Tuesday 2 September 2008

Mp3 music: Au Revoir Simone






Au Revoir Simone
   

Artist: Au Revoir Simone: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Indie

   







Au Revoir Simone's discography:


Bird of Music
   

 Bird of Music

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 11






The Brooklyn indie pop outfit Au Revoir Simone features Heather D'Angelo (vocals/drum machine/keyboard), Erika Forster (vocals/keyboard), and Annie Hart (vocals/keyboard). Borrowing their cite from a minor character in Tim Burton's comedy front-runner Pee-Wee's Big Adventure, the Casio-centric mathematical group came together in belated 2003; Forster and Hart befriended one some other patch traveling by train from Vermont to New York. From thither, they became debauched friends and began writing songs. D'Angelo and Sung Bin Park (keyboard/vocals) were added to the dreamy pop frazzle subsequently sitting in on many recitation roger Huntington Sessions, only Park left field in January 2005 to pursue other projects. A year afterwards, Au Revoir Simone issued their debut album, Verses of Comfort, Assurance & Salvation. It was self-released in the United States and appeared on Moshi Moshi end-to-end Europe. "Through the Backyards" was included in the time of year conclusion to Grey's Anatomy in outflow 2006. Au Revoir Simone's second album, The Bird of Music, was released on Moshi Moshi Records one year later.





Katie Holmes Steals Tom Cruise's Style

Wednesday 6 August 2008

A Cannes of worms for indie films

Climate of risk aversion takes toll on acquisitions




NEW YORK -- At May's Festival de Cannes, buyers rushed to see the latest function from three American auteurs: Steven Soderbergh's "Che," James Gray's "Two Lovers" and Charlie Kaufman's "Synecdoche, New York." But the fest ended without any of the films clinching a U.S. sale.

It took iI months for the $20 million-plus "Synecdoche" to solid ground a U.S. distribution conduct with Sony Pictures Classics. 2929 Prods. gave up on finding an outside buyer for its $12 million "Lovers," deciding to release it through sister company Magnolia Pictures. And Soderbergh's $65 million "Che" is noneffervescent searching for a home.

The tough market the three films encountered reflects an indie moving picture industry rattled by folding specialty divisions, economic woes and the challenge of keeping films in theaters. A clime of risk-aversion not seen since the death of auteur-driven films in the 1970s has set in.

"I vouch you 'Synecdoche' and 'Lovers' would've been bought quickly a couple years agone," Overture Films CEO Chris McGurk aforementioned, "but now that on that point are fewer buyers, and fewer goodish buyers, they both sat there."

Soderbergh's Spanish-language Che Guevara biopic encountered resistance contempt its lead Benicio Del Toro earning best worker honors at Cannes.

The Weinstein Co. had been in exclusive pre-Cannes negotiations for North American rights with seller Wild Bunch based on footage shown in Berlin. But a deal couldn't be completed ahead "Che's" Cannes premiere, so both parties agreed to table further discussions till then.

Wild Bunch head Vincent Maraval hoped to drive a $10 million getaway to pay back investors immediately merely now says his company would demand just a $4 meg deal with longer-term payouts. Four indie offers are on the table, though not the Weinstein Co., he said.

Soderbergh wants to release the two-part, four-hour-plus film as one moving picture in limited December openings. He'd then like to release the first region in January and the second in February. Soderbergh has cut five to seven proceedings from each half, but a potentiality distributor wHO suggested one three-hour cut was ruled out immediately.

Maraval said a P&A commitment isn't an issue. "Our joke is that you need to have 'guerrilla marketing,' " he said.

Todd Wagner and Mark Cuban's 2929 was looking for at least $3.5 million for North American rights to "Lovers," the story of an emotionally disturbed valet de chambre forced to choose 'tween two women. But when four offers came in in the $1 million-$2 million range for the Joaquin Phoenix-Gwyneth Paltrow starrer, 2929 opted to hired man the film over to Magnolia.

