Various Fatcat Records Sampler 2007 Mp3, Flac, Wma
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Favorite Music
Favorite Albums of 2008 Lancashire, perfect songwriting and playing topped with that gorgeous voice 1 The Seldom Seen Kid Elbow England alternative singing poetry about daily life LP4 was a huge change for the Icelanders, parts of it actually sound 2 Með Suð í Eyrum Við Spilum Endalaust Sigur Rós Reykjavík, Iceland ambient, post-rock HAPPY, and they pull it off magnificently debut of the year, we all knew it back in January, still sounds great, 3 Vampire Weekend Vampire Weekend New York, NY Upper West Side Soweto every song = potential single was not shown as much critical love as last year's part 1, but I 4 The Stand-Ins Okkervil River Austin, TX lit-rock, neofolk played it a lot and Sheff's the best lyricist in rock Damon Albarn helped produce this excellent record from the blind 5 Welcome to Mali Amadou & Mariam Bamako, Mali world, African married couple, great party music 6 Alight of Night Crystal Stilts Brooklyn, NY garage, shoegaze retro-sounding drone-rock that says turn it up 7 Carried to Dust Calexico Tucson, AZ Americana Southwest border-crossing magical realists never disappoint so shoot me, but I liked it better than the Fleet Foxes record, go 8 Furr Blitzen Trapper Portland, OR neofolk Portland! (the poor man's Seattle) $.49 worth of pure songwriting genius by Replacements' frontman, 9 49:00 of Your Time/Life Paul Westerberg Minneapolis, MN alternative no breaks, no song titles, it's a beautiful mess modern-day Allman Brothers make twang you can love with 10 Brighter than Creation's Dark Drive-By Truckers Athens, GA alt-country -
Phonographic Performance Company of Australia Limited Control of Music on Hold and Public Performance Rights Schedule 2
PHONOGRAPHIC PERFORMANCE COMPANY OF AUSTRALIA LIMITED CONTROL OF MUSIC ON HOLD AND PUBLIC PERFORMANCE RIGHTS SCHEDULE 2 001 (SoundExchange) (SME US Latin) Make Money Records (The 10049735 Canada Inc. (The Orchard) 100% (BMG Rights Management (Australia) Orchard) 10049735 Canada Inc. (The Orchard) (SME US Latin) Music VIP Entertainment Inc. Pty Ltd) 10065544 Canada Inc. (The Orchard) 441 (SoundExchange) 2. (The Orchard) (SME US Latin) NRE Inc. (The Orchard) 100m Records (PPL) 777 (PPL) (SME US Latin) Ozner Entertainment Inc (The 100M Records (PPL) 786 (PPL) Orchard) 100mg Music (PPL) 1991 (Defensive Music Ltd) (SME US Latin) Regio Mex Music LLC (The 101 Production Music (101 Music Pty Ltd) 1991 (Lime Blue Music Limited) Orchard) 101 Records (PPL) !Handzup! Network (The Orchard) (SME US Latin) RVMK Records LLC (The Orchard) 104 Records (PPL) !K7 Records (!K7 Music GmbH) (SME US Latin) Up To Date Entertainment (The 10410Records (PPL) !K7 Records (PPL) Orchard) 106 Records (PPL) "12"" Monkeys" (Rights' Up SPRL) (SME US Latin) Vicktory Music Group (The 107 Records (PPL) $Profit Dolla$ Records,LLC. (PPL) Orchard) (SME US Latin) VP Records - New Masters 107 Records (SoundExchange) $treet Monopoly (SoundExchange) (The Orchard) 108 Pics llc. (SoundExchange) (Angel) 2 Publishing Company LCC (SME US Latin) VP Records Corp. (The 1080 Collective (1080 Collective) (SoundExchange) Orchard) (APC) (Apparel Music Classics) (PPL) (SZR) Music (The Orchard) 10am Records (PPL) (APD) (Apparel Music Digital) (PPL) (SZR) Music (PPL) 10Birds (SoundExchange) (APF) (Apparel Music Flash) (PPL) (The) Vinyl Stone (SoundExchange) 10E Records (PPL) (APL) (Apparel Music Ltd) (PPL) **** artistes (PPL) 10Man Productions (PPL) (ASCI) (SoundExchange) *Cutz (SoundExchange) 10T Records (SoundExchange) (Essential) Blay Vision (The Orchard) .DotBleep (SoundExchange) 10th Legion Records (The Orchard) (EV3) Evolution 3 Ent. -
Red Ban Egiste Section One
