Pages

Monday, October 31, 2011

Lioness: Hidden Treasures

Today it’s been announced that on the 5th December, “Lioness: Hidden Treasures“, the third album from Amy Winehouse, without question one of the most talented, original, and best loved artists to emerge in popular music for decades, will be released through Island Records.
Following her tragic passing in July, some of the producers and musicians who worked closely with Amy Winehouse, among them Mark Ronson and Salaam Remi, spent time listening over the many recordings that Amy had made, before, during, and after the release of “Frank” and “Back To Black”. It was said by all who worked with Amy that she never sang or played a song the same way twice. It quickly became apparent to Salaam and Mark that they had a collection of songs that deserved to be heard, a collection of songs that were a fitting testament to Amy the artist and, as importantly, Amy their friend.
The 12 track collection features previously unreleased tracks, alternate versions of existing classics as well as a couple of brand new Amy compositions, and has been compiled by long-time musical partners Salaam Remi and Mark Ronson in close association with Amy’s family, management and record label Island Records. “Lioness : Hidden Treasures” proves a fitting tribute to the artist, the talent and the woman and serves as a reminder of Amy’s extraordinary powers as a songwriter, a singer and an interpreter of classics.
The full tracklisting is as follows:
“Our Day Will Come (Reggae Version)” – reggae re-working of classic 60’s doo wop song produced by Salaam Remi. Recorded May 2002.
“Between The Cheats” – new Amy composition recorded in London in May 2008 for potential inclusion on album three produced by Salaam Remi.
“Tears Dry” – originally written by Amy as a ballad, this is the original version she recorded in November 2005 in Miami with Salaam. The later uptempo version appears on “Back To Black”.
“Wake Up Alone” – the first song recorded for the “Back To Black” sessions. This is the one-take demo recorded in March 2006 by Paul O’Duffy.
“Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow” – Amy’s beautiful reading of the Carole King written Shirelles classic. Produced by Mark Ronson and featuring the Dap Kings with string arrangements by Chris Elliott who did all the strings for Mark’s tracks on “Back To Black”. Recorded in September 2004.
“Valerie” - one of Amy’s jukebox favourites. This is the original slower tempo version of the Mark Ronson produced post “Back To Black” single. Recorded in December 2006.
“Like Smoke” featuring NAS – Amy and Nas became really good friends after Amy name checked the New York rapper on “Back To Black’s” “Me & Mr Jones”. “Like Smoke” is finally Amy doing a song with one of her favourite artists. Produced by Salaam Remi. Recorded in May 2008.
“The Girl From Ipanema” – the first song the 18 year old Amy sang when she first went to Miami to record with Salaam. Salaam remarked that “the way she re-interpreted this bossa nova classic made me realise that I was dealing with a very special talent. Her approach to the song was so young and fresh, it really inspired the rest of our sessions.” Recorded in May 2002.
“Halftime” - Amy had talked to Ahmir ‘Questlove’ Thompson of the Roots about working together. “Halftime” is a song that Amy and Salaam had worked on since the Frank sessions. The result is beautiful. Recorded in August 2002.
“Best Friends” – “Frank” era live set opener produced by Salaam Remi. Probably the first song that early Amy fans would have heard live. Recorded in February 2003.
“Body & Soul” with Tony Bennett - cover of 30’s jazz standard with hero Tony Bennett. Recorded at Abbey Road Studios London in March 2011 and produced by Phil Ramone. Amy’s final studio recording.
“A Song For You” - heartbreaking and emotional version of the Leon Russell classic made famous by Donny Hathaway. Hathaway was Amy’s all-time favourite artist and the song was recorded in one take, just Amy and her guitar, at her home in London during the spring of 2009 as she battled her demons. Produced by Salaam Remi.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

[quote]


"Remember one thing, Through every dark night, there's a bright day after that. So no matter how hard it get, stick your chest out, Keep your head up, and handle it."
--Tupac

[And soon I'll hear Old winter's song ]












I'm afraid Autumn Leaves are here to stay.

