Thursday 28 August 2008

Megan Fox films sex scene for zombie flick

Transformers star Megan Fox has filmed a �really hot� tribade love scene for her new zombie movie.



The actress romps topless in seam with Mamma Mia star Amanda Seyfried in zombie film Jennifer�s Body.


A source said: "The two girls make out hardcore, wheeling around in a bed. It was a truly hot scene."


In Jennifer�s Body, Megan plays a amok cheerleader world Health Organization goes on a killing spree murdering her male classmates.


Megan recently hinted she would be sharing a passionate smack with her co-star Amanda, revealing: "I eat and seduce everyone. There's a lot of kissing everyone�- boys and girls. All kinds of craziness."


This isn�t the only highly-anticipated swelled screen lesbian kiss.


Scarlett Johansson recently revealed she enjoyed locking lips with Penelope Cruz in new Woody Allen picture Vicky Cristina Barcelona.


She aforementioned: "Everybody wants to know what it was like. Penelope had less facial hair than a guy so it was sure enough more pleasant. It was better than kissing Jonathan Rhys Meyers in Match Point."


Jennifer�s Body, also leading Adam Brody and JK Simmons, hits cinemas oecumenical in 2009.







More info

Monday 18 August 2008

Download Herbie Hancock mp3






Herbie Hancock
   

Artist: Herbie Hancock: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

funk
Jazz
Jazz: Acid Jazz
Other
R&B: Soul

   







Discography:


The Jewel in the Lotus
   

 The Jewel in the Lotus

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 8
The Finest In Jazz
   

 The Finest In Jazz

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 6
Possibilities
   

 Possibilities

   Year: 2005   

Tracks: 10
The Definitive
   

 The Definitive

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 9
Lite Me Up
   

 Lite Me Up

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 8
Future 2 Future
   

 Future 2 Future

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 11
The Herbie Hancock Trio
   

 The Herbie Hancock Trio

   Year: 2000   

Tracks: 5
Ken Burns Jazz Series: Herbie Hancock
   

 Ken Burns Jazz Series: Herbie Hancock

   Year: 2000   

Tracks: 9
Sound System
   

 Sound System

   Year: 1999   

Tracks: 6
Town Hall Concert
   

 Town Hall Concert

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 5
Thrust
   

 Thrust

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 4
The Complete Blue Note Sixties Sessions (cd6)
   

 The Complete Blue Note Sixties Sessions (cd6)

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 8
The Complete Blue Note Sixties Sessions (cd5)
   

 The Complete Blue Note Sixties Sessions (cd5)

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 9
The Complete Blue Note Sixties Sessions (cd4)
   

 The Complete Blue Note Sixties Sessions (cd4)

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 8
The Complete Blue Note Sixties Sessions (cd3)
   

 The Complete Blue Note Sixties Sessions (cd3)

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 9
The Complete Blue Note Sixties Sessions (cd2)
   

 The Complete Blue Note Sixties Sessions (cd2)

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 9
The Complete Blue Note Sixties Sessions (cd1)
   

 The Complete Blue Note Sixties Sessions (cd1)

   Year: 1998   

Tracks: 11
Magic Windows
   

 Magic Windows

   Year: 1997   

Tracks: 6
New Standard
   

 New Standard

   Year: 1996   

Tracks: 11
The New Standard
   

 The New Standard

   Year: 1995   

Tracks: 11
Cantaloupe Island
   

 Cantaloupe Island

   Year: 1995   

Tracks: 6
Dis Is Da Drum
   

 Dis Is Da Drum

   Year: 1994   

Tracks: 11
Maiden Voyage
   

 Maiden Voyage

   Year: 1990   

Tracks: 5
Mr. Hands
   

 Mr. Hands

   Year: 1980   

Tracks: 6
Monster
   

 Monster

   Year: 1980   

Tracks: 6
An Evening With Herbie Hancock and Chick Corea
   

 An Evening With Herbie Hancock and Chick Corea

   Year: 1978   

Tracks: 6
Man-Child
   

 Man-Child

   Year: 1975   

Tracks: 6
Flood
   

 Flood

   Year: 1975   

Tracks: 7
Head Hunters
   

 Head Hunters

   Year: 1973   

Tracks: 4
Sextant
   

 Sextant

   Year: 1972   

Tracks: 3
Crossings
   

 Crossings

   Year: 1972   

Tracks: 3
Empyrean Isles
   

 Empyrean Isles

   Year: 1964   

Tracks: 4
Out of this world
   

 Out of this world

   Year: 1961   

Tracks: 7
The Egg
   

 The Egg

   Year:    

