted directly through the band's website now.


'Intimacy' was produced by Paul Epworth ('Silent Alarm') and Jacknife Lee ('A Weekend in the City') and was recorded in Kent and London.


According to a handout, "some songs are Bloc Party at their nearly wildly observational, while other tracks are simply classic Bloc Party, fitting in seamlessly amongst fan-favourites 'Helicopter', 'Banquet' and 'So Here We Are'."


The band ar also preparing to perform at the Reading and Leeds festivals this weekend.


Intimacy Tracklisting:


1. Ares

2. Mercury

3. Halo

4. Biko

5. Trojan Horse

6. Signs

7. One Month Off

8. Zephyrus

9. Better Than Heaven

10. Ion Square




More information

Monday 11 August 2008

Ask Mick LaSalle Chronicle Movie Critic

Hi Mick: If you please, I'd like your take on James Mason, one of my favorites.


Len Bakker, Berkeley


Hi Len: Good actor, handsome as a thomas Young man, only I like him best as an old guy, charming only rarely trusty - and also as a teller. He was hands downward the topper documentary narrator of all time. So much came through in that voice.


Dear Mick: I read with horror in your editorial that thither is a remake of "The Women." I shudder to think of the outcome. Can't Hollywood leave a successful movie unparalleled?


Robert L. McMahon, Oakland


Dear Robert: I've heard similar sentiments from other readers, only I get to say I don't share them. A bad remake does no hurt to the original. It simply disappears. (Today cypher talks about "The Opposite Sex," the musical remaking of "The Women," because it was lousy.) And if a remake is good, even better. Either way, this remake will incite interest group in the original 1939 movie, which - hard as it is for hard-core classic movie fans to trust - to the highest degree people have never heard of. There are folk who ar going to be beholding Joan Crawford, Rosalind Russell and Norma Shearer wHO might never have otherwise.


Beyond that, there ar reasons why this account, in finicky, is a good prospect for a remake. For the net 70 days, there experience repeatedly been stage revivals of the Clare Boothe Luce play, "The Women," showing the property still has life in it. And the 1939 version cut extinct an entire character and some of the edges from the play - there ar things you could do onscreen today that you couldn't do in 1939. Finally, on a strictly subjective annotation, I don't see the 1939 film as remotely sacrosanct. For one thing, it's the movie nigh responsible for distorting Norma Shearer's bequest in the eyes of posterity. For decades, at least until 2000, when things started turning around, she was recalled as a angelic milquetoast, thanks to "The Women," when she'd been the example of intimate sophistication in the immense majority of her films. In fact, she thought twice about taking the role of the devastated wife, and I cogitate she should have thought process three times.


Hello Mick: What movie sold the most tickets ever (yes, ever!)? Not highest grosses, since every time ticket prices go up, there's a new winner in that category.


Mary Ann Lahann, Newcastle


Hello Mary: Even before I checked, I knew the answer to this one: "Gone With the Wind."


Dear Mr. LaSalle: I would appreciate learning any thoughts you may have on the camera work of Michelangelo Antonioni. I commend seeing some of his films when I was in graduate school. I found them engrossing, nigh hypnotizing! Was I exactly an well impressed whitney Moore Young Jr. person so, or was there genuinely something there? And if so, what was it?


Tom Johnson, San Francisco


Dear Mr. Johnson: It's a cryptical thing. When you determine a guess in an Antonioni photographic film, a awareness comes through, one probing for knockout, connection and meaning. Yet if someone were to imitate Antonioni, the shot would be cold and sterile, kinda than inquisitory and quiet despairing. I'd say that, in appreciating the photographic camera work in an Antonioni film, you're really picking up on what was special more or less him: his way of seeing and his compositional originality. Antonioni was non a particularly good narrator. Even his best movies have boring patches, and in his worst movies those patches are as long as the linear time. But he saw things others didn't, and after eyesight an Antonioni film, you start to see Antonioni aspects in daily life. That in itself constitutes a significant contribution to cinema and civilization.


Hey Mick: A circle of foreign films have American music in them. Do they change the music for U.S. distribution to make it more palatable for us?


Chuck Shaw, Berkeley


Hey Chuck: No. They just like our pop music. They just know that we're as honest at pop music as they are at opera, so they leave it to the experts. {sbox}



To hear Ask Mick LaSalle with commentary, small beer and lots of extras, download his podcast at sfgate.com/podcasts.



