Monday 8 September 2008

Noel Gallagher - Noel Gallagher Attacked During Toronto Musical Festival

Oasis guitar player Noel Gallagher was pushed to the ground by a fan at a concert in Toronto, Canada on Sunday night.

The Mancunian musician was playing the band's song (What's the Story?) Morning Glory when a world rushed the stage at the V festival and shoved him from behind.

Security guards chop-chop restrained the intruder patch Noel's brother Liam, the group's lead singer, had to be held back as he attempted to retaliate.

The interloper was by and by charged with assault, according to the Globe and Mail newspaper.

The incident caused a brief interlude in Oasis' set which resumed with The Importance of Being Idle and likewise contained renditions of Wonderwall and Don't Look Back in Anger.

Their new album Dig Out Your Soul, the band's seventh, is released on October 12th.

The fan attack was captured by a fan and can be seen on YouTube.





More information

Tuesday 19 August 2008

Elvis fans ignore rain for graveside vigil

MEMPHIS, Tenn. �

Mary Lou Martell put it off as long as she could. But she finally had to head to Memphis for an anniversary watch at Elvis Presley's grave.


"It's my first base Elvis Week. I'm a little ashamed to state that, but it is," Martell, 60, said as she took part in a candle flame procession to Presley's grave accent at Graceland, his former Memphis residence. "We watched it on the computing machine last year and I finally said, `I have to be part of that.'"


The procession, called the "Candlelight Vigil," drew respective thousand Elvis fans wHO lined up in the street in front of Graceland for a file procession up a long, winding drive to his grave in a modest garden.


Fans weren't scared away by an intermittent drizzle during the vigil, which began at 9:30 p.m. EDT.


"We're doing fine," Martell said, peeping out from the hood of a plastic anorak. "It's just for Elvis we appease out doing this."


The watch, which runs into the early morn, is the highlight of a weeklong series of fan-club meetings, dances and Elvis-impersonator contests to commemorate the day of remembrance of his death. He died of heart disease and drug abuse at Graceland on Aug. 16, 1977. He was 42.


Martell of Dunkirk, N.Y., aforementioned she visits Graceland ofttimes but avoided Elvis Week in the past because of the crowds. She came early for her first graveside vigil, though, setting up a lawn chair at 9 a.m. at Graceland's front gates.


Many Elvis pilgrims return each year, and the graveside vigil draws visitors from around the universe. But it's largely unheeded by Memphis residents.


Jennifer Hobson, 29, of Memphis and a mathematical group of hometown friends formed a "Blue Hawaii" club to render to change that and sent extinct vigil invitations to their friends.


The group set up a modest canvas canopy in the street in front of Graceland and decorated it with inflatable palm trees, blue lights and an Elvis raid sporting a blue lei.


"This is region of our city," Hobson said, "just when we come down here, we rarely determine people we know. Y'all need to come out."


Hobson said the group had to forget some decorations at place because of the rain.



"I have a velvet Elvis, but because of the rain we couldn't bring out all of our good stuff," Hobson said.


Graceland supports a sprawling complex of relic shops, and fans wait for the procession packed the stores pouring over Viva Las Vegas bobble head dolls for $19.99, Burning Love scented candles for $14.99, Jailhouse Rock T-shirts for $24.99 and hundreds of other Elvis-flavored gifts and do-dads.


Nancy Rooks, a former Graceland cook, was set up at a souvenir shop at table to sell her book, "Elvis' Maid Remembers," and speak with fans.


Generally, the 71-year-old Rooks aforementioned, the fans ask about Elvis' personal habits, when he went to bed, when he got up, what he liked to eat.


"I tell them he ate breakfast at 5 o'clock in the afternoon, but so he'd eat dinner at 1 o'clock at night," she said. "We always had a meat loaf cooked, exactly in event he wanted it. If he didn't want meat loaf, then we knew to give him joint beef. He liked psyche food."










