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Post by dino on Nov 14, 2007 11:11:11 GMT -5
:-) my ass
i dont read your posts and you know it
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Post by dino on Nov 14, 2007 4:27:03 GMT -5
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Post by dino on Nov 13, 2007 10:38:20 GMT -5
nah.. bo is a Rush fan, thats all
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Post by dino on Nov 13, 2007 10:08:27 GMT -5
how this boring little twat dare to refuse a duet with Paulie???
Radiohead frontman turned down Paul McCartney duet
The ex-Beatle tried to get Thom Yorke to sing with him 4 hours ago Sir Paul McCartney has revealed that he asked Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke to record a duet with him - but Yorke turned him down.
McCartney explained that Yorke, who famously duetted with PJ Harvey in 2000 on her song 'This Mess We're In', said he now wasn't happy working on music other than that made with his own band and his solo material.
Speaking on Channel 4's 'T4' programme, McCartney said: "My daughter was putting an album together and she put us in touch. I asked Thom to do a duet, but he said he couldn't because he only felt happy working on his own and Radiohead's material."
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Post by dino on Nov 10, 2007 13:22:19 GMT -5
is paulie day here at dino's - watching the complete macca years on 3 dvd and is *gorgeous* - plus paulie commentary!
hey the live wings were just *great*
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Post by dino on Nov 7, 2007 2:31:25 GMT -5
Ringo new CD and live in Liverpool in January Hollywood, California - November 5, 2007 On January 15 (January 14 internationally), Ringo Starr will release Liverpool 8, his first new album with Capitol/EMI since 1974's Goodnight Vienna. Liverpool 8 will be available worldwide on CD and digitally, and the album's title track will debut as a digital single on December 4. Starr will launch the album with a hometown performance on January 12 to commence Liverpool's 2008 Capital of Culture celebrations. Liverpool 8, also the title of the album's upbeat, vibrant lead track, "refers to the section of Liverpool where I used to live," explains Ringo. "The song was actually Dave Stewart's idea, as a mini autobiographical travelogue: 'I was a sailor first,' and then, 'Liverpool I left you' -- because I did. 'but I never let you down,' which is true." Although Starr and Stewart have known each other for years, this is the first time they have collaborated. It began when Dave asked Ringo to lay down some drums on a track Stewart had done with George Harrison. "After I did the drums I asked Dave to add some guitars to my album, which Mark Hudson and I were working on at Mark's Whatinthewhathe? Studio in LA. After Mark and I parted ways, Dave and I took over producing the record," Starr said. Then added in his trademark wit, "and that's why the credits say: Produced by Ringo Starr and Mark Hudson and Over-produced by Ringo Starr and Dave Stewart." Liverpool 8's 12 original tracks were all co-written by Starr and were recorded in England and in California. "The writing of the records is always the same," Ringo explains, "it's the same group of guys and we all sit together and write about what's happening." That "group of guys" who joined Starr on the album's songwriting and recording are (in alphabetical order): Gary Burr, Steve Dudas, Mark Hudson, Sean Hurley, Zac Rae, and Dave Stewart. Since beginning his career in the 1960s with The Beatles, Ringo Starr has been one of the world's brightest musical luminaries. Starr has enjoyed a successful and dynamic solo career as a singer, songwriter and drummer, an active musical collaborator, and as an actor. Drawing inspiration from classic blues, soul, country, honky-tonk and rock 'n' roll, Starr continues to play an important role in modern music with his solo recording and touring. His last studio album, Choose Love, was released in 2005. Ringo has said that as time goes on there is more and more of his personality in his music, and the songs on Liverpool 8 feel personal. Starr's candor, wit and soul are evident in the lyrics and the heartbeat of every song; I always followed my heart and I never missed a beat. Peace and love are Ringo Starr's primary life beats, and Liverpool 8 propels this universal message in each of its evocative songs, which are imbued with joy, insight, reflection and wisdom from the music icon the world knows and loves simply as 'Ringo.' Ringo Starr: LIVERPOOL 8 Liverpool 8 Think About You For Love Now That She's Gone Away Gone Are The Days Give It A Try Tuff Love Harry's Song Pasodobles If It's Love That You Want Love Is R U Ready?
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Post by dino on Nov 6, 2007 6:47:41 GMT -5
Bob turned on the Beatles - A new book reveals how Dylan's doobie led the Fab Four to Sgt Pepper, says charles laurence The Beatles got their very first marijuana joint from Woodstock's own Bob Dylan. In return, Dylan got Mod suits, tab-collar shirts and the idea of growing his hair. They met back in 1964, when the Fab Four were still Mop Tops conquering America on their first tour, with A Hard Day's Night at No 1 in the charts. I learn this when I call into the Golden Notebook village bookshop to find Barry the owner lost in a hardcover behind his cash till. "You HAVE to read this," he says, cracking the spine and passing over Can't Buy Me Love: The Beatles, Britain and America. It comes from Jonathan Gould, a drummer, critic and writer who lives in the wilds beyond Overlook Mountain. An early American Beatlemaniac, he has been burrowing through the archives for 20 years to combine a musical analysis of Lennon-McCartney songs with a romp through social history. "I was trained in cultural anthropology," he says, "so I see the Beatles as both products and actors in their times." This makes for a terrific trip down memory lane to Baby Boomer childhoods of Angry Young Men and Teddy Boys, Mods, Rockers, Beats and Carnaby Street, the Whisky club and Swinging London. Oh, boy. The New York Times book review points out that there are already 500 Beatle books in print and they get seven times as many internet hits as Jesus, perhaps proving that John Lennon was right all along about who was more popular. Can there be anything new to say? Well, yes. No cultural exchange could have been more momentous than when Dylan, tongue tied, simply rolled a joint and passed it around. John, Paul, George and Ringo had been living on amphetamine pills but had never had a 'smoke'. Here comes Sgt Pepper. Dylan, meanwhile, saw a perfect formula for throwing off his unwanted role of Holy Folkie, and promptly picked up an electric guitar. "I did my research," says Gould, "and this meeting is no myth. It really happened."
