Monday 25 August 2008

Download Bad Religion mp3






Bad Religion
   

Artist: Bad Religion: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

ROck: Alternative
Punk
Other
Pop: Pop-Rock
Rock: Punk-Rock
ROck: Alternative
Punk
Other
Pop: Pop-Rock
Rock: Punk-Rock

   







Discography:


New Maps of Hell
   

 New Maps of Hell

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 16
The Empire Strikes First
   

 The Empire Strikes First

   Year: 2004   

Tracks: 14
Los Angeles Is Burning
   

 Los Angeles Is Burning

   Year: 2004   

Tracks: 3
The Process Of Belief (Japan)
   

 The Process Of Belief (Japan)

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 15
The New America
   

 The New America

   Year: 2000   

Tracks: 13
No Substance [Japan]
   

 No Substance [Japan]

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 17
The Gray Race
   

 The Gray Race

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 16
Tested [Live]
   

 Tested [Live]

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 27
Punk Rock Song
   

 Punk Rock Song

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 4
Infected Live [EP, Japan]
   

 Infected Live [EP, Japan]

   Year: 1995   

Tracks: 7
All Ages
   

 All Ages

   Year: 1995   

Tracks: 22
Christmas Show [Bootleg]
   

 Christmas Show [Bootleg]

   Year: 1994   

Tracks: 29
21st Century [Digital Boy]
   

 21st Century [Digital Boy]

   Year: 1994   

Tracks: 4
1994 - Stranger Than Fiction [Limited European Edition]
   

 1994 - Stranger Than Fiction [Limited European Edition]

   Year: 1994   

Tracks: 34
Recipe For Hate
   

 Recipe For Hate

   Year: 1993   

Tracks: 14
Generator
   

 Generator

   Year: 1992   

Tracks: 11
80-85
   

 80-85

   Year: 1991   

Tracks: 25
Against the Grain
   

 Against the Grain

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 17
No Control
   

 No Control

   Year: 1989   

Tracks: 15
Suffer
   

 Suffer

   Year: 1988   

Tracks: 15
Back To The Known EP
   

 Back To The Known EP

   Year: 1984   

Tracks: 5
In The Unknown
   

 In The Unknown

   Year: 1983   

Tracks: 8
All Our Yesterdays
   

 All Our Yesterdays

   Year: 1983   

Tracks: 12
How Could Hell Be Any Worse
   

 How Could Hell Be Any Worse

   Year: 1982   

Tracks: 14
Bonus CD
   

 Bonus CD

   Year:    

Tracks: 2






Out of all of the Southern Californian hardcore punk tilt bands of the early '80s, Bad Religion stayed around the longest. For over a decennium, they maintained their underground believability without turning out a serial of undistinguishable records that all well-grounded the same. Instead, the stria tasteful their approach, adding inflections of psychedelia, heavy alloy, and hard rock along the way, as well as a considerable dose of melodic phrase. Between their 1982 debut and their first major-label record, 1993's Recipe for Hate, Bad Religion stayed vital in the hard-core community by tightening their musical washington punishment and guardianship their lyrics building complex and righteously angry.


Forged Religion formed in the northerly suburbs of Los Angeles in 1980, comprising guitar player Brett Gurewitz, vocaliser Greg Graffin, bassist Jay Bentley, and drummer Jay Ziskrout. Gurewitz constituted his possess record company, Epitaph, to button the band's records. Between their self-titled EP and their number 1 full-length record, Pete Finestone replaced Ziskrout as the group's drummer. Into the Unknown, their debut album, was released in 1983 and gained them some attention on the national U.S. hardcore picture. After its button, the group's lineup changed, as bassist Paul Dedona and drummer Davy Goldman linked the chemical group.


In the lag, the band's lineup was undergoing some more shakeups. Gurewitz had to take 1984 off to regain from diverse substance abuse problems, leaving Graffin as the band's only original member. In addition to Graffin, the 1984 incarnation of the band featured previous Circle Jerks guitar player Greg Hetson, bassist Tim Gallegos, and reversive drummer Pete Finestone. Bad Religion's side by side discharge, the harder, punkier Back up to the Known EP restored faith among the group's devoted fans. After its button, the chemical group went on abatement for triad years.


When Bad Religion returned in 1987, the striation featured Gurewitz, Graffin, Ziskrout, Hetson, and Finestone. They released Meet the following year, a record that re-established the mathematical group as prominent players in the U.S. underground punk/hardcore scene. They followed with No Control (1989) and Against the Grain (1990). By the time of their 1993 album, Formula for Hate, alternative rock candy had become democratic with the mainstream; in addition, the band's undermentioned was quite large. These two factors contributed to Bad Religion sign language a major-label contract with Atlantic Records.


