Artist: Davy Graham: mp3 download Genre(s): Rock Discography: Midnight Man Year: 2005 Tracks: 14 One of the nearly eclecticist guitarists of the sixties, Graham's mix of phratry, blues, jazz, Middle Eastern sounds, and Indian ragas was an authoritative accelerator of the British tribe vista. Like Sandy Bull and John Fahey -- deuce folk-based guitarists with a exchangeable taste for genre-bending experiment -- Graham could not be aforesaid to be a rock instrumentalist. But like Bull and Fahey, he shared the keenness of the '60s psychedelic bikers to stretch out and incorporate unpredictable influences into his music. While he wasn't a great deal of a vocaliser, Graham's taste in material was broad and sharp, surrounding blues, ragas, Joni Mitchell, Charles Mingus, and the noted instrumental "Anji," which Graham recorded in 1962, way sooner the more noted versions by Bert Jansch and Simon & Garfunkel. Besides cutting respective albums of his cause crop in the sixties with sympathetic, subdued unconstipated recurrence sections, he to a fault recorded with traditional folk vocalizer Shirley Collins and British vapours father Alexis Korner. Graham recorded only sporadically later on the sixties, although he performed with the illustrious acoustic guitar wizards Stefan Grossman and Duck Baker. |
Sunday, 17 August 2008
Download Davy Graham mp3
Thursday, 7 August 2008
Monday, 30 June 2008
Kenny Larkin
Artist: Kenny Larkin
Genre(s):
Techno
Discography:
Loop 2
Year: 1995
Tracks: 4
Third Wave techno artist Kenny Larkin is the penis of a newfangled school of Detroit-based musicians taking the city's illustrious trade name of hard-edged melodious futurism into new and modern areas. Although he missed out on the style's formative years in the mid to recent '80s due to a stint in the military, Larkin, a Detroit aboriginal, was brought up to hurrying upon his take back by the likes of Juan Atkins and Derrick May, the latter of whose weekly radiocommunication shows divine Larkin to pursue music yield. Heavily frozen in house, Larkin quickly incorporated techno's formal characteristics into a brazen-yet-refined style that places his medicine somewhere in betwixt Detroit and Chicago, combine house's more swinging rhythmic vibe and soft edge with techno's hefty backbeat and experimental zeal. He released a couple of 12-inches -- "We Shall Overcome" and "Integration" -- on the Richie Hawtin/John Acquaviva label Plus 8 in the early '90s before moving on to tone ending material through Buzz, Warp, and R&S. Massively influential on British and German, as well as American strains of techno, his tracks have appeared on a number of celebrated compilations documenting new-school Detroit talent. His exposure abroad has also translated, as with a number of Detroit originals such as Jeff Mills and Carl Craig, into a grade of European success far surpassing that at home. Somewhat suprisingly, he took several age off from production act in the late '90s and early 2000s to focus on his alternate life history as a standup mirthful. Though he continued to DJ during this period, it wasn't until 2004 that he released new material for England's Peacefrog tag. [Escort also: Dark Comedy]
Fotomoto
Wednesday, 25 June 2008
Monday, 16 June 2008
Barbara Gowdy, Rachel Zolf win Ontario's Trillium Book Awards
TORONTO - Authors Barbara Gowdy and Rachel Zolf were named winners Thursday of the 21st annual Trillium Book Awards, Ontario's top literary prize.
Gowdy won for her novel "Helpless" (HarperCollins) while Zolf won the poetry award for her collection "Human Resources" (Coach House Books).
French-language winners were Pierre Raphael Pelletier for "L'Oeil de la lumiere" (Les Editions l'Interligne) and Tina Charlebois for the poetry collection "Poils lisses" (Les Editions l'Interligne).
Winners of the poetry book award, intended for emerging poets, each receive $10,000 and their publishers get $2,000. The other Trillium award winners receive $20,000, and their publishers $2,500.
News from �The Canadian Press, 2008
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Friday, 6 June 2008
Corrie star had nightmares over plot
'Coronation Street' star Samia Smith has revealed that she had nightmares about one of her recent storylines in the soap.
The actress, who plays hairdresser Maria Connor in the show, told Teletext that her character's long-triangle storyline with Liam (Rob James-Collier) and Carla (Alison King) caused her to have nightmares.
Smith said: "I dreamt he was running off with Alison King. I went mental - running around screaming and crying."
"Then I woke up and my face was completely blotchy. I'd been crying in my sleep."
The actress, who plays hairdresser Maria Connor in the show, told Teletext that her character's long-triangle storyline with Liam (Rob James-Collier) and Carla (Alison King) caused her to have nightmares.
Smith said: "I dreamt he was running off with Alison King. I went mental - running around screaming and crying."
"Then I woke up and my face was completely blotchy. I'd been crying in my sleep."
Monday, 26 May 2008
John Cale and Chris Spedding
Artist: John Cale and Chris Spedding
Genre(s):
Pop
Discography:
Live in Stockolm
Year: 1975
Tracks: 11
 
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