It's the same strategy 2929 took when "The Life Before Her Eyes" failed to attract offers in Toronto and "What Just Happened?" didn't muriel Spark a bidding frenzy in Sundance. Given that Cuban and Wagner also have Landmark Theatres, DVD, pay TV and VOD outlets, 2929's Marc Butan said, "Even at our to the highest degree pessimistic poser, we ar doing OK."



"Lovers" will bow other next year with New York and Los Angeles openings. Butan said it's not as yet clear whether the film also will go prohibited via Magnolia's Ultra VOD day-and-date platform.

SPC plans to debut "Synecdoche," Kaufman's directorial debut starring Philip Seymour Hoffman as a writer staging a surreally challenging play, in the fall.

The film scored a five-minute standing standing ovation and some glowing reviews at Cannes. One indie executive called it "a flawed masterpiece," but other execs, unsettled by the recent closure of Picturehouse and Warner Independent, power saw only its high commercial risk factor.

After Cannes, Kaufman made only when minor expert tweaks. Several indies, positive that the film would need deliberate word-of-mouth, made modest bids. SPC's complicated, winning deal offered the filmmakers a lower upfront payment in return for significant long-run performance bonuses and a wide tone ending commitment.

"We met with the filmmakers deuce years ago and have pursued it ever since, but the only stumbling block was that the budget light-emitting diode to a bigger financial upfront than we were willing to do," SPC co-head Michael Barker said.

While the major studios, specialness divisions and indie distributors mostly left Cannes unrewarded, SPC and IFC Films benefited from the securities industry downtown. Both acquired the largest figure of Official Selection and market titles in their history, partly because the lack of frenzied challenger led to dropping prices.

SPC rejects IFC's day-and-date model, but both look to create a valuable library of titles to pull in viewers all over the foresighted term.

"Having a meaningful theatrical run to give a good profile to a film, whether people construe it in theaters, on DVD or TV, is our mantra," Barker aforementioned. He insists it's "rugged but not impossible" for indie films to break through the crowded marketplace. And, care IFC, SPC takes pride in non overpaying.

IFC releases about 25 films a year day-and-date in prize cities and on VOD. Part of its gross revenue pitch to emerging and foreign filmmakers is the American dream: More than 45 meg homes ar able to access their films.

IFC's Arianna Bocco aforementioned that this year unquestionably was "a buyer's market." And while IFC offers a across-the-board variety of deals to filmmakers, she said "it's also just very appealing for many filmmakers to get exposure in the U.S. that will help them with their following projects." Even if the deal offers little in the way of reimbursement.

As filmmakers wHO settled for less upfront at Cannes learned, less-than-commercial films like a shot need to be made cheaply, and beggars can't be choosers.


More info

Thursday 26 June 2008

Online music retailers shift pricing

Amazon offers discount promotions on albums





DENVER -- The cost of digital music is rising, and falling, depending on where you shop online these days. Amazon introduced two new discount promotions on select digital albums as part of an ongoing variable pricing strategy.
The company's Daily Deals effort will feature a new album every day, sold at a discounted price that will vary by title. Both new and catalog releases will be included. For instance, to support the new Coldplay album "Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends," Amazon will feature each of the band's past four albums for $2, with "Brothers and Sisters" going for only $1.
The Friday Five promotion, meanwhile, will feature five albums for $5 each. Both are existing promotions that Amazon is only now publicizing outside of the digital store itself.
Meanwhile, eMusic is raising prices on the indie-focused music subscription service. Starting July 17, its entry-level pricing plan will jump from $10 a month for 30 downloads to $12 a month. Existing subscribers of the basic plan will be given an additional 10 downloads a month, while new subscribers will be limited to 30.
eMusic's bundled pricing strategy has been a source of concern for a handful of indie labels, some of which have let their agreements expire over the lower price-per-track gained from eMusic compared to other digital music retailers. It's unclear at this time whether increasing the lowest-level pricing tier will alleviate those concerns (let alone whether it was implemented to address them) considering that the highest service plans are those causing the most distress.
eMusic's Premium plan, for instance, is $20 a month for 75 songs, or about 26 cents a track. The new basic plan for incoming subscribers works out to 40 cents a track, while existing subscribers actually get more for their money, to 30 cents a track from the 33 cents a track under the old plan.

