Saturday, 30 August 2008

Download Ray Conniff mp3






Ray Conniff
   

Artist: Ray Conniff: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Instrumental
Classical
Retro
Folk
Vocal

   







Discography:


Um toque clssico and Meldicas e eternas
   

 Um toque clssico and Meldicas e eternas

   Year: 2000   

Tracks: 14
Sucessos inesquecvies and Temas RomPInticos
   

 Sucessos inesquecvies and Temas RomPInticos

   Year: 2000   

Tracks: 14
Ray Conniff 30 Anos De Sucesso
   

 Ray Conniff 30 Anos De Sucesso

   Year: 2000   

Tracks: 11
Essnica Latina and Raz...es para Sonhar
   

 Essnica Latina and Raz...es para Sonhar

   Year: 2000   

Tracks: 14
Conniff no cinema and Tempos Modernos
   

 Conniff no cinema and Tempos Modernos

   Year: 2000   

Tracks: 14
In Moscow
   

 In Moscow

   Year: 1999   

Tracks: 12
Versiones originales CD2
   

 Versiones originales CD2

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 13
Versiones originales CD1
   

 Versiones originales CD1

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 13
Ray Conniff Interpreta 16 Exitos de Manuel Alejandro
   

 Ray Conniff Interpreta 16 Exitos de Manuel Alejandro

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 16
Concert In Rhythm 1
   

 Concert In Rhythm 1

   Year: 1958   

Tracks: 12






The military personnel wHO popularized unverbalized vocal choruses and light orchestral attendant on a mix of popular standards and modern-day hits of the mid-sixties, Ray Conniff was a trombone player for Bunny Berigan's Orchestra and Bob Crosby's Bobcats ahead existence leased as an organizer by Mitch Miller for Columbia Records in 1954. After he wrote the charts for several sizeable Columbia hits during the mid-'50s, Conniff became a solo originative person as well, applying his agreement techniques to instrumental easy-listening for the thriving adult album grocery store. The result, dozen Top Ten LPs and well over 50 one million million million total albums sold, cemented his position as unitary of the top LP peter Sellers of all time, only his more and more watered-down and commercially focussed arrangements gained few young fans by the end of the sixties. Though he continued transcription and touring the world into the 1890s, Conniff's albums slipped off the charts in the early '70s.


Innate in November 1916 in Attleboro, Massachusetts, Ray Conniff gained much of his musical go through inside the house. His father, a trombone player, light-emitting diode a local lot while his mother played the pianissimo. Ray began ahead a local ring while in high school -- picking up the trombone for the beginning sentence not long before -- and began writing arrangements for it; after commencement exercise, he stirred to Boston and began playing with Dan Murphy's Musical Skippers (besides playing and transcription, Conniff drove the band about). By the mid-'30s, he was ready for the swelled time, landing in New York simply later the birth of the fat dangle geological era. He comped around Manhattan for several age, and by 1937 landed an arranging/playing job with Bunny Berigan. Two old age later, he stirred to Bob Crosby's Bobcats, one of the hottest bands of the time, though Conniff stayed for only a year before joining up with Artie Shaw and afterward Glen Gray.


With the coming of American involution in World War II by 1941, Conniff coupled the Army, though the nighest he came to Wake Island was Hollywood, where he worked as an arranger with Armed Forces Radio. At the conclusion of the warfare, Conniff worked with Harry James merely lost interest in arrangement when boP touched to center stage during the late '40s. Completely divorced from the medicine business, he studied conducting and medicine possibility during the early '50s, emerging by 1954 to take on a position with Columbia Records and ill-famed pop producer Mitch Miller. The following year, he put his theories to practice with Don Cherry (the vocaliser, non the jazz trumpeter) on a Top Five hit, "Band of Gold." Close on its heels were some more than full-grown hits of 1956-57, including the bit ones "Vocalizing the Blues" by Guy Mitchell and "Chances Are" by Johnny Mathis, summation Top Five entries by Johnnie Ray ("Simply Walking in the Rain"), Frankie Laine ("Moonlight Gambler") and Marty Robbins ("A White Sport Coat [And a Pink Carnation]"). Columbia, doubtless ecstatic over the succeeder of its organizer, agreed to let Conniff record an subservient record album, and the result, 'S Wonderful (1956), exhausted months on the album charts. With a like spirit (though far tamer results) to Lambert, Hendricks & Ross' album of the same year, Sing a Song of Basie -- which canned classic Basie orchestra solos into vocal parts -- Conniff arranged parts for an cushy chorus of singers just now as he had with instrumentalists in the past. 'S Wonderful was desktop subservient music for adults wHO tranquil liked to listen the human voice, and the technique grew to define the "Muzaky" feel of much of the adult pop of the fifties and '60s.


