Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Newsboys

Newsboys





One of the more than media-exposed Christian rock bands of the '90s, Newsboys formed in the former '80s about a core of John James, Peter Furler, and Philip Urry. Though former in their career the stria was panned for a perceived over-reliance on religious clichés in their lyrics, Newsboys later grasped laic music's alternative revolution in the early '90s for an image makeover, with good results. The mathematical group gained vI number one singles on the Christian charts, and have been featured in more secular media outlets than the medium Christian band. Dance step Up to the Microphone, their starting time album for major label Virgin, followed in 1998; Dearest Liberty Disco appeared a year later. In solemnization of the new millennium, the Newsboys also ascertained their have career with the greatest-hits packet Shine...The Hits, issued in fall 2000. Their well-nigh rarify make to date, Fly high, was issued in outpouring 2002 and lED to one of their biggest CCM hits ever, "It Is You." Over ten-spot years into their own career, that fall Newsboys Remixed was released, offering new takes on several of their biggest hits. The band issued Idolisation: The Worship Album in April 2003. The record included both originals and Newsboy versions of long-familiar worship songs. Guitarist Jody Davis left the Newsboys in late 2003 in guild to aid for his daughter, Bethany, and Byan Olesen took his piazza for a lilliputian over a class. He left in 2004 to work on his own dance orchestra, Casting Pearls, just after the Newsboys released their second worship album, Devotion. Paul Coleman, an Aussie singer/songwriter, came aboard as the band's new guitarist, and the side by side deuce years base the dance orchestra touring the globe and working on the songs that would become their low gear pop album in quaternary age, Go. That album, released in October 2006, was the first base to be released on the band's possess Inpop Records.






Albums of Newsboys




Top albums of Go





Year 2006, tracks 11






Top albums of Devotion





Year 2004, tracks 10






Top albums of Adoration: The Worship Album





Year 2003, tracks 10






Top albums of Shine... The Hits





Year 2000, tracks 17






Top albums of Step Up To The Microphone





Year 1998, tracks 10






Top albums of Word





Year 1992, tracks 11




Saturday, February 23, 2008

Ananda Shankar

Ananda Shankar





Ananda Shankar, nephew of world-famous sitar player, Ravi Shankar, never quite matched the success of his uncle, only made a important impact in the '70s psychedelic resistance scene by combination Western electronics and Indian music to create instrumental jams and moody soundtracks.The boy of famed classical dancers caught the entertainment industry bug in the late '60s and traveled to Los Angeles, where he played with rock musicians (including Jimi Hendrix) at the elevation of the psychedelic movement. At long time 27, he sign-language a apportion with Reprise Records world Health Organization released his debut self-titled album; a coalition cult classic that combined Hindustani music with psych-rock and included sitar-heavy versions of "Jumping Jack Flash" and "Light My Fire." After inadequate Stateside record gross sales, Shankar returned to India and began constructing 1975's Ananda Shankar and His Music, a blend of savage funk beats, keyboards, and traditional Indian instruments. From 1978 to 1981, he recorded cinque conceptual records: Republic of India Remembers Elvis (Indian versions of Elvis standards), A Musical Discovery of India (an enterprise financed by the Indian tourist board), Missing You (a dedication to his parents), the space-themed 2001, and the jungle safari-tinged Sá-Re-Gá Machán. In the mid-'90s, a new generation of DJs and musicians plant an abundance of samples in his discography, and when Blue Note released the 1996 compilation album Risque Juice, Vol. 1 which featured two of his dance tracks, "Streets of Calcutta" and "Terpsichore Drums," a reawakened interest in his music light-emitting diode to a tour-slot in Peter Gabriel's Womad festival and some other aboard Asian turntablist DJ State of Bengal. This collaboration resulted in 2000s Walking On, featuring Shankar's sitar virtuosity motley with bachelor launchpad breakbeats and trip-hop. Sadly, he never byword the sack of the album, due to a sudden nub attack at eld 56. In 2007, Fallout Records reissued Ananda Shankar and His Music, with Sá-Re-Gá Machán with India Remembers Elvis tacked on as bonus tracks.