RED BAN EGISTE SECTION ONE VOLUME LXIV, NO. i. RED BANK, N. J., THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1941. PAGES! TO 16 Supper Tonight At 700 DogsEntered In Reformed Church Big Sailing Regatta $1,600 Cleared For Second Registration The second annual supper served Child Welfare by the ladles of the Red Bank Re- formed church on Shrewsbury ave- Mrs. Lewis S. Thompson, Jr., Annual Rumson Sfiow nue, will take place in the churoh On Fourth Of July of Brookdale farm, Llncroft, For Draft Next Tuesday 1 notified The Register Tuesday dining room tonight. Supper will be that there had been 1,100 paid served from 0:30 o'clock and will admissions at the annual Social consist of ham and all ths fixings. Service pet show, and that the Event Saturday At Rumson To The ohalnnan in charge of the af- Inter-Club Races Feature gross receipts totaled. $1,861.94. Instructions Issued By Re'd Bantc fair is Mrs. Wallace B. Ronkln. She She said that approximately Feature Water Test Exhibition will be assisted by tho following com- Event* On M. B. C. Program $1,600 had been cleared for child Board—Expect 15d to Register Here mlttees: Kitchen committee, Un. welfare work. John Weller chairman, Mrs. Eliza- An -unusual "water test" exhibition beth Estelle, Mrs. Victor Hembllng, Arrow and lightning class boats, She was especially apprecia- Instructions for the second draft will be one of the interesting fea- Mrs. Rusiel Clark, Mrs. H«It3r"£i- knockabouts, comets, sneakboxes, tive of the co-operation received registration for military service neat tures of the 13th annual dog show of Joseph Serpico telle and Mm. -
Spartan Daily Across Campus on Their Skate- 60 Percent of the SJSU Student Boards and They fl Ip and They Body Is Served in One Way Or An- Hurt
JIMI HENDRIX Men’s Basketball New album from deceased After up-and-down season, SJSU guitar king released prepares for WAC Tournament SEE PAGE 5 SEE PAGE 4 Serving San José State University since 1934 Wednesday, March 10, 2010 www.TheSpartanDaily.com Volume 134, Issue 22 Health center off ers services for students Amaris Dominguez, Health Center for as many basic Melissa Sabile medical appointments as they’d Staff Writers like at no cost.” Elrod said a general offi ce visit The Student Health Center of- off campus can have a $20 co-pay fers a wide variety of services to or a $200 charge, and that seeing students, most of which are avail- a health center provider for free able for no additional charge. is a signifi cant benefi t of being an But there can be extra fees SJSU student. for specialty services, said Paula “This is especially true in dif- Hernandez, senior operations of- fi cult fi nancial times, when even fi cer for the health center. more students are making diffi - Many of the charges are paid cult choices between health vis- for by the mandatory health fee, its and other basic needs,” Elrod Hernandez said, but students pay said. “Right on the campus with a on their own for prescriptions relatively short wait, students can and labs. be seen for aches, pains, injuries “We get athletes in here,” she and illnesses at no cost by a doc- said. “They get hurt while play- tor or nurse practitioner.” Jeff Lee, a designer and tester at Halo Guitars, works on a guitar in his shop in Cupertino. -
Fuck Buttons – Street Horrrsing | Ragged Words
Fuck Buttons – Street Horrrsing | Ragged Words http://www.raggedwords.com/?q=node/609 Home Ragged Words Record Reviews Live Reviews Interviews Features Listings New Music Videos Contact Home Fuck Buttons – Street Horrrsing Fuck Buttons – Street Horrrsing ATP Recordings Release Date: 17/03/08 Ragged Rating: **** 4/5 In A Ragged Word: complex The debut album from Bristol duo Andrew Hung and Benjamin John Power has taken me four days to listen to the whole way through. Not because it’s bad, but because suffering from man flu and surrounded by countryside, the nihilistic noise merchants’ sound is making me feel slightly nauseous. So when my head finally clears, I’m glad to say Street Horrrsing is quite good. On it, Fuck Buttons come across as a more abject M83, Einstürzende Neubauten or Suicide. This is progressive music driven on by tribal notations and a dark brooding. Opener ‘Sweet Love for Planet Earth’ starts with