Thursday, 4 September 2008

David Duchovny's Sex Addiction Fails To Halt TV Show

...more David Duchovny �

X Files star David Duchovny�s latest hit TV show Californication will not be scrapped off-air despite the actor enrolling himself into a rehab for sex addiction.


Ironically, actor David plays a sex-loving author in the bawdy express � if the shoe fits.


The married star checked himself into rehab final week in a offer to control his own sexual urges.�


Bosses at the series' TV network Showtime have confirmed all 12 episodes for the second season have been filmed and are scheduled to debut on schedule this September, according to the New York Post.


A interpreter tells the newspaper plans for the third season "have thus far to be decided."

Monday, 25 August 2008

Download Bade Ghulam Ali Khan mp3






Bade Ghulam Ali Khan
   

Artist: Bade Ghulam Ali Khan: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Ethnic

   







Discography:


Best of
   

 Best of

   Year:    

Tracks: 5






Bade Ghulam Ali Khan (1902-1968) was one of the great vocalists of the 20th century. He was one of the starring vocalists of the Patiala gharana -- Patiala was unitary time a princedom only it forms function of the modern-day Indian state of Punjab and the gharana seated there is notable for the quality of its vocalists. The panache and right-down fashion of the gharana lives on in Bade Ghulam Ali Khan's son Munawar Ali Khan and in turn in Ajoy Chakrabarty world Health Organization conditioned from him. Regrettably he is ill-served by material in catalogue.






Friday, 15 August 2008

National Association Of Chain Drug Stores Pushing For Separate Food, Drug Regulations


The National Association of Chain Drug Stores has begun lobbying House Energy and Commerce Committee leaders' staff in opposition to stricter track-and-trace rules in the heat of the recent salmonella outbreak, CongressDaily reports. Committee Chair John Dingell (D-Mich.) recently released a revised version of the do drugs portion of an FDA overhaul invoice on which he is working that would give the agency more authority to oversee food and drug products. According to CongressDaily, when Dingell's

Thursday, 7 August 2008

My Getaway

When My Getaway came by the Billboard studios late

Friday, 27 June 2008

Lish

Lish   
Artist: Lish

   Genre(s): 
Trance: Psychedelic
   



Discography:


Free Fall   
 Free Fall

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 9




 






Sunday, 22 June 2008

Mongol - 6/6/2008

While American filmmakers flog the CGI action to drunken extremes (300, Beowulf), Russian director Sergei Bodrov spits at shortcuts (although he still digs CGI) and recalls the great movie spectacles of the old school, invoking the invigorating spirits of Abel Gance, Sergei Bondarchuk, and Samuel Bronston, in his rousing, grand, and old-fashioned epic Mongol.



The first film in a trilogy, Mongol charts the course of the young nine-year-old Temudjin, beginning in 1172 on the barren and unforgiving Mongolian steppes, and his ensuing trials and tribulations after his father's murder until 1206, when the adult Temudjin (the great Tadanobu Asano) becomes the legendary Genghis Khan, uniter of the Mongolian tribes, and soon to be conqueror of the world, all set to an incredibly rich musical score by Tuomas Kantelinen.



Based upon an ancient Mongolian epic poem written after the death of Khan, the film takes a favorable look at Genghis Khan and treats him, not as a bloodthirsty monster, but as an astute and able political and military leader and a man with love and devotion to his wife and child. There is no wrath in this Khan. Rather Mongol presents a Khan with a spring in his step and love in his heart. And, OK, some wrath.



The film is magnetically centered by the charismatic performance of Asano as Temudjin. The first image of the film is Temudjin, held in captivity. Asano, through the bars of his cage, stares down the camera and pierces the audience with the intense stillness and power of his eyes. It is that gaze that is cast over the rest of the film and with Asano's commanding presence it is easy to believe that Mongol clans would fall behind Temudjin as their beacon of unity -- even if the first shot of Temudjin as an adult has Asano running like hell from his arch enemy Targutai (Amadu Mamadakov).



Bodrov mounts his film in splendor, reveling in the Ford-like landscapes where men are enveloped in the stony expanse and the sky is filled with ominous clouds or intense thunder and lightning bearing down upon forlorn figures on horseback. The camera is fluid and impressionistic, picking up geese in flight over a river, reeds bending in the soft wind, or mystical renditions of filigree from an ancient God. And then there are the mighty battle scenes that Bodrov wades into with relish, set pieces of clanging swords and fearsome heroics, where the blood flows like droplets of rain.



But even with all the grandiosity and robust action, Bodrov makes a point to return to the personal relationships that bind this larger-than-life Temudjin to humanity -- the bond between Temudjin and his strong-willed wife Borte (Khulan Chuluun) and Temudjin's doomed friendship with clan leader Jamukha (Honglei Sun, in a refreshingly chummy performance). As in any good "cast-of-thousands" extravaganza, it is the ability of the director to shift gears and make the legends personable and likeable that is all the difference.



In spite of it all, though, Bodrov doesn't quite overcome the trap of depicting a legendary figure (Bodrov should have taken another look at Ford's Young Mr. Lincoln to see how it's done). With all the rabble-rousing vigor, there is not much at stake in Mongol and no surprises. One presumes the audience knows going into the film all the markers in the life of Genghis Khan that have to be touched upon -- or at least the signposts of the genre. But Bodrov and co-writer Arif Aliyev leave nothing to the imagination; it is all spelled out. For instance, like a mantra we are repeatedly told that Targutai and Temudjin will tangle in the future ("When he grows up, I'll kill him." "Someday you will have to kill him." "I won't just kill you -- I'll kill you piece by piece."). By the time the final confrontation occurs between the two, it is somewhat less than apocalyptic. And even an opening Mongolian proverb telescopes the entire film: "Do not scorn a weak cub. He may become a brutal fighter." In its story, Mongol is a bore.



Mongol is a less film narrative than a hagiographic film diorama. But Mongol is presented with such vitality, passion, and intensity that as an object of cinematic contemplation it cuts across critical prevarications like a head-lopping saber.







Baby Khaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaan!

See Also

Saturday, 14 June 2008

Frida

Frida   
Artist: Frida

   Genre(s): 
Pop
   Other
   



Discography:


Svenska popfavoriter   
 Svenska popfavoriter

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 14


Djupa andetag   
 Djupa andetag

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 10


Something`s Going On   
 Something`s Going On

   Year: 1982   
Tracks: 11


Shine   
 Shine

   Year:    
Tracks: 10




Frida, whose full constitute is Anni-Frid Lyngstad Fredriksson Andersson, was a Scandinavian solo vocaliser in the sixties and seventies earlier she joined a chemical group being put together by her young man (and by and by husband), Benny Andersson, ABBA. ABBA was a massive external success especially during the second half of the '70s; the chemical group disbanded at the start up of the '80s, and Frida, wHO divorced Andersson, returned to solo work with the Phil Collins-produced Something's Going On in 1982. Among her early releases were 1984's Beam and 1996's Djupa Andetag.





CAKE Vocalist Tells REVUE He's Trading Touring for Farming