Jump to content

Leaderboard

Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation since 01/26/2010 in Posts

  1. Sure! Here are some short suggestions for fixing the website: 1. Identify and address technical issues. 2. Optimize the site's loading speed. 3. Improve the website's design and user interface. 4. Ensure mobile responsiveness. 5. Fix broken links and errors. 6. Enhance the site's navigation and usability. 7. Update and refresh content regularly. 8. Implement proper SEO techniques. 9. Test and optimize the site for different browsers and devices. 10. Consider seeking professional web development assistance if needed. Remember to prioritize the user experience and make necessary improvements based on feedback and analytics.
    2 points
  2. What's up music lovers? I'm Oldbeats which means that I love the classic sounds of-soul-r&b-jazz and doo-wop..looking forward to rapping about great sounds!
    2 points
  3. Oh wow! Very nice single!
    2 points
  4. How do graphic designers effectively utilize the versatility of mountain vectors in their creative projects, adapting the style and representation of these vectors to convey different moods and themes in designs, and can you provide examples of industries or contexts where they are commonly employed?
    1 point
  5. Does anybody still play any Star Wars games? I thought people got tired of them finally
    1 point
  6. For those who enjoy tinkering and customization, the Pandora Platinum arcade machine offers opportunities for modding and hacking. From modifying the hardware to enhance performance or adding new features, to creating custom game packs or even building your own pandoras box arcade cabinet, the Pandora Platinum provides a playground for DIY enthusiasts. Unleash your creativity, explore the modding community, and transform your Pandora Platinum into a unique arcade machine that perfectly suits your preferences and aspirations.
    1 point
  7. Unfortunately I cannot get mtv2 now but I love this show, we have alot of episodes from the mid-late 80's
    1 point
  8. Definitely good recomendations as far as starting off goes...most of these pieces ROCK!
    1 point
  9. LOL, believe it or not, we are on it. Are you proficient at addressing any of these issues, Zubair?
    1 point
  10. We discuss the weird magic of the best songs by fictional performers in movies and TV, from Daisy Jones & the Six to the OnedersView the full article
    1 point
  11. Thank you for sharing this content. Useful.
    1 point
  12. Wow, this is really cool! I love this idea of signing a lease knowing that if something unexpected happens and you need extra income, you can just list your spare room on Airbnb. The fact that Airbnb is now curating a list of apartment buildings that allow tenants to sublet short-term is really helpful. Of course, there is always the chance that people will use the Airbnb-friendly apartment program to find places they can sublet full-time. I'm interested to see how the program develops. By the way, if you are looking for a great place to rent in Spain, check out happylife.es. They have a wide selection of apartments and houses for rent in different locations.
    1 point
  13. If you haven't seen Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery, I won't spoil it. I did plenty of that in my explanation of what the film says about Elon Musk. But let's just say the cast did a fantastic job. That's become a hallmark of a Knives Out movie. There's Daniel Craig as detective Benoit Blanc, a compelling mystery story, and a cast loaded with stars. The latest film, Glass Onion, featured Craig, Janelle Monáe, Kate Hudson, Edward Norton, Kathryn Hahn, Leslie Odom Jr., Dave Bautista, and Madelyn Cline, among other fun cameos. With Glass Onion finally available to stream on Netflix, folks are already moving on to the next installment in their minds. People really want to cast this movie. And frankly, some people on the internet have some really good ideas. For instance, now I NEED Jack Black in a Knives Out film. He'd absolutely ham it up to the perfect campy degree. Ditto with Jennifer Coolidge. For all those steeped in the drama within the Don't Worry Darling extended universe, this is a perfect idea. There are so, so, so many great suggestions online. It's fun to dream cast new Knives Out films for a few reasons. Of course, one reason is that any actor is a reasonable get. Chris Evans, Kate Hudson, Ana De Armas, Jamie Lee Curtis, Ed Norton, Janelle Monáe have all said yes to these movies. And both installments were well-received by critics and audiences. So, presumably, lots of stars would sign on for the third movie. But it's also fun to dream cast these movies because director Rian Johnson really lets the actors cook in his films. They are full of camp and fun. Glass Onion shows that. Craig is a hammy revelation. Hudson is dialing it up to 11. Hahn steals every scene. Johnson's deal with Netflix guarantees we'll get at least one more Knives Out mystery, and the writer-director has expressed interest in going even bigger in the future. Craig has said he'll play Blanc as long as he's asked, but the rest it up to our imagination. View the full article
