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Posts Tagged ‘Music’

Dr. Dog Winter Dates & New Music

TICKETS GO ON SALE OCTOBER 16; NEW SONGS AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD


Dr. Dog

Dr. Dog has announced a
string of east coast dates to begin January 29, 2011. Tickets go on sale this Saturday, October 16. The band is on
tour right now in support of their new album, Shame, Shame. Click here for those dates.

During their current tour, the band are selling a new double 7″. Click here and here to download
“Nobody Knows Who You Are” and “Take Me Into Town” from that release.


January 28 – 9:30 Club – Washington, DC
January 29 – 9:30 Club – Washington, DC

January 31 – Bijou Theatre – Knoxville, TN
February 1 – Minglewood Hall – Memphis, TN
February 3 – Music Farm – Charleston, SC
February 4 – The Masquerade – Atlanta, GA
February 5 – Cannery – Nashville, TN
February 7 – WorkPlay – Birmingham, AL
February 8 – Orange Peel – Asheville, NC
February 9 – Jefferson Theatre – Charlottesville, VA
February 11 – Electric Factory – Philadelphia, PA
February 15 – Higher Ground – Burlington, VT
February 16 – TBA – Rochester, NY
February 17 – Mr. Small’s – Pittsburgh, PA

February 18 – Terminal 5 – New York, NY

February 19 – Paradise – Boston, MA

Dr. Dog
Tour Dates

::
Dr. Dog News
::
Dr. Dog
Concert
Reviews


MySpace names Michael Jackson as best male artist

Late King of Pop Michael Jackson has been named as the best male artist by music and social networking site MySpace. The site announced its Top Music of All Time on October 7, and singer Justin Timberlake came in at second place, outranking the likes of Bob Marley, David Bowie and Bob Dylan, the Herald [...]

West Beach Music Fest | Pics | Review

Words & Images by: L. Paul Mann

West Beach Music Festival :: 09.24.10-09.25.10 :: Santa Barbara, CA

Day 1

WBMF Grounds 2010

Despite a slew of seemingly insurmountable roadblocks thrown up by the Santa Barbara City Council, the fourth annual West Beach Festival went off without a hitch the last weekend of September. Music fans were greeted with some of the first hot, sunny weather after one of the coldest, foggiest summers in Coastal California’s history. The scaled back festival was actually moved to Santa Barbara’s East Beach, along a palm lined grassy field that made for the perfect backdrop to the warm weather. Among the city’s restrictions, the festival was scaled back from three days to two and attendance was limited to half of last year’s record 14,000 people. The city also limited in and out privileges, sound levels and alcohol consumption (4 drinks per person per day). But despite all the restrictions, there were nothing but smiles all around on happy music fans throughout the grounds.

Twin Productions has been able to create a unique festival over the last four years, built around their core interest in reggae and beach music. Most of the acts booked are carefully selected world music artists, flying just under the radar of pop music fame, with a few headliners thrown in to add broader credibility to the event. Although most of the acts playing the main stage share reggae roots, the fest’s unique approach and vast cultural differences create a smorgasbord of sounds. West Beach Festival probably has more in common with Peter Gabriel s’ 30 year old WOMAD Festival than any other event. WOMAD was the first pop music festival to feature all types of bands from across the globe. West Beach also adds an electronic music stage into the mix to keep young techno fans dancing. A beautiful sunny day greeted early bird music fans for day one of the festival. Here are some of highlights.

Vancouver-based Red Eye Empire rocked the main stage early on. Their funky reggae infused sound is reminiscent of G Love & Special Sauce, and the band, in fact, has toured with G Love several times. Through The Roots were up next with the beach party oriented California sound. Hawaiian singer Anuhea (a cool breeze of the heavenly rose) brought a mellow island vibe during their sweltering afternoon set, with the crowd lounging on beach blankets during this set.