More information

Saturday 9 August 2008

Patrick O'hearn

Patrick O'hearn   
Artist: Patrick O'hearn

   Genre(s): 
Ambient
   Electronic
   Soundtrack
   



Discography:


Slow Time   
 Slow Time

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 8


Beautiful World   
 Beautiful World

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 7


So Flows The Current   
 So Flows The Current

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 11


Indigo   
 Indigo

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 9


Alien Cargo   
 Alien Cargo

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 20


A Windham Hill Essential   
 A Windham Hill Essential

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 13


Crying Freeman   
 Crying Freeman

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 19


Trust   
 Trust

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 8


White Sands   
 White Sands

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 15


The Private Music Of   
 The Private Music Of

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 14


Mix Up   
 Mix Up

   Year: 1990   
Tracks: 8


Eldorado   
 Eldorado

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 10


Rivers Gonna Rise   
 Rivers Gonna Rise

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 10


Between Two Worlds   
 Between Two Worlds

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 10


Ancient Dreams   
 Ancient Dreams

   Year: 1985   
Tracks: 7




 






Tuesday 1 July 2008

Nattefrost

Nattefrost   
Artist: Nattefrost

   Genre(s): 
Metal: Death,Black
   Ambient
   



Discography:


Terrorist (Necronaut Pt. I)   
 Terrorist (Necronaut Pt. I)

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 13


De Som Sejrede ...   
 De Som Sejrede ...

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 10


Blood and Vomit   
 Blood and Vomit

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 11




 





DJ Running Man and Van-Da-Flex

Wednesday 25 June 2008

Qawwali

Qawwali   
Artist: Qawwali

   Genre(s): 
Folk
   



Discography:


The Sabri Brothers   
 The Sabri Brothers

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 4


Super Hit Qawwalies   
 Super Hit Qawwalies

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 9


Warsi Brothers vol. 2   
 Warsi Brothers vol. 2

   Year:    
Tracks: 7




 






Monday 16 June 2008

O'Neal Gets Candid About Drug Problems On Street Corner

A candid Tatum O'Neal staged an impromptu press conference on the streets of New York on Wednesday after she was cornered by cameramen and journalists quizzing her about her drug arrest. The embattled actress has been charged with seventh-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance after cops caught her exchanging money with a dealer three blocks from her home. But rather than run away from her problems, O'Neal chose to address the media members who followed her out of her home of Wednesday afternoon, and then stopped to chat with them as she waited on a street corner for a taxi. The 44-year-old said, "Every day is a great day if I'm not using," before insisting, "I have peace in my life, I made a mistake... I have a very good life. I made a bad mistake and unfortunately I'm well known and this is what happens." O'Neal also told the gathered press that she was attending a 12-step drug abuse program daily, adding "That's really helping." The actress concluded her 10 minute street corner chat by telling the media members, "It's an everyday struggle and you try to do the best that you can and some days, unfortunately, it doesn't pan out the way you'd like it too."


See Also

Tuesday 3 June 2008

Fox talks about Lost in the future

Actor Matthew Fox, who plays Jack in 'Lost', has been talking about what lies ahead in the series.
Speaking to the film website comingsoon.net about his new thriller 'Vantage Point', Fox found the time to talk about 'Lost'.
Following the resolution of the writers' strike in the US, Fox said that he would be going back to shoot more episodes for the fourth series of 'Lost' this spring.
"We probably won't get all of the eight [episodes] we owe," said Fox, "but I'm sure we'll get five or six of them."
Fox remained coy on the development of his character, Jack, and whether he would become a hero or villain in the series.
He said: "I think the idea of hero or good guy, bad guy is sort of an antiquated notion in a lot of respects. I think it's more interesting to accept the complexity of all of us and hope that he makes heroic choices in very difficult circumstances."
He continued: "I really feel like 'Lost' and what I'm getting to do on that show is pretty complex, and it's evolving as well. (Jack) sort of started as this idea. Everybody wanted him to be this heroic guy, and actually, he's really flawed and the island is stripping away this deep compassion in him and bringing out a much darker side, so there's an evolution that's happening in the character that's always been important to Damon [Lindelof, 'Lost' creator] and myself."
Of the fourth series, Fox said: "I think the fourth season will close those two moments of time of Jack in the future and Jack feeling like he's being rescued. The season will be about answering all those questions of who got off with him? Who's in the casket? Why does he want to go back, this guy of all people? Why is he suicidal and desperate to go back?"
In his interview with comingsoon.net, Fox did offer a hint about the timeframe of the series, when asked how much time had passed on the island since the aeroplane crash.
He said: "If you're going to talk about from Jack in the plane crash to Jack in the future, that's about a year-and-a-half, and Jack on the island now would be about 120 days."
For more on 'Lost', read our blog here.
Visit the show's website here.