Tuesday 8 July 2008

Erick Gallun

Erick Gallun   
Artist: Erick Gallun

   Genre(s): 
Indie
   



Discography:


Sound Field Furrows   
 Sound Field Furrows

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 12




 






DeepChord Presents : Echospace

DeepChord Presents : Echospace   
Artist: DeepChord Presents : Echospace

   Genre(s): 
Electronic
   



Discography:


The Coldest Season Part 4 Vinyl   
 The Coldest Season Part 4 Vinyl

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 2


The Coldest Season Part 3 Vinyl   
 The Coldest Season Part 3 Vinyl

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 2


The Coldest Season - Part 1   
 The Coldest Season - Part 1

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 2




 





Library exhibit celebrates real men and women of advertising

Abdel Ali Slimani

Abdel Ali Slimani   
Artist: Abdel Ali Slimani

   Genre(s): 
Ethnic
   



Discography:


Mraya   
 Mraya

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 9




Rai singer Abdel Ali Slimani was brocaded in El Anasser, Algeria, where as a teenager he knowledgeable guitar and performed as a drummer at association football matches. Finding little chance for musicians in his native acres, he went to Paris in 1982; later a subsequent move to London, Slimani found puzzle out as a golf club DJ before signing on as a vocalizer and percussionist with ex-PiL bassist Jah Wobble's Anglo-Arabic social unit Invaders of the Heart. In 1996, Wobble co-produced Slimani's solo debut Mraya, a collection spotlighting the fusion of the performer's rai-based Algerian roots with the influences of Western culture.






Svasti-Ayanam

Svasti-Ayanam   
Artist: Svasti-Ayanam

   Genre(s): 
Ambient
   



Discography:


Sanklesa   
 Sanklesa

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 11




 





Iggy Pop and the Stooges plot summer tour

Emeute Infernal

Emeute Infernal   
Artist: Emeute Infernal

   Genre(s): 
Rap: Hip-Hop
   



Discography:


Flashball   
 Flashball

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 13




 






Helloween

Helloween   
Artist: Helloween

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   Metal: Power
   Metal
   Metal: Heavy
   



Discography:


Gambling With The Devil   
 Gambling With The Devil

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 12


Light The Universe (EP)   
 Light The Universe (EP)

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 3


Mrs. God   
 Mrs. God

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 3


Keeper of The Seven Keys: The Legacy   
 Keeper of The Seven Keys: The Legacy

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 13


Rabbit Don't Come Easy   
 Rabbit Don't Come Easy

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 12


Rabbbit Don't Come Easy   
 Rabbbit Don't Come Easy

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 17


Treasure Chest (Buried Treasure)   
 Treasure Chest (Buried Treasure)

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 11


Live In Moscow   
 Live In Moscow

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 17


Live at CSKA Ice Palace, Mosco   
 Live at CSKA Ice Palace, Mosco

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 17


The Dark Ride   
 The Dark Ride

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 14


Rares CD2   
 Rares CD2

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 15


Rares CD1   
 Rares CD1

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 15


If I Could Fly (EP)   
 If I Could Fly (EP)

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 3


Metal Jukebox   
 Metal Jukebox

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 12


Lay All Your Love On Me (EP)   
 Lay All Your Love On Me (EP)

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 3


Karaoke Remix Cd2   
 Karaoke Remix Cd2

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 14


Karaoke Remix Cd1   
 Karaoke Remix Cd1

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 8


I Can (ep)   
 I Can (ep)

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 3


Hey Lord (ep)   
 Hey Lord (ep)

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 3


Better Than Raw   
 Better Than Raw

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 12


High Live-2CD   
 High Live-2CD

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 7


High Live-1CD   
 High Live-1CD

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 9


High Live Cd2   
 High Live Cd2

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 7


High Live Cd1   
 High Live Cd1

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 9


The Time Of The Oath   
 The Time Of The Oath

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 3


The Time Of The Oath   
 The Time Of The Oath

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 14


Power (ep)   
 Power (ep)

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 4


Forever and One (EP)   
 Forever and One (EP)

