Tuesday 26 August 2008

Three Days Grace live DVD

Three Days Grace [ ] will release a live DVD Aug. 19 exclusively at Best Buy locations countrywide, according to a press release. The DVD, "Three Days Grace: Live at the Palace 2008," besides will be available at Best Buy online.

The DVD, which was filmed live at Detroit-area arena The Palace of Auburn Hills will be screened theatrically in full HD in select markets the week of Aug. 26.

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Saturday 16 August 2008

Download Daughtry






Daughtry
   

Artist: Daughtry: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Rock

   







Discography:


Daughtry
   

 Daughtry

   Year: 2006   

Tracks: 14






Bo Bice proved that American language Idol could get a rocker as a finalist, simply Chris Daughtry proven that the show could yield a successful rocking chair outside the context of the supply. Of class, it helped that Daughtry was the polar opposite of Bice, a bushy retro-rocker blind drunk in the South: bold and bald-headed, he was the picture of a mod rocker, living by the rulebook written by Live and Fuel. These were the qualities that helped make Chris Daughtry the most successful new rock and roll & roll up isaac M. Singer of 2006.


Like whatsoever AmIdol finalist, Daughtry had a long run as an amateur musician. The North Carolina native -- born in Roanoke Rapids, he lived in Charlottesville, VA, before establishing himself in the Greensboro area -- began tattle in local rock bands when he was 16 geezerhood old. He continued to play locally after his high school graduation in 1998, marrying his girlfriend Deanna in 2000, a few months after the January 2000 birth of their son Griffin (he adoptive Deanna's girl from a old marriage). Family human race he may have been, just Daughtry didn't let his rock & cast pipe dream break, as he continued to play guitar and sing in a dance band called Absent Element. He auditioned for Rock Star: INXS in 2005 only was jilted -- a rejection that sour out to be rather rosy since it freed him to tryout for the far more popular televised singing contest American Idol.


Daughtry was featured heavily during the show's ostensibly ceaseless tryout rounds for iI reasons: he was telegenic and he capitalized on the rocker promise of Bo Bice and Constantine Maroulis from the previous season. He was bald-pated and big, he amuck a terrific smile, and his veneration to his menage made for smashing TV. He sailed through to Hollywood and made it into the final 12, where he was hailed as a standout early on and soon seemed to be a favourite to get ahead. Daughtry manic disorder began to point in March when his interpreting of Fuel's "Haemorrhage (In My Hands)" caused such a sense experience that rumors began to fly that Fuel precious to hire him as their lead singer -- something that proven no hearsay, as the new rock group, degustation the new press, practically pleaded for his front after he was voted off the show. But this was still two long months away -- two months where he continued to be ane of the top draws in the season, tied wooing some controversy when he panax quinquefolius Live's arrangement for Johnny Cash's "I Walk the Line." This dwight Lyman Moody reinterpretation was misinterpreted as a Daughtry original, and on the results show he had to clarify where he erudite this version. Still, this contention paled to when he was voted off the show in May: Daughtry was one of the final four-spot and Katharine McPhee just narrowly beat him, a resultant role that visibly dismayed the rocker. Daughtry would shortly have the last laugh.


After he was kicked off of Beau ideal, he sour down pat Fuel's standing offer up of replacement their lead vocaliser and set off on his have career, sign lyric with Matinee idol's 19 Entertainment chemical group and RCA Records in July of 2006. By the time the album materialized in November, it had turned into a cast by a band called DAUGHTRY (spelled all in uppercase letters) -- the band featured guitarist Jeremy Brady, guitar player Josh Steely, bassist Josh Paul, and drummer Joey Barnes, only they did non play as a set on the finished record album; Brady was replaced after the album's handout by Brian Craddock -- a subject of semantics overlooked by to the highest degree, especially in light of the album's blockbuster winner. Like many hotly hoped-for albums of the SoundScan geological era, it debuted heights on the charts only it didn't drop off down quick: it stayed in the Top Ten for month after calendar month, as did the first base single, "It's Not Over." This meant that DAUGHTRY was non only a immense hit by Graven image standards, it was one of the few hit rock'n'roll albums -- period -- in 2006. DAUGHTRY didn't debut at number one, simply it climbed to the top side in January 2007 (given, it only if sold close to 65,000 copies the workweek it was at number unrivaled, exactly that's still an impressive exploit) and stayed in the Top Ten well into the new year, as did the single "It's Not Over." By February, it was seeming that his popularity eclipsed those of his American Idol rivals Taylor Hicks and Katharine McPhee.