Albums of Ananda Shankar




Top albums of Sa-Re-Ga Machan





Year 1981, tracks 10






Top albums of Snow Flower





Year 1977, tracks 8






Top albums of Ananda Shankar





Year 1970, tracks 8






Top albums of Melodies from India





Year 1968, tracks 18






Top albums of Walking On





Year , tracks 11






Top albums of Walking On - The Ananda Shan..





Year , tracks 11




Death

Death





Over the course of more than a ten and heptad increasingly accomplished albums, Chuck Schuldiner, the designer behind the omnipresent Death, became a bona fide laboured metal icon. Now widely accepted as the father of last metallic element (if a single prospect mustiness be chosen, his resumé is around as sound as it gets), Schuldiner's singular drive and ruthless originative vision guaranteed that Death keep back a perch position at the head of the style's development. Indeed, spell the viciously in the buff aggressiveness contained in Death's get-go terzetto albums proved all important to spearheading the first generation of death, and subsequently grindcore bands, the dumbfounding musicianship and progressively sophisticated songwriting establish on their later-day efforts may make influenced regular more than groups exploring the limits of extreme metal's progressive outposts. By all accounts a force to be reckoned with onstage, Death as well logged more than frequent-flier miles than possibly whatever other band of their extreme alloy ilk, undertaking legion far-reaching tours contempt hurt from continuous and bitter turnover rate inside their ranks. Throughout this long journey and drastic evolutionary curve, Chuck Schuldiner was the only unvarying, the effective conceiver behind Death's continually groundbreaking ceremony career, and his near-canonization at the time of his ill-timed passing only confirmed his unparalleled stature at the upside of rock's almost sturdy style.The story of Death begins in Florida, around 1983, when vocalist/guitarist Chuck Schuldiner formed a band named Mantas with guitar player Rick Rozz and drummer Kam Lee. Although they'd in time to finish High School, the aegir teens quick set around trying to replicate the most excessive heavy alloy sounds imaginable, which they often heard on tapes obtained via the bustling underground tape-trading tour existing at the meter. Many of these hailed from the U.K., where bands like Iron Maiden, Angel Witch, and Venom were horseback riding high on the New Wave of British Heavy Metal; others arrived from the West Coast, where thomas Young bands care Metallica, Slayer, and Exodus were redefining the literary genre by injecting it with unprecedented doses of speed and get-up-and-go, therefore giving birth to thresh about alloy. All of these developments converged to spark the pres Young Floridian's fervor, and the fresh rechristened Death worn-out the next few days refinement their chops through sempiternal, arduous rehearsals and sporadic alive performances. Their strong work and perseveration last paid turned when a three-song demo tape called Mutilation began lottery rave reviews in the metal subway system, presently convincing Bay Area-based thrash specialists Combat Records to sign the radical. Leaving his bandmates slow (they would shape a band called Massacre in his absence), Schuldiner resettled to San Francisco and teamed up with drummer Chris Reifert (later of Autopsy infamy) to record Death's straight off legendary Shriek Bloody Gore LP. Released in 1987, the album is considered demise metal's first archetypal papers. Possessed's proto-death definitive Sevener Churches crataegus laevigata have predated it by virtually two years, just the fact of the matter is that both were coincidental kit and caboodle from a demo perspective, and spell Seven-spot Churches represented something of a unplanned passage between thresh and death metal, Belly laugh Bloody Gore clearly defined the raw offshoot's true inwardness for the first time. Boiled down to the most basic footing, this transition just entailed propulsive thresh about metal's gauzy amphetamine and ferocious murder into farther inaccessibility with the accession of gore-obsessed lyrics delivered via much indecipherably growled vocals. Needless to aver, this unprecedented level of sonic hatred went down a storm with thousands upon thousands of angry teenagers crossways the world.Having set his metallic dreams (or nightmares, as it were) into motion, Schuldiner returned to Florida, where he reunited with his sure-enough chum Rick Rozz and drafted bassist Terry Butler and drummer Bill Andrews to integrate Death's first touring card. Between ever-increasing touring commitments, they were before long ensconced in Tampa's soon-to-be famous Morrisound Studios with soon-to-be premier destruction alloy producer Scott Burns (a lot of "firsts" in this story) and working on 1988's Leprosy followup, which reprised much of the debut's successful tricks, just was somewhat marred by Rozz's subpar technological skills. He was before long unceremoniously ejected for his shortcomings (the number 1 victim of a Spinal Tap-like game of musical chairs) and replaced by the far more gifted James Murphy, wHO would just final a yr himself before embarking on a craftsman existence that would take him to Obituary, Testament, and beyond, just withal contributed star latticework to 1990's transitional Spiritual Healing. This album plant Death commencement to release some of the persistent velocity, mindless