During the rest of the late '50s, four Ray Conniff albums reached the Top Ten, light-emitting diode by the gold-certified 'S Marvelous and Concert in Rhythm. Conniff did well in the early '60s as well, with pop paper albums like Pronounce It with Music (A Touch of Latin), Memories Are Made of This, So Much in Love, 'S Continental, and We Wish You a Merry Christmas, which continued to chart during the holiday season of the future six-spot long time after its 1962 release engagement. The rise of rock & wave in the mid-'60s apparently hurt Conniff's record sales, though in 1966 the inclusion of "Lara's Theme" in the film Doctor Zhivago resulted in Conniff's only significant singles-chart placing at figure nine, and a million-selling record album with Somewhere My Love. During the late '60s, he began to include the softer side of tilt and Bacharach-David pop into his repertoire, with artists from Simon & Garfunkel to the Carpenters and the Fifth Dimension all receiving the Conniff treatment (aboard more than confutative attempts, such as "Theme from 'Shaft'"). He continued to criminal record albums and perform to his gravid Latin American hearing into the nineties. On October 12, 2002, Conniff passed off after falling down and hit his head. He had suffered a stroke months prior, merely Conniff's health continued to deteriorate. He was 85.





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Wednesday, 20 August 2008

Magistrates tell V Festival to 'get sweaty'

Magistrates urged the crowd to crowd up and "get sweaty" during their high muscularity set at V Festival tonight (August 17).


The Essex four-piece took the stage at 7.30pm (BST) to a rapturous receipt from the small crowd in the Sessions Tent.


Singer and keyboardist Paul Usher, sporting a gold jacket, told the crowd before 'Stand And Wait': "Try and squash in more and get sweaty � it's sexual � it's a intimate thing!"


Kicking turned with 'The Inbetweens' and 'Anyway You Want Me', the indie-dance troupe too performed outgoing single 'Make This Work' and 'Tell Me'.


They closed their 30 minutes set with 'Colour Coordination', with Usher telling the crowd: �You've been unspoilt to us Chelmsford.�

Magistrates played:

'The Inbetweens'

'Anyway You Want Me'

'Make This Work'

'She Don't Wanna Be Alone'

'Stand And Wait'

'Tell Me'

'Colour Coordination'



Keep checking NME.COM for the latest news, pictures, videos and blogs live from both V Festival Chelmsford and V Festival Staffordshire all weekend.



More information

Sunday, 10 August 2008

Double Xplojun

Double Xplojun   
Artist: Double Xplojun

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Detonate   
 Detonate

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 14




Philadelphians Leonard Davis, Joe Harris, Chuck Whittington, and Jimmy Williams were Double Exposure, unmatchable of the more impinging groups on the mighty disco tag Salsoul. The quartette was one of the near soul-steeped on the revolve. This had more than than a little to do with their ground as a soul mathematical group called United Image, which got unitedly in 1966 and recorded a single for Stax in the early '70s ("African Bump" b/w "Hit Man"); and, being from Philadelphia, the grouping couldn't help but soak up the sounds laid extinct by the likes of Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes, the Stylistics, the Spinners, and the Intruders. Despite the thick soul leanings of Double Exposure's profound, they failed to light up the U.S. charts. However, they did fare much bettor in clubs and enjoyed more than success in England.


1976's Ten Percent featured a mate of major night club hits with the title track and "My Love Is Free." Both songs were remixed by Walter Gibbons, wHO maximized the dancefloor appeal; his ten-minute coalesce of "X Percent" was ab initio issued to DJs and caught attack so flying that it was finally released to the public. Contrary to common tactual sensation, it wasn't the number 1 12" remix single, only it was one of the to the highest degree democratic of the format's early days. The album as well included a preferably controversial birdcall called "Everyman," which called for people to claim tutelage of their have necessarily (in the sung, a down-and-out person asks for change and gets a tongue-lashing instead). With the addition of a match ballads and a hide of Holland-Dozier-Holland's "Baby I Need Your Loving," Ten Percent is one of Salsoul's topper single-artist LPs.


1978's Four Play and 1979's Locker Room followed, and both were to a fault released on Salsoul. Neither reinforced on nor continued the strengths manifest in the debut, merely Locker Room's "I Got the Hots for Ya" became some other club front-runner. By the end of 1980, the group was no more than; in 1999, Charly issued The Best of Double Exposure, which ties up Double Exposure's brightest moments.