The Kooks – Konk – 2008
2nd CD from THE KOOKS
great second album…
Groot Brittanniƫ
Pop / Rock
Label: Virgin
Track
1. See the Sun 3:37
2. Always Where I Need to Be 2:42
3. Mr. Maker 3:00
4. Do You Wanna 4:06
5. Gap 4:00
6. Love It All 2:51
7. Stormy Weather 4:02
8. Sway 3:36
9. Shine On 3:15
10. Down to the Market 2:27
11. One Last Time 2:38
12. Tick of Time 7:41
13. Watching the Ships Roll In [Live] *
14. Eaten by Your Lover [Live] *
15. No Longer [Live] *
16. Fa La La La La [Live] *
17. Nothing Ever Changes [Live] *
18. By My Side [Live] *
19. Hatful of Love [Live] *
20. See the Sun [Alternate Version] *
21. Brooklyn [Home Demo] *
The Kooks – Konk – 2008
Black Sabbath Sabotage
Black Sabbath Sabotage
Tracklist :
1-Hole In The Sky
2-Don’t Start (Too Late)
3-Symptom Of The Universe
4-Megalomania
5-The Thrill Of It All
6-Supertzar
7-Am I Going Insane (Radio)
8-The Writ
Rihanna – Dont stop the music – music video

Artist : Rihanna
Title : Don’t Stop the music
Format : Avi
Size : 9mb
Download this music video from rapidshare:
http://www.rapidshareprotect.com/rs/120613018047e416043c1f3/rhna_dntpmsc.avi
White Stripes – Conquest Ep – 2007
Amon Tobin – Supermodified

Amon Tobin – Supermodified
At the junction of jazz and breakbeat
science, Amon Tobin is one of the undisputed masters. Instead of
drawing on jazz samples and styles as a sort of prepackaged cultural
signifier, he\’s engaged in the cross-fertilization and
recontextualizing that many aspire to but not so many achieve. On this
release, he casts his net farther afield–the smoky nightclub trumpets
and sultry beats of 1998\’s Permutation are still present, but the
hummingly intense electronics and roiling drums on tracks like \”Rhino
Jockey\” leave the jazz references pretty far behind. The track
\”Precursor\” uses what is called \”vocal percussion\” to emulate the
click-and-pop assemblages of some of the farther out German
electronic experimentalists and segues neatly into the down-tempo
groove of \”Saboteur,\” which is built on a bottle-clinking percussive
sample from obscure \’60s blues-rock outfit the Aynsley Dunbar
Retaliation. \”Keepin\’ It Steel\” is reminiscent of Stereolab in a
way, with a pleasantly lazy tempo that manages the neat trick of
sounding like it\’s in an odd-metre time signature when it\’s not,
punctuated by horns that evoke a \’70s reggae record.

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