a folksy melody before morphing into something much more rapid and complex. It’s followed by ‘Ribst out’ is pure nihilism driven on by a tribal back beat. I say tracks but this album has to taken as a whole, the songs meld into each other progressing along a line that when you are in that zone is arresting and drags you in. ‘Okay, lets talk about tomorrow’ is my soundtrack to the revolution when it is in fact televised. It starts out harsh and bleak and by the end is quite beautiful. It’s not just noise, crafted in a way that, at first makes you question the necessity of such white noise, but in the end shows you the merits of it. -
CSU Honors Internment Victims
Vol. 87 Issue 23 March 18, 2010 Senior heavyweight on the road to NCAA Wrestling Championships SPORTS, Page 10 Demonstration addresses THURSDAY national gay rights violations NEWS, Page 2 Manchester Orchestra performs at The Troubadour SOUND-OFF, Page 8 Sound-off: What defines music? SOUND-OFF, Page 6 The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton CSU honors internment victims LMFAO to play BY TANYA GHAHREMANI Daily Titan Staff Writer [email protected] Spring Concert BY MELISSA In the spring of 1942, hundreds MALDONADO of thousands of Japanese Americans Daily Titan Staff were removed from their homes Writer and forced into internment camps. news@dailytitan. Among those who faced this injus- com tice, many were students who had to leave their studies. The Associ- The Nisei Diploma Project is a ated Students collaborative effort of all the current Inc. production CSU campuses that had Japanese- staff has con- American students who were re- firmed that the moved and forced into internment Grammy-nom- camps during World War II. While inated electro- Cal State Fullerton was not open at pop group the time, six other CSU campuses LMFAO will be were – Fresno, Pomona, San Diego, headlining this San Francisco, San Jose and San Luis year’s Spring Obispo. Through the project, those Concert, sched- removed and forced into internment uled for Friday, camps will receive Honorary Bach- April 16. elor of Humane Letters degrees. E i g h t According to the project’s Web months of site, the CSU system hopes to at planning and PHoto coURTESY RENE MCLEAN least ease the pain of the incarcera- o p e n - e n d e d tion the students faced, and welcome student surveys showed the band was favored alongside the students back into the CSU. -
New Initiative Takes Mainstream Approach to Marketing the School
The Postscript The Park School of Baltimore | PO Box 8200 Brooklandville, MD 21022 November 9, 2005 Volume LXVI | Issue No. 2 Bunting to speak as ’05 Resident Scholar Military offi cer, liberal arts educator visits on Veteran’s Day by Anders Hulleberg ’07 General Josiah Bunting III will visit Park November 11 as this year’s Upper School Resident Scholar. A decorated combat veteran and former superintendent of the Virginia Military Institute (VMI), Bunting will speak at an assem- bly to the entire Upper School in the morning and then host two small- er seminars later in the day. The fi rst will focus on his novel, All Loves Excelling, and the sec- ond on General George Marshall, the subject of the biography he is cur- rently writing. The title for his morning assem- photo by B. Weinstein ’06 bly talk will be “What Bright fall foliage sets a lively tone for students as they begin the second quarter. Matters in College.” With early applications sent in for seniors and second semester registration over, Bunting received a B.A. and M.A. in Eng- the Upper School has become a more lively place. photo courtesy VMI lish History from Ox- ford University as a New initiative takes mainstream Rhodes Scholar, taught as a professor at West Point and the U.S. Naval War College, served as president of Briarcliff College and Hampden-Sydney College and headmaster of approach to marketing the school the Lawrenceville School in Princeton, N.J. He led VMI when it fi rst began to accept women into its ranks in 1997. -