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Posts Tagged ‘spin’

Britney Spears “Hold It Against Me” Shatters Billboard Spin Record

Britney Spears’ latest track, “Hold It Against Me,” has received the highest amount of radio play in Billboard’s 18-year history. On Monday, Brit’s dance-fused single stormed Billboard’s Pop Songs chart — which lists the most-played songs on 130 mainstream Top 40 radio stations across the US — at No. 16, earning 4,071 plays in its [...]

The Use of Customer Relationship Management Software For Easy Customer Management Posted By : jacy spin

Customer Relationship Management [CRM] software is a system that helps to integrate the management of functions such as customer services, as well as marketing and sales activities. This CRM management system has softwares that are able to facilitate the management of these services. The ability of this system ranges from its ability for information to be shared by different people to having it help improve the capabilities of a customer tracking system. The other major uses of this is that it a

The Benefits of Using CRM Software towards Attaining an Efficient Manner of Defining Company Posted By : jacy spin

The best definition of CRM management is one that combines serving clients and developing ideal services for new ones while using software that will make a company define and develop a relationship between the company and the clients. When CRM management is carried out in an effective manner, it is known to improve the internal operation of the business and clearly, this is also reflected in the external relationships of the business. This can be done with ease using CRM software. In essence, th

Pietersen’s inability to handle left-arm spin, not giant ego his Achilles heel

England batsman Kevin Pietersen’s inability to handle left-arm spin bowling with confidence has strengthened Xavier Doherty’s chances of playing in the first Ashes Test in Brisbane. Australia A’s left-arm spinner Steve O’Keefe troubled Pietersen in a tour match at the Bellerive Oval, reminding the talented batsman of his one real weakness. Critics say that Pietersen’s [...]

crm based software applications and management Posted By : jacy spin

CRM Software brings manifold influences to a business and they can bring extraordinary prosperity to any business no matter what stage it might be in. there are types, variations as well as separate thinking strategies that come with practical decision making steps that bring a company out of the dysfunctional processes. Sales force automation brings in software to streamline the different phases of sales promotion along with new identification of promotional codes

Watch Railroad Earth Spin New LP On Facebook

SPINNING NEW ALBUM ON THE DENON 100 TURNTABLE


Railroad Earth

Railroad Earth‘s new self-
titled album is out on October 12 via One Haven Music. Tomorrow at 1pm EDT the
band will test-drive a vinyl copy of the new album, in its entirety, at the HQ of legendary electronics-maker Denon.
They’ll spin the album on a new Denon
100 turntable
, manufactured to commemorate Denon’s 100th anniversary.

You can watch the whole thing on the Railroad Earth Facebook page.


Oct 9 Roseland, VA @ The Festy Experience
Oct 14 Ozark, AR @ Mulberry Mountain Harvest Music Festival
Oct 15 Austin, TX @ La Zona Rosa

Oct 16 New Orleans, LA @ Tipitina’s
Oct 19 Athens, GA @ The Melting Point
Oct 21 Live Oak, FL @ MagnoliaFest
Oct 22 Charlotte, NC @ Visulite Theatre
Oct 23 Carrboro, NC @ Cat’s Cradle
Oct 28 Woodstock, NY @ Bearsville Theater
Oct 29 New York, NY @ The Fillmore NY @ Irving Plaza
Oct 30 Boston, MA @ The Paradise
Oct 31 Ithaca, NY @ State Theater
Nov 4 Buffalo, NY @ The Tralf Music Hall

Nov 5 Cleveland, OH @ The Beachland Ballroom

Nov 6 Grand Rapids, MI @ The Intersection
Nov 7 Ann Arbor, MI @ The Ark
Nov 20 Baltimore, MD @ Rams Head Live
Nov 26 Stroudsburg, PA @ Sherman Theater

Nov 27 Stroudsburg, PA @ Sherman Theater
Dec 2 Londonderry, NH @ The Tupelo Music Hall

Dec 3 Burlington, VT @ Higher Ground Ballroom

Dec 4 Skowhegan, ME @ Skowhegan Opera House

Dec 10 Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club
Dec 11 Philadelphia, PA @ World Cafe Live
Dec 29 Denver, CO @ Ogden Theatre

Dec 30 Denver, CO @ Ogden Theatre
Dec 31 Denver, CO @ Ogden Theatre

Railroad Earth
Tour Dates

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Railroad Earth News
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Railroad Earth
Concert
Reviews


WHAT IS THE NEED TO FIND OLD VERSION SOFTWARE Posted By : tanya spin

Free Open Source Software is a kind of computer software which is widely accessible with the help of source code and also with some other official rights which is normally reticent for copyrighted holders.

Oceanus to buy 2 companies, spin off restaurant unit: Update

Oceanus Group, the world’s largest operator of abalone farms, plans to buy two companies this year to expand its food business and sell shares of its restaurant unit as early as 2012.