Tracks: 6
Secrets
   

 Secrets

   Year:    

Tracks: 7
Feets Don't Fail Me Now
   

 Feets Don't Fail Me Now

   Year:    

Tracks: 6






Herbie Hancock will invariably be one of the well-nigh venerable and controversial figures in jazz -- simply as his employer/mentor Miles Davis was when he was alive. Unlike Miles, wHO pressed in the lead unrelentingly and never looked back until near the very conclusion, Hancock has cut a zigzagging stem itinerary, shuttling 'tween near every development in electronic and acoustic nothingness and R&B all over the last third of the 20th century. Though grounded in Bill Evans and able to take in blues, blue funk, gospel, and even new classical influences, Hancock's pianoforte and keyboard voices ar alone his possess, with their own urbane harmonic and complex, earthy rhythmic signatures -- and pres Young pianists glom his licks perpetually. Having studied applied scientific discipline and profession to love gadgets and buttons, Hancock was dead suited for the electronic eld; he was one of the earlier champions of the Rhodes electric piano and Hohner clavinet and would line of business an ever-growing aggregation of synthesizers and computers on his galvanic dates. Yet his love for the magisterial forte-piano never waned, and scorn his peripatetic activities all around the musical map, his pianissimo style continues to develop into tougher, ever-more-complex forms. He is as much at dwelling trading riffs with a smoke funk ring as he is communing with a world-class post-bop regular return section -- and that drives purists on both sides of the fence up the bulwark.


Having taken up the pianissimo at age seven-spot, Hancock chop-chop became known as a prodigy, soloing in the low movement of a Mozart forte-piano concerto with the Chicago Symphony at the age of 11. After studies at Grinnell College, Hancock was invited by Donald Byrd in 1961 to get together his group in New York City, and before long, Blue Note offered him a solo sign on. His debut album, Takin' Off, took off indeed later on Mongo Santamaria covered one of the album's songs, "Citrullus vulgaris Man." In May 1963, Miles Davis asked him to join his band in time for the Seven Steps to Heaven roger Huntington Sessions, and he remained in that location for five-spot years, greatly influencing Miles' evolving direction, slackening up his own style, and upon Miles' proffer, converting to the Rhodes electric forte-piano. In that time span, Hancock's solo vocation as well blossomed on Blue Note, pouring forth increasingly sophisticated compositions like "Maiden Voyage," "Cantaloupe Island," "Bye to Childhood," and the recherche "Speak Like a Child." He besides played on many East Coast transcription roger Huntington Sessions for producer Creed Taylor and provided a groundbreaking ceremony score to Michelangelo Antonioni's photographic film Blow Up, which step by step light-emitting diode to farther film assignments.


Having left the Davis circle in 1968, Hancock recorded an elegant funk album, Fat Albert Rotunda, and in 1969 formed a sestet that evolved into one of the nigh exciting, forward-looking jazz-rock groups of the geological era. Now deep immersed in electronics, Hancock added the synthesiser of Patrick Gleeson to his Echoplexed, fuzz-wah-pedaled electric forte-piano and clavinet, and the recordings became spacier and more complex rhythmically and structurally, creating its have corner of the avant-garde. By 1970, all of the musicians used both English and African names (Herbie's was Mwandishi). Alas, Hancock had to break up the band in 1973 when it ran out of money, and having studied Buddhism, he terminated that his ultimate finish should be to make his audiences happy.


