Thursday 4 September 2008

Update: DMX Pleads Guilty To Drug Charges, Rapper Released From Jail




Despite cursing out a Miami judge who denied his bail yesterday(August� 27) , DMX avoided further jail time today (August 27) by pleading guilty to drug charges as part of plea deal.


According to TMZ, DMX plead guilty to trying to buy small amounts marijuana and cocaine in Miami in June.� The rapper was slapped with time served and a $483 fine.� He is now a free man.


The Yonkers bred rapper�had been in custody since being arrested in Miami on August 14th on a warrant for failing to appear in a Phoenix court for a drug releated case.


DMX had tried to bail himself out of jail since his arrest but the Phoenix judge who issued the warrant revoked his bond and he also faced the aforementioned drug charges in Miami.




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Monday 25 August 2008

Mp3 music: Ricardo Arjona






Ricardo Arjona
   

Artist: Ricardo Arjona: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Latin
Pop
Rock
Other
Folk

   







Ricardo Arjona's discography:


Quien dijo Ayer (cd2)
   

 Quien dijo Ayer (cd2)

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 13
Quien dijo Ayer (cd1)
   

 Quien dijo Ayer (cd1)

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 16
Mis Mejores Lentos
   

 Mis Mejores Lentos

   Year: 2006   

Tracks: 16
Adentro
   

 Adentro

   Year: 2006   

Tracks: 16
Santo Pecado (with Bonus CD)
   

 Santo Pecado (with Bonus CD)

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 14
Vivo
   

 Vivo

   Year: 1999   

Tracks: 16
Sin Danos a Terceros
   

 Sin Danos a Terceros

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 14
Si El Norte Fuera El Sur
   

 Si El Norte Fuera El Sur

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 14
Ineditas
   

 Ineditas

   Year: 1994   

Tracks: 12
Historias
   

 Historias

   Year: 1994   

Tracks: 14
Jesus Verbo No sustantivo
   

 Jesus Verbo No sustantivo

   Year: 1993   

Tracks: 10
Galeria Caribe
   

 Galeria Caribe

   Year: 1993   

Tracks: 19
Dejame Decir Que Te Amo
   

 Dejame Decir Que Te Amo

   Year: 1993   

Tracks: 9
Animal Nocturno
   

 Animal Nocturno

   Year: 1993   

Tracks: 12
En Vivo
   

 En Vivo

   Year:    

Tracks: 16






Guatemalan singer/songwriter Ricardo Arjona is one of the more than respected Latin artists, largely for his social sense of right and wrong and his integrity in writing and playing songs. Born in Antigua, he was interested in music from an early age merely later distinct to go a rural schoolteacher. He in any case played basketball game for the Guatemalan national squad, simply continued to play his guitar and compose songs in his spare m. After realizing that music was his unmatchable true passion, he stirred to Mexico City; once there, he began looking for a record contract and played at many student festivals, increasing his position as a protest isaac Merrit Singer.


Arjona eventually launch a narrow through PolyGram, merely the label attempted to market him as a Latin-lover type on his debut album, Dejame Decir Que Te Amo (Let Me Say I Love You). Predictably, the record album failed, and Arjona spent the adjacent pentad age didactics and from time to time composition songs recorded by other artists. He touched to Buenos Aires, began playing once again, and soon returned to the transcription sphere with corporeal more suited to his experiences as a protestation singer, viz. "Jesus Christ Verbo No Sustantivo," a controversial strain about his experiences at a Catholic school as a baby. It gained him a abbreviate with Sony, which released many of his nigh popular albums, including Brute Nocturno. Adentro, released in late 2005, was nominative for a 2006 Grammy in the Latin Pop Album category.






Friday 27 June 2008

Duran Duran - Taylor Madonna Copied Duran Duran


DURAN DURAN star JOHN TAYLOR has hit out at pop superstar MADONNA, accusing her of copying their collaboration with JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE and superproducer TIMBALAND.

