Saturday, 30 August 2008

Download Little Richard mp3






Little Richard
   

Artist: Little Richard: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Rock
Rock & Roll
Other
Retro

   







Discography:


The Best Of Little Richard
   

 The Best Of Little Richard

   Year: 2003   

Tracks: 16
Little Richard - (2000) The Best Of The Vee Jay Years, Vol. 2
   

 Little Richard - (2000) The Best Of The Vee Jay Years, Vol. 2

   Year: 2000   

Tracks: 25
Little Richard - (2000) The Best Of The Vee Jay Years, Vol. 1
   

 Little Richard - (2000) The Best Of The Vee Jay Years, Vol. 1

   Year: 2000   

Tracks: 25
Specialty Box Set [Ace]
   

 Specialty Box Set [Ace]

   Year: 1989   

Tracks: 20
Formative Years 1951-53
   

 Formative Years 1951-53

   Year: 1989   

Tracks: 22
18 Greatest Hits
   

 18 Greatest Hits

   Year: 1985   

Tracks: 18
Second Coming [1971]
   

 Second Coming [1971]

   Year: 1971   

Tracks: 22
The Specialty Sessions -  CD1
   

 The Specialty Sessions - CD1

   Year:    

Tracks: 26
The Best Of
   

 The Best Of

   Year:    

Tracks: 16
Long Tall Sally
   

 Long Tall Sally

   Year:    

Tracks: 14
Here's Little Richard
   

 Here's Little Richard

   Year:    

Tracks: 12
Bama Lama Bama Loo
   

 Bama Lama Bama Loo

   Year:    

Tracks: 12






One of the original rock & roll out greats, Little Richard structured the fire of gospel singing with New Orleans R&B, buffeting the pianoforte and wailing with joyful abandon. While legion other R&B greats of the early '50s had been moving in a like management, none of them matched the plain electricity of Richard's vocals. With his bullet-speed deliveries, rapturous trills, and the overjoyed strength of personality in his singing, he was important in upping the electric potential from high-power R&B into the like, still different, pretense of rock & roll. Although he was entirely a hitmaker for a match of age or so, his influence upon both the soul and British Invasion stars of the 1960s was immense, and his early hits rest burden classics of the rock repertoire.


Heavily steeped in gospel music piece growing up in Georgia, when Little Richard began recording in the early '50s he played unexceptional climb up blues/R&B that owed a bunch to his early inspirations Billy Wright and Roy Brown. In 1955, at Lloyd Price's hint, Richard sent a demo tape to Specialty Records, wHO were impressed enough to sign him and format a session for him in New Orleans. That session, yet, didn't get cancelled the ground until Richard began casual around with a slightly abhorrent ditty during a break. With somewhat cleaned-up lyrics, "Tutti Frutti" was the record that gave birth to Little Richard as he is now known -- the joyful "court!"s, the ferocious piano playacting, the sax-driven, pedal-to-the-metal rhythm segment. It was besides his number one tally, although, ridiculous as it now seems, Pat Boone's cover version outdid Richard's on the strike parade.


Boone would besides stress to cover Richard's next make, "Long Tall Sally," merely by that time it was apparent that audiences sinister and elwyn Brooks White much favorite the genuine carry on. In 1956 and 1957, Richard reeled off a string of hellenic hits -- "Long Tall Sally," "Slippin' and "Slidin'," "Jenny ass, Jenny," "Keep back a Knockin'," "Good Golly, Miss Molly," "The Girl Can't Help It" -- that continue the foundation garment of his celebrity. While Richard's inimitable mania was the key fruit to his best records, he as well owed a lot of his success to the gutsy playing of ace New Orleans academic session players like Lee Allen (tenor sax), Alvin Tyler (baritone sax), and specially Earl Palmer (drummer), world Health Organization ordinarily accompanied the isaac Merrit Singer in both New Orleans and Los Angeles studios. Richard's unforgettable appearances in early tilt & flap movies, especially The Girl Can't Help It, as well did a caboodle to spreading the sway & roll gospel to the people.


Richard was at the pinnacle of his commercial-grade and aesthetic powers when he of a sudden lay off the business during an Australian tour in late 1957, enrolling in a Bible college in Alabama presently after reverting to the States. Richard had actually been feeling the call of religion for a spell before his announcement, but it was nonetheless a shock to both his fans and the music industry. Specialty drew on unreleased roger Sessions for a few more hard-rocking singles in the late '50s, but Richard most vanished from the public eye for a few age. When he did repay to recording, it was as a gospels singer, cut a few little-heard sacred sides for End, Mercury, and Atlantic in the early '60s.