Fall2011 <3 Source: Here

Monday, October 24, 2011

[Speak]

I don't wanna fall asleep
Cause I don't wanna wake up here again
If I could hear myself speak
I don't think I'd talk a word again
I've not got a words with way
I've not got much to do or say
Nobody let me in
I'll never finish so why begin

Give it some time
Give yourself hope
Or I'll give you mine
Cause I don't need it any more

There's no accounting for taste
Lets agree to disagree
I'm a good person going two ways
You can leave but I've got to live with me

Give it some time
Give yourself hope
Or I'll give you mine
Cause I don't need it any more

I'm sorry I spoke
Had all my eggs in one basket
It broke
But I don't need them any more
Oh I tried
This will has run dry
Do you fall a thousand times before you fly
Time goes by
Been living a lie
Gotta fall a thousand times before we fly so...

Give it some time
Give yourself hope
Or I'll give you mine
Cause I don't need any more

I'm letting it go
I know what I like
And don't like what I know
Cause I don't know me any more


I must be crazy to beat me, Must be crazy to beat me

Friday, October 21, 2011

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

MOVE

MOVE from Rick Mereki on Vimeo.


Rick Mereki is the main guy in these films. This series involves 3 guys, 44 days, 11 countries, 18 flights, 38 thousand miles, an exploding volcano, 2 cameras and almost a terabyte of footage--all to make this 3 part series "EAT< LEARN< MOVE." Check out HERE

LEARN

LEARN from Rick Mereki on Vimeo.

IS TROPICAL - THE GREEKS

IS TROPICAL - THE GREEKS (official music video) from EL NINO on Vimeo.

Home - Edward Sharpe and The Magnetic Zeros Acoustic Cover (Jorge & Alex...




The Little girl is adorable.

Check out their video here covering "Be my Baby" by The Ronettes

Celebrity Roast Best Of PARTS 1 - 3







When I watched this I reminisced where I was when I saw these Roasts for the first time. LMAO

ENJOY!

Monday, October 17, 2011

MUTEMATH - BLOOD PRESSURE (Official Music Video)



Check this band out. They're a twist of indie pop and The Dead Weather meshed into one sound.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

The Return to lipstick

I'm wearing your old jeans, no make-up and
a cardigan that's big enough for two -
I'm giving Oxfam shops a helping hand
but anyway, who's looking now? Not you.
I'm far more desperate than a life of crime
and all my wasted days are Guinness black,
I'm drinking like a drunk at closing time
as if I'd find a way to drink you back.
But you have gone, so I must sober up
and wash you from my long-neglected hair,
go home, put on a dress and raise my cup
of tea to toast the last night of despair.
I'll coat my lips with Damson in Distress -
they miss your mouth; one day they'll miss it less.
--Kathryn Simmonds

School KILLS.

EAT

EAT from Rick Mereki on Vimeo.

[quote]





"I like the diversity that my children are exposed to every day. i love the way their brains work. joe turns to me the other day and says ‘one day i will have a girlfriend or a boyfriend, darling. which would you prefer?’ and i said ‘my love, that would be entirely up to you, and it doesn’t make any difference to me.’ but that he knows! it’s a real privilege. talk about the best education."

—Kate Winslet.

[quote]



"The children now love luxury; they have bad manners, contempt for authority; they show disrespect for elders and love chatter in place of exercise. Children are now tyrants, not the servants of their households. They no longer rise when elders enter the room. They contradict their parents, chatter before company, gobble up dainties at the table, cross their legs, and tyrannize their teachers."
-- Socrates (469–399 B.C.)

An Elephant Painting...an Elephant



This is pretty damn amazing.

Surprise Surprise!!

9 Surprising Stories Behind Famous Rock ‘n’ Roll Lyrics

One of the best things about rock ‘n’ roll—in addition to the sex and drugs, of course—are the sweet, often obscure lyrics. Sometimes they’re political or spiritual, the rockers attempt to get serious; other times they’re just nonsense, the product of dope and booze. The best rock ‘n’ roll lyrics are the mysterious ones. Of course, sometimes they have no real meaning, but are just gibberish (for example, every Grateful Dead song). But sometimes there’s a real story about how those lyrics came about. So, with that as our inspiration, here we present to you 9 Rock ‘n’ Roll Songs with Weird or Surprising Stories Behind their Lyrics. Sometimes it’s crazy, sometimes it’s just not what you think, or sometimes it’s a lot deeper than you realized. But each of these classic songs has a story.