    1 point
  14. Sullivan King’s next album, Thrones Of Blood, is officially due out March 2023, as announced with his first single, “The Dead March,” with Ray Volpe. Now, he’s back with the next single, teaming up once again with Wooli for “Let Me Go.” The two have paired up once before, releasing “Don’t Forget Me” on Monstercat. Sullivan King and Wooli seem to have found a formula that works in their releases, pairing Sully’s voice and an anthemic, melodic first section with a heavier drop, leading into another melodic outro. Speaking of the track, Sullivan King shares, “Adam and I wrote “Let Me Go” about his fear of planes. I’m pretty sick of him always holding on to me when we fly next to each other and there’s a little turbulence. He’s really just not a great flyer tbh and it’s f*****’ annoying, so Adam if you’re reading this….. let me go. Stop grabbing my hand. You squeeze way too much. We’re gonna be fine. Statistically, not a single plane has crashed from turbulence, so just drink your ginger ale, have those little biscoff cookies American Airlines gives out, and watch a Harry Potter movie. We’re gonna be good.” Wooli adds, “‘Let Me Go’ is about the time Keaton kidnapped me. He put me in a cage in the crawl space of his Miami condo and left one night to go get more diapers and Monster Energy baby formula for his new kid. I felt it was the perfect time to escape. I picked the lock with a Capri Sun straw and bolted for the elevator. As soon as the doors opened, Keaton was standing there smiling. “Don’t leave yet, we have more ‘content’ to film!” he said. He began to slip back into character as the Joker from Batman. “You don’t want to see me get Reckless do you?” I’m actually still writing this from the cage. If you are reading this, please call 911 or Excision. They are my only hope.” The next album from Sully will continue to highlight his cross-genre musicianship with notable features on both sides. Check out “Let Me Go” below! Photo via Rukes.com This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: Sullivan King & Wooli team up once again for next album single, “Let Me Go” View the full article
    1 point
  15. Aladdinmagic here that’s Aladdin magic [email protected] you’re trying to track people involved in the creation of OPA NARISE I had a contact at one point there was supposed to be a second creation wondering whatever HAPPENED? I fear all these links are dead but I keep on keeping on
    1 point
  16. Great. Living in Leeds doesn't make it a wise decision to rely on solar power too much. This one would be a great addition though. I wish I had the lack of my friends in the USA and specifically the ones that live in Samui. They have solar panels on top of their homes and they say thousands of dollars every year while I get to pay more and more for gas and electrical bills are just going higher every year here. They were both think about this service they had buy a1solarstore.com and their crew. They didn't even pay half of the price that other companies charge and I'm top of that it was done in a couple of hours and it was ready to go. If a service like this appears here in Leeds I will definitely call them to have this new type of solar panels installed.
    1 point
  17. The one to watch out for is pre-calculated interest. It's where they calculate the interest then put it into the principal at the beginning of the loan. That way it is impossible to pay it back without paying every cent of interest. If you are late tho fees get added in. Edit: both of these things ""pre-calculated"" in the apply to future payments are often hidden. You may have seen it but unless you recalculated the loan on your own you can't see it. I am a financial nerd now partially because of things like this. I just had to know how it worked. I recalculate any loan I am a part of. For me better way was here https://usnetloan.com/title-loans/utah/
    1 point
  18. A new season is here and as always hope is in the air for many fans including me,although my team-Redskins are not very good..who do you root for?