By 1962, though, Richard had returned to rock & rove, touring Britain to an enthusiastic reception. Among the groups that supported him on those jaunts were the Rolling Stones and the Beatles, whose vocals (St. Paul McCartney's specially) took a caboodle of inspiration from Richard's. In 1964, the Beatles cut a kayo version of "Long Tall Sally," with McCartney on trail, that whitethorn have got even outdone the original. It's been speculated that the success of the Beatles, and other British Invaders world Health Organization adored Richard, finally prompted the singer into making a all-out riposte as an unapologetic rock candy & curler. Hooking up with Specialty in one case again, he had a little strike in 1964 with "Bama Lama Bama Loo." These and other sides were goodly efforts in the mould of his classical '50s sides, but tastes had changed excessively a good deal for Richard to climb the charts again. He fagged the rest of the '60s in a continual unsuccessful riposte, recording for Vee-Jay (accompanied on some sides by Jimi Hendrix, world Health Organization was concisely in Richard's isthmus), OKeh, and Modern (for whom he even tested recording in Memphis with Stax academic session musicians).


It was the rock-and-roll & roll resurgence of the late '60s and early '70s, though, that actually saved Richard's career, enabling him to trifle on the nostalgia circumference with great success (though he had a modest hit, "Freedom Blues," in 1970). He had always been a flamboyant performing artist, brandishing a six-inch pompadour and mascara, and constant entertaining appearances on television talk shows seemed to ascertain his continuing succeeder as a surviving caption. Yet by the tardy '70s, he'd returned to the church over again. Somewhat predictably, he relieved endorse into sway and usher business by the mid-'80s. Since and so, he's retained his profile with a part in Mastered and Out in Beverly Hills (the movie's soundtrack besides returned him to the charts, this clip with "Capital Gosh a-Mighty") and edgar Albert Guest appearances on soundtracks, compilations, and children's rock-and-roll records. At this peak it's safe to arrogate that he never will get that much-hungered-for rejoinder murder, only he corpse one of stone & roll's most colorful icons, noneffervescent capable of turning on the charm and charisma in his infrequent appearances in the calcium light.





Bright Eyes' Conor Oberst brings country rock to Leeds Festival

Wednesday, 20 August 2008

Massachusetts Governor Proposes Rule That Would Require Businesses To Contribute More To Health Coverage


Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick (D) on Monday proposed a state regulation that would command businesses to contribute more to employee health coverage or pay an annual "fair ploughshare" penalty, the Boston Globe reports. Under existing state of matter law, businesses with more than than 10 full-time workers must offer health reporting or yield an yearly penalty of $295 per worker. Employers could choose either to cover at least 33% of their workers' premiums within the first 90 days of employment or ensure that at least 25% of their full-time workers ar enrolled in an employer-sponsored plan.

The proposed regulation would require employers to comply with both requirements or pay the annual penalty. Public documents released on Monday stated that the rule, if adoptive, would be implemented on Oct. 1. The new rule would generate an estimated $45 million this fiscal year, which would be secondhand to close a funding gap in the state's health insurance law. A public hearing on the proposed regulation is scheduled for Sept. 5.

Brian Rosman, research director for Health Care For All, said, "We think this implements the shared responsibility concept that was the stylemark of health care reform," adding, "It makes sensory faculty to us to say to companies that tender minimal or no benefits, 'You have to pretend a lowly contribution.'"

The Retailers Association of Massachusetts, which represents about 3,000 state businesses, said that the new regulation would force its members -- especially small-business owners -- to spend thousands of dollars more than on employee health care and would lead some companies to drop coverage altogether. Association President Jon Hurst said that hundreds of businesses, particularly those that are seasonal, would be affected by the proposed regularisation because it would need them to submit quarterly reports on workers' wellness coverage, rather than annual reports.

The proposed linguistic rule comes 2 weeks later lawmakers sanctioned a supplementary funding nib that increases funding for the state's health policy law by $100 1000000 through extra assessments on insurance companies' reserve accounts and hospitals, as well as money from the Medical Security Trust Fund, which is used to fund health coverage for the unemployed (Lazar, Boston Globe, 8/12).


Reprinted with kind license from hypertext transfer protocol://www.kaisernetwork.org. You can view the intact Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for email delivery at hTTP://www.kaisernetwork.

Sunday, 10 August 2008

Giorgos Ntalaras

Giorgos Ntalaras   
Artist: Giorgos Ntalaras

   Genre(s): 
Folk
   



Discography:


Kalhmera Kuria Ludia   
 Kalhmera Kuria Ludia

   Year: 1984   
Tracks: 15


Omorfo Xava   
 Omorfo Xava

   Year: 1982   
Tracks: 13


O Ilios o iliatoras   
 O Ilios o iliatoras

   Year: 1982   
Tracks: 12


18 Lianotragouda Ths Pikrhs Patridas   
 18 Lianotragouda Ths Pikrhs Patridas

   Year: 1974   
Tracks: 18


Ta Tragoudia Mou   
 Ta Tragoudia Mou

   Year:    
Tracks: 25


Radar   
 Radar

   Year:    
Tracks: 12