Recipe for Hate was originally released on Epitaph, but it was presently re-released with the supporting of Atlantic. The group's get-go proper major-label record album was 1994's Alien Than Fiction; it was as well Gurewitz's final album with the chemical group. Before the release of Alien Than Fiction, Epitaph had an unexpected strike with the Offspring's Bankrupt, causing Gurewitz to spend more time at the label; reports likewise indicated that he was displeased with Bad Religion's major-label contract. The group replaced Gurewitz with hard-core old hand Brian Baker for their encouraging duty tour, which proven to be their most successful to date.


Bad Religion released their second base major-label album, The Gray Race, in early 1996, only it didn't reach the like results as its predecessors. No Substance followed in 1998, and two days later the banding returned with New America, which was produced by Todd Rundgren. Although it featured Bad Religion's best work in years, Atlantic subsequently dropped the band, and they returned to Epitaph. In the summer of 2001, Gurewitz rejoined the batting order after a six-year absence, and the group began work on The Process of Belief. The album appeared in February the following twelvemonth, and was widely hailed for its recalibration of the Graffin/Gurewitz axis.


Sorry Religion's future picture was the remastering and issuance of their former catalogue. The discs began appearance in April 2004 with the release of Generator and How Could Hell Be Any Worse? The former included relevant 7" material from the epoch, patch Inferno took the place of 80-85, which had previously accounted for the band's earlier end product. Both were in full remastered, as were subsequent reissues of Suffer, No Control, and Against the Grain. Bad Religion then returned in June of that year with The Empire Strikes First, a typically acerbic LP that reflected the surge of angriness and defiance in the punk rocker and indie music communities toward the policies of the Bush administration. The potent New Maps of Hell, released in 2007, continued on the path of discontent and railed at what the stripe adage as rampant spiritlessness in the face of world crisis.





Richard Ashcroft | Download mp3

Friday 15 August 2008

Demi Lovato charms New York City


Disney teen sensation Demi Lovato captivated in a black tout ensemble as she left her Manhattan hotel en route to Madison Square Garden on Monday, August 11, 2008, to perform with the Jonas Brothers. Photo Credit: Splash News

August 11, 2008 () - Disney adolescent sensation Demi Lovato charmed in a black ensemble as she left her Manhattan hotel en route to Madison Square Garden on Monday, August 11, 2008, to perform with the Jonas Brothers.


She wore a black screen printed tee, a black

Thursday 7 August 2008

Adolf Castle

Adolf Castle   
Artist: Adolf Castle

   Genre(s): 
Metal: Heavy
   



Discography:


Really Crazy Germans   
 Really Crazy Germans

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 13




 






Monday 23 June 2008

Django Bates, Spring Is Here Shall We Dance

If the title invitation proffered by Mister Bates is taken up, it can only be tackled by dancers with either a.) an extreme degree of pedal dexterity, or b.) an extreme degree of inhibition-eroding imbibing. Yes, Django returns, with his usual level of dilute-to-taste density. He's finally completing his long-running seasonal sequence of albums with this slightly delayed Spring.

Jazz On 3 presenter Jez Nelson forewarned his listeners that this album (as expected) will not be to all tastes. The Bates contents can often be divisive, his style so individualist and extreme that he often plants folks firmly in love or hate camps. Overloaded with activity, these pieces are simultaneously hook-filled and defiantly uncompromising, with regular singing collaborator Josefine Lindstrand doing much to welcome uncertain ears. Bates digs compression of everything, rarely allowing a soloist to simply solo, but always stringing such self-expression through a maze of hyperactive themes, constantly in motion.

Lately residing in Copenhagen, Bates has formed Stormchaser, a large young band that rehearses weekly, and has a residency in the city's Jazz House. Hence their intimate grasp of these inner Django workings. They maintain slickness at the same time as keeping hold of a slippery sense of anarchy. The legacy of Brazilian tinkerer/composer Hermeto Pascoal looms large, but whose are these many souls, flying past at a kaleidoscopic rate? There whooshes Frank Zappa, and here land a sweetly scatting Lambert, Hendricks & Ross, with slap-happy bongos spilling out of old Edmundo Ros sleeves. Was that Keith Tippett's Centipede, in all its massed choral majesty? Could that be the kitchen/garage clatter of Spike Jones & His City Slickers? And meet The Residents, standing right next to The Smurfs. Bates is funky and tuneful, with piled-up vocal choruses repeating compulsive (or annoying) lines, and most certainly, the essence of the spring season has been bottled in all of its barely containable vigour.