    1 point
  19. Artist To Watch Squirrel Flower released her debut album, I Was Born Swimming, at the beginning of the year. A few months ago, she put out a cover of Caroline Polachek's "So Hot You're Hurting My Feelings" and today she has another cover ready to go. This time she reached a … More »View the full article
    1 point
  20. Wow,still no activity here...close up shop!!
    1 point
  21. California-based Metallica joins a growing list of artists who have donated to the state's wildfire relief efforts. View the full article
    1 point
  22. Thanks,I'm still checking in,so what's up?
    1 point
  23. 1 point
  24. I think you'd appreciate this @DudeAsInCool
    1 point
  25. It can be hard to decipher whether Jacquees' appeal is authentic, or a byproduct of the warm nostalgic vibes of the late '90s and early 2000s that his music often hearkens to. If he weren't such a skillful singer, he probably wouldn't get away with it, but his decadent voice and lush harmonies can elevate material that might… View the full article
    1 point
  26. I will begun posting again and driving some traffic
    1 point
  27. New kid on the block. Matt Taylor - Cut You Off https://youtu.be/DbMaZFi9pY8
    1 point
  28. I dig this... I was listening to it and then it started to be part of my world and then it stopped and I realized I was listening to it again... hard to explain, but I liked it.
    1 point
  29. A screenshot of Cardi B's Instagram Story surfaced earlier this week which read, “Ain’t no hoe taking my spot. Stop BAPPIN." Many thought this was a dig at Megan Thee Stallion but Cardi took to social media to clear up the rumors. Cardi B made it clear that she doesn't have any feud with Megan Thee Stallion. She took to Twitter to clarify the Instagram Story, claiming that she hasn't even really been online in the first place. "I barely been getting online. I haven’t been talking to nobody just straight promoting! Stop putting me in bullshit let me keep minding my business in peace. Thank you," she wrote. Megan Thee Stallion also appeared to address the rumors shortly after Cardi. "If you’re a real hottie, please spread positivity. we real around here and we fw everybody that fw us. No dry hating no dry beef," she wrote on Twitter. Megan Thee Stallion recently addressed the competition among female rappers. She explained the competitive nature is part of hip-hop but at some point, it won't necessarily be like that forever. “I feel like since, like, forever, it has only been, like, one female rapper at a time. And naturally, women are competitive. So I feel like, without beef, hip-hop probably wouldn’t even be what it is, so it’s good to have, like, a little friendly competition here and there,” Megan said told Essence. “ Just because we might be rapping about some of the same things, we’re not doing it in the same way. There’s enough room for all of us to eat. So as soon as we can get that together, then we’ll be all right.” View the full article
    1 point
  30. The Flamingoes..The Isley Brothers..The Miracles..The Impressions..The Drifters,name em if you got em.
    1 point
  31. Great list,if I may add a small Jazz set from-Kool And The Gang[Kool Jazz-1969]very nice LP from a group known more for funk.
    1 point
  32. Hopefully you got it out of your head or figured it out.
    1 point
  33. Title: No Hables la Mentira Artist: A-Santyq Style: Techno/ Minimal Label: Eastar Records Listen to the release here and get your own copy! Available Now From: iTunes Beatport Junodownload Amazon Thank you for your Support!
