Monday 8 September 2008

Download Alio Die mp3






Alio Die
   

Artist: Alio Die: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

New Age
Electronic
Ambient
Other

   







Discography:


Suspended Feathers
   

 Suspended Feathers

   Year: 2005   

Tracks: 5
Khen Introduce Silence
   

 Khen Introduce Silence

   Year: 2003   

Tracks: 7
Il Tempo Magico Di Saturnia Pavonia
   

 Il Tempo Magico Di Saturnia Pavonia

   Year: 2003   

Tracks: 10
Sola Translatio - Ad Infinitum
   

 Sola Translatio - Ad Infinitum

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 5
Prayer For The Forest
   

 Prayer For The Forest

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 6
Leaves Net
   

 Leaves Net

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 10
Incantamento
   

 Incantamento

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 2
Aquam Metallicum
   

 Aquam Metallicum

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 9
Apsaras
   

 Apsaras

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 6
Ad Infinitum
   

 Ad Infinitum

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 5
La Stanze Della Transcendenza
   

 La Stanze Della Transcendenza

   Year: 1999   

Tracks: 6
The Way Of Fire
   

 The Way Of Fire

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 2
The Hidden Spring
   

 The Hidden Spring

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 10
Password For Entheogenic Experience
   

 Password For Entheogenic Experience

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 1
Password For Entheogenic Exper
   

 Password For Entheogenic Exper

   Year: 1997   

Tracks: 1
Under The Holy Ritual
   

 Under The Holy Ritual

   Year: 1994   

Tracks: 11
Under A Holy Ritual
   

 Under A Holy Ritual

   Year: 1994   

Tracks: 11
The Flight Of Real Image
   

 The Flight Of Real Image

   Year: 1993   

Tracks: 3
Sit Tibi Terra Levis and Introspective
   

 Sit Tibi Terra Levis and Introspective

   Year: 1993   

Tracks: 16
Sit Tibi Terra Levis / Introspective
   

 Sit Tibi Terra Levis / Introspective

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 16
Sit Tibi Terra Levis / Introsp
   

 Sit Tibi Terra Levis / Introsp

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 16
Alio Die and Mortar Split Tape
   

 Alio Die and Mortar Split Tape

   Year:    

Tracks: 10






Since the late '80s, Stefano Musso has recorded deep, reminiscent experimental ambient and electro-acoustic soundscapes under the nominate Alio Die. Combining sweeping electronics with establish legal and acoustic treatments which take echoed through the recent plant of composers such as Robert Rich, Tetsu Inoue, and Brian Williams, Musso has assembled a rich and varied aggregation of recordings for such labels as Projekt, Timebase, Fathom, and his own Hic Sunt Leones pronounce. Based in Milan, Musso studied artistic creation and electronic writing on that point, creation Alio Die in 1989 as a live carrying into action move, and in conclusion self-releasing a debut, Under an Holy Ritual, in 1992. Enthusiastically standard in his nursing home land, Holy station Ritual expanded Musso's external presence importantly in 1993 when it was commissioned by the democratic U.S.-based gothic/darkwave label Projekt. The connection brought a crossover voter audience to Musso's music, and -- together with artists such as Asmus Tietchens, Vidna Obmana, Coil, and A Produce -- helped ready ears for such mid-'90s dark ambient/isolationist outfits as Lull, Final, Download, and Lustmord. Musso subsequently released three additional solo albums, including the showtime full-length -- Suspended Feathers -- issued by the noted, limited-run Amplexus pronounce. A vague, cavernous, intensely elaborated fusion of acoustic elements, step-and-repeat sample distribution treatments, thin, echoing rhythm section, and deep, atmospherical heavy pattern, Suspended Feathers presented Musso at his very c. H. Best, playing ambient's static tendencies off of shifting melodious and textural passages that evoke move without sacrificing the music's vague, entropic formlessness. In summation to unmown and digest appearances, Musso has contributed to releases by Vidna Obmana and Steve Roach, and teamed up with Robert Rich in 1996 to disc the unmown work Fissures for Stephen Hill's Fathom pronounce. More collaborative efforts appeared during the new millennium, including Echo Passage with Vidna Obmana in 2000, Apsaras one year later with Amelia Cuni, and Mei-Jyu in 2005 with Jack or Die.