vehemence, and often timeworn blood-and-gore lyrics which characterized death metal's early childhood (grindcore's fast-rising legions, lED by Napalm Death and Carcass, would adopt it from here) and diving rashly into its clearly experimental pubescent phase. In practice, this meant introducing slower rhythms, coordination compound dynamic pacing changes, insidious melodies, and more enlightened, if no less dark and misanthropical subject matter that commented on society's ills and injustices. All of these exciting developments would fall to greater realization on 1991's polar Human LP, just given the respective organisational problems and unsatisfactory performances that had plagued the Spiritual Healing go, it's a curiosity Death survived longsighted enough to record it. In his obsessive quest for perfection and unceasing evolution, Schuldiner had once again pushed his bandmembers as far as their musical abilities could take them, mandating that an entirely new mathematical group of players be cast to enact the following chapter in his expansive dodge. Sure enough, the sessions for Human convened a supra-technical ensemble for the ages, that is to say guitarist Paul Masvidal and drummer Sean Reinert of unsigned death/fusion sensations Cynic, and fretless freshwater bass curiosity Steve DiGiorgio, world Health Organization was borrowed from Sadus for recording purposes only. This liberation, along with the tied more than commercially successful Rise by Brazilians Sepultura, helped insure that 1991 should go low-spirited as the absolute acme of last metal's world mastery. At least in its original form, as hordes of gifted new upstarts such as the aforementioned Cynic and the death/jazz experimentalists Atheist, to list merely a few, were even and then undertaking to rewrite the ruler good Book and challenge elder statesmen like Death for genre domination.Non to be outdone, Schuldiner just upped the ante, repeatedly reinventing his lot time and time once again, tied as he refused to compromise its brutal gist values one iota. As proof, both 1993's Individual Thought Patterns and 1995's Emblematic introduced astonishing advancements into the group's sound. The first exploded with the brilliant lattice of ex-King Diamond guitarist Andy LaRocque, whose six-string duels with Schuldiner membership among the near exciting of Death's longsighted career; patch the second benefited from the heavy harmonies contributed by the less gaudy, merely equally effective Bobby Koelble, resulting in Death's most systematically melodic record album of all time. And perhaps best of all for extreme metal fans, old Dark Angel behemoth Gene Hoglan lent his inimitable percussive talents to both LPs, forging an improbable pairing with Chuck that remains the stuff of death metal dreams to this day. Not surprisingly, this trio of albums persist in to compete for fans and critics' black Maria as Death's superlative achievements -- how dry then that Schuldiner himself was commencement to grow hackneyed of his life's work.Just come 1996, Death's gaffer architect was athirst for a originative outlet with which to express his more mainstream fleshy alloy songwriting, and citing his possess voice as too limited for what he had in mind, Schuldiner aghast the great metal community by disbanding Death and announcing his plans for an whole raw band, to be named Control Denied. But the new visualize took longer than expected to take off the base, so Schuldiner distinct to backtrack and record one terminal album below the Death franchise, resulting in 1998's quite astral The Sound of Perseverance. As was to be expected, he was once over again backed up by an only young dance band, this time consisting of congenator unknowns like guitarist Shannon Hamm, bassist Scott Clendenin, and drummer Richard Christy. Following this tone ending, Schuldiner lastly felt ready to move forwards with the Control Denied concept in heartfelt, and the new quintet (featuring many of Chuck's older accomplices and a full-time lede vocalist in Tim Aymar) unleashed their The Fragile Art of Existence debut in the fall of 1999. Everything seemed to be sledding according to be after, simply then tragic fate intervened. Schuldiner was diagnosed with a malignant brain-stem neoplasm and immediately underwent emergency surgery in early 2000 to remove it. All melodious plans were brought to a standstill as Chuck fought for his life amid ever-mounting medical bills (like most professional musicians, he had no health policy), exclusively a small fortune of which were relieved by the heavy metal community's outflow of support by way of life of numerous benefit concerts. Over the ensuing two years, the dead on target doS of his health was much mired in mystery story, and even though he was occasionally rumored to be on the path to retrieval, all hopes were ultimately and cruelly dashed on December 13, 2001, when Chuck lastly succumbed to genus Cancer at the years of 33. Like any headstrong leader, Schuldiner's despotic monopoly over Death's brilliant life history is perpetually guaranteed to evoke contrary opinions close to his case, ranging from the resentful accusations of disgruntled other employees, to the language of loving extolment of willing collaborators. It scarcely matters, since whichever reputation people eventually choose to conceive in, Schuldiner's recorded legacy testament forever and a day remain inextricably coupled, synonymous even, with the destruction alloy genre.