    1 point
  34. http://jimcolyer.com/papers/entry?id=80 Reflections I began writing songs in December, 1963, in my senior year of high school. While others were mulling over their algebra, I was struggling with lyrics and melodies. My music is a blend of different styles: country, rock, blues and pop. My lyrics are often personal, drawn from my own experiences. I enjoy working with females because it is a challenge to write from the female perspective and fun to go into the studio with pretty girls. Much of my material can be described as “rockabilly for women." There is a Shania influence, and I try to create girly images. Visuals are important in songwriting, and I dress mine in upbeat melodies. I have felt driven to write and record. Maybe I had to pursue music to validate myself, to prove I can succeed in this field. I had the idea of going to Nashville at 19, but it took me a decade to get there because of college and the army. Once in Nashville, I befriended a music major with a studio in his back yard. We recorded song after song and produced an album. Expressing myself in this way was a catharsis. I have had many influences. 1950s rock n' roll started it. From the moment I heard Elvis Presley's "Hound Dog," I wanted that record. An Elvis influence pervades my catalog, evident in songs like "Hard Earned Love." In the 1960s, it was The Beatles. In the 1970, it was Swedish ABBA. I traveled to Stockholm and wrote a book about ABBA. Top 40 was a big deal. I would come home from school and throw myself on the bed with my radio. I bought records: 45s and LPs. I became interested in musicals like West Side Story and Gypsy. I write what I want to hear. If other people like it, okay. I give vent to my emotions. Sometimes it starts with an idea. Sometimes it starts with strumming the guitar and playing chords. A melody comes and suddenly, I have a hook around which to write a song. Sometimes it is easy. Sometimes it is hard. 1997-2003 was a Renaissance! I wrote 200 songs and spent time in the studio. I worked with singers and musicians in Louisville and Nashville. Things slowed when Michael reached college age because I was helping him. Good productions are essential, ones that stress the vocals. People want to hear the singers, and they want to understand the words. Instrumental tracks should support the vocals. Lead guitars and keyboards should stay true to the melodies while improvising enough to create interest. Bass and drums are the foundation, and other tracks sit on their shoulders. The record is the thing! A friend told me I was going to "make it in old age." I want to pass along my best tunes, those that inspire constructive behavior. I think of my Christmas song and my wedding song: "I Promise." One bride-to-be chose "I Promise" from 400 songs. There is no particular audience. I do what is in me, and the chips fall where they fall. If people like what I do, they let me know. I suppose my audience is people who appreciate honest songs and the work that goes into them. I am still doing this at a time when people with more talent have given up. I am still moving in the direction of giving the world classic songs. I have mp3s on my site. People around the world hear my songs and make comments. Johnny Thompson put his vocal on "Save The Planet, my environmental song. I am not afraid to expose my material, and that has helped me get independent cuts. 1963-1972 - Early Years I have written 1500 songs counting the lyrics 2013-16. It started as I was turning 18. I began hearing songs that did not exist, and that made me a songwriter. There was an old, beat-up guitar at my grandmother's house. Chords were easy to make, and I quickly learned to fit them into patterns. I could transpose from one key to another. The problem was, I had no rhythm. That came later! The neck on that old guitar was awful, and its strings dug into my fingertips. The pain in my fingers woke me in the night. Calluses formed! My first songs were about my girl friend and I drifting apart. That is true for most writers. Self-pity is a factor. Most songwriters are introverts, and schizophrenia and the creative process seem related. Creating music which no one else identifies with isolates a person. He finds himself cut off from society, misunderstanding and misunderstood. That is how it was. My mother bought me an electric guitar, a Gibson. I was no guitarist! I banged out chords and screamed, sweat pouring from me on hot summer days. My first songs were imitations of what I heard on radio. Coherent efforts were "Welcome Mat" and "Long Live Rock n' Roll." The culmination of my first period was the gospel songs I wrote after coming out of the army. My religious phase was tumultuous! As America rejected the Vietnam War, I began reading books of a spiritual nature. I delved into the writings of Aldous Huxley and hung out with "Jesus freaks." We went to a Pentecostal church, where the congregation danced in the aisles. We spoke in tongues! I threw away all my possessions except for my clothes, Bible and guitar. I went off the deep end and was admitted to the mental ward of the Veterans Hospital in Louisville. I was given 10 shock treatments. My gospel songs grew from the turmoil, "Jesus Paid My Debt" being the best. I recorded it with Kymberly Bryson 36 years after it was written. No problem because it sounded like it was a hundred years old when I wrote it! It reeked of old time religion! 