Download California Guitar Trio mp3

Friday 29 August 2008

Britney's new album to include duet with Justin Timberlake


Britney Spears' new record album, due out at the end of the year, will feature a a great deal wished for and keenly anticipated couple with fellow mouseketeer Justin Timberlake. Photo Credit: Splash News

August 21, 2008 () - Britney Spears' new album, due out at the end of the yr, will lineament a much wished for and keenly anticipated duette with bloke mouseketeer Justin Timberlake.


According to Pagesix, Britney and Justin were to feature on Britney's last album Blackout (2007) but the troubled pop star failed to show up for a scheduled recording session at Timbaland's Virginia Beach studio last August.


Jive Records officially proclaimed that Britney is on the job on her sixth studio album in July.


"Britney Spears is spending her summer in the recording studio, working on a blade new album," Jive Records said in a instruction. "She's working with a team of top-notch producers and songwriters and we're very excited about what she's accomplished so far."


Rodney "Darkchild" Jenkins, who worked with Spears on her 2001 record album, Britney, producing the remix for the track Overprotected and I Love Rock 'n' Roll, is producing two tracks for Britney's new album.


He told Rap-Up TV in June that he is working on "very dancey, really up-tempo, aggressive, catchy, and filch friendly" material for Britney's next album.







More info

Tuesday 19 August 2008

Locarno finds 'Via'

Mexican drama caps fest with Golden Leopard




ROME -- "Parque Via," a drama from Mexican director Enrique Rivero, south Korean won the top prize at the 61st Locarno Film Festival, where threatening brave over much of the 11 years prevented the event from surpassing net year's attendance record.

Organizers aforementioned the festival attracted a total of 180,000 visitors, a 3% drop compared with last year's levels, by and large because of a 5% drop in attendance at the festival's picturesque outdoor venue the Piazza Grande, where only four of 11 screenings took topographic point under clear skies.

The festival did report record-breaking business for its industry office, where five-spot of 18 in-competition films signed international distribution deals.

"Parque Via," one of only four non-world premieres in the card, has been a success in every festival it has screened; the movie previously won two awards in February at the Mexico City Film Festival. It is the number one Mexican photographic film to win Locarno's prestigious Golden Leopard Award.

It capped a notable festival for Latin American film, which was the focus of Locarno's Open Doors sidebar.

Locarno's jury prize went to "33 Scenes From Life," a Germany-Poland co-production from Malgoska Szumowska. Denis Cote won the best director prize for "Elle veut le chaos." Tayanc Ayaydin ("The Market -- A Tale of Trade") and Illaria Occhini ("Mar Nero") won the best actor and actress awards, respectively.

A complete list of winners can be found on the future page.



Golden Leopard

"Parque Via" by Enrique Rivero, Mexico

Special Jury Prize

"33 Sceny Z Zycia" (33 Scenes from Life) by Malgoska Szumowska, Germany/Poland

Best director

Denis C�t� "Elle Veut le Chaos," Canada

Leopard for best actress

Ilaria Occhini, "Mar Nero" by Federico Bondi, Italy/Romania/France

Leopard for best actor

Tayan� Ayaydin, "The Market -- A Tale of Trade" by Ben Hopkins, Germany/UK/Turkey/Kazakhstan

C.P. Company Golden Leopard

"La Forteresse" by Fernand Melgar, Switzerland

Cin� Cin�ma Special Jury Prize

"Alicia en el Pais" by Esteban Larra�n, Chile

Leopard for the best first feature

"Marz" by H�ndl Klaus, Austria (International Competition)

SRG SSR id�e suisse Prize for the International Leopard of Tomorrow Competition

"Dez Elefantes" by Eva Randolph, Brazil

Eastman Kodak Company Prize for the International Leopard of Tomorrow

"Kaupunkilaisia" by Juho Kuosmanen, Finland

Film and video subtitling prize

"Babin" by Isamu Hirabayashi, Japan

IKEA Prize for the Leopards of Tomorrow Competition

"La Delogeuse" by Julien Rouyet, Switzerland

Eastman Kodak Company Prize Prize for the International Leopard of Tomorrow

"Un Dia y Nada" by Lorenz Merz, Switzerland

Action Light Prize for the best Swiss newcomer

"Au Caf� Romand" by Richard Szotyori, Switzerland

Prize Cinema e Giovent� -- Leopards of Tomorrow

"Babin" by Isamu Hirabayashi, Japan

For the Swiss National Competition

"Au Caf� Romand" by Richard Szotyori, Switzerland

Youth Jury Prize


First prize

Kirill Serebrennikov for "Yuriev Den" (Yuri�s Day), Germany/Russia

Second prize

Malgoska Szumowska for "33 Sceny Z Zycia" (33 Scenes from Lifes), Poland/Germany

Third prize

Federico Bondi for "Mar Nero," Italy

The environnement is the quality of life prize

Gideon Koppel for "Sleep Furiously," U.K.