The succeeding pace, so, was a terrific blue funk group whose first album, Straits Hunters, with its Sly Stone-influenced hit unmarried, "Chameleon," became the biggest-selling jazz LP up to that time. Now manipulation all of the synthesizers himself, Hancock's heavily rhythmical comping often became part of the rhythm section, leavened by interludes of the old polished harmonies. Hancock recorded several galvanizing albums of generally superior timber in the '70s, followed by a wrong turn into disco around the decade's end. In the meantime, Hancock refused to abandon acoustic jazz. After a one shot reunion of the 1965 Miles Davis Quintet (John Hancock, Ron Carter, Tony Williams, Wayne Shorter, with Freddie Hubbard sitting in for Miles) at New York's 1976 Newport Jazz Festival, they went on spell the following year as V.S.O.P. The near-universal clap of the reunions proved: that Hancock was still a giant of a pianist; that Miles' loose mid-'60s post-bop direction was far from worn-out; and that the time for a neo-traditional revitalization was nigh, eventually bearing fruit in the '80s with Wynton Marsalis and his ilk. V.S.O.P. continued to go for sporadic reunions through 1992, though the death of the indispensable Williams in 1997 roam a good deal doubtfulness as to whether these gatherings would go on.


Hancock continued his chameleonic shipway in the '80s: marking an MTV hit in 1983 with the scratch-driven, proto-industrial unmarried "Rockit" (accompanied by a hitting video); launch an exciting partnership with Gambian kora virtuoso Foday Musa Suso that culminated in the vacillation 1986 live album Jazz Africa; doing photographic film scores; and playacting festivals and tours with the Marsalis brothers, George Benson, Michael Brecker, and many others. After his 1988 techno-pop album, Perfect Machine, Hancock left Columbia (his label since 1973), signed a contract with Qwest that came to virtually zippo (write for A Tribute to Miles in 1992), and in conclusion made a trade with PolyGram in 1994 to record jazz for Verve and release pop albums on Mercury. Well into a youthful middle years, Hancock's curiosity, versatility, and capacity for maturation showed no signs of attenuation, and in 1998 he issued Gershwin's World. His curiosity with the optical fusion of electronic music and malarky continued with 2001's Future 2 Future, but he too continued to explore the future of straight-ahead contemporary jazz with 2005's Possibilities. An intiguing album of jazz treatments of Joni Mitchell compositions, called River: The Joni Letters, was released in 2007.





Pinback nails down 'Autumn' trek

Friday 8 August 2008

Katie Holmes attends Broadway play rehearsals in New York City


Though casually attired, Katie Holmes exuded great stylus attending a rehearsal for her forthcoming Broadway play 'All My Sons' in New York City on August 1, 2008. Photo Credit: PR Photos

August 1, 2008 () - Though casually attired, Katie Holmes exuded great manner attending a rehearsal for her coming Broadway play All My Sons in New York City on August 1, 2008.




Katie Holmes attending a rehearsal for her approaching Broadway recreate 'All My Sons' in New York City on August 1, 2008. Photo Credit: PR Photos

Katie, 29, wore a navy gamy top with white diagonal stripes, elasticized hem and blouson sleeves paired with blue slight fitting jeans. She accessorized with black wedge heeled pointed pumps and a black Chloe purse.




Katie Holmes attending a rehearsal for her approaching Broadway play 'All My Sons' in New York City on August 1, 2008. Photo Credit: PR Photos

She flashed a demure smile below a forehead covered with her bob fringe and oversized dark glasses.


Katie is set to make her Broadway debut with the play written by Arthur Miller and directed by Eric Falkenstein. She'll appear six nights a hebdomad alongside John Lithgow, Dianne Wiest, and Patrick Wilson.





Katie Holmes attending a rehearsal for her approaching Broadway play 'All My Sons' in New York City on August 1, 2008. Photo Credit: PR Photos

The play is based on a true write up about a woman world Health Organization informed on her padre who had sold incorrect parts to the U.S. military during World War II.


The play begins its preview run on September eighteenth, with the official chess opening on October 16th at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre.










More information