Have a question? Ask Mick LaSalle at mlasalle@sfchronicle.com. Include your name and city for publication, and a phone number for verification. Letters crataegus oxycantha be edited for clearness and length.




More info

Wednesday 2 July 2008

Hastle The Day

Hastle The Day   
Artist: Hastle The Day

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


When Everything Falls   
 When Everything Falls

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 12




 





First He Swept, Now Boy George Will Sing

Tuesday 24 June 2008

"Namaste Man" goes from Nepal to New York with some bumps on the way

He has acted in scores of plays, in cities around the U.S., including Seattle. But Andrew Weems has not tackled anything like the role he plays in "Namaste Man."



Wait — make that the 40 roles Weems juggles, and so nimbly, in this solo, autobiographical play, including those of writer and star.



A compact, wispy-haired scamp of middle years but puckish vitality, Weems leads us on a careening tour in this Intiman Theatre world premiere. His main destinations: Katmandu, Nepal (where Weems spent four years of his youth) and New York City (where he resides now).



En route, under Bartlett Sher's lively direction, Weems adroitly cameos travelers from Australia and a would-be theater impresario from India; Nepali Sherpas and 1950s pop crooners; his cheerful engineer-turned-diplomat dad and melancholy, Boston-bred mother.



Weems also mimics to perfection a pair of miniature dachshunds, a monkey eating beetle nuts, and his first schoolboy crush, Jessica.



A fine showcase for the art of the multidexterous character actor, "Namaste Man" also aspires to be something more: a coming-of-age study of cultural clash and displacement. But it needs a shapelier, more focused dramatic arc to achieve that ambition.



In its current form, "Namaste Man" begins weakly, with Weems in a New York funk, repeatedly proclaiming how "lost" he is — geographically and otherwise. The 90-minute show also has difficulty ending, circling round itself for the right final anecdote and image.



In between, though, there is much to appreciate, to marvel and laugh at, with Weems as our winningly befuddled, highly observant and rigorously candid guide.



On a set by Elizabeth Caitlin Ward, littered with slabs of corrugated metal, statues of Buddha, suitcases, prayer flags and many flickering votive candles, Weems evokes for us the pungent smells, sights and sounds of Katmandu.



He brings us on a childhood swimming expedition, during which he bumped into a charred corpse floating down a holy river.



He invites us to a convivial Americans-abroad Christmas party, where a turkey shipped halfway around the world is consumed.



Through Weems' eyes (and a backdrop set aglow by Greg Sullivan's lighting) we spot the white-coned, Himalayan peak of Langtang Lirung, and go on a grueling school trek to it.



Most mirthfully, we get a whirlwind account of an amateur Katmandu production of "A Thousand Clowns," in which a terrified young Weems makes his acting debut alongside stage-struck Indian and English diplomats.



Weems' impressionistic memoir also affords a bittersweet paean to his mother. She dutifully schleps her brood to exotic foreign postings, but in her Katmandu living room, with Tony Bennett and Frank Sinatra on the stereo, she longs for home.



The question of what and where "home" is, for an American raised partly in Korea and Zambia, as well as Nepal, arises often in "Namaste Man." (The title is a Nepali salutation, meaning both hello and goodbye.)



"Home" is a fairly abstract notion to ponder. And the less Weems verbalizes it, the more directly engaging the show is.



Watching Weems work his actor's alchemy is a treat in itself. But "Namaste Man" is still scattered where it should be supple. It merits another draft, one in which Weems says "goodbye" to extraneous side trips, and maps out more clearly the journey he wants to take us on.



Misha Berson: mberson@seattletimes.com








See Also

Wednesday 18 June 2008

David Beckham - Beckham Stunned By Pitch Invasion


Soccer ace DAVID BECKHAM was left shocked after an over zealous fan ran on to the pitch and embraced him during a game for LA Galaxy.

The British star - who joined the team from Real Madrid last year (08) - was playing against the Colorado Rapids on Saturday (07Jun08).

But the game was marred by troubled when a man ran on to the pitch and threw his arms around a visibly shocked Beckham.

The intruded was quickly tackled by security and escorted off the grass, leaving the teams to play on.

LA Galaxy went on to win 3-2.





See Also