Monday, 23 June 2008

Mario Lopez - Lopezs Theme Park Tryst


Actor MARIO LOPEZ has blown his chances of ever landing a role in a PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN movie, after confessing he once had sex on the Disney theme park ride that inspired the film.

The former Saved by the Bell star insists the acrobatic tryst is his proudest sexual moment, and he jokes that Disneyland bosses should honour his achievement in some way.

Lopez tells People magazine, "(It's) a long ride... It's very dark. Hopefully I'll get the raft named after me."





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Monday, 16 June 2008

Darkspace

Darkspace   
Artist: Darkspace

   Genre(s): 
Metal: Death,Black
   



Discography:


Dark Space II   
 Dark Space II

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 3


Dark Space I   
 Dark Space I

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 7




 






Friday, 6 June 2008

Snoop Dogg's court appeal

Britain is appealing a court's decision to allow US rapper Snoop Dogg into the country said the Border Agency.

The multi-platinum-selling musician was barred from Britain after he was arrested on charges of violent disorder at London's Heathrow Airport in 2006. But the hip-hop heavyweight successfully appealed the ban and received entry clearance from an asylum and immigration tribunal in January.

The Border Agency said it would challenge the ruling at a hearing next week.

In March 2007, Snoop Dogg was forced to cancel a tour of Britain with fellow rap icon P Diddy after authorities denied him a visa.




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Monday, 2 June 2008

Paul Potts' story big screen-bound

The story of 'Britain's Got Talent' winner Paul Potts is to be made into a film.
Variety reports that 'Britain's Got Talent' creator and judge Simon Cowell will produce the film.
Film studio Relevant Entertainment acquired the rights to the story from Potts.
The tenor has sold 3m copies of his debut album, 'One Chance'.

Walt Disney - Vod And Dvd Releases Will Soon Come On Same Day Say Moguls


Walt Disney Co. chief Robert Iger and News Corp Chairman Rupert Murdoch each predicted
that movies will be released on video-on-demand platforms on cable and the Internet
at the same time they are released on DVD and Blu-ray disc. Speaking to a conference on digita
l technologies in Carlsbad, CA, Murdoch said that simultaneous releases are opposed
by "vested interests in the distribution chain." He presumably was referring to large
DVD retailers like Wal-Mart and Best Buy, which have threatened to shut out studio releases
if they are sold online at the same time they are released on home video. Speaking
separately at an investor's conference in New York, Iger predicted that the demands
of younger viewers will force studios to close the window between DVD and home-video
releases. "I think it has to be day and date with the DVD business and the home
video business and we've done that in some markets as a test," Iger said. "I think
you have to have a rich library, not only the newest stuff but you have to have a lot
of older stuff. I think we'll get there."






29/05/2008




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'Sex' only part of weekend's boxoffice action

'Indiana Jones' keeps top spot overseas





Sex and action comingled to stir up the weekend's overseas boxoffice, with New Line's "Sex and the City" joining the May madness with a weighty opening of $37.2 million from only 14 markets, and Paramount's "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" bringing in $70.7 million from 47 territories in its first follow-up session.


Also contributing to a noteworthy weekend at foreign multiplexes were "The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian," $17.8 million; "What Happens in Vegas," $13 million; and "Iron Man," $8 million.


After the earlier collapse of "Speed Racer," the final weekend of May renewed faith in this year's summer season, as the five top scorers brought in a total of $146.7 million compared with 2007's $127.7 million, when the weekend was dominated by the record $103 million from "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End" alone.


Also significant this year is the ability of a romantic comedy to challenge megabuck action tentpoles. "Sex" -- released overseas by territorial distributors as part of holdover deals with New Line International until Warner Bros. International takes over in 2009 -- grabbed the No. 1 spot in the U.K., via Entertainment Distributors, with an eye-opening $17.3 million from 980 screens. "Sex" also hit the top in Germany ($7.4 million from 974 screens), France ($6.1 million from 551), Italy ($2.8 million from 535), and in Austria, Turkey and South Africa.


This coming weekend, "Sex" is scheduled to open in 19 new markets as the European Cup soccer championships get under way.