Madonna teamed up with the hitmaking duo to record songs for her new album Hard Candy, and her single 4 Minutes - featuring the pair - has become a chart topper across the world.

But bassist Taylor claims the Holiday singer stole the idea for the duet from the 1980s rockers, after Duran Duran joined Timberlake and Timbaland in the studio for their 2007 album Red Carpet Massacre.

However, he insists he isn't surprised: "It wouldn't be the first time Madonna's copied us. She's been doing it for years."





See Also

Saturday 14 June 2008

The 'Indy 4' That Never Was? We Compare 'Crystal Skull' To 'City Of The Gods' Script Leaked Online




What would movie fans give to read every draft of "Indy 4" — especially Frank Darabont's? Well, the wait is over: That very version popped up online late Wednesday.

At least we think it did. Titled "Indiana Jones and the City of the Gods," the version of the script (before it was taken down by legal eagles) is either the Darabont version or the most authentic, beautifully written fake we've ever seen. (Calls to Paramount and Lucasfilm were unreturned at press time.)

And, make no mistake about it, there are moments of real beauty in this thing. So what's the biggest difference between the two versions?

The overall arc of the film more or less follows that of "Crystal Skull," with the adventure beginning at a desert military base/ warehouse, continuing at Marshall College, and ending with Indy and company deep in the jungles of South America searching for skulls.

But the four biggest differences in this draft also double as the four best: No Mutt Williams; no Mac; a tougher, more "Raiders"-esque Marion; and a climax that not only gives Indy something to do (how in the world did David Koepp think to give Indy nothing?) but forces him to make a decision that rivals the end of "Crusade" (the cup or a father's love?), crystallizing the character and his history into one momentous singularity. Bravo!

So how good is Marion, really? Great. The first time we see her onscreen, she literally punches Indy in the face. She's also married, and not to Dr. Jones, but to a rival archaeologist turned communist spy. The banter between the two old lovers sparkles, a lot of it recalling dialogue from "Raiders." For example:

Marion: "What's the matter, Jones? Mileage finally catching up with you?"

Indy: "It ain't the mileage, sweetheart. It's the years!"

A "Raiders" reference! Are there any more? Lots and lots.

We don't see the Ark in this movie, though we can assume from the description that we're in the same warehouse. We also see Sallah (briefly), a play on Indy's fear of snakes, repeated references in the dialogue (Indy: "Marion Ravenwood. I always knew someday you'd come walking back through my door"), and even the golden fertility idol.

Are the groan-inducing moments from "Crystal Skull" in here too? Surviving a nuclear blast in a fridge? A rubber tree that supports a car? Man-eating ants? A character swinging through the trees like Tarzan? Yeah, they're all here, as well as some even sillier stuff, like an "Anaconda"-esque snake that devours Indy whole and a cameo for Henry Jones Sr. that has him singing — singing — Frank Sinatra's "Fly Me to the Moon." Also, there's this dialogue:

Marion: "Oh yeah, what about that glamour gal you spent time with?"

Indy: "She moved out to Hollywood to be a star. Last I heard, she fell in love and married some big-shot director."

(In real life, Kate Capshaw, who played Willie Scott in "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom," is married to Steven Spielberg. Indefensible.)

Is the silly stuff still as silly? Not really. That's the thing. We can't believe we're going to defend a refrigerator ride on a nuclear wave, but we're going to. For one, the conversation after the event is much more pointed — Indy actually talks about nuclear weapons with his interrogators, telling them that he doesn't think anybody should have that much power. And that exchange, that line, means so much to this film, especially to the climax, that it's easy to say it works better. The film also ends not with a spaceship flying away into space, but a spaceship trying to fly away into space, only to crash-land and explode in a second nuclear inferno. So it's a silly setup that has a serious and poignant payoff. Nobody should have that much power. Not even the aliens.

Oh yeah, there are still aliens. Well, one alien. He talks this time, specifically calling himself a being worthy of worship. We see scenes of primitive man mistaking them for gods. (The red-staters would have a hemorrhage.)