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Monday 16 June 2008

Billy Bob Thornton's album hits stores

Boxmasters' dual CD has originals, covers





CHICAGO -- He is an acclaimed actor and Oscar winner for writing the movie "Sling Blade," but most of the time Billy Bob Thornton would rather be pursuing his first love: music.
Thornton's band, the Boxmasters, released its first album Tuesday, a dual CD with one disc of original songs written by Thornton and second with covers of the likes of Mott the Hoople, the Louvin Brothers, the Who and Chad and Jeremy.
Thornton, credited as W.R. "Bud" Thornton partly to distinguish from his movie star status, released four solo albums between 2001 and '07, but it is this latest incarnation -- as drummer, singer and songwriter for the Boxmasters -- that he thinks brings him closest to his true calling.
"I've always been committed to music first," Thornton said. "It just so happened that I accidentally became a movie star. So it's really more like I use the movies to keep me from going broke between records."
The 52-year-old native of Hot Springs, Ark., has been playing drums since he was 9 and as a young man he kicked around the fringes of the music industry, including a stint as a roadie for the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band in the mid-1970s.
He remembers when his mother gave him his first album of his very own -- the soundtrack to Elvis Presley's 1958 movie "King Creole." His favorite record of all time is the Allman Brothers' 1971 "At Fillmore East." Among his unfulfilled ambitions are to write a song someday with two of his idols, Kris Kristofferson and John Prine.
His Boxmasters bandmates include J.D. Andrew, who co-wrote several songs, and Mike Butler, whose blazing guitar licks pepper the album. Thornton describes the band's music as "Hillbilly British Invasion" and they plan to hit the road and tour the U.S. in the summer, Thornton said.
"If you take the Beatles and the Stones and the Kinks and the Dirt Band and Mike Nesmith and the Monkees, mix them up with Buck Owens, Merle Haggard and Johnny Cash and Webb Pierce and Del Reeves, that's what the Boxmasters are," he said.
Thornton writes many songs about lower middle-class people who are down on their luck and he admits they are similar to many of the characters he has portrayed on film, such as Willie in "Bad Santa," a con man posing as Santa Claus to rob stores.
He also disagrees with perceptions that actors who make records are talentless musical hacks.
"If I were doing this as a lark. ... I would try to craft a pop song that was gonna make a hit," he said. "And we (the Boxmasters) don't really do that. We're kind of an earthy bunch. I'm not out there trying to be on MTV and stuff."
Thornton said he grew up playing in bands and he likes being close to music. He said he would even return to his roots as a roadie and work for Jack White, singer-songwriter for rock bands the White Stripes and the Raconteurs.
"I've grown quite fond of Jack White, mainly because he respects the history of music," Thornton said. "He's a kid who knows what came before him and that's what's important."
But working on a touring crew is not great pay and Thornton still has to earn a living. He is currently shooting the film comedy "Manure" about a manure salesman in the 1960s.
Still, Thornton said is happiest talking about music or tinkering in his home's recording studio.
"My personality is not made for vacationing. I prefer to be constantly working," he said. "If I can make a movie a year and a record a year and do a tour a year, I'd be pretty happy."

Sunday 1 June 2008

Pete Doherty - Pete Doherty Misses Out On Charity Football Win

Pete Doherty and his charity football team were unable to retain their Samaritans Celebrity Soccer Six at a tournament in south London yesterday.

The troubled musician's side had claimed the Soccer Six title last year but were defeated 3-1 in this year's final by a team composed of members of the dance band Faithless.

However, despite losing out in the final, the former Libertine - who was recently released from prison after being punished for failing to meet the terms of his probation order - reiterated his support for the charity.

"Samaritans provide a service called 'the listeners' where they train inmates so if you're struggling any time during the night you've got someone you can spill your heart out to," he said.

Claire Duncan, a Samaritans spokesperson, explained that the football tournament allowed the charity to raise awareness of the support available to troubled people across the UK.

"In light of the recent suicides in Bridgend in Wales it is vital that we reach out to young people out to young people at an earlier stage before problems seem much more difficult to manage," she added.

"Samaritans is here to listen, not to judge or make assumptions but to give people the time and space to work through how they are feeling. If you need emotional support then get in touch."

Other celebrity teams included members of the Wombats and the Twang, former Darkness frontman Justin Hawkins, Get Cape Wear Cape Fly, Jade Goody, Dave Gorman, and contestants from Big Brother, X Factor, The Apprentice and Shipwrecked.


19/05/2008 14:59:11




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Saturday 24 May 2008

Ashlee Simpson calls Britney Spears 'trashy'

Ashlee Simpson says she feels "horrible" after calling fellow pop star Britney Spears 'trashy' during a live radio interview.

During a recent visit to the UK, the Outta My Head singer was quizzed about her knowledge on rhyming slang in London, the World Entertainment News Network reported.

A radio DJ asked Simpson what she thought the phrase, 'You've had one-too-many Britney Spears' meant.

Simpson didn't realise the term referred to drinking too much beer, and immediately regretted her answer, WENN reported.

Recalling the incident on British music show on The Nokia Green Room, Simpson said: "I was like, 'Oh, you've had one too many trashy girls.'

"And I was like, 'Oh my god, I can't believe I just said that!'

"It was really bad, I felt horrible."

Simpson is engaged to Fall Out Boy rocker Pete Wentz, and the pair are rumoured to be marrying in secret this weekend.

She is also rumoured to be pregnant.





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