Meanwhile, "Crystal Skull" hit an international cume of $265.6 million, as it delivered $54.6 million in 11 days from the U.K., $25.9 million from France, $20.7 million from Spain, $18.3 million from Germany, $18.1 million from Korea, $17.3 million from Australia, $11.5 million from Italy, $14 million from Russia, $8.3 million from Brazil and $7.9 million from Mexico.


Despite Disney CEO Robert Iger's comment that "Prince Caspian" is not doing as well as expected because of its May release date (instead of Christmas), the family-faith offering appears to be holding up well in the overseas market. So far, "Caspian" has brought in $74.1 million, with 30% of the international market still to go, including Australia (this weekend) and Western Europe (in July). The weekend saw "Caspian" bring in $17.8 million from 4,390 screens in 19 countries. In many instances, the second edition of the film is beating last year's holiday totals by as much as 30%. "Caspian" currently holds the No. 1 spot in seven of the 19 countries in which it is currently playing.


In an early analysis of summer playing time, boxoffice pundits feared that the juxtaposition of romantic comedies during the May barrage of action tentpoles would spell disaster. At this time, they're re-evaluating their predictions -- what with the performance of "Sex and the City" and Fox's Cameron Diaz-Ashton Kutcher comedy romance "What Happens in Vegas." "Vegas" is nearing the $100 million mark in overseas boxoffice earnings, having reached $96.3 million over the weekend after its $13 million take from 4,084 screens in 61 markets. The U.K. has brought in $13.3 million in four weekends; Spain, $9.9 million; Germany, $9 million; Russia, $8.8 million; France, $8.2 million; and Australia, $7.9 million.


Paramount/Marvel Comics' earlier tentpole, the Robert Downey Jr. starrer "Iron Man," picked up another $8 million from about 5,000 sites in some 48 markets to lift its international cume to a solid $265.6 million. The U.K. has brought in $31.7 million in four weekends; France, $17.8 million; Australia, $17 million; Spain, $11.2 million; Germany, $8.1 million; and Brazil, $13.5 million.


Another romantic comedy that defied the odds is Sony's "Made of Honor," which came up against "Iron Man" in the first week of May. It hit a respectable $30.8 million after picking up $4.1 million over the weekend from 1,772 screens in 26 countries.


"Speed Racer," meanwhile, added another $2.7 million to its foreign cume, which reached $33.8 million following a $959,000 opening in Russia from 436 prints. Upcoming openings include Australia (June 12), France (June 18) and Japan (July 5.)


Other weekend tallies included "21," $3.1 million (cume: $53.2 million); "27 Dresses," $1.2 million (cume: $77.2 million); and "Fool's Gold," $1.2 million (cume: $39 million).



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9 Ball

9 Ball   
Artist: 9 Ball

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Upside Down   
 Upside Down

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 9




 






Winehouse to perform at tonight's Brit Awards

The stars have been getting ready for tonight's Brit Awards, the biggest night in the UK music calendar.
Paul McCartney, Amy Winehouse, Kylie Minogue, Leona Lewis and Mark Ronson will all perform at the Earls Court event, which will be televised live.
McCartney, who will receive an Outstanding Contribution to Music Award, rehearsed his set yesterday.
Take That are expected to seal their triumphant comeback with a gong after scooping four nominations. 'X Factor' winner Lewis and flamboyant singer-songwriter Mika are up for the same number of awards.
Arctic Monkeys, uber-producer and performer Ronson, Kaiser Chiefs and Kate Nash are up for three awards each.
The show will be hosed by Sharon and Ozzy Osbourne and will go out live on UTV. The couple will sit on thrones surrounded by two giant sculptures of dogs and a totem pole featuring a skull and gigantic bat, a reminder of Ozzy's infamous bat-eating incident.
This year's Brits will feature a "glam" stage with gold drapes and a punk stage adorned with a ripped Union Jack.
'Doctor Who' star David Tennant, actor Ian McKellen, Gossip singer Beth Ditto, and 'Bionic Woman' star Michelle Ryan are among the guest presenters.
Five times Grammy award-winner Winehouse is preparing to perform two numbers following her latest stay in rehab.
One of the songs will be 'Valerie', as part of a medley with Ronson, Adele and Daniel Merriweather.
But Winehouse has only one nomination - for her cover of The Zutons' 'Valerie' with Ronson - which is in the running for Best British Single.
'Back to Black', the biggest selling album of 2007, does not qualify because it was released in 2006.
Minogue is hoping to win Best International Female and Best International Album.
Arctic Monkeys are up for Best British Group and Best British Album.
Lewis will do battle for the Best British Female crown with Kate Nash, KT Tunstall, PJ Harvey and Bat for Lashes.
With Girls Aloud up for Best British Group, Cheryl Cole is set to make her first public appearance on home soil since travelling to Thailand to reportedly consider the future of her marriage to Ashley Cole.
Minogue is to present ex-Beatle McCartney with his special award, before he performs a medley of hits at the ceremony which is expected to be broadcast with a 30-second time delay.

