Wednesday 28 May 2008

Big Mountain

Big Mountain   
Artist: Big Mountain

   Genre(s): 
Reggae
   



Discography:


New Day   
 New Day

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 11


Big Mountain - Things to Come   
 Big Mountain - Things to Come

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 14


Free Up   
 Free Up

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 12


Resistance   
 Resistance

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 17


Unity   
 Unity

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 13




Much care UB40, American reggae band Big Mountain brought a selfsame commercialized adaptation of Jamaican music to the American mainstream when their traverse of Peter Frampton's "Baby, I Love Your Way" reached the Top Ten in early 1994. To the band's credit, though, their trinity albums carry reggae roots music combined with only when various R&B-ish covers, and the lineup includes iI Jamaicans with first-class credential: rhythm guitarist Tony Chin and drummer Santa Davis -- both of whom played with the Peter Tosh isthmus and the Soul Syndicate.


Vainglorious Mountain was originally formed in San Diego as the Rainbow Warriors. After several age of dizzying lineups and deuce name changes -- first-class honours degree to Shiloh and in conclusion to Big Mountain -- the group centralised about vocalist/guitarist Quino, with round guitar player Jerome Cruz, drummers Gregory Blakney and Lance Rhodes, keyboard participant Manfred Reinke, and bassist Lynn Copeland. That lineup released Wake Up on the Quality judge in 1992 and charted "Disturb My Light" other the undermentioned year. The exclusive reached figure 51 in America, but only one year later Big Mountain began to experiment with several different guitarists. After several changes, Tony Chin became useable and united Quino and Copeland with new additions Santa Davis, James McWhinney (rhythm section) and keyboard players Billy Stoll and Michael Hyde. During roger Huntington Sessions for their sec album, film producer Ron Fair approached Big Mountain most transcription a cover of "Baby, I Love Your Way" for his forthcoming film Reality Bites. Included on the soundtrack and the group's 1994 1 album, the single reached identification number six-spot in the U.S. and became a general hit.


Despite Big Mountain's success on the commercial bolt down charts, most of the reggae community remained faithful to the band; the group headlined two straight Reggae Sunsplash festivals in Jamaica during massive existence tours that crisscrossed Europe, North and South America, Asia and Indonesia. Third album Opposition was released in 1995, followed deuce years later by Free Up.






Monday 26 May 2008

Former La's man to play Tapestry Festival

Former member of The La's, John Power, is set to play the Tapestry Goes West Festival.

Jeffrey Lewis is also due to perform at the the festival, which takes place in Margam County Park, Port Talbot in south Wales between July 8 and 9.

The full line-up is:

Jeffrey Lewis and The Jitters
John Power
Circulus
Radio Luxembourg
The Wolf People
The Dulocks
The Beep Seals
Threatmantics
Danny And The Champions Of The WorlD
El Goodo
Diagonal
Tokyo Dragons
Zevas and Pepper
Alan Tyler
Jim Jones Revue
Zun Zun Egui
Big Boss Man
The See See
The Cherry Bombers
Los Chicos
Tim Tenyen

To check the availability of Tapestry Goes West tickets and get all the latest listings, go to NME.COM/GIGS now, or call 0871 230 1094.




May 19, 2008 at Tripod, Dublin -
May 20, 2008 at Oran Mor, Glasgow -
May 21, 2008 at Brudenell Social Club, Leeds -
More La's tickets

LTJ Experience

LTJ Experience   
Artist: LTJ Experience

   Genre(s): 
Jazz
   



Discography:


When the rains begins to fall   
 When the rains begins to fall

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 12




 





Jimmy Buffett continues to add wind to tour sails

Christopher Short and Vir Unis

Christopher Short and Vir Unis   
Artist: Christopher Short and Vir Unis

   Genre(s): 
Ambient
   



Discography:


The Yellow House   
 The Yellow House

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 6




 






Indiana Jones Is Our Professor Too: The 19 Things We've Learned From Indy




He's the world's most pre-eminent archaeologist, but for millions of fans worldwide, Indiana Jones isn't just a professor at Marshall College, he's our teacher as well. In the 19 years since "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" hit theaters, we've had a lot of time to absorb his lessons.

So in honor of the release of his latest adventure, "Kingdom of the Crystal Skull," we present the 19 most important things we've learned from watching Indiana Jones.