Over on the electronic music stage, Oakland-based rappers Zion I were the first act to draw a sizable crowd of enthusiastic, young fans on Saturday. Next, as the hot afternoon sun began to fade, Rey Fresco greeted a refreshed audience in front of the main stage. The Ventura, CA-based band is a veritable world music jam encapsulated in one group. Hailing from Fiji, lead singer Roger Keiaho offers a distinctive vocal style. Blonde surfer Andrew Jones not only plays the drums but manufactures them as well. Bassist Shawn Echevarria brings a Latin rhythm to the band. Finally, harpist Xoco Morazo adds a unique touch to the group, playing a variety of custom harps built by his father.

Rebelution @ WBMF ’10

A fired up crowd was ready for the next main stage act, San Diego-based Mike Pinto. Originally from Philadelphia, this roots rocker is far more at home playing beachy surf music. He already has a big following in many Pacific islands like Guam and Hawaii.

As dusk fell, one of the most well received bands of the festival truly brought the growing crowd alive. Katchafire, hailing from New Zealand, is comprised of indigenous Maori musicians playing lush roots reggae with their own cultural sounds in the mix.

Collie Buddz brought his unique mix of dance hall, Soca and hip hop to the main stage as night fell. Born in New Orleans and raised in Bermuda, his style is truly his own.

Saturday’s headliner was Santa Barbara’s own Rebelution. The band’s popular Cali-reggae sound has recently exploded in popularity and the group has been headlining large venues across the country. The band was greeted by a smoky, smiling, gyrating crowd. At the same time, electronic music wizards Savoy were closing out the electronic music stage in front of a younger crowd of enthusiastic fans. The Boulder, CO trio, including a live drummer, merges a mash up of styles from European house to 70s and 80s dance music to create their fresh new sound. As day one of West Beach Festival 2010 wound down, smiling music fans could be seen from one end of the venue to the other.

Day 2

Lime Riders @ WBMF ’10

Sunday at the West Beach Music Festival started bright and early with blazing sunshine and music on all stages by 12 noon. Cuervo, which came on board as a last minute corporate sponsor and helped save the event from early termination, produced a giant playground for young adults with the Cuervo Pavilion. It came complete with an artificial rock wall, where volunteer teams from the audience would compete for prizes while being doused with gallons of water. Other games featured a giant mechanical lime that participants could ride like a mechanical bull. A few bikini-clad girls ended up with minor bloody noses, but were still smiling nevertheless. Most of the games featured some sort of water dousing, which became very inviting as the temperature in Santa Barbara soared to over 90-degrees.

While some fans frolicked at the games, others danced to their favorite bands on the multiple stages. Giant Panda Guerilla Dub Sound played an early set in the sweltering midday sun. The New York-based band plays experimental dub reggae but also takes a page from jam bands like Phish by never playing the same set twice and improvising extensively live. Indeed, the band played two entirely different sets in Santa Barbara on this day. The West Beach Fest set sounded like traditional reggae and created a mellow tone in line with the mood of a sweltering early crowd. At the after-show later in the evening at the Soho nightclub, the band played a much more upbeat dub drenched set. The sound was reminiscent of The Clash when they began to experiment with reggae. Giant Panda has built a loyal following by playing over 500 shows in the last three years. The band offers free downloads of their music at LivePanda.com.

Central Coast band Still Time hit the main stage next with a blues-drenched set of upbeat tunes. This relatively young band has become a regional favorite, playing up and down the coast for the last five years. Their unique, bluesy style has been compared to music masters like Dave Matthews and Ben Harper. The band was the perfect lead-in to the next main stage act, JJ Grey & Mofro. The funky blues boogie band from Jacksonville, FL has been a staple on the festival circuit for nearly a decade. Mofro brought a sweltering mid-afternoon crowd to their feet for a shuffling dance extravaganza.

UB40 @ WBMF ’10

As the relentless afternoon sun began to subside, Australian new-roots reggae sensation The Beautiful Girls hit the stage. Led by charismatic lead singer Matt McHugh, the band had bikini clad girls screaming and dancing in front of the West Beach crowd. Another unique new hybrid group, their sound has been compared to bands as diverse as The Police and Ben Harper.