David Cook claims 'Idol' crown

David Cook, who tried out for "American Idol [ tickets ]" on a whim while accompanying his brother to an audition, grabbed the coveted prize last night (5/21) after landing 56 percent of the 97.5 million votes cast in the deciding showdown between him and fresh-faced teen David Archuleta. "This is amazing. This is all your fault," Cook said to his brother, Andrew, before breaking down in tears. To those who watched the final performance night on Tuesday (5/20), the odds seemed stacked against Cook, who received mediocre reviews from judge Simon Cowell. That was especially true when Cook covered Collective Soul's "The World I Know.""I just want to say publicly you are one of the nicest, most sincere contestants we've had," Cowell said. "It was a beautiful song but I want to be honest with you, it was completely and utterly the wrong choice for you. You should have sung 'Billie Jean' or 'Hello,'" he added about songs Cook previously sang. On Tuesday, Archuleta and Cook each sang three songs. After Archuleta's trio of tunes, which included Elton John's "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me" and John Lennon's "Imagine," Cowell proclaimed the Utah native the heir apparent. "David, you came out here tonight to win and what we have witnessed is a knock out," Cowell said to the gee whiz 17-year-old during the fight-themed finale. The other two judges, Randy Jackson and Paula Abdul, were all about Cook. After the Missouri resident's rendition of U2's "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," Jackson proclaimed it "hot."Before host Ryan Seacrest dubbed Cook the winner on Wednesday, Cowell, uncharacteristically, took the opportunity to say he was sorry. Upon watching the television show after he went home, he said, the winner wasn't as clear cut as he thought. Cowell explained he wanted to apologize to Cook because he verged on being "disrespectful." Judge Randy Jackson called both Davids "winners." "This has been one of the strongest years ever," he said. Wednesday's results show wasn't without performances. However, most of the collaborations were from songs born long before "American Idol's" average viewer. Cook joined ZZ Top for "Sharp Dressed Man," and the six female finalists hooked up with Donna Summer for a medley of her hits. The top 12 paid homage to George Michael with a medley of his hits, before a rough-looking Michael took the stage to perform "Praying For Time." Finalists Carly Smithson and Michael Johns performed a rocked up version of the Box Tops' "The Letter." The top six men sang a handful of Bryan Adams songs before he came forth with a new tune. Brooke White and Graham Nash strapped on acoustic guitars for "Teach Your Children." On a contemporary note, "American Idol" winners Jordin Sparks and Carrie Underwood graced the stage. Archuleta teamed up with OneRepublic for its hit "Apologize." Early in the two-hour show, third-place winner Syesha Mercado and Seal offered his hit "Waiting for You."This year's Top 10 finalists will be appearing on the upcoming "American Idols Live [ tickets ]" tour, which gets underway July 1.

Earth Wind Fire

Earth Wind Fire   
Artist: Earth Wind Fire

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Greatest Hits   
 Greatest Hits

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 18




Earth, Wind & Fire were one of the most musically accomplished, critically acclaimed, and commercially popular funk bands of the '70s. Conceived by drummer, bandleader, ballad maker, kalimba musician, and occasional vocaliser Maurice White, EWF's all-embracing musical vision secondhand casimir Funk as its base, simply likewise incorporated idle words, smooth soul, gospel truth, pop up, rock-and-roll & roll, psychedelia, blues, folk, African music, and, by and by on, disco. Lead isaac Bashevis Singer Philip Bailey gave EWF an duplicate property with his talent for crooning schmalzy ballads in addition to funk workouts; behind him, the band could harmonise wish a smooth Motown grouping, put to work a boiling vallecula like the J.B.'s, or extemporize like a idle words optical fusion outfit. Plus, their stage shows were often only as elaborate and dynamical as George Clinton's P-Funk empire. More than only versatility for its own sake, EWF's eclectic method was part of a broader concept informed by a cosmic, mystical spirituality and an uplifting positivity the likes of which hadn't been seen since the early days of Sly & the Family Stone. Tying it all together was the complete songwriting of Maurice White, whose intricate, unpredictable arrangements and unfaltering grasp of maulers and complex body part made EWF one of the tightest bands in funk when they wanted to be. Not everything they tested worked, only at their best, Earth, Wind & Fire on the face of it took all that came before them and wrapped it up into one dizzying, spectacular software package.