Thursday 7 August 2008

Nas: More Than Words

Seated in a quiet corner of New York restaurant the Spotted Pig, Nas is drinking a glass of ros�. He's dressed comfortably in jeans, Velcro-fastened sneakers and a white T-shirt with a poster from Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier's "Thrilla in Manilla" fight. His black Rolls Royce is parked outside and he's awaiting a few cigars from his driver.

In here, the noise surrounding his new Def Jam album, formerly known as "N*gger," has faded, but Nas is still happy to discuss the grand implications of it all. In the past nine months, the veteran has proved masterful at wagging the dog. Since last October, when Nas first announced his intentions for the album title, he's drawn all kinds of responses: ire from African-American activist the Rev. Al Sharpton, but support from Def Jam chairman/CEO Antonio "L.A." Reid. Then after retail distributors, which neither Def Jam nor Nas would identify, claimed they wouldn't carry an album called "N*gger," Nas rechristened it as an untitled project, starting yet another round of debate on popular hip-hop sites like nahright.com.

As the record nears its July 15 release, Nas is the first to admit he's not a one-man show. Def Jam, a unit of publicly traded company Vivendi, has to market this hot-button album while maintaining its market share, which begs the question: How do a corporation and an artist balance creative integrity with the bottom line? "If I was the one watching all this shit happen, I would want to see me ride to the end," says Nas, who promises that the album's incendiary commentary on race relations remains. "Except a lot of so-called black leaders were using my album as a platform for themselves. I would have been fighting not to get the 'N*gger' album out but to express myself, and that's not the fight I wanted. This album is about me and how I feel as a black man."

Aside from the new name, or lack thereof, Nas' subject matter is rare. Especially in contemporary commercial hip-hop, which sells everything from mobile phones to fast food, and the three hip-hop songs atop Billboard's Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart�Plies' "Bust It Baby Part 2" and Lil Wayne's "Lollipop" and "A Milli"�focus on sex and braggadocio. However, Nas says he recorded the album with a balance of education and entertainment in mind.

"I didn't want to 'n*gger' my audience to death," he says. "So 'Be a N*gger Too,' which I recently released a video for, isn't on the album. It didn't fit. The entire record deals with the concept, but every song couldn't be 'n*gger.' I had to pace myself."

The album includes production and features from Cool & Dre, Green Lantern, Mark Ronson, Polow Da Don, Busta Rhymes, Keri Hilson, Chris Brown and Stargate. Throughout, Nas finds creative ways to address his chosen subject matter. On the Rhymes-featuring "Fried Chicken," Nas uses a woman as a metaphor for soul food and black people's attraction to deadly eating habits. ("Mrs. Fried Chicken/fly vixen/give me heart disease but still I need you in my kitchen," he raps.)

On "N.*.G.G.E.R. (The Slave & the Master)," the MC nods to his hit "I Can," where he runs down the historic inventions of the African Diaspora, amid describing the bittersweet calling cards of low-income life like "schools with outdated books." First single "Hero," featuring Hilson, boasts anthemic synthesizers, a tuba, running keys and a swelling chorus as Nas explains why he changed the album title. Key lyric: "I'm hog-tied on the corporate side blocking y'all from going in stores and buying it/at first L.A. and Doug Morris was riding with it/but Newsweek articles startled bigwigs and asked Nas, why is you trying it?"

Back at the Spotted Pig, Nas has lit one of the cigars and is musing that he doesn't need to market himself like other artists. And he may be correct.

During his 14-year career, the MC has had only six top 10 singles on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, but four of his albums�"It Was Written," "The Firm�The Album," "I Am" and "Hip-Hop Is Dead"�debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200. And despite a nearly nine-month publicity binge, none of the leaked singles from the new project have charted.

According to Nas, it's because he can "do [Nielsen] SoundScan numbers like everyone else" without following the usual promotional pattern. While his highest-selling album to date is 1996's "It Was Written" at 2.5 million copies, according to SoundScan, perhaps his Muhammad Ali T-shirt boasting the phrase "The Greatest," and/or that ros� is getting Nas riled up. Or maybe after more than a decade in hip-hop, he's just being honest.

"From Jay-Z to 50 Cent to Kanye [West], I've been around longer than all of them and I don't need any of their marketing," Nas says. "The people are my marketing, and that puts me in a class by myself."





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