As a spectacular sunset fell over the festival grounds, the most anticipated band of the festival exploded onto the stage in a spectacular blazing light show. UB40, one of the veterans of the English ska and reggae movement, has sold over 70 million records since they got together in the late 70s. The band did not disappoint, offering a larger-than-life live show featuring animated dance routines and lively solo performances from many of the more than one dozen jamming musicians onstage.

At the same time, electronic music duo Pretty Lights had a smaller crowd of younger fans in a dancing frenzy in front of the electronic music stage. As the second night of the West Beach Music Festival wound to a close, bands like Soja and The Easy Star All-Stars had music fans grooving and smiling till the 10 p.m. curfew brought the 2010 festival to a close.

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JamBase | Irie
Go See Live Music!


Hot Rize: Free Download of First New Music in 20 Years

U.S. TOUR BEGINS OCTOBER 28


Hot Rize

Hot Rize has reunited for
their first US tour in over a decade, including recent high-profile performances at Bonnaroo and Telluride. The band
has recorded new music for the first time in 20 years, including “Diamond Joe” and a rearrangement of “Wichita
Lineman,” both available for free through HotRize.com. Click
here to download
“Diamond Joe”.

“The world is ready for a revisit from Hot Rize,” says banjo player Pete Wernick, who launched the band in
1978 with Tim O’Brien (mandolin, fiddle, lead vocals) and Nick Forster (electric bass, vocals) and
guitarist Charles Sawtelle. “In the rare times we’ve reunited for one-off performances, we’ve seen a level
of enthusiasm that’s been hard to ignore.” Following the untimely passing of Sawtelle in 1999, the quartet
reorganized in 2002 with Grammy winner and five-time IBMA Guitarist of the Year, Bryan Sutton. “I’m so
happy to be playing with Hot Rize. I’ve been a fan since seeing them as a kid when they came through North
Carolina,” adds Sutton. “It’s a joy to share the music.”

“A first, the four of us set out to play a summer’s worth of gigs – that was all we had committed to,” says Forster.
“But we kept going, playing everywhere we could. We grew up together and created music we’re really proud of –
over 100 recorded songs, mostly original or new arrangements of traditional music. Now – 32 years later – we’ve all
evolved as musicians, but we still have the Hot Rize sound; something only the four of us can make, something
Bryan is now a part of.”

TOUR DATES:

Oct 28 Berkeley, CA The Freight
Oct 29 Seattle, WA Benaroya Hall

Oct 30 Portland, OR Aladdin Theater
Oct 31 Boulder, CO Boulder Theater

Nov 3 Lexington, MA National Heritage Museum
Nov 4 New York, NY BB King Blues Club
Nov 5 Charlotte, NC McGlohon Theatre
Nov 6 Alexandria, VA The Birchmere

Nov 7 Morgantown, WV Creative Arts Center (Mountain Stage Radio Show)

Hot Rize
Tour Dates

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Hot Rize News
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Hot Rize
Concert
Reviews


Willie Nelson/Ryan Bingham | Santa Barbara | Pics | Review

Words & Images by: L. Paul Mann

Willie Nelson :: 09.23.10 :: Santa Barbara Bowl :: Santa Barbara, CA

Ryan Bingham by L. Paul Mann

“Living legend” is an oft-overused phrase in the music world, but 76-year- old Willie Nelson has surely earned the title. The proponent of American roots country music has created relevant music for close to 60 years while touring relentlessly. His bigger than life personal experiences and iconic outlaw image also help to bolster his legendary status.

Modern country-oriented rocker Ryan Bingham played an opening set with his band The Dead Horses. Singing in his trademark gravel voice, Bingham set the tone for the evening, playing a low-key set. The 29-year-old Academy Award winning singer-songwriter has been a regular on the festival circuit the last few years, often surrounded by indie rockers, where his concerts tend to be more rock ‘n’ roll in tone. At the Bowl, he offered a more intimate, almost folk sound. Bandmates Corby Schaub (guitar, mandolin), Elijah Ford (bass) and Matthew Smith (drums) followed Bingham’s lead playing with a subdued style that highlighted Bingham’s unique vocal skills and allowed an appreciative audience to absorb his masterful lyrics.