'Can't Buy Me Love' is published in the US by Harmony on November 4 and in the UK by Portrait on November 8
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Post by dino on Oct 30, 2007 4:52:31 GMT -5
Sixties pop star Donovan is working on a plan to open a university in Scotland which will concentrate on transcendental meditation.
The 'Mellow Yellow' singer says guru Maharishi Mahesh Yogi told him to build the university on a visit to India in 1968, and it wasn't until he met famed film director David Lynch in recent years that he decided to fulfill the Maharishi's request.
"I know it sounds like an airy-fairy hippie dream to go on about '60s peace and love," Donovan told the Associated Press "But the world is ready for this now."
"I met David Lynch, who told me about the positive effects of TM in education. Although it's taken me 35 years, I will do what the Maharishi told me to do."
The David Lynch Foundation is on a mission to bring transcendental meditation to schools in deprived areas of the US and say it has had a positive effect so far on students at the schools where it has been introduced.
Lynch and Donovan intend to contact education officials in Scotland to make the school a legitimate place of learning and director Lynch says the effects could be outstanding.
"For a country the size of Scotland it would take only 250 students meditating to protect Scotland from its enemies and to bring peace, to stop violence and drug abuse. That is just a byproduct of the students meditating together."
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Post by dino on Oct 25, 2007 12:15:08 GMT -5
at the hunger whatever site you showed me times ago and you always quote, cripes
and he also does In My Life, totally shite!!! but the only Harrison soundboard In My Life ever!
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Post by dino on Oct 25, 2007 8:13:57 GMT -5
what fucking drugs was georgie using in 1974? and they say that boby in concert is weird - this tour rank with every shit dylan is doing these days LOL
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Post by dino on Oct 25, 2007 4:20:26 GMT -5
i'm downloading this now
George Harrison - Sell, Sell, Sell! (VR-23/24) Los Angeles, CA - The Forum - Tuesday, November 12, 1974 - Matinee (SBD) / Evening (AUD)
These soundboard tracks turned up recently in an internet broadcast and lots of people were having trouble capturing them, so I thought I'd put them on CD-R. As a bonus i've included the complete audience tape of the evening show that doesn't seem to be too common. I had trouble getting a good copy of the matinee show, but luckily the evening show isn't too bad performance or audiowise. I've heard a lot worse from this tour.
i always been curious about that tour, nver heard anything - in the track list, there are a couple of "dispute & violence" moments LOL, i wonder if is like the Newport boooo
maybe cripes was there that night
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Post by dino on Oct 24, 2007 5:23:51 GMT -5
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Post by dino on Oct 17, 2007 2:18:22 GMT -5
Paul McCartney has spoken for the first time about how the Beatles turned down a offer to reform the band in 1976.
Speaking to listings magazine Radio Times to publicise his show at the BBC Electric Proms later this month, McCartney said that the money they were offered to stage a comeback back then was 'phenomenal'.
He said:"There were phenomenal amounts of money being offered. Millions by Sid Bernstein, this New York promoter. But it just went round and round. There might be three of us thinking 'You know, it might not be a bad idea' - but the other one would go, 'Nah, I don't think so' and sort of veto it. Let's put it this way, there was never a time when all four of us wanted to do it. And I'm actually glad of that now because the Beatles' work is a body of work. There's nothing to be ashamed of there.
He concluded: "The potential disappointment of coming on and not being as good as The Beatles had been, that was a risk we shouldn't take."
In the wake of the unprecedent buzz around Led Zeppelin's reunion - Macca was asked in the interview 'What If' the Beatles could have reformed now?
McCartney replied: "Since you're leading me down that flowery path, we could imagine that John would be this fantastic elder statesman, very much in command of his lifestyle. I'd be alongside him singing magnificently. George would be playing like an angel on his guitar. We'd be gelling, sounding like nothing anyone's ever heard before with all the power of modern amplification."
With a flourish he added: "And, behind us, would be the world's greatest drummer. And it'd be fandabidozi! We could be introduced by the Krankies. Unfortunately, this is just pure imagination. But then what's wrong with that?"
McCartney also revealed that he has artists old and new on his iPod, saying: "My iPod moves from Kaiser Chiefs to Neil Young to Guillemots to Bob Dylan to Radiohead to Bob Marley. And if you want to get a dancefloor moving, it's I Will Survive. Mix that with Foo Fighters, throw in a bit of Fred Astaire, KC and the Sunshine Band, maybe Fatboy Slim and we've got it!"
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Post by dino on Oct 16, 2007 4:35:02 GMT -5
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Post by dino on Oct 15, 2007 8:16:00 GMT -5
well, its not for everyone to share Paulie same bed & shitter
and what a shitter!
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Post by dino on Oct 14, 2007 6:54:31 GMT -5
"Like me being a bass player.... But at first it was the loser role in the group. It's usually the fat guy who stands at the back."
is he talking about tony garnier?
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Post by dino on Oct 14, 2007 5:30:01 GMT -5
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Post by dino on Oct 12, 2007 5:04:26 GMT -5
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Post by dino on Oct 10, 2007 4:47:49 GMT -5
ttp://www.nme.com/photos/1/265/0/john-lennon
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Post by dino on Oct 9, 2007 13:21:45 GMT -5
6 days - i dont think english records were available in the Usa in those days in less than a week - and not on the american radio in such a short time too
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