Oceanus may buy a Taiwan food-packager by mid-2010 and an Australian company later in the year to boost its supply of wild abalones, Chairman Ng Cher Yew said. Ah Yat Tian Xia, its chain of restaurants, will sell shares in Taiwan or Hong Kong, he said. Oceanus stock rose by the daily limit in Taipei.

Read more…

Oceanus to buy 2 food companies, spin off restaurant unit

Oceanus Group, the world’s largest operator of abalone farms, plans to buy two companies this year to expand its food business and sell shares of its restaurant unit as early as 2012.

Oceanus expects to buy a Taiwanese food-packager by mid-2010 and acquire an Australian company later in the year to boost its supply of wild abalones, Chairman Ng Cher Yew said. Ah Yat Abalone Group, its chain of restaurants, will sell shares in Taiwan or Hong Kong, he said.

Read more…

Sun Spin: Bohemian Rhapsody

IS THIS THE REAL LIFE OR JUST FANTASY?

There are some songs that cut across time, distance, nationality and genre to touch the vast majority of people worldwide. There’s no formula to it or artists would pump out such universal numbers like clockwork. But some songs, whenever and wherever they are played, trigger off a kind of happy, focusing mania. And one such uber-tune is Queen‘s “Bohemian Rhapsody.” The culminating point of 1975′s stellar, artistically vigorous A Night At The Opera, “Bohemian Rhapsody” is a miniature rock opera, a widescreen tale with electric guitars, boyish choir interludes, and a tear-in-your-beer tale of a life gone wrong. It’s the Old West and ’30s Gangster films distilled into song form, and it’s got a broad enough appeal to be covered by a whole host of folks, while the original continues to ignite the creativity of others, from Wayne’s World to children’s cartoons. It’s the only song we can imagine both The Flaming Lips and Pink will ever share on setlists (though there seems promise in a Pink-i-fied “Do You Realize?” and a Lips smacked “Get The Party Started”Â…but we digress). For many reasons, what Freddie Mercury penned and brought to vibrant fruition with his bandmates continues to endure. This Sunday we celebrate one of the truly great songs of the 20th century, a number that will still likely be trotted out to great, joyous applause in the 22nd and 23rd centuries.

Our salute to the operatic rock classic begins with a recent interpretation by The Muppets that’s been making the rounds recently that was the catalyst for this installment. You’re in for a treat!

However, the fuzzy thespians were not the first inanimate objects put into service of what Freddie and the lads have wrought.

This He-Man and the Masters of the Universe mash-up gives us the giggles, and hopefully will tickle y’all, too.

Over time the song has gotten some pretty classed-up polishes, including this rendition by The Ten Tenors from German television.

Speaking of classed-up, the California Guitar Trio remove most of the testosterone but reveal some very pretty bones beneath the familiar skin.

As mentioned at the start, there’s probably not another tune that both Pink and The Flaming Lips would tackle. Here’s both taking their shot at the prize. And being honest, Pink is one of the few lead vocalists that really gives proper chase to Mercury’s legendary vocal. Girl can sing, even if her originals often lack much heft.

We give the final word to Queen and dear departed Freddie. We miss you lots, you mustachioed marvel.


Blu-ray Burner Turns Your Desktop Into a Spin Zone

Product: Mercury Pro 8x Blu-ray Pioneer BDR-203 External Manufacturer: OWCWired Rating: 5If your hard drive is running out of room to store all the movies, music and software you’ve accumulated, maybe it’s time to get a Blu-ray burner. With the ability…

Kimberly Krautter: Un-Spinning Healthcare Reform: Part 1

One of the most infuriating aspects to the issue of healthcare reform is the lack of honest debate by our public officials.

Arianna Huffington: Bearing Witness 2.0: You Can’t Spin 10,000 Tweets and Camera Phone Uploads

When deadly riots broke out in China last week, the Chinese government sprang into message control mode. It choked off the Internet, blocked Twitter, and deleted updates and videos from social networking sites. At the same time, it invited foreign journalists to take a tour of the area. That’s right, it slammed the door in the face of new media — and offered traditional reporters a front row seat. The Chinese have clearly learned the lessons of Iran. The same can’t be said about the New York Times’ Roger Cohen who, writing about covering the Iran uprising, recently mounted an attack on search engines, news aggregation, and “miracles of technology” such as Twitter and real-time video delivered via camera phones — the very tools that allowed millions of people around the world to bear witness to what was happening in Iran. How bizarre is that?

Sun Spin: Jackson Browne

CLASSIC ALBUM SPOTLIGHT RETURNS WITH A TOOL FOR LIVING THROUGH TOUGH TIMES

Now there’s a world of illusion and fantasy
In the place where the real world belongs
Still I look for the beauty in songs
To fill my head and lead me on

Some albums slip past our defenses, touching places we might rather have left alone, tender spots that never quite scab over. While perhaps not always consciously welcome, it is these albums that become the bedrock of our listening, informing our lives and offering cold comfort and understanding when both are in short supply in the “real world.” Jackson Browne‘s third album, Late For The Sky (1974) is such a marvel of unvarnished honesty flecked with romantic understanding, true empathy and poignant awareness of human frailty. The intervening 35 years have done nothing to diminish the instantaneous emotional zap this record produces when the needle hits the groove. All its quietude and wise-beyond-its-years resonance (he was just 25 when he recorded it) is preserved in music crafted with extraordinary attention to detail in every respect.