Shortly before dark, Nelson sauntered onstage with Trigger, his ragged acoustic guitar. Like Bingham, Nelson has played countless large music festival over the last few years and toured with a ramped-up band that gives a rock & roll road show quality to recent his live performances. However, his current tour offers a quieter show, something akin to a jazz club or honky tonk affair.

He largely played the same set his fans have come to expect over the years. “Whiskey River” was followed by “Still Is Still Moving To Me,” an almost mandatory opening pair for any Willie concert. But with a toned down band, this show offered a much more intimate and surprisingly more interesting view of the iconic songwriter’s talents. His twangy old guitar was prominent in the mix and his raspy vocals were easier to decipher and follow than usual. With fans hanging on his every word, the ability to hear his lyrics more succinctly seemed to bind the crowd more tightly to their favorite musical outlaw. His band included his little sister Bobbie Nelson on piano, longtime drummer Paul English on a simple single snare drum, Mickey Raphael on harmonica, and Billy English, Bee Spears and Jody Payne on backing vocals. With Nelson’s voice & guitar in the forefront of the subdued arrangments, mandatory classics like the Nelson-penned Patsy Cline hit “Crazy” and “On The Road Again” had folks dancing in the aisles and singing every line.

After the show, appreciative fans filed past Nelson’s biodiesel tour bus with wide smiles for the American icon that never seems to tire of touring.

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Willie Nelson Tour Dates :: Willie Nelson News :: Willie Nelson Concert Reviews

Ryan Bingham Tour Dates :: Ryan Bingham News :: Ryan Bingham Concert Reviews

JamBase | Rolling
Go See Live Music!


Rod Stewart doesn’t like music when making love

Rod Stewart has revealed that he doesn’t like music when making love because he needs to concentrate. The fertile rocker, 65, whose wife Penny Lancaster, 39, is expecting their second child – his eighth – admits that although his ballads may be responsible for a number of intimate evenings he isn’t a fan of romantic [...]

Beach Boys Movie Musical

A group of rock ‘n roll pioneers are the subjects of an upcoming motion picture musical — sprinkled with a splash of Mamma Mia!Music legends the Beach Boys will be getting the big screen treatment, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Fox 2000 edged out Universal for the rights to the catalogue of the successful band, who [...]

Sat Eye Candy: Don McLean

MORE TO THE MAN THAN A SLICE OF PIE

There are very few songs that virtually everyone is familiar with, but “American Pie” and its tale of “the day the music died” is surely one of them. However, that 1972 ultra-hit is hardly the only thing Don McLean ever recorded, and in fact, he remains one of only a handful of musicians to emerge from the golden era of singer-songwriters that’s still plying his trade with the same seriousness and high level craftsmanship as the work that brought him to notoriety in the first place. There’s a sense of dinged-up wonder to McLean’s songs, a wistful-but-still standing philosophical feel that’s bent and twisted by life’s inescapable vicissitudes. Like many of his peers, often peace and the pursuit of it is prominent in his work but McLean injects a sense of reality that often escapes folkies, not to mention a jazz-tinged musicality that’s a good ways from Greenwich Village standard. Today is McLean’s 65th birthday and we offer this assortment of choice moments in salute. Spare ol’ Don a thought or two as you look out on the starry, starry night this evening. And do yourself a favor and catch him with his crack band of Nashville players if he makes a rare concert appearance near you. The man continues to deliver something truly special in front of a live audience. (Dennis Cook)

We begin with a lovely number off McLean’s 1970 debut Tapestry.

Here’s the title cut from McLean’s most recent album, Addicted To Black (released this past April), followed by his second most famous single “Vincent.”