Wednesday 18 June 2008

Signum feat. Scott Mac

Signum feat. Scott Mac   
Artist: Signum feat. Scott Mac

   Genre(s): 
Trance
   



Discography:


Coming on strong incl dj tiesto remix CDM   
 Coming on strong incl dj tiesto remix CDM

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 5




 






Monday 9 June 2008

Elvin Bishop

Elvin Bishop   
Artist: Elvin Bishop

   Genre(s): 
Blues
   



Discography:


Gettin' My Groove Back   
 Gettin' My Groove Back

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 1


Ace in the Hole   
 Ace in the Hole

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 13


Let It Flow   
 Let It Flow

   Year: 1974   
Tracks: 11


Don't Let The Bossman Get You Down!   
 Don't Let The Bossman Get You Down!

   Year:    
Tracks: 12




Elvin Bishop was natural in Glendale, CA, on October 21, 1942. He grew up on a farm in Iowa with no electricity and no running water. His folk stirred to Oklahoma when he was ten. Raised in an all-White community of interests, he had no exposure to Blacks or their music demur though the radio where he would hear to sounds from far aside Mexico and blues stations in Shreveport, LA, in special, the piercing levelheaded of Jimmy Reed's mouth harp got his attention. Bishop says it was like a crossword puzzle teaser that he had to number out. What is this music? Who makes it? Where and how do Black hoi polloi live? What is this music all around? He assign the pieces together.


Just it was not until he won a National Merit Scholarship to the University of Chicago in 1959 that he launch the real answers to his questions. Suddenly, there he was correct in the bosom of the Chicago blues scene. Live. It was a dream come true. "The low gear thing I did when I got there was to pull in friends with the mordant guys working in the cafeteria. They took me to all the clubs. I washed-up myself wholly in the vapours life as ready as I could," says Bishop.


After two age of college, he simply dropped extinct and was into euphony full meter. Howlin' Wolf guitarist Smokey Smothers befriended Bishop and taught him the basics of blues guitar. In the early '60s he met and teamed up with Paul Butterfield to become the essence of the Butterfield Blues Band. Although only playing guitar for a few eld, he practiced day and dark on the blues music that he loved. He and Butterfield played together in exactly about every place possible -- campuses, houses, parks, and clubs. They began to become well known in 1963 when they took a job at Big John's on Chicago's North Side and the Paul Butterfield Blues Band was born. Bishop helped to create and played on the number one several Butterfield albums. (The Pigboy Crabshaw is Bishop's countryfied role referred to in the title of the third base Butterfield album.)


When he left the Butterfield isthmus subsequently the In My Own Dream album (1968), Bishop relocated to and settled in the San Francisco area where he appeared often at the Filmore with artists care Eric Clapton, B. B. King, and Jimi Hendrix. He recorded for Epic (quatern albums) and subsequently sign-language with Capricorn in 1974. His recording of "Travel Shoes" (from the album Let It Flow) hit the charts, simply he scored big with the endearing melody "Fooled Around and Fell in Love" (from his album Struttin' My Stuff) in 1976. He was (and is) illustrious for having fun on leg (putt on a swell demonstrate) and letting the good times roll up. Over the next few age the Elvin Bishop Group dissolved. He released his album Best Of in 1979, and was not heard from practically until he gestural with Alligator in 1988.


Bishop then released Big Fun (1988) and Don't Let the Bossman Get You Down (1991), which were well standard. He as well participated in Alligator's 1992 twentieth Anniversary cross-country tour. His up-to-the-minute release is Ace in the Hole (1995). Over the age, Bishop has graced the albums of many great bluesmen including Clifton Chenier and John Lee Hooker. He toured with B.B. King in 1995. Bishop is known for his sense of sense of humour, his unique way of slide guitar, and fusion of blues, creed, R&B, and country flavors. He lives with his wife and household in the San Francisco area, is a colossal gardener, and continues to meet dates in the U.S. and afield, issue The Skin I'm In in 1998. The following year saw the passing of Hometown Boy Makes Good and That's My Partner in 2000. After a basketball team year hiatus, Bishop released Gettin' My Groove Back in 2005 on Blind Pig Records.





