Latest news
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03/13/2008 03:33 PM
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Study shows music affects moods, students agree
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The Mozart effect is one that has been around for a long time. Studies suggest that when a child under age 3 is subject to the music of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, their brain development is increased.Whether or not the stories and studies prove anything, the question remains: Does music have an effect on people?Psychology professor [...]
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03/13/2008 03:33 PM
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Keeping Music Real
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Music is a powerful thing. It evokes feelings and has the power to bring people together. Music is also a way for people to express themselves and share ideas, whether through poetic lyrics or throbbing anthems. But today, artists are not known for their music, but for how extravagant their outfits are and how many [...]
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03/13/2008 03:33 PM
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Rising rap star doesn't need RIAA
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You won’t hear up-and-coming rap star Flo Rida griping about fans pilfering his songs on P2P sites, or complain that technology is hurting the music industry. Don’t talk to him about so-called digital divides either.
As one of rap music’s fastest rising stars, Rida, 28, is new enough to music success that fans are still precious [...]
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03/13/2008 11:34 AM
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A lesson in sharing: the music of today plays the give-and-take game
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Now, more than ever, North American bands and music fans are becoming more open to music originating somewhere outside the continent. Sri Lankan-born M.I.A.’s unique sound rules the club scene, while the Afro-pop inspired Vampire Weekend have seen their debut album enter the Billboard Top 20. New York City’s Yeasayer have also recently garnered acclaim [...]
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03/13/2008 11:34 AM
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Two short notes on pop music
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“Romany Soup” is absolutely classic: haunting, hypnotic, melodic. Please do get started on Bolan. Please do. (And don’t you dare leave out “One Inch Rock”.)
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Just Added
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Album: The Wicker Man |
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Track Title |
Mode, kbps |
Length |
Size, MB |
Download |
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| 1 |
Corn Rigs |
229 |
2:37 |
4.29 |
Download
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| 2 |
The Landlord's Daughter |
202 |
2:40 |
3.84 |
Download
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| 3 |
Gentle Johnny |
236 |
3:33 |
5.98 |
Download
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| 4 |
Maypole |
185 |
2:46 |
3.67 |
Download
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| 5 |
Fire Leap |
199 |
1:29 |
2.10 |
Download
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| 6 |
The Tinker Of Rye |
237 |
1:53 |
3.17 |
Download
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| 7 |
Willow's Song |
238 |
4:43 |
8.00 |
Download
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| 8 |
Procession |
203 |
2:17 |
3.31 |
Download
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| 9 |
Chop Chop |
132 |
1:44 |
1.63 |
Download
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| 10 |
Lullaby |
172 |
0:58 |
1.20 |
Download
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| 11 |
Festival / Mirie It Is / Sumer Is A-Cumen In |
145 |
4:30 |
4.67 |
Download
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| 12 |
Opening Music / Loving Couples / The Ruined Church |
196 |
4:17 |
5.99 |
Download
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| 13 |
The Masks / The Hobby Horse |
185 |
1:25 |
1.89 |
Download
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| 14 |
Searching For Rowan |
162 |
2:23 |
2.75 |
Download
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| 15 |
Appointment With The Wicker Man |
222 |
1:18 |
2.08 |
Download
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| 16 |
Sunset |
201 |
1:07 |
1.60 |
Download
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Album Review |
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Long thought buried somewhere under the M3 along with prints of the full version of the film, this release represents a truly wondrous piece of archaeology. In most cases any film labelled 'cult' tends to use the label as a get-out clause for some wobbly production that had something to do with Russ Meyer. The Wicker Man was always much more than this. From, probably, the last period when British cinema was prepared to show more than gritty portraits of life 'up north' or sappy feelgood nonsense about Hugh Grant living in a ridiculously large apartment in London, The Wicker Man dared to combine a genuinely creepy story line about provincial paganism with a simply stunning collection of songs. Despite its trouble with the distributors the film has now been rightly placed in the pantheon of great celluloid, and its soundtrack deserves the same accolades.
Ironically the saviour of this sonic scariness was the other übermensch of cult movies, Roger Corman. Found within his private collection of film prints, Paul Giovanni's songs reside neatly against a portrait of the idyllic community of Summerisle whose adherence to an older order attracts the unwanted attentions of uptight Presbyterian policeman Edward Woodward. American Giovanni collected a fine bunch of sessioneers under the banner of Magnet and conjured up some surprisingly authentic-sounding folk numbers. The lilting (how come folk is always lilting?) melodies of numbers like ''Corn Rigs'', ''Gently Johnny'' and ''Willow's Song'' are stuffed with a vaguely sinister eroticism, reflecting Woodward's unease as he scratches the tranquil surface of the island community to discover its sinister secret (you know, the usual: child sacrifice, fertility rituals, Britt Ekland rubbing up against a wall etc.).
Christopher Lee (the Laird of Summerisle and, himself, a vocalist on the bawdy ''The Tinker Of Rye'') described this album as:''...quite extraordinary, it is probably the best music I've ever heard in a film''. He's not far short of the truth. Maybe it takes a foreigner to get to the dark heart of much of our indigenous music, but it's a darkness suffused with beauty. Coupled to the original incidental music - complete with snippets of dialogue, including Woodward's terrified shriek as the full weight of realisation hits him ! - this is a vital document of a time when the UK could still produce classic cinema. It's also a really fine album.
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