Albums of Death




Top albums of Live in L.A. - Death and Raw





Year 2001, tracks 13






Top albums of Live in LA





Year 2001, tracks 13






Top albums of Live At Trocadero (Bootleg)





Year 1998, tracks 14






Top albums of The Sound Of Perseverance





Year 1998, tracks 9






Top albums of Symbolic





Year 1995, tracks 9






Top albums of Symphonic Technicalogy - Live In Japan 1995





Year 1995, tracks 13




Photek

Photek





Though Goldie became the get-go virtuoso of jungle, the recordings of Rupert Parkes -- as Code of Practice, Aquarius, Studio Pressure, the Truper and Sentinel, but to the highest degree magnificently as Photek -- made him an easy piece for the style's most esthetic and intelligent producer. Working his way through street-level hardstep (on former productions for Certificate 18 and Street Beats) and laputan, subaquatic "dolphin" tunes for L.T.J Bukem's Good Looking label, Parkes eventually arrived at a well-grounded that pushed the bound of drum'n'bass from the dancefloor into the realm of breakbeat headspace; unlike to the highest degree jungle producers, Parkes has never DJed and seldom goes to clubs. His incredibly intricate rhythm scheduling -- ofttimes requiring weeks of reckoner homework -- and the unmissable aura of paranoid menace on recordings such as "The Hidden Camera" and "Flying saucer" exerted quite an influence on the return of dark-style drum'n'bass during the late '90s.



As a adolescent, Parkes listened to electro, techno and hip-hop as well as the more than free form side of idle words and fusion. Thanks to a sampler bought with a £2000 loan from the Trust of the Prince of Wales, he began producing tracks and first appeared on Paul Solomon's Certificate 18 Records with singles as Studio Pressure. He likewise recorded for Basement (as Sentinel) and Street Beats (the Truper) before initiating a series of 12-inch singles for his own Photek Records, which gave him credentials and lED to releases on Goldie's Metalheadz label and L.T.J. Bukem's Good Looking, as well as a remix of the Therapy? single "Loose."



Later Parkes had released more than 80 tracks of drum'n'bass on half a 12 labels, he was approached by Virgin and sign-language to a five-album deal with the label's Science imprint (provided he was allowed to stay on recording for other independent labels as well). Parkes' first freeing on Science was The Hidden Camera EP, which appeared in May 1996. The second Science single "Ni-Ten-Ichi-Ryu" displayed an increasing stake in applying the lessons of martial humanities to his programming (the deed is Japanese for "two swords, one technique"). Virgin compiled the latter two releases on 1997's Reduced instruction set computer Vs. Reward, and then released the debut Photek album Modus Operandi in September 1997. Much-hyped though little-praised, the album was followed by 1998's Shape & Function, a compiling including various original Photek Records tracks plus remixes and new tracks. During the next two years, Parkes focussed on his new Photek Productions label, and at long last released a second LP, Solaris, in 2000.






Albums of Photek




Top albums of Solaris





Year 2000, tracks 11






Top albums of Terminus





Year 2000, tracks 3






Top albums of Form and Function





Year 1998, tracks 12