9. Losing My Religion (1991)

This surprise hit by REM was a surprise precisely because it’s subject matter, which was almost infinitely more serious than other chart-toppers of the day. The song’s narrative is from the perspective of South African political prisoner Sicelo Zumba, and more or less gives an account of the anguish he experienced rotting away and eventually dying in prison under South African Apartheid. When the narrator sings of “losing my religion” he does mean literally losing his faith; however, it is not only his faith in God but also in progress and human beings in general. He starts out the song optimistically, believing “life is bigger / it’s bigger than you and you are not me / the lengths that I will go to.” But as time goes on he becomes more cynical, eventually singing of being tortured, saying “every waking hour I’m choosing my confessions.” He becomes torn between his belief in the cause he represents and his own suffering, singing “oh no I’ve said too much / I haven’t said enough.” So, yeah, not a happy song.

8. Bad Moon Rising (1969)

This Creedence Clearwater Revival song contains one of the most famously misheard lyrics of all time. “There’s a bad moon on the rise” was and still is commonly heard as “there’s a bathroom on the right.” And while it certainly would be awesome if the song did claim there is a bathroom on the right, the real story of the lyrics is amusing as well. For you see, the song’s lyrics are basically a satire of a 1968 book written by a religious fanatic called Signs of the Times. The book got a lot of press in 1968 because it claimed that the end of the world was being foretold by the seemingly unusual number of natural disasters that had occurred in the years leading up to the book’s publication—the most famous disaster being Hurricane Alicia, which devastated the Texas cities of Galveston and Houston in 1967, killing 21 people. John Fogerty wrote “Bad Moon Rising” as a response, highlighting how silly such theories sounded.

7. Where the Streets Have to Name (1987)

This song from U2’s biggest and most influential album, “The Joshua Tree,” was a huge hit in 1987 and has remained one of U2’s best-known and loved songs. But the title and refrain have always been someone mysterious. Well, this is another classic rock song inspired by a novel, though in a more earnest way. Lead singer Bono’s lyrics were inspired by a novel he read in 1986 called, of course, Where the Streets Have No Name by Ernesto Bolano. The book is about a priest sent to be a missionary in 19th century El Salvador, but who comes to the realization that the isolated people he is supposed to convert know more about love than he does, and that they are better off without Christianity. The priest eventually takes up arms (and dies) in defense of the village against wealthy landowners who eventually take the land for themselves. The fact that the village streets had no name was a symbol in the novel for innocence and, eventually, innocence lost. U2’s song basically takes up these themes. Bono sings, “I want to take shelter from the poison rain / where the streets have no name,” and then “We’re beaten and blown by the wind / trampled in dust / I’ll show you a place / high on a desert plain / where the streets have no name.” You get the picture.

6. Oh, Pretty Woman (1964)

While this song was a huge hit for Roy Orbison when originally released, most people born since the 70s know it as the theme song and inspiration for the 1990 film Pretty Woman starring Julia Roberts. And though the song was interpreted in the 60s as a simple love song, Orbison later reveals that it was far more apt to inspire a movie about a hooker than people originally realized. This is because the “pretty woman” in the song actually is a prostitute, the song being a metaphor about the temptation of a married man who wants to remain faithful but is weak and prone to giving in to temptation. The opening lines of the song say it all: “Pretty woman walkin down the street / Pretty woman, the kind I like to meet / Pretty woman, I don’t believe you / You’re not the truth / No one could look as good as you.” In other words, the street walking woman isn’t the truth; his wife is the truth. No woman could really be as good as this other woman looks. Nevertheless, the man is taken in and pursues the false idea anyway.

5. Purple Haze (1966)

Most people assume this Jimi Hendrix song is about drugs, since “purple haze” was both the street name for a certain type of weed and the name given to the cloud of pot smoke at a concert. And this song is about drugs…just not in the way people think it is. Hendrix wrote the song in London after reading a bizarre newspaper story about a a waitress who became obsessed with a regular customer. She began stalking the man after he left the cafe where she worked. One day the woman slipped LSD into the man’s coffee and, with his faculties rather impaired, led the man back to her apartment, where she tied him up and held him captive for several days. Hendrix was struck by the story, and wrote the song from the perspective of the man coming to his senses and wondering what the hell was going on. In interviews, Hendrix always refuted the simple interpretation of the song’s drug inspiration by pointing to the line, “Am I happy or in misery? / Whatever it is, that girl put a spell on me / Help me, help me.”