White founded Earth, Wind & Fire in Chicago in 1969. He had antecedently honed his chops as a sitting drummer for Chess Records, where he played on songs by the likes of Fontella Bass, Billy Stewart, and Etta James, among others. In 1967, he'd replaced Redd Holt in the popular jazz grouping the Ramsey Lewis Trio, where he was introduced to the kalimba, an African pollex pianissimo he would use extensively in succeeding projects. In 1969, he left hand Lewis' grouping to contour a songwriting partnership with keyboardist Don Whitehead and vocaliser Wade Flemons. This chop-chop evolved into a band dubbed the Salty Peppers, which signed with Capitol and scored a regional hit with "La La Time." When a followup flopped, White decided to move to Los Angeles, and took to the highest degree of the band with him; he likewise renamed them Earth, Wind & Fire, afterward the three elements in his astrological charts. By the time White convinced his brother, bassist Verdine White, to join him on the West Coast in 1970, the batting order likewise consisted of Whitehead, Flemons, female isaac Bashevis Singer Sherry Scott, guitar player Michael Beal, tenor saxist Chet Washington, trombone player Alex Thomas, and percussionist Yackov Ben Israel. This aggregate sign-language a fresh handle with Warner Bros. and issued its self-titled debut album in recent 1970. Many critics launch it intriguing and ambitious, much like the 1971 followup, The Need of Love, only neither attracted much commercial-grade attending, despite a ontogeny following on college campuses and a high profile gig playing the soundtrack to Melvin Van Peebles' groundbreaking ceremony fatal main motion picture Unfermented Sweetback's Baadasssss Song.


Disgruntled with the results, White dismantled the first version of EWF in 1972, retaining only crony Verdine. He built a new lineup with female vocaliser Jessica Cleaves, flute/sax player Ronnie Laws, guitarist Roland Bautista, keyboardist Larry Dunn, and percussionist Ralph Johnson; the most important young addition, however, was vocalizer Philip Bailey, recruited from a Denver R&B band called Friends & Love. After seeing the grouping open for John Sebastian in New York, Clive Davis gestural them to CBS, where they debuted in 1972 with Last Days and Time. Further personnel department changes ensued; Laws and Bautista were all deceased by year's end, replaced by reedman Andrew Woolfolk and guitarists Al McKay and Johnny Graham. It was then that EWF really began to hit their pace. 1973's Psyche to the Sky (Cleaves' last album with the chemical group) significantly broadened their religious cult following, and the 1974 follow-up, Open Our Eyes, was their number one echt hit. It marked their first coaction with producer, arranger, and erstwhile songwriting collaborator Charles Stepney, world Health Organization helped streamline their healthy for wider acceptance; it too featured another White brother, Fred, brought in as a irregular drummer. The unmarried "Mighty Mighty" became EWF's number one Top Ten strike on the R&B charts, although pop radio shied aside from its black-pride subtext, and the minor dispatch "Kalimba Story" brought Maurice White's puppy love with African sounds to the airwaves. Open Our Eyes went gold, setting the stage for the band's blockbuster breakthrough.