So this climax we keep talking about. What is it?

Indy, Marion, Oxley (yeah, he's here), Marion's husband (the rival archaeologist) and a few others deliver the crystal skull to the temple, placing it on the head of a crystal skeleton. Soon, five members of the group are lifted into the air and offered anything their hearts desire. One wishes for ultimate power. One for ultimate wisdom. Another to be the deadliest creature alive. Indy? We'll let Marion ask:

Marion: "Back in the Lost City. When you were in the dream cloud, what did you see?"

Indy: "It was like ... seeing everything in the universe all at once. Like suddenly knowing all the secrets there are to know. The meaning of it all."

Marion: "So why didn't you take it? All that fortune and glory?"

Indy: "I did."

And then they kiss. Good line. After falling from the cloud, Indy shoots the skull, destroying the entire temple — again, denying any creature that much power. We call that a climax in this business. Scratch that: We call that an awesome climax.

And the action scenes? Some really good ones, including a rooftop fight between Indy and a Russian assassin, and a midair plane fight in which Indy battles his rival from the wings of a biplane.

Final verdict?

A million times better than "Crystal Skull." Not perfect. Not "Raiders." But it's got its moments of pure Indy magic. Darabont obviously loves the character, and more than anything else, his passion is evident in each and every scene. If made, it could have been a welcome addition to the Indy cannon and easily earned a place alongside the other sequels.

Check out everything we've got on "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.






See Also

Sunday 1 June 2008

The Distillers

The Distillers   
Artist: The Distillers

   Genre(s): 
Punk
   Other
   



Discography:


Coral Fang   
 Coral Fang

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 11


Sing Sing Death House   
 Sing Sing Death House

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 12


The Distillers   
 The Distillers

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 14




 






Saturday 24 May 2008

Kip Mazuy

Kip Mazuy   
Artist: Kip Mazuy

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


The Sweet Nectar of Silence   
 The Sweet Nectar of Silence

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 5




 






Sunday 11 May 2008

Cut Copy , In Ghost Colours

Cut Copy , In Ghost Colours



Quartet eld is a long metre in these accelerated days. Since Switch off Copy last released an album, we’ve witnessed entire careers crash and burn. However, longanimity is rewarded for those wHO first felled seam for the Melbourne-based ternion when they supported Franz Ferdinand the Catholic or Axis Party, or indeed were lucky enough to witness them to a lower place Daft Punk rocker on the Australian ramification of those picky robots’ world spell. The parole of mouth helped turn their debut, Bright Like Neon Making love, with attended singles such as Leaving Nowhere, into a slow-burning blast. Already in their native Australia, In Ghost Colors has entered the charts at number one. Although their descent crataegus laevigata non be as heights here, there’s no cause wherefore it shouldn’t be purchased in droves and Cut Copy adopted as our have.

Recorded over a sixer week stretch in Freshly House of York with DFA brain and in-house producer Tim Goldsworthy, In Ghost Colors is a fantastic montage of an album. Single min it’s like ELO on E (opener Feel The Love), the next it’s as if Kevin Shields has joined Technique-era New Rules of order (Unforgettable Season) or Interpol have in the end conceded to their inner discotheque (Midnight Runner). Those of you world Health Organization visit the blogosphere will be well aware of the superb rave-up of Hearts On Fire; full of laser-guided moments and euphoric breakdowns.

This is doubtless Cut Copy’s pop album, as the footstep seldom drops below boogie-woogie, and with practically of it mixed into each other, it gives off the vibration of a perfective tense album to hurrying through the city at night to or an nonpareil dance record album for those a second to a fault old to throw shapes in public, simply occasionally snap moves around the kitchen. Indeed with its melange of ideas and references advent at you in from each one strain, it’s exhausting to pick out everything, just this is by no means a bad thing. In Spook Colours rewards you with newly thaumaturgy with from each one mind, and sounds even better when the bloody rain stops.