Next, a clip from the early 80s taken from an Irish TV programme called Siamsa Cois Laoi (Music Beside the Lee), where McLean updates a classic Irish folk tune and offers one of his own.

He can be quite the swinging romantic when he puts his mind to it.

The American West and cowboy culture are threads that run through his catalog, including 2003′s excellent The Western Album, where he tapped into classic public domain pieces alongside songs by Gene Autry & Woody Guthrie. Here’s an earlier original crack at this subject matter.

Another thoughtful, ambitious piece performed in Israel in 1979.

For all his distance from the Greenwich Village scene, McLean penned some songs that fit in nicely with the societal commentary that made Joan Baez and young Bob Dylan so famous.

McLean offers some fine thoughts on how music endures before his rumination on the original Superman and the downsides of wearing that cape.

No celebration of McLean would be complete without this one. We end here and raise our glass to one of the finest American singer-songwriters ever. A class act all the way.


JamBase Questionnaire: Greensky Bluegrass

Welcome back to JamBase’s baker’s dozen to the bright lights of the music world. Last time we heard from Ryan Montbleau
Band
.

Without a lot of fanfare – as is the way of guys comfortable picking in parking lots, open fields and the back of
overstuffed vans – Greensky
Bluegrass
have released a strong contender for String Band Album of the Year. All Access, Vol. 1 (released May 4) is as pure
and satisfying an example of quality songwriting, strong, interlocking musicianship and savvy cover selection as any
group of pickers are likely produce in 2010.

Captured in a single night last Thanksgiving weekend at The Riviera Theatre in Three Rivers, Michigan, All
Access, Vol. 1
flows like a delighted river over the listener, the immediacy of the moment accentuated by the
intimacy of the unfussy production, which makes one feel present enough to inspire no small amount of involuntary
shufflin’ & swayin’. Their picks from others’ songbooks are choice – Dylan’s “When I Paint My Masterpiece,” The
Beatles’ “A Day In The Life,” Pink Floyd’s “Time > Breathe Reprise,” Bruce Hornsby’s “King of the Hill,” Townes Van
Zandt’s “White Freight Liner Blues” – but what really sticks are the fabulously sculpted, sharply honest originals, many
tinged with a shadowy truthfulness that sets them apart from many in the too-damn-chipper acoustic crowd. The
fast ones fly wonderfully but it’s when Greensky nestles into a ballad or exploratory simmer that one hears all their
carefully honed strengths emerge. And numbers like “Just To Lie,” “200 Miles From Montana,” “Nine Days,”
“Reverend” and lengthy but never dull ramble “All Four” more than hold their own against the top gun cover material,
and their vocal blend cheerfully suggests a streamlined descendent of The Band’s rough ‘n’ ready rightness. All
Access, Vol. 1
is the ideal handshake for listeners yet to explore this reliably excellent, hard working string
band. (Dennis Cook)

Greensky Bluegrass returns to the road in October, starting with a headlining performance at the Fox Theatre in
Boulder, CO on October 13, followed by more Colorado dates (10/14-10-16) and then onto Arizona, California,
Oregon, Washington and back towards Midwest. Find full tour dates here.

Here’s what Paul Hoffman, Greensky Bluegrass’ mandolinist, vocalist and lead songwriter, had to say to our
inquiries.

Paul Hoffman by Eric Kinnally

Instrument of choice: Mandolin, words
Nicknames: Noodle, Big City, phoffman

1. Great music rarely happens withoutÂ…
Inspiration. From other music. From Pain. From the audience.

2. The first album I bought wasÂ…
HmmÂ…probably a tape. Simpsons Sing the Blues? New Kids on the Block? Beatles? The Beatles were
probably more inspiration than the others, but who didn’t want to be bad ass like Bart? I even wore a spike for
awhile.