1973-1985 - Comeback I rose from the ashes! I began going to the Dipperwell, the restaurant where my mother worked. The Dipperwell was run by my mother's cousin, Thelma Lee, and she introduced me to a drummer in a local band. He helped me record "Long Live Rock n' Roll" in a Louisville studio. I did the vocal. We took it to Nashville and pressed 1000 45s. I mailed them to radio stations, publishers and record companies around the country. Doing a record was like a resurrection! Decent songs followed, the strongest of which was "Phoenix," based on the bird of Greek mythology. I was that bird, and I soon found myself in Nashville recording in a makeshift studio in a friend's back yard. I had a 4-channel Teac, and he had a Dokorder. We put the decks together, and our collaboration led to an album with students at Castle Heights Military Academy, where I worked. We called it "Rising from the Ashes." My renditions of "Belle Meade Blues" and "Leaving" were on it. They were comeback songs! Tim Morrison sang "Too Late For Love," and Lori Powell did "Losing Makes You Stronger." Naturally, it was a misadventure! Recording with Amy Plummer that summer, "Sailing Out" came out nice. Those first female songs were really male. I simply changed the pronouns. As things played out, I pressed the final cuts for Jim Colyer Records. My son's mother did "Somebody To Love," and I backed it with "I Am The Greatest" Silence! I realized the futility of making my own records. Years passed before I recorded again. 1989-1996 - Rewrite After becoming a parent, I questioned music and my involvement in it. I had a son to take care of and had squandered my resources. My songs were second generation imitations of what I heard on radio. Few held up, and even those were mediocre. They reflected my life at a particular level. Entering middle age with a kid gave me a different perspective. I retreated to my parents' basement following a divorce. Nothing sounded good, and I spent my time writing a book about Sweden's ABBA. The rewrite began unconsciously. I wrote the lyrics for "Agnetha" and "Stockholm Lady" over old melodies. "When I Was A Boy" evolved lyrics relevant to my own boyhood. I wrote a jukebox musical called "Phoenix Rising," 30 songs pieced together with a story around them with characters and dialog. It dealt with an American soldier named Frank Logan who had a daughter in Sweden he had never seen. Frank was about to father a second child with a young British singer. The plot reflected my infatuation with younger women. I discarded "Phoenix Rising," knowing it was unstageable. The rewrite continued as fragments sprouted verses and bridges. 1997-2004 - Explosion I thought "Save The Planet" could be an international hit and advertised in a Louisville music paper for a vocalist. It triggered a chain of events I could not have foreseen. A lady in Indiana recorded it, but it was no good. Shortly thereafter, a clerk in a video store told me about her cousin wanting to be a country singer. I gave out my phone number, and Ron Coogle called looking for songs for his daughter Rachel. I went to their house with one called "Satisfied." We took it to Doc Dockery's studio in Indiana and did a demo. Rachel performed the song on a TV show for songwriters. Doc then introduced me to Pam Ingold. Pam and I recorded 8 songs, including "Things Aren't Good At Home". Suddenly, I was back in Nashville writing songs on Music Row. I bought Doc's Takamine as songs poured from me. Many were female. I wrote "Always The First Time" for Donna Carter and "Songs About Angels" for the Gentry Cousins. My best work was coming in my 50s during the Shania Twain era. These girl songs were different from the early ones. There was female psychology in them. I was writing as if I were a woman! By now, women sang the way men used to. They were strong and independent, and they liked my tough girl lyrics and rockin' beat. I recorded with Kenny Royster at Direct Image in Nashville. I did "I Promise" with Veda, sub-titling it "Wedding Song", and I began to think it wise to identify my lyrics with entrenched institutions. "Feel So Country" was filled with patriotism and flag-waving! I wrote the lyrics for "Merry Christmas" over the track and promoted it in December. Good Christmas songs are hard to write as the best