The winner of the audience prize

"Son of Rambow" by Garth Jennings, France/Germany/U.K.

Variety Piazza Grande Award

"Back Soon" by S�lveig Anspach, Iceland/France

Netpac Prize

"Daytime Drinking" by Noh Young-Seok, South Korea

FIPRESCI Prize

"Parque Via" by Enrique Rivero, Mexico

Oecumenical Jury Prize

"Mar Nero" by Frederico Bondi, Italy/Romania/France

FICC / IFFS Prize

"Yuriev Den" (Yuri�s Day) by Kirill Serebrennikov, Germany/Russia

CICAE Prize

"Sonbahar" (Autum) by �zcan Alper, Turkey/Germany

Critics Week

"Latawce" (Kites) by Beata Dzianowicz, Poland


More information

Saturday 9 August 2008

David Bowie's Berlin: a musical tour of the city

Many great cities are celebrated for their artistic creation and civilization but only if a blue-ribbon few come with their own soundtrack. From Kurt Weil to Bertolt Brecht, Lou Reed to Iggy Pop, Nick Cave to the minimal techno DJs currently opinion the roost, our image of Berlin is molded by the ambitious music created there.

But for a generation of music lovers, the spirit of David Bowie bestrides the landscape of Berlin more than any other musician. At the peak of his career in the mid-to-late seventies, Bowie lived and played in the city, working on three albums with producer Brian Eno.

Those three eld, when Bowie lived in a flat with Iggy Pop consume passed into rock folklore, and even despite the massive changes undertaken in the preceding decades, much of Bowie's Berlin cadaver, while the adventurous liveliness that john Drew him there is as strong as ever.

What to see: Hansa Studio Tour

Bowie recorded at the famous Hansa Studios, not far from the reconstructed Potsdamer Platz. The studio apartment - which used to overlook the Wall - remains operational and it is amazingly relaxed approximately letting citizenry visit. Small tours submit you into the oak-panelled Tonstudio 2, where Bowie recorded Low and Heroes, and produced The Idiot for Iggy Pop. You are invited into a back room to analyse a script of paper cuttings and to old World chat with the staff. The place is no museum, however. It's a running recording studio: Supergrass recorded there last year and Snow Patrol were upstairs during my visit.

How to see it

You can besides visit the Hansa Studios with Fritz Music Tours (prices from �15pp), a four-hour drive around the city conducted by the effervescent Thilo, a other recording engine driver. In a six-seater minibus, Thilo careers around the city, talk at a mile-a-minute, piece playing you snatches of Bowie and Iggy on the way to the pair's onetime flat (Hauptstrasse 155) in Sch�neberg (where he tells you the delightful story of the current resident who has never heard of the famous duo) before taking you for a sceloporus occidentalis drink in Neues Ufer - erstwhile Anderes Ufer - (Hauptstrasse 157), the legendary jocund cafe where the mate used to hang out and where a portrayal of Bowie remains. Thilo's a passionate guy, he knows most of the people world Health Organization helped create the soundtrack of Berlin, and he'll give ironical advice on where's flow in the city's ever-changing scene.

Where to stay

The Hotel Ellington has experient as many ch-ch-changes as Bowie himself. Built in the 1920s it has hosted an infamous Weimar-era nightclub, diverted the Nazis, been bombed to blaze and been the offices of an insurance society. But it also has a musical heritage to rival whatever hotel in LA.





In 1949, when the surrounding area was occupied by US troops, the cellar played host to the Badewanne club, illustrious for its regular performances by Count Basie, Dizzy Gillespie, Ella Fitzgerald and Duke Ellington (their black and white River photographs now adorn the hotel). In the mid-seventies, it reopened as Dschungel, Berlin's answer to Studio 54, replete with female bouncers (world Health Organization once turned away Sly Stallone) and a even clientele that included Bowie, Iggy Pop, Lou Reed and, later, Nick Cave.