3. The last song or album to really flip my wig wasÂ…
Not an album or song, but the David
Rawlings Machine
in concert totally flipped me. Love the way he phrases songs and builds solos. Check
out the free
podcast
from NPR’s Tiny Desk. Maybe Eisenhower by The Slip, too. The song arrangements are
sweet and the lyrics are real unique.

4. When I was a kid I wanted to grow up to beÂ…
Who wants to grow up? A screen actor, maybe, Big Hollywood or something. Don’t think that would work now. I
really just wanted to get paid to entertain. If only I’d known. My dad always says, “A big lottery winner.” I like that,
too. Now sometimes I say, “Retired and free.”

5. My favorite sort of gig isÂ…
The fun ones. Aren’t they all? Sort of. Sometimes there’s those factors though – great and less than great; long
drive; no fans; no dinner. The gigs that surprise me are my favorite sorts of gigs, like when we threw an
unannounced show at home and a great crowd showed up. Or when we drove from San Fran to San Diego and 13
hours later we loaded into the packed club while the opener was finishing. We just decided
to go for it and it worked out. All good at 10 am? Whew. Or maybe 6am?

6. One thing I wish people knew about me isÂ…
That I’m not afraid of sentence fragments. If they’re reading. Still. The people. After all this.

7. I love the sound ofÂ…
Music. Is this a trick question? And feedback, of course. Why else would I keep trying to use delay with distortion
and an envelope filter?

8. One day I hope to make an album as fantastic asÂ…
I can. The people I admire are out of reach to me. Not in a bleak way. Records are timeless and unique in a way
that I admire more than the music itself. The idea of documenting music in a breath of its development, it’s like a
musician’s truest commitment. So, I hope mine can be as genuine as possible.

9. The best meal I ever had on tour was atÂ…
Until recently, The Red Iguana has been a tour favorite. Salt Lake City mole. I know people who take it home on dry
ice. Recently, we were able to eat at home on tour. Weird, right? Food Dance in Kalamazoo, MI has got to be my
new favorite – breakfast lunch or dinner – although, SLC, if you’re reading, have me back. I need some mole!

10. I always find the coolest audiences inÂ…
The most unexpected places. I wouldn’t alienate any of our dedicated fans, who are spread all over, by being
specific. And I couldn’t. The places where I had no idea it would go off are always the coolest. Those surprise gigs.
Something so organic about them. No expectations.

11. The worst habit I’ve picked up being on the road all the time isÂ…
What was your name again?

12. The Beatles or the Stones? Por que?
The Beatles all the way. I was raised that way and I’m backing it fully now. Guess I couldn’t get into the Stones’
songs. Being named after Paul didn’t hurt.

13. The craziest thing I ever saw wasÂ…
Ughh? Really? Who is reading this?

Greensky Bluegrass Tour
Dates
:: Greensky Bluegrass
News
:: Greensky Bluegrass
Concert Reviews

JamBase | Better Off
Go See Live Music!


Cher Lady Gaga Duet?

In news that will be heavenly music to the ears of pop lovers everywhere, The Gossip Hotline is atwitter with buzz that two of the most flamboyant and outre pop songstresses of our time are teaming up to lay down vocals on a collaboration. Cher/Lady Gaga Duet anyone?Tattles reportedly tell The National Enquirer (Consider the Source!) [...]

World Music Expo: Womex 2010

OCTOBER 27-31 IN COPENHAGEN, DENMARK

It’s an all-day, all-night dance and listening party, where old hands and grand dames share space with wild
newcomers. It’s a business platform where people from remote villages and well-heeled megalopolises meet and
discuss how to sustain musical diversity. It’s the best place to launch a successful career, whether you’re a striking
traditional singer from Afghanistan or the best rock guitarist in Zanzibar.

It’s WOMEX, the world’s premier world music expo
and music event (October 27-31, 2010 in Copenhagen,
Denmark). This year, in addition to hearing sounds from across the planet, participants will get a chance to build
new approaches to “world music,” a term coined at the end of the eighties in the UK to help market music from
outside the Western world, now about creating musical infrastructure to support artists and audiences everywhere.