ones preceded the rock era. I played my songs for ascap writer reps and published them on the Internet. I started jimcolyer.com. Writing female I have recorded with 35 women going back to Lori in 1978. Originally, I was singing everything myself. Finally, I started working with real singers, male and female. I did not care for the females of the Elvis and Beatles eras. It was in the 1970s after women became more assertive that I began paying attention. ABBA did it! I may have listened to Agnetha and Frida as much as any person alive. When Shania Twain appeared in the 1990s, my writing had reached a point where I wrote female without thinking about it. That would have bothered me had I been younger. By now, I thought it cool to write from the female point of view. I enjoyed talking to women about music and going into the studio with them. I cannot recall the girl's name who sang "How Did You Do That", but it has garnered praise from other writers. Writing needs to flow naturally. It should not be based on artificial hooks or ideas someone carries around in a notebook. The best philosophy is to write only when you feel like it. Do not write for publishers, and do not write something you think people are going to buy. Write from yourself. Those songs will last. Having written 1500 songs in 50-plus years, it behooves me to critique my catalog. I am 70. From this point, I am content to reject self-pity songs for those that communicate positive emotions. I want to be identified with songs that inspire people, especially young people. My Christmas song does that. So do the Shania-type songs that tend to encourage young women. There was a time when all I wanted was to get songs out. Now, I am sensitive to the effect lyrics have on listeners. We are affected by the movies we see, the books we read and the music we hear. 2016-2025 - Making It The time came to quit losing money because of music. My catalog must generate income. Music is a luxury, not a necessity. It is egocentric, the songwriter's favorite word being "I." John Lennon could stretch the word "I" over several seconds. From my own list of 200 titles, 70 began with the word "I." Music people care about themselves and their families. They want money, and when they get it, they are gone. Each generation produces its music and rarely relates to that of previous generations. It is like language, tied to the sexual mores of the people making it. Everybody writes, and writers tout their own songs. It is money and self! Radio hits are recorded using state-of-the-art technology, and production cannot be overestimated. Listeners respond first and foremost to sound. Songs are intellectual things. A bad song with a good production can be a hit. A good song with a bad production cannot. The ideal situation is to have both a good song and a good production. I publish on the web! If people like my tunes, they can use their own resources to record them. I am conscientious about what I pitch, being interested in songs with positive messages. Colt Records J.K Coltrain owned Colt Records. One Night Stand was on the label and put "I Looked Twice!" on their CD. There was a release party at the Nashville Palace, March 28, 2009, and Michael went with me. Donna Ray was on Colt Records and recorded "Old Time Country Song". It was very traditional and went to #3 on the SoundClick Country and Western chart. LaDonna Kay in Kentucky did "Feel So Country" for myspace. Katrina Lynn from Pennsylvania recorded "Feel So Country" with David Walker in Lavergne, Tennessee, and put it on youtube. I did a CD called "God Given Talent" with Kymberly Bryson. We recorded at Direct Image and got airplay across northern Europe. Victoria Eman in The Netherlands put "Love Me Just A Little" on her album. Josh Oldaker in West Virginia put "Jesus Paid My Debt" on youtube and on his gospel CD. Josh has pressed 4000 copies and paid me 9.1 cents per copy as required by federal law. It is my strongest demos that are getting the attention of independent artists. Annie Bushmeyer Annie Bushmeyer is from Quincy, Illinois. She said she did not know a soul in Nashville and sat in her apartment the first night thinking, "What have I done?" She soon found a waitress job and started meeting people. I met Annie in a karaoke bar in Nashville the night of April 1, 2014, and was immediately drawn to her! Really, I was looking for a girl to sing over pre-recorded tracks so I could get on youtube. One thing led to another, and I showed Annie "Born To Sing," re-writing the first two lines to suit her. I showed her "Hard Earned Love," and we went in the demo studio at ascap, finally doing 6 vocals. "I Looked Twice!" was number 6. Then, came the crossroads. It was either quit or take Annie to Direct Image and Kenny Royster. I opted for the latter. We laid 3 tracks on September, 30, 2014. It was a rough ride! Kenny