4. Stairway to Heaven (1971)

This Led Zeplin classic was never even released as a single off the album “IV,” since it was 8 minutes long and impossible to reduce to a single-length track due to its composition. Nevertheless it became one of the most-requested and most-played rocks songs in radio history. What’s funny about the song is that the story told by the lyrics comes from an unlikely source for a rock song. Robert Plant got the idea from a fable by the famous 19th century Danish children’s storyteller Hans Christian Andersen. The story was called “Den Gyldne Trapper” in Danish, “The Golden Stairs” in English. It was a fable about a wealthy woman who was so obsessed with getting to heaven that she was building a golden staircase to get there. The story ends tragically, of course; the staircase becomes so heavy that it sinks into the earth and becomes a staircase to “Helvede” (Danish for hell). Robert Plant happened to read the story while the band was writing songs for their album at a cottage in Whales, and he thought it was a good lesson for the band as they became richer and more famous.

3. Billy Jean (1983)

This song was probably Michael Jackson’s first mega-hit, the second single off his album “Thriller” which paved the way for the title song. The “Billie Jean” MJ sings about is based on the famous tennis player Billie Jean King. While it was never suggested that the two were an item—King was 15 years older than Jackson…and a lesbian—they were friends, having been introduced by one of Michael Jackson’s other older woman friends, the late Elizabeth Taylor. One night at a party at Taylor’s house, a recently retired Billie Jean King told a story about how a deranged female fan wrote to her repeatedly claiming she was having King’s baby. Jackson, no stranger to obsessed fans himself (he once framed a letter from a stalker and hung it in his mother’s house), was obviously fascinated by this level of delusion. Currently in the studio working on his next album, MJ penned a song about a deranged fan, and in a nod to the source material, named the fan Billie Jean.

2. Tutti Frutti (1955)

This Little Richard song was one of the original Rock and Roll hits—some critics say the very first. It is also part of the reason why uptight parents were so uneasy about this new “Rock and Roll” fad. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that the song has something to do with promiscuous activity. He’s got a girl named Sue who knows just what to do? A girl named Daisy who almost drives him crazy? But what does the refrain, “Tutti Frutti, all rooty” mean? Well, as you might imagine, African American rhythm & blues culture was pretty wild and had its own slang vernacular. “All rooty” basically meant “all right!” And “tutti frutti?” Well, that was code for a certain two-word sex act that begins with the same letters. So uptight preachers and old-school public figures may not have known exactly what their kids were dancing to, but they knew it wasn’t good—and they were sorta right.

1. Hey Jude (1968)

This all-time classic, like many other classic Beatles songs (e.g. Yellow Submarine, I Am the Walrus, Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds, Strawberry fields) was written with—how shall we put it?—pharmaceutical assistance. In the late 60s a trend was growing of watching The Wizard of Oz while smoking pot or doing LSD (a trend later responsible for the theory that Pink Floyd’s “Dark Side of the Moon” fits perfectly with the film). While never admitting to taking part in this activity himself, McCartney did explain that the titular Jude is in fact Judy Garland (Dorothy). The line “take a sad song and make it better” refers to “Over the Rainbow,” while the line “You’re waiting for someone to perform with” refers to Garland’s famous attempts at finding love (and the many times in which her relationships publicly crashed and burned). Bet you won’t ever
here this song the same now, will you?


Source: HERE

Friday, October 7, 2011

Michele Bachmann: Brainless



LMAO I DIED laughing yesterday when I saw this play on FOX News. And what was even funnier was that they were interviewing Michele Bachmann.
I'd say "Poor Girl," but she sets herself up for these things.

I swear if there was a zombie apocalypse, I don't think she needs to worry about getting eaten since she has NO BRAIN at all. And another thing, her husband is SO far IN the closet, he's in Narnia LMAO

Hobo's Lullaby - Woody Guthrie



"I know the police cause you trouble
They cause trouble everywhere
But when you die and go to Heaven
You'll find no policemen there"
-Woody Guthrie

Rihanna's Creepin'

Jeremy Scott Spring/Summer 2012

Ri Ri rocking his work:





Rihanna seen Late last month on the streets shooting her video "We Found Love."

I LOVE the fact that she's wearing Creepers!! I have 3 pairs myself (this same pair actually), and I have to say, it feels good seeing I'm NOT the only one who wears them.


Black Suede Creepers

Prada Creepers



Source: http://www.upscalehype.com/2011/09/rihanna-in-jeremy-scott-spring-2012-denim-bralette-and-skirt/

[quote]





"A man is a success if he gets up in the morning and goes to bed at night and in between does what he wants to do." -- Bob Dylan.

Saturday, October 1, 2011