Model Bruni marries French president

Sunday 1 June 2008

New Releases, May 27: Usher, Cyndi Lauper, Return to Forever

Plus: 'Sex and the City,' Al Green [ tickets ], more* * *Usher [ tickets ]"Here I Stand"(Jive)Usher Raymond IV--better known in the entertainment business as just "Usher"--will release his new album a month earlier than initially announced. "Here I Stand" follows 2004's chart-topper "Confessions," which sold some 1.1 million copies during its first week on shelves.For the new set, Usher worked with some big-name writers and producers, including Jermaine Dupre and Dr. Dre, and called in such guest stars as Beyonce and Jay Z. The first single from "Here I Stand" is "Love in the Club," which is already a radio hit.* * *Cyndi Lauper [ tickets ]"Bring Ya to the Brink"(Epic)Lauper--the original girl who just wants to have fun--returns with a follow-up to 2005's "The Body Acoustic," a work that contained acoustic renditions of past hits. "Bring Ya to the Brink" features the single "Set Your Heart."The quirky vocalist will also hit the road this summer, leading another edition of the True Colors tour to support the gay-and-lesbian advocacy group Human Rights Campaign. The tour, which also features The B-52's, Rosie O'Donnell and other acts, kicks off May 31 in Boston.* * *Return to Forever [ tickets ]"The Anthology"(Concord)The jazz-rock fusion supergroup made headlines when it announced that it was reuniting for its first tour in 25 years. Return to Forever--featuring keyboardist Chick Corea, bassist Stanley Clarke, guitarist Al Di Meola and drummer Lenny White--will kick off its tour May 29 with the first of two shows in Austin, TX. From there, it will hit more than 30 other North American cities.The Grammy-winning band will also have something to sell at these shows--this "Anthology" set. The collection features remixed and remastered tracks from the albums "Hymn of the Seventh Galaxy," "Where Have I Known You Before," "No Mystery" and "Romantic Warrior." * * *Various artists"Sex and the City: Music From the Original Motion Picture"(New Line)HBO's hit comedy TV series is getting a big-screen makeover: "Sex and the City," the motion picture, hits theaters this week. In connection with that highly anticipated film comes this soundtrack, which features tracks by such artists as The Weepies, Jennifer Hudson and Fergie. It also includes some interesting collaborations, such as Al Green teaming with Joss Stone on "How Can You Mend a Broken Heart?"* * *Al Green"Lay It Down"(Blue Note)The R&B legend is set to drop his highly anticipated new studio album. Green has already been active on the road this spring, playing a few select festivals such as the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage and the Sonoma Jazz +. He'll kick off his headlining tour in earnest with a June 19 show in Toronto.* * *More new releases:The Browns, "The Complete Hits" (Collector's Choice)The Byrds, "Live at Royal Albert Hall 1971" (Sundazed)Eliza Gilkyson, "Beautiful World" (Red House)Buddy Guy, "Breaking Out" (JSP)John Hiatt, "Same Old Man" (New West)Ihsahn, "Angl" (Candlelight)Kataklysm, "Prevail" (Nuclear Blast)Sam Phillips, "Don't Do Anything" (Nonesuch)Jenny Scheinman, "Jenny Scheinman" (Koch)The Smithereens, "Live in Concert--Greatest Hits and More" (Koch)36 Crazyfists, "The Tide and Its Takers" (Ferret)Tobymac, "Alive and Transported" (Forefront)Various artists, "Nigeria 70: Lagos Jump" (Strut)Soundtracks and scores:"A Catered Affair (Original Broadway Cast Recording)" (P.S. Classics)"Rodgers and Hammerstein's South Pacific" (Sony)

Sunday 25 May 2008

McConaughey set to become a father

Actor Matthew McConaughey has announced that he and his Brazilian girlfriend Camila Alves are expecting their first child.
On his website the 38-year-old actor said that model Alves was three months' pregnant.
He added that the couple were "stoked and wowed by this miracle of creation and this gift from God".
Alves and McConaughey started dating after he split up with Penelope Cruz in 2006.