had raised his rates, and the approaching winter was to be a hard one. A redeeming factor was that Kenny's musicians had shed all pretense of "old" country. They offered a mix of country, rock and blues with Annie's vocals topping it off! By February, 2015, we had completed 6 songs: "Live My Dreams," "I Looked Twice!," "Born To Sing," "Hard Earned Love," "All Roads Lead To You," & "Love Me Just A Little." We were headed in the direction of an EP. I was sending songs to Internet Radio, and Annie and Johnny Thompson planned a showcase. Annie performed "Live My Dreams" with a band at the Vanderbilt student center. I got the idea of starting an ascap publishing company called "Colyer Bushmeyer Music," and that is what I did. I met with Ryan O'Grady in Membership Services on February 20, 2015, and founded the company. The 6 Annie and I recorded at Direct Image are the best I have done. They were played worldwide on Internet Radio. I have a list of stations I submitted them to. Georgetown Masters on Music Row did the mastering, and Annie and Johnny pressed 1000 EPs at Disc Makers. Annie did the Get It Girl showcase with Drew Haley @ SOUTH, 524 Demonbreun St., June 3, 2015. She performed "Live My Dreams," "Born To Sing" & "Love Me Just A Little." Annie Bushmeyer on The Stars of Tomorrow, July 2, 2015 She did a TV show at KMA Studios in Nashville. After an interview with J.K. Coltrain, she performed "Live My Dreams" & "I Looked Twice!" Annie Bushmeyer on NECAT television, Aug 26, 2015 I set it up for Annie to be on public access TV in Nashville. Jesse Goldberg, whom I knew from the Songwriters Guild, had a show, and Annie performed 3 songs from our EP. Her performance is on youtube. My goal is for my songs to be on major labels with world-class publishing companies like Sony/ATV and Warner-Chappell Music. Revised 2016 Jim Colyer
    1 point
  35. Heaven or Hell, need to pick ur role, energy feed, to draw ur soul, its all in the choice, so listen to his voice... as these boisterous daemons voices, screaming venomous beaming noises, poison us scheming with lust,/ this matrix so anxious, it seems to torture us, beneath the flux, never stuck in place, nor ever muck the pace, knuckles down with a busted face, buckles the clown in last place, no need to frown, turn it upside down, no longer allow, in, the negative min., that's the beginning, of sinnin... Heaven or Hell, need to pick your role, energy feed, to draw your soul, it's all in the choice, so listen to his voice... and enter his kingdom, his words of wisdom, read em, his people, need em, lead them, reminisin and wishin to envision the mission with in him, its in us all, try never again to fall, by learning to bend the law, why not avoid the flaw, make ties, mend with ya'll, just blessed the call, its all just right, remember always ur in his sight to feel his might, thats the blessing within, ... Heaven or Hell, need to pick ur role, energy feed, to draw ur soul, its all in the choice, so listen to his voice...
    1 point
  36. Sigur Ros - Ny Batteri, off their live album "Inni". If only Jonsi sang in English, they'd be bigger than Justin Bieber... ha! Here is their latest release: [url="http://youtu.be/Oc6zXSdYXm8"]<iframe width="435" height="344" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/Oc6zXSdYXm8" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>[/url]
    1 point
  37. Preview, leave feedback, and download! Preview / Download: <iframe src="http://emd.sharebeast.com/embed.php?type=basic&file=z1w8i7vdprmo&enableDownload=true&title=The Temptations - Just My Imagination (Deejay Light Soff Blend).mp3&dur=211.6&bg=F9F9F9&border=CCCCCC&color1=00A5DF" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" style="width:100%;height:52px;"></iframe>
    1 point
  38. Soundcrash presents a one-off joint headline show for the desert soul rebels Tinariwen and cosmopolitan folk singer/songwriter José González. An utterly unique night of musical excellence you don’t want to miss. You’ve got to be doing something right when you can count amongst your fans the likes of Thom Yorke, Brian Eno, Carlos Santana or TV On The Radio. Formed in rebel training camps in Libya, these exiled nomads-turned-rockstars of the Sahara have become the soundtrack for Touareg independence and reconciliation, combining traditional Touareg melodies with Malian, Western, Berber and Arabic influences to create spare, evolving, hypnotic grooves. As if Keith Richards, Santana, John Lee Hooker, various members of Primal Scream, Mogwai and the Grateful Dead had got lost in the Sahara for a decade and then returned as a fully-fledged desert band. They have opened 2012 with a bang, winning a Grammy Award for Best World Music Album and the award for Best Group at the Songlines Music Awards. José González, whose family fled their Argentinian homeland bound for Sweden when the military Junta came into power, provides a perfect counterpoint to the hypnotic relentlessness of Tinariwen’s grooves. Being exposed to latin-american melodies from an early age and drawing from the idiosyncrasies of Scandinavian folk José González’s music is a unique hybrid which takes the best of both worlds. Both poignantly beautiful and subtly warm, José González will win over your heart and mind. Concerts don’t get any better than this. Two hugely renowned acts come together for the first and only time tonight at The Shepherd’s Bush Empire for a very, very special show. Be there. http://www.soundcrashmusic.com/tinariwen-jose-gonzalez/ [img]http://www.soundcrashmusic.