1. The Size of Your Rod Does Matter

If you listen to anyone telling you differently, you're literally just seeing one side of the coin. Remember to take back one Kadan to honor the Hebrew God whose rod it is. By the way, this is as good a time as any to let readers know that I'm not allowed to make circumcision jokes on MTV.

2. Never Get Caught With a Sword in a Gunfight

Forget all your fancy maneuvers and impressive showmanship. The simplest solutions in life are often also the best. Sometimes, problems just aren't as complicated as we make them out to be.

3. Anything Goes!

Giant boulders, restless tribes, poisoned darts, double crosses ... as you travel through life, expect the unexpected.

4. Only the Penitent Man Will Pass

In the face of seemingly insurmountable challenges, remember to be humble and learn your own limitations. It's OK to rely on a little luck and last-second inspiration.

5. Step Where He steps, and Don't Touch Anything!

Life is full of booby traps. Find yourself in an unfamiliar environment? Try proceeding with caution, and if you can, bring a guide. There's no need to leap when you can look ...

6. Take a Leap of Faith

... Except when you have to. Not all life's answers can be found in "The Chronicles of St. Anselm." Your father wouldn't steer you wrong — learn to trust in something bigger than yourself.

7. It's OK to Be a Little Crazy

He no crazy, he nuts! And that's OK too. When all else fails, and life has you cornered, do the one thing they least expect. Hey, what do you have to lose?

8. Know Your Competition

Think you can drink anyone under the table? It's probably best you don't try it against someone with their own family label. No matter how good you are at something, chances are there's someone out there who's better.

9. Don't Play Poker With a Pickpocket

Of course, sometimes the competitions will be rigged. Look, no matter how cute he is, remember your enemy has an ace up his sleeve. Listen to us, and you'll live longer.

10. Never Insult Your Host

This is more food than they've eaten in a week. When in Rome, sometimes you have to eat what the Romans eat, even if it's chilled monkey brains. Don't embarrass yourself. Do, and the next thing you know they've sent an assassin to your room.

11. Avoid Dark Tunnels

They contain snakes, rats and really, really large bugs. Trust us, take the long way around. That said ...

12. It's Always Gonna Be Snakes

Snakes! Why does it always have to be snakes? 'Cause life isn't fair, that's why. It's going to test you, challenge you, push you past your limitations. Conquer your greatest fear — even if it means you have to call in a rope — and you can do anything.

13. Stay in School

You never know when a little knowledge is going to save your life. Remember: In the Latin alphabet, Jehovah begins with an I.

14. Don't Call Us Junior

What's in a name? Only our identity, self-worth and life story — all wrapped up in a neat little appellation. Forget what Shakespeare said: A rose by any other name just wouldn't smell as sweet. You call him Dr. Jones, lady, his professional name.

15. Let It Go

Sometimes our obsessions can get the better of us, make us forget who we are and why we're here. Never put an object of desire above a friend or a family member. Know that the true value of material goods will never equal the value of a father's love. Let it go.

16. Choose ... Wisely

The quest for the Grail is the quest for the divine in all of us. Don't be fooled by fancy jewels and sparkling diamonds — not all that glitters is gold. The most valuable things in life are often the ugliest, and most worn from use.

17. Your First Love Will Always Be the Strongest

Who else would you go all the way to Nepal for? Sure, you were both young and stupid, but remember how you felt when you first fell in love? Chances are, that's as good as it's gonna get. Someday, if you're lucky, that special someone will walk back through the door.

18. Archeology Is the Quest for Truth, Not Fact
Yeah, we inverted Indiana's statement to his students, but so does Indiana himself, in action if not words. Forget fortune and glory (and Dr. Tyree's philosophy class right down the hall): The objects we choose to seek in life say more about who we are than what they are. Seek to be illuminated.

19. It's Not the Years, It's the Mileage

Life is just one adventure after another. It's OK to be tired or broken-down if you're caught up in the middle of it all. Don't go to the grave with your odometer stuck at zero.

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

Going to religious extremes

Leconte provokes with ‘Jerks’ docu





Do we have the right to caricature God? This and other questions involving religion and freedom of speech raised by the controversial Danish cartoons depicting the prophet Mohammed are examined by "It's Tough Being Loved by Jerks," a documentary by Frenchman Daniel Leconte which unspools today as a special screening.