With angels sleeping beside him along hitchhiked roadsides, Browne wrestles with torn and empty dreams and how one goes on when their tank is empty. It’s a place all of us reach from time to time but few of us possess the acumen and insight to turn our own low tides into something that reaches other’s shores. Where it’s easy to lash out in such moments, blame someone else for our circumstance, Browne spreads it around, never sparing himself a healthy measure:

Now the things that I remember seem so distant and so small
Though it hasn’t really been that long a time
What I was seeing wasn’t what was happening at all
Although for a while, our path did seem to climb

Late For The Sky is one of the templates for the so-called California Country sound, where Nashville’s slick slide meets the sativa vibe of oceans, forests and dirty blue jean, long-haired thinking. The album is a direct descendent of what Gram Parsons was moving towards and a mighty influence on future generations, a less acknowledged but just as crucial instigator as Neil Young’s Harvest. In some ways, Browne is even more successful in marrying musical sophistication and grand scale to hyper-personal themes than Young’s early attempts on say his debut. The way the words, ideas and music intertwine here is breathtaking and never seems forced. Like the best sets, there’s an internal logic that ties everything into intricate knots, where each element is as it should be. Rock is generally a touch messier (and perhaps happily so) but artistry of this level brings to mind John Barth’s line, “In art as in lovemaking, heartfelt ineptitude has its appeal and so does heartless skill, but what you want is passionate virtuosity.”

Passion lies at the center of Late For The Sky, which examines relationships with clear eyes (“when you see through loves illusions, there lies the danger/ And your perfect lover just looks like a perfect fool”) and the individual’s place in the universe (“dreaming I can make it right/ if I closed my eyes and tried with all my might”). Track after track explicates some heart truth or thought stirred staring at night skies, alone and wondering. It is an exposed place for any writer and yet Browne sings in a sharp, strong voice of things usually held close to the chest, sharing of himself in a way that aids our own self-examination, his bravery perhaps, if we’re lucky, becoming our own. And always without undue sentimentality:

Everyone I’ve ever known has wished me well
Anyway that’s how it seems, it’s hard to tell
Maybe people only ask you how you’re doing
‘Cause that’s easier than letting on how little they could care

Frequently it is David Lindley‘s exquisite guitar work that speaks directly to these deep places in us, bypassing language to vibrate our soul with pure, emotion soaked sound. And he’s equally gorgeous and effective on violin (dig his soaring through closer “Before The Deluge”), but it’s most often his unbelievably powerful slide work that takes one’s breath away. The cry he unleashes at the beginning of “Farther On” is every bit the equal of Lightnin’ Hopkins or any other celebrated bluesman, but Lindley never falls back on blues cliches, forging a new language inside rock with his slicing poetry.

The whole core band – Doug Haywood (bass), Jai Winding (keys), Larry Zack (drums), Lindley (acoustic guitar, electric guitar, steel guitar and fiddle) and Browne’s own guitar and keys – is pretty damn together, playing with intuitive grace further amplified by tremendous backing vocals from Don Henley, Terry Reid, J.D. Souther and Dan Fogelberg. Long before he was cutting his own albums, Browne was a respected Los Angeles songwriter whose tunes had been cut by a host of late ’60s/early ’70s luminaries. Even at his young age, he was already a respected man about town, and the pros gathered around him here reflect that.

It would probably be enough to score a spot on Rolling Stone‘s 2003 list of the Top 500 Albums of All Time if it were just a king size bummer fest, but Late For The Sky turns on its heels midway. The second side positively skips, finding fortitude and black tinged jubilation that feels real, sustainable, genuine:

Walking slow down the avenue
Through my old neighborhood
Don’t know why I’m happy
I’ve got no reason to feel this good
Maybe it’s because I’m all alone
And I’ve got no place to go
And everywhere I look I see
Another person I’ll never know

I got a thing or two to say
Before I walk on by
I’m feeling good today
But if die a little farther along
I’m trusting everyone to carry on

What the last half seems to say is, “There’s life after the flood.” No matter what the world throws at you, no matter the hurt or confusion we currently feel, we heal, rebuild and move on. Browne’s subsequent career has continued to reflect these themes but they’ve never been more beautifully articulated than Late For The Sky, a bonafide classic to be sure.

Track Listing

Side One:
1. Late for the Sky
2. Fountain of Sorrow
3. Farther On
4. The Late Show

Side Two:
1. The Road and the Sky
2. For a Dancer
3. Walking Slow
4. Before the Deluge