Tuesday, 29 April 2008

Besh o droM

Besh o droM   
Artist: Besh o droM

   Genre(s): 
Ethnic
   



Discography:


Nekemtenemmutogatol!   
 Nekemtenemmutogatol!

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 14


Macso himzes   
 Macso himzes

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 10




 





Beatsteaks

Saturday, 26 April 2008

The Beatles guru Maharishi dies aged 91

The Beatles guru Maharishi dies aged 91



Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the man world Health Organization taught the Beatles transcendental meditation, has died. He was 91.
The American Indian mystic became famous in 1968 when the Beatles travelled to the foothills of the Himalaya Mountains to instruct his techniques and he was besides filmed with Mike Love of the Beach Boys, the isaac Merrit Singer Donovan and actress Mia Farrowing.
Love said: "His passage is profoundly sad. Just I for one, am among the millions wHO are grateful for what he shared with us. We will miss you, simply your great illumination testament smoothen on."
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi Berra moved to the hamlet of Vlodrop in Holland in 1990 and died there last night.
The Maharishi built a business empire charles Frederick Worth billions, including attribute dealing and a company merchandising ayurvedic music and cosmetics.
He set up universities and schools completely over the man and his Natural Law Party has campaigned in elections in piles of countries about the reality.





Jay-Z And Beyonce: It Sure Looks Like They're Getting Married

Jay-Z And Beyonce: It Sure Looks Like They're Getting Married







Afterward




Quicksand

Feist is winner of Shortlist Prize

Feist is winner of Shortlist Prize



Canadian singer-songwriter Feist has won the 2007 Short list Trophy in the US for her album 'The Reminder'.
Billboard reports that the judgement board for the prestigious accolade included Snow Patrol's Gary Lightbody and the Killers' Ronnie Vannucci.
True cat Power's 'The Greatest' was the winner last year; previous winners include TV on the Tuner, Damien Rice, NERD and Sigur Ros.
Read the review of 'The Reminder' here.





It's summer, it must be the Verve

It's summer, it must be the Verve



As the Verve's anthems ring out over the fields this summer, thousands of festival fans will be hoping for a unique live moment. But for some it may prove a bittersweet symphony as Richard Ashcroft and his band repeat the exercise on stages across the UK and Ireland.

As dozens of summer festivals unveil increasingly similar line-ups, organisers have warned that several of the events are likely to flop as consumers tighten their belts. The problem is too few big-name acts spread too thinly over too many stages.












A wider range of people is attracted to summer festivals these days. So, increasingly, new events look to follow in the successful footsteps of the smaller "boutique" festivals - alternatives such as Latitude, Bestival, and Green Man, which have prospered in recent years.

The Verve and Kings of Leon are fixtures this year at the top of several of the big festival bills, including Glastonbury, T in the Park in Perthshire, Oxygen in Ireland, and V2008 in Chelmsford and Staffordshire.

Steve Jenner, founder of VirtualFestivals.com, said: "It's very apparent that there have been major problems with headliners this year. The surge of people who started going to big festivals a few years ago [has] become more demanding."

While most of the biggest festivals will again sell out, industry insiders said demand had levelled off as the numbers of events had increased. Some also detected a backlash against the corporate branding that has proliferated in recent years as mobile phone and alcohol brands have sought to reach a lucrative segment of the market.

"Bands now have all the power when it comes to playing live," said Jenner, pointing to the alternative options of playing Wembley stadium or a residency at the O2 arena instead.

Vince Power, who took over Reading Festival in 1989 and ran it alongside a network of other festivals and music venues before selling up in 2005, agreed that there were "more festivals chasing fewer bands".

He said he was attempting to tap into a backlash against the corporate festivals with a one-day event at a former hop farm in Kent that sells itself on "no registration, no sponsorship, no branding". It will be headlined by Neil Young, with the rest of the lineup due to be announced this week.

Power said: "We did a lot of research and it became clear that people are a little bit pissed off with festivals. The whole thing has just become more and more about marketing and branding and I just felt people were getting short-changed. We want to get back to basics and do it for the music. We want to make it inclusive rather than exclusive." He said at his event there would be none of the backstage or corporate hospitality areas that had proliferated elsewhere.

Melvyn Benn, managing director of the company behind the Reading and Leeds festivals, and Latitude, admitted that competition for the best acts was fierce and the cash required to secure the biggest acts was rising.

Reading and Leeds still insisted on exclusivity, which made negotiations harder still.

With bands such as Radiohead, Oasis and Coldplay opting out of the festival circuit, despite having new albums to promote, the re-formed Verve and Kings of Leon have cashed in.

But Benn, whose Festival Republic company also has a role in organising Glastonbury, said most artists would still play festivals at some point in the two-year life cycle of an album because they offered the chance to take music to a wider audience.

Benn also rejected the idea that audiences were against sponsorship and branding, pointing to the popularity of Latitude, whose sponsors include Pimm's and Tuborg.

He added that the naysayers should not get carried away. "People will plan their whole summer around festivals and go to more than one," he said. "Festivals have become part and parcel of the British summer."

Chris Smith, the organiser of Womad, said the event he ran - a long-running one, featuring world music - proved that festivals that built up a loyal following and went on innovating would always prosper.

Who's playing where

Glastonbury festival

June 27-29

Worthy Farm, Pilton, Somerset

Jay-Z, Kings Of Leon, The Verve, The Fratellis, Goldfrapp

A Day at the Hop Farm

July 6

The Hop Farm, near Paddock Wood, Kent

Neil Young (other acts to be confirmed)

T in the Park

July 11-13

Balado, Kinross-shire, Scotland

The Verve, REM, Kings Of Leon, KT Tunstall, Kaiser Chiefs, Amy Winehouse, Aphex Twin, The Fratellis

Latitude festival

July 17-20

Henham Park, Suffolk

Franz Ferdinand, Sigur Ros, Interpol, The Breeders, Elbow

The Green Man festival

August 15-17

Glanusk estate in the Brecon Beacons, Wales

Super Furry Animals, Beirut, Black Mountain

V festival

August 16-17

Hylands Park, Chelmsford, and Weston Park, Staffordshire

The Verve, Kings of Leon, Kaiser Chiefs, Muse, Maximo Park, Amy Winehouse, Alanis Morissette


See Also