Leconte says his aim is to provoke healthy debate, even if that upsets some people due to their faith. "We have to have this debate, because when we do, we win the argument," he said. "As soon as you explain that it's not Muslims that are targeted (in the caricatures), but those who kill in the name of that religion, it's different. It's like the difference between the Inquisition and all other Catholics. I wouldn't put Torquemada in with Francis of Assissi. The extremists know they'll lose in debate, so they spread terror to widen the gap between East and West, between Islam and democracy."


The film follows the unprecedented 2007 trial of a French newspaper for allegedly insulting the Muslim people, and with radical Islam a hot topic for international media, it is bound to attract interest from buyers here.


The movie's starting point is the publication of 10 caricatures by Danish paper Jyllands Posten, which prompted protests and flag-burning in sections of the Arab/Muslim community worldwide.


When the caricatures were subsequently printed by Gallic paper Charlie Hebdo, the satirical weekly added a front-cover cartoon portraying Mohammed weeping into his hands and declaring: "It's tough being loved by jerks," in specific reference to Islamic fundamentalists.


The publication prompted the Paris Mosque and other Muslim organizations to start legal proceedings for "insult towards a group of people on grounds of their religion" -- by the plaintiffs as racism.


"If the plaintiffs win this case, we won't wake up in the same France," comments in the film "Shoah" director Claude Lanzmann, who testified at the trial.


Leconte, who was also called as a witness, produced "It's Tough" through his production banner Films En Stock. Pay-channel Canal Plus came on board as did French independent Pyramide, which took French theatrical rights and international sales, with all other territories available going into Cannes.


The film follows the build up to the trial and recreates the arguments that were presented in court through interviews with many of the principal protagonists. The verdict cleared Charlie Hebdo of the charges.



See Also

The Edge of Heaven - 5/20/2008

Head-On director Fatih Akin turns his focus from the intimacy of a botched marriage of convenience between a lapsed conservative Muslim and a hard-drinking Turk in his previous film to The Edge of Heaven, a globetrotting human-rights drama about deported Turkish renegades and the lesbians and bookshop owners who love them.



Awarded the Cannes prize for screenwriting at last year's ceremonies, Akin's new world is sparked by a moral dilemma that plagued his lost Muslim girl in Head-On. Yeter (Nursel K�se), "Jessy" to her johns, is a faithful Muslim despite her prostitute day job. The local fundamentalists bully her on the bus and stare daggers at her on the boulevard. After a few times servicing Ali (Tuncel Kurtiz), an elderly customer, she's asked to come and live with him as a roommate and periodic sex slave. K�se's face, fitted with age and a wincing grief, becomes a hardened casket when she's with Ali but melts into tender matriarchy when she's introduced to Nejat (the great Baki Davrak), Ali's German-language professor son.



The tenderness she shows Nejat accounts for the professor's unshakable diligence in finding her lost daughter when Yeter dies unexpectedly. The young professor makes his way to Turkey and buys a German bookstore, hanging flyers and other such public displays in the hope of finding Yeter's daughter. Little does he know that her daughter G�l (Nurg�l Yesil�ay, an actress who can play sexy and self-serious within the same note) has just made her way to Germany after escaping a group of Turkish radicals. She makes her way to a university and falls into the bed of a Spanish-English major named Charlotte (Patrycia Ziolkowska). A scene where they share a joint drag is one of Akin's most erotic shots to date.



G�l is found during a routine pull-over and sent back to Turkey with Charlotte hot on her tracks, much to the chagrin of Charlotte's mother (Hanna Schygulla). Charlotte befalls a tragedy right as she begins renting a room from Nejat, causing the mother to come in contact with the professor... and around and around we go. Certainly, the crossed wires of this we-are-all-connected melodrama are more intriguing and engaging than the this-is-racism pandering of Crash and Babel, but the content comes off as light. Nejat's quoting of Goethe's challenging thoughts on revolution points rather blatantly to the pains of G�l's revolt.



The intersections are nicely played but the reasoning behind them seems near-empty. Blessed with a first-rate cast, Akin's ability to keep interest is exercised to great ends but his attempts at wringing intimacy out of this broad palette would seem to be a fool's charge. The Edge of Heaven flirts with close-to-the-vest perceptions of culture, sexuality, and identity but never indulges in them. Emotions remain on the sleeve, as does history.



Aka Auf der anderen Seite.

See Also

Juliana Ondar

Juliana Ondar   
Artist: Juliana Ondar

   Genre(s): 
Folk: Neo-Folk
   



Discography:


Collection   
 Collection

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 14