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 3


Sole Survivor   
 Sole Survivor

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 4


Perfect Gentleman   
 Perfect Gentleman

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 4


Mr Ego   
 Mr Ego

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 4


Master Of The Rings (US Bonus CD)   
 Master Of The Rings (US Bonus CD)

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 7


Master Of The Rings   
 Master Of The Rings

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 11


Chameleon   
 Chameleon

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 12


When The Sinner (Ep)   
 When The Sinner (Ep)

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 3


Step Out Of Hell (EP)   
 Step Out Of Hell (EP)

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 4


I Don't Wanna Cry No More (Ep)   
 I Don't Wanna Cry No More (Ep)

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 3


Kids On Party (bootleg)   
 Kids On Party (bootleg)

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 11


The Best - The Rest - The Rare   
 The Best - The Rest - The Rare

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 13


Pink Bubbles Go Ape   
 Pink Bubbles Go Ape

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 11


Number One (EP)   
 Number One (EP)

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 3


Kids Of The Century (Ep)   
 Kids Of The Century (Ep)

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 3


Live In The UK   
 Live In The UK

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 7


Live In The U.K.   
 Live In The U.K.

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 7


Keeper Of Seventh Keys Part I   
 Keeper Of Seventh Keys Part I

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 10


I Want Out (Ep)   
 I Want Out (Ep)

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 3


Dr. Stein (Ep)   
 Dr. Stein (Ep)

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 4


[1988] Keeper Of The Seven Keys II   
 [1988] Keeper Of The Seven Keys II

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 11


Monster Of Rock (Bootleg)   
 Monster Of Rock (Bootleg)

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 7


Keeper Of The Seven Keys Part I   
 Keeper Of The Seven Keys Part I

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 9


Future World (Ep)   
 Future World (Ep)

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 3


Walls Of Jericho   
 Walls Of Jericho

   Year: 1986   
Tracks: 8


Judas (Ep)   
 Judas (Ep)

   Year: 1986   
Tracks: 5


Helloween   
 Helloween

   Year: 1985   
Tracks: 5


Keeper Of Seventh Keys Part II   
 Keeper Of Seventh Keys Part II

   Year:    
Tracks: 13




Alongside Switzerland's Celtic Frost and Sweden's Bathory, Germany's Helloween were possibly the most influential great metal band to fall out of Europe during the eighties. By pickings the hard riffing and minor key melodies handed down from alloy masters like Judas Priest and Iron Maiden, then infusing them with the fastness and energy introduced by the burgeoning thrash metal cause, Helloween crystalised the sonic ingredients of what is now known as power metal. Sadly, exactly as they were on the verge of breakage to a wider audience -- fifty-fifty toying with American success -- the band's meteoric rise was rudely interrupted by intragroup discord and a string of bad job decisions. These blunders kept them from ever restitution their original momentum, just Helloween took their hard-knock lessons in pace and continued to thrive in the international metal scene of action on their have damage. More importantly, they remained the benchmark by which most every power metal band is still calculated.


Helloween were formed in Hamburg, Germany, by guitarists Kai Hansen and Michael Weikath, bassist Markus Grosskopf, and drummer Ingo Schwichtenberg. Originally named Second Hell then Iron Fist in front morphing into Helloween in 1982, they sign with Germany's have fledgling Noise International two days subsequently. With Hansen besides treatment vocals and the majority of songwriting duties, the foursome recorded its self-titled debut mini-album in early 1985. The uncut Walls of Jericho and the Judas Iscariot maxi-single followed the class subsequently, and the media was before long buzzing over the band's thrash-fueled interpretation of classical great metal. Countless fans crosswise continental Europe were besides fast converting to the band's cause, simply Hansen remained dissatisfied with his tattle ability, and mat Helloween needful a proper frontman in order to reach their full potential difference. Enter teen singer Michael Kiske, whose high-pitched delivery followed in the footsteps of previous backbreaking metal banshees like Rob Halford and Bruce Dickinson.