WOMEX has brought Saharan desert rockers Tinariwen, Cape Verdean diva Cesaria Evora, Brazilian bohemian Seu Jorge, and countless others to global stardom. This year’s showcase festival highlights
everyone from La Reunion’s soulful Creole blues poet Danyèl Waro to the hip electro-cumbia of Colombia’s
Bomba Estereo and the hard-core Bavarian brass of LaBrassBanda. Virtuoso hurdy-gurdy from
Austria (Matthias Loibner) may follow 10,000-year-old Chinese jew’s harp tunes (Wang Li) and
the resonant funk of the Senegalese hoddu (Malick Pathe Sow & Maoba). Anything goes—as long as it
excels.

“The jury always tries to put together a program that is broad in styles and traditions,
that reflects electronic and acoustic approaches,” WOMEX Director of Music Programming Alexander
Walter
notes. “We keep an eye on having bigger and smaller bands. Only by being this open and diverse can
cover the radically different interests and tastes of the delegates that come to the event.”


Treasure Island Music Fest: Daily Schedule & Night Shows

SEE EVERY BAND PLAY; NIGHT SHOWS AT THE INDEPENDENT


James Murphy

The 2010 schedule for the Treasure Island Music Festival is available here. With two stages that alternate between
bands, rather than having them play simultaneously, fans have the chance to literally hear every note of every artist for
the entire weekend.

Night shows featuring Die Antwoord, Rogue Wave, Dan Black, Butterfly Bones, and Vin Sol take
place October 14-16
at The Independent in San Francisco. Click here for the details.


Susan Boyle Holiday Album, “The Gift,” Already A Charttopper

SuBo’s “Gift” is already a big hit.Music Lovers can’t wait to hear Scottish songbird Susan Boyle belt out some Yuletide carols. Boyle is putting the finishing touches on her new album, her first holiday release, and the compilation’s already shot to the top of Amazon.com’s Bestsellers chart! Susan Boyle’s The Gift doesn’t hit music retailers until [...]

Justin Bieber caught kissing in back seat of car

Justin Bieber was spotted locking lips in the with his music video co-star in the backseat of a car in Venice, CA—a news that could break the hearts of millions of his girl fans. The 16-year-old pop star was seen making out with singer Jasmine Villegas in the back seat of a Honda. Villegas, 16, [...]

Audiophile Update

Longtime readers know of my love for music and audio, and regardless of the quality of my marketing thoughts here the linkbait of my headphone review trumps everything else at this site. The original review was in 2007 and is … Continue reading

Share music video on ipod Posted By : hensony

iPod is getting more popular everyday and no matter in which part of the world you live, you know iPod is just wonderful. It is the most popular portable music device the world has ever seen!

How to transfer iPod music to iPod/iTouch/iTunes/computer/iPhones? Posted By : JasmineGuo

You may have an old iPod and a new one. When you want to transfer music from iPod to the new iPod, this article will introduce to you how to transfer iPod to iPod free, also to other formats.

Google Music Combines Cloud Storage and Downloads

As its inevitable launch fast approaches, more and more rumors are beginning to circulate about Google’s upcoming music service. The latest of these rumors is that Google will be combining both cloud-based storage and downloads, making it possible for users to listen to their music almost anywhere. Of course, the question on everyone’s mind is [...]

Convert all your Music and Videos Format from Downloadsversion Posted By : Tom Thompsons

Downloadsversion is a website that provides all kinds of downloads right from free ones to those that cost a little and are not imitation software. Downloadsversion also has a hoard of categories that a user who decides to download can choose from.

Kanye West 40-Minute “Runaway” Short Film Will Be Longest Music VIDEO In History

Kanye West will release the longest music video in history with the release of a 40-minute epic for his new “Runaway” single, NY Mag reported on Wednesday.The music video will last just seconds longer than the currentl title-holder, Michael Jackson’s “Ghosts,” which timed in at 39 minutes and 31 seconds. West said the film-noir-style movie will [...]