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/tjgWeb.jpg[/img]
    1 point
  39. ive bled verse after verse but this one feels like the first as i search out a verse thatll help me work out this hurt, i aint a rapper im a writer, but rap is my method of expressing my life to u in chapters but it feels with each chapter a piece of me dies, its given to u and living within these lines, so its in your eyes, read me as i skip beats, read me as i colapse into a coma, i left my legacy in 6 albums so fuck it im over, ive done all that i wanted acheived what i set out to, who the fuck would of believed i did it all by 22, so im through with all the bullshit lets be honest lifes pretend were born to live to die so im runing straight to end, i search within my soul is there any humanity left my writing seems to retain any sanity i have left
    1 point
  40. Don't look for this to get any airplay on any RADIO ONE affiliated radio station (or Trae's verse will get cut on their stations), but this track is EPIC! Download and leave feedback: <object type="application/x-shockwave-flash" data="http://static.hulkshare.com/p/player.swf" height=24 width=290><param name="movie" value="http://hulkshare.com/p/player.swf"><param name="FlashVars" value="soundFile=http://hulkshare.com/ap-p4zio4fyww41&titles=Wiz Khalifa ft. Trae Tha Truth & Big Sean - Phone Numbers - EXPLICIT - JefeMedia.mp3"><param name="quality" value="high"><param name="menu" value="false"><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></object> [url="http://hulkshare.com/p4zio4fyww41"]http://hulkshare.com/p4zio4fyww41[/url] HOT OR NOT?! Let us know!
    1 point
  41. 1 point
  42. Well done, Josh. I liked both pieces. I think you have a future in music - keep at it and drop back to keep us abreast of your latest work.
    1 point
  43. im from the southeast side, so let me define what these streets are like young minds are in decline tryin to get by in these meantimes and in the meantime... politicians on the tv screen saying we gotta be vigilant in order to defeat crime and that may seem fine, while there living in comfortable surroundings its found that round here some little kids wont even make it home for tea time teenagers are attracted to the prospect of fast money commiting street crime and most of them wouldnt change a thing even if they could make time rewind money and scraping by are just a fact of having to grow up and the police dont show love round here so why should we trust them whenever they show up an
    1 point
  44. Charlotte Gainsbourg and Beck dropped by KCRWs studios today to play songs from their new collaborative album, Irm, as well as selected cuts from 9 X5. Enjoy, <object width="424" height="421"><param name="movie" value="http://www.kcrw.com/music/programs/mb/mb100127charlotte_gainsbourg/embed-video"></param><param'>http://www.kcrw.com/music/programs/mb/mb100127charlotte_gainsbourg/embed-video"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.kcrw.com/music/programs/mb/mb100127charlotte_gainsbourg/embed-video" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="424" height="421"></embed></object> <object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value=" name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src=" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>
    1 point
  45. 3 MARVIN GAYE - WHAT'S GOING ON Released on May 21, 1971, "What's Going On"reflected the beginning of a new trend in soul music. With introspective lyrics about drug abuse, poverty and the Vietnam War, the album was an immediate sensation and has endured as a classic of early-1970s soul. In worldwide critics/artists and public surveys it is constantly voted as one of the landmark recordings in pop music history and is considered to be one of the greatest albums ever made. In 2003, the album was ranked number 6 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time What's Going On Lyrics You can find it at Amazon.
    1 point
  46. DJ Pheloneous Exclusive Remix as heard on airwaves coast to coast!!! Artist: DMXSong Title: No Love For MeGenre: Reggaeton/Hip Hop Remixhttp://www.sendspace.com/file/6rjpg8'>
    1 point
  47. 1 point
×
×
  • Create New...