The devolve of the wall and the rear of techno left Dschungel behind, and it unopen in 1993. The Ellington then lay vacant until it re-opened as a chic design hotel with many of the artistic creation deco features intact, including a splendid green and white tile staircase. True to its roots, it hosts regular jazz concerts in the bar (doubles from �90pn).

Where to hang out

Little has changed since the days of Iggy and Bowie in S036, the legendary locale in Kreuzberg the pair often frequented. Then the club rivalled New York's CBGBs as one of the finest new-wave venues in the world. It remains a fixture on the Berlin music scene championing new artists, piece staying on-key to its punk past.

Today the area around Oranienstrasse, east of Moritzplatz and down towards Kottbusser Tor, is redolent of those rash days, when Kreuzberg was a Turkish enclave behind the Wall. Artful graffito sits alongside designer shops as surviving examples of the district's working class roots. There's also a palpable want of anything too corporate (aside from a subdivision of grocery chain Spa) and an admirable compendium of previous fishmongers, button stores and a delightful shop marketing objects made by the blind: all wooden cabinets, baskets and brushes.

Where to go drinking

Kreuzburg remains a place of punks, graffito and politics (handbills emblazoned with signs shout "Stop gentrification!") and it's as well home to many communities of gays and Turks, trendies and crusties, thinkers and drinkers. Most contact at Luzia, (Oranienstrasse 34), a born-again butcher's stag, where to my revel they were actually playing Iggy Pop at mass.

Luzia is decorated with wall paintings, thrift-shop article of furniture, and crystal chandeliers. Aside from the old Iggy records, it serves an extremely eclecticist programme of DJs and live acts. The musical programme crosses techno, bluegrass and indie.





Where to eat

For such famous people, Iggy and Bowie lived relatively modestly in Berlin. When they wanted to push the boat out, they often ate at the Paris Bar, an expensive French cafe in upscale Charlottenburg. The eating place is the scene of an ill-famed Rolling Stone interview where the journalist described the cafe as a scene from Degas' The Absinthe Drinkers and Iggy got so sot he all over up wheeling around in the ice outside. You will spy few absinth drinkers at the bar today � it is far more than glamorous � but the place retains an aviation of gipsy bliss. Thanks largely to the artistic creation collection donated by Martin Kippenberger, himself a far-famed painter. In 1993 Kippenberger chose the bar (and his ingathering) as the subject for this painting, now owned by Charles Saatchi.

Where to buy the soundtrack

For Bowie-era records, head back west to Charlottenburg for Rock Steady Records and its archive of over 10,000 vinyl LPs. It's just two blocks from the Ellington. Kreuzberg's Hardwax is the place for the minimal techno and microhouse, and too has a huge back catalogue of Chicago house and dub reggae. Back on Oranienstrasse, Core Tex approximates the punkier sounds coming out of S036, while the more boutique Downbeat Reggae Store (Oranienstrasse 44) offers an splendid selection of rare channel and mixtapes.

Where to go clubbing

The clubs may have changed but the city's night life is no less vivacious than in Bowie's peak. Yet, despite its melodious heritage, Berlin is the least flashy of cities. You have to actively seek the coolest places in town, like some urban equivalent of an orienteer. Nothing is obvious. Take the best club at the moment. There are no neon lights, no loss velvet rope, no carpet outside Weekend, a 15th-floor club atop an anon. office block in Alexanderplatz, the Soviet-era square in the center of the former east. Instead, thither is a small queue at ground level leading to a set of lifts that whisk you up 15 floors. They open practically straight on to the dancefloor, which is henpecked by a massive electronic screen. On the seventeenth floor is a roof terrace overlooking Alexanderplatz and the tall and elegant TV tower.

Alternatively, over on the western side is the more lounge-like Solar, a 15th floor restaurant and club with panoramic views over the floodlit ruins of the Anhalter Bahnhof: once the largest train station in Europe. Again, it takes some finding: hidden down a english courtyard it sits supra an nt halt. The music is more than mainstream house, but the bar mixes a hateful mojito.