In 1975, EWF completed work on some other moving picture soundtrack, this clock time to a music-biz drama called That's the Way of the World. Not affirmative almost the film's commercial prospects, the mathematical group rushed out their soundtrack record album of the same name (unlike Unfermented Sweetback, they composed all the music themselves) in boost. The film flopped, simply the record album took off; its lead story single, the love-and-encouragement hymn "Glossy Star," guessing to the height of both the R&B and pop charts, devising Earth, Wind & Fire mainstream stars; it afterward won a Grammy for Best R&B Vocal Performance by a Group. The album too hit turn one on both the pop and R&B charts, and went double platinum; its rubric track went Top Five on the R&B side, and it too contained Bailey's signature lay in the record album disregard "Reasons." White victimized the new income to develop EWF's live show into a too-generous, effects-filled extravaganza, which eventually grew to include stunts designed by conjurer Doug Henning. The band was too augmented by a regular horn section, the Phoenix Horns, headed by saxophonist Don Myrick. Their rising concert experience was chronicled later that year on the double-LP set Gratitude, which became their secondment neat number 1 album and featured one side of new studio tracks. Of those, "Sing a Song" reached the pop Top Ten and the R&B Top Five, and the lay "Can't Hide Love" and the claim cut were also successful.


Lamentably, during the 1976 roger Huntington Sessions for EWF's succeeding studio album, Liveliness, Charles Stepney died suddenly of a heart attempt. Maurice White took over the arranging chores, just the Stepney-produced "Getaway" managed to elevation the R&B charts posthumously. Liveliness naturally performed well on the charts, topping out at numeral two. In the meantime, White was taking a hand in producing other acts of the Apostles; in gain to working with his old boss Ramsey Lewis, he helped kick go the careers of the Emotions and Deniece Williams. 1977's All n' All was some other strong cause that charted at numeral ternary and spawned the R&B smashes "Fantasy" and the chart-topping "Snaky Fire"; meanwhile, the Emotions topped the pop charts with the White-helmed smash "C. H. Best of My Love." The following year, White founded his possess label, ARC, and EWF appeared in the for the most part disastrous film adaptation of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, turning in a fine cover of the Beatles' "Got to Get You Into My Life" that became their commencement Top Ten pop hit since "Sing a Song." Released before year's end, The Best of Earth, Wind & Fire, Vol. 1 produced some other Top Ten gain (and R&B number one) in the freshly recorded "Sept."


1979's I Am contained EWF's almost explicit nod to disco, a nail collaboration with the Emotions called "Boogie-woogie Wonderland" that climbed into the Top Ten. The lay "After the Love Has Gone" did even better, falling one spot short of the elevation. Although I Am became EWF's sixth straight multi-platinum album, there were signs that the group's explosion of creative thinking over the past tense few years was beginning to wane. 1980's Faces stone-broke that strand, afterward which guitarist McKay bypast. While 1981's Erect brought them a Top Five gain and R&B chart-topper in "Let's Groove," an overall pass up in consistency was decorous unmistakable. By the time EWF issued its succeeding album, 1983's Powerlight, ARC had folded, and the Phoenix Horns had been cut loose to make unnecessary money. After the lacklustre Electric Universe appeared at the end of the year, White disbanded the mathematical group to simply require a fracture. In the meantime, Verdine White became a producer and video director, while Philip Bailey embarked on a solo career and scored a pop smash with the Phil Collins duet "Easy Lover." Collins besides made haunt consumption of the Phoenix Horns on his '80s records, both solo and with Genesis.


Bailey reunited with the White brothers, summation Andrew Woolfolk, Ralph Johnson, and new guitarist Sheldon Reynolds, in 1987 for the album Touch the World. It was amazingly successful, producing two R&B smashes in "Thinking of You" and the numeral one "Organization of Survival." Released in 1990, Inheritance was a forced attempt to contemporise the group's healthy, with edgar Guest appearances from Sly Stone and MC Hammer; its nonstarter light-emitting diode to the end of the group's relationship with Columbia. They returned on Reprise with the more traditional-sounding Millennium in 1993, but were dropped when the record failed to recapture their commercial-grade standing disdain a Grammy nomination for "Dominicus Morning"; tragedy smitten that year when old horn loss leader Don Myrick was murdered in Los Angeles. Bailey and the White brothers returned once once more in 1997 on the small Pyramid label with In the Name of Love. After 2003's The Promise, the group realigned itself with several top-shelf adult contemporary artists and released 2005's Illumination, which featured a much-publicized collaborationism with smooth malarkey steamroller Kenny G.






Esoterica

Esoterica   
Artist: Esoterica

   Genre(s): 
Electronic
   



Discography:


The Fool   
 The Fool

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 11




 





Amy Winehouse confirmed for Glastonbury