The young chemistry proved as explosive onstage as it did in the studio, and with their classical lineup now intact, Helloween were ready for the adult clock time. Returning to the studio in early 1987, the band emerged in May with Keeper of the Seven Keys, Pt. 1, a turning point recording that remains arguably the single nigh influential power metallic element record album to date. Its volatile combination of might and melodic phrase would inspire an intact generation of alloy bands, and transformed Helloween into bona fide superstars all over Europe and the U.K., fifty-fifty making probationary inroads into America at the time. The band toured relentlessly for the rest of the yr and into 1988 (including a prolonged opening stint with Iron Maiden), merely despite this frenzied work schedule, they still found time to record the aptly titled Keeper of the Seven Keys, Pt. 2. Released in September 1988, the phonograph recording was another blockbuster that crashed the U.K. Top 30, merely its odd songwriting (particularly from longtime loss leader Kai Hansen) revealed the beginnings of a major ring crisis.


Helloween's watershed functioning at that year's Donington Monsters of Rock Festival proven to be their crowning glory, simply for Hansen, his dreaming derive true too represented the closing of his ambitions for the radical. Shockingly, the guitar player soon announced his release from the band he had helmed to the big top, claiming that Helloween were now also big a fauna for him to control. (He would shortly make a fresh begin with a novel turnout called Gamma Ray, which, to no one's surprise, sounded signally like Helloween.) But the left over members of Helloween weren't around to lease their stroke at stardom slip away, and after drafting late Rampage guitar player Roland Grapow, they got right back to work with a sold-out turn of the U.K. Impressed by the band's momentum, giant EMI stepped in and offered to sign them away from the ever troubled Noise Records, but in doing so, combat injury up igniting a legal difference of opinion that would by-line Helloween for most deuce years. Several live albums (Live in the U.K. for Europe, Keepers Live for Japan, and I Want Out: Live for the U.S.) were released to distract the fans during this suspension, and the band obtained added support from the mighty Sanctuary management team (Iron Maiden, W.A.S.P., etc.) to iron boot.


Confident that they'd accrued little, if whatever rust from their prolonged layoff, Helloween in conclusion returned to action with the peculiarly coroneted Pink Bubbles Go Ape in 1991. But no amount of EMI or Sanctuary muscle could redress for the scattered, unfocused songwriting that henpecked the album. Furthermore, the band's way-out attempts at humor had full-grown so forced that fans weren't sure what to make of furious metal anthems with names like the title caterpillar tread and "Heavy Metal Hamsters." The record bombed in no unsettled footing, as did its even more schizoid follow-up, Chameleon. Recorded in 1993 by an obviously shell-shocked stripe, its short screening only exacerbated growing internal dissension, which culminated with the ousting of both Kiske (off to plunge a solo career) and Schwichtenberg due to drug-related physical and mental health issues. Fair-weather friends EMI and Sanctuary as well distinct to geld their losings at this time, going away the shattered remnants of Helloween to fend for themselves. Attempting to regroup as fast as possible, Helloween brought in modern vocalizer Andi Deris and drummer Uli Kusch to record 1994's Master of the Rings, a small merely determined measure in the right direction. Then cataclysm struck, when previous drummer Ingo Schwichtenberg -- a diagnosed frenzied depressive whose deterioration condition had been partly to blame for his sack -- took his have life, throwing himself in front of a train approximate his aboriginal Hamburg.


Jolted to the sum, only as compulsive as ever so, Helloween dedicated 1996's The Time of the Oath to their fallen champion, and, coincidentally, the album sour extinct to be the strongest since their glory age, doing very much to resurrect their life history. The ensuing tour spawned the double-disc set up High Live and confirmed the band's render to manakin as major players in the international alloy arena (in Europe and Japan, they were arguably bigger than e'er). Helloween continued to fly high with 1998's Better Than Raw, 1999's celebratory Alloy Jukebox covers album, and 2000's The Dark Ride, and not even the deviation of longtime members Grapow and Kusch could dull them for long. Now regarded as elder statesmen of Euro-metal, Helloween far-famed their achievements with 2002's Gem Chest greatest-hits set. This was followed by 2003's Rabbit Don't Come Easy, which introduced modern guitarist Sascha Gerstner and featured Motörhead's Mikkey Dee guesting on drums until a permanent substitute could be constitute in Stefan Schwarzmann (ex-U.D.O., Running Wild and many more).