Getting there

easyJet flies from from London Gatwick to Berlin Schonefeld from �47 (incl task)




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Tuesday 1 July 2008

Grey Daze

Grey Daze   
Artist: Grey Daze

   Genre(s): 
ROck: Alternative
   



Discography:


...No Sun Today   
 ...No Sun Today

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 13


Wake Me   
 Wake Me

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 12


(Demo)   
 (Demo)

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 4




 






Monday 23 June 2008

Billie Letts goes back to Wal-Mart in fourth novel, 'Made in the U.S.A.'

Billie Letts returns to Wal-Mart in the opening of her fourth novel, which features a shoplifting gymnastics star and her younger brother.

Letts' first novel, "Where the Heart Is," became an American classic with its tale of an unwed, pregnant teen who finds refuge and eventually gives birth in a Wal-Mart store.

In her latest novel, 15-year-old Lutie McFee eases the pain of being kicked off the high school gymnastics' team by stealing sexy clothing from the discount retailer. She's mid-theft when her father's ex-girlfriend drops dead at the checkout counter, leaving her and her 11-year-old brother on their own.

Fearful of foster care, the two children steal the dead woman's car and flee to Las Vegas in search of the father who abandoned them.

The initial resemblance between "Made in the U.S.A." and "Where the Heart Is" is striking. Both start in Wal-Mart and star teenage girls on the run with a young child to look after.

But "Made in the U.S.A" is a much darker book, with an unflinching look at the hardships and dangers runaway children face. Lutie McFee is also a much tougher character than the trusting and hopeful Novalee Nation, who seemed to bring out the best in those around her.

Damaged by her mother's early death and father's alcoholism, Lutie is wilful, spiteful and selfish. She's redeemed by her affection for her younger brother, Fate, a budding intellectual who dreams of going to the aptly named Paradise Elementary School.

That makes the first two sections of "Made in the U.S.A." a tough read as the two children are beset by tragedy and repeatedly victimized. But when it seems like a happy ending is impossible, Letts has a guardian angel move the children to Oklahoma, where they - like Novalee Nation - find love, acceptance and a home.

The result is a gripping 200 pages followed by an ending that feels forced. The abrupt change of scenery and lighter tone of the book's third section makes it feel more like an epilogue than a conclusion to the original story.

Letts' novels following "Where the Heart Is" have fallen a bit short in terms of pure reading pleasure, and "Made in the U.S.A." is no different.

But it's her best work since her stunning debut novel, and she still writes about America's lower-class with a clarity few other contemporary American authors can muster.

-

"Made in the U.S.A."

Billie Letts (Grand Central Publishing)










See Also

Wednesday 18 June 2008

Dean Evenson

Dean Evenson   
Artist: Dean Evenson

   Genre(s): 
New Age
   



Discography:


Sacred World Chants   
 Sacred World Chants

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 9


Raga Cycle   
 Raga Cycle

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 5


Buddhas Dream   
 Buddhas Dream

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 10


Mountain Meadow Meditation   
 Mountain Meadow Meditation

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 9


Healing Sanctuary   
 Healing Sanctuary

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 8


Native Healing   
 Native Healing

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 9


Sonic Tribe   
 Sonic Tribe

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 9


Healing Waters   
 Healing Waters

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 12


Dreamstreams   
 Dreamstreams

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 14


Ascension   
 Ascension

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 11


Forest Rain   
 Forest Rain

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 13


Desert Moon Song   
 Desert Moon Song

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 12


Ocean Dreams   
 Ocean Dreams

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 8


D'rachael - Peaceful Pond   
 D'rachael - Peaceful Pond

   Year: 1986   
Tracks: 8


Mystic Mountain   
 Mystic Mountain

   Year:    
Tracks: 10




In the '70s, Evenson and his married woman Dudley traveled crossways the country with early portable video equipment to document "the awakening cognisance as it was manifesting in people's lives." The brace finally settled in Tucson, AZ, and reinforced a small conglomerate with their Soundings of the Planet record fellowship. Their stated determination was to help people "have the healing energies of medicine and natural sounds and suffer in partake with a more passive station inside themselves." Soundings of the Planet has had awing success in creating and distributing recordings that communicate this goal. Evenson produces many of the label's artists. He as well has several albums of his possess that combine natural sounds with his lightly flowing fluting melodies and various early acoustic and electronic instruments.