Results for: from the mars hotel
The Mars Hotel
2009-07-16 - extension: rar - size: 41 MB
The Mars Hotel
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from marshotel
2009-06-04 - extension: rar - size: 72 MB
from marshotel
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Video results for: from the mars hotelMore results from video
Tony Blair's Pro Peace Song Ugly Rumours was the name of a rock band founded in part by the current UK prime minister Tony (More) Ugly Rumours was the name of a rock band founded in part by the current UK prime minister Tony Blair, while studying law at St John's College, Oxford during the early 1970s; he sang and played guitar. The band's name came from the cover of the Grateful Dead's album From the Mars Hotel.
Other members of the were Mark Ellen, who later went on to present BBC TV's Old Grey Whistle Test music show and become the founding editor of British music magazine Q and Adam Sharples, currently Director General, Work, Welfare and Equality Group at the Department for Work and Pensions
On January 19, 2006, Channel 4 broadcast a docudrama entitled Tony Blair: Rock Star, which stated that the band's first gig was at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, during which the drum kit fell apart, and that the band played a total of six gigs before disbanding. It was also mentioned that Blair passed his audition for the band primarily because he was the only auditionee who knew all the words to the song he was asked to sing, "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" by Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones, whom he imitated during his performances.
Stop the War, the coalition that organised the march of close to two million people in London just before the war has brought together a band including a front man supposed to be Tony Blair and is releasing a download only single for 1st week of January 2007 to try to get a chart topper with Edwin Starr's classic song War
Tony Blair wants his legacy to be that he was the highest charting British Prime Minister of all time, please help him fulfill his dream and vote for him by texting "PEACE1" to 78789. (all texts cost £1.50 plus normal network charges/Only available to UK customers) (Less)
Charly Garcia tirandose del Hotel Aconcagua en Mendoza Filmado por mi amigo Daniel Raquela,el UNICO que filmo la caida del musico Charly Garcia a la pileta (More) Filmado por mi amigo Daniel Raquela,el UNICO que filmo la caida del musico Charly Garcia a la pileta del Hotel Aconcagua en Mendoza Argentina.-
Temas de Fondo:
No se va llamar mi amor y Cerca de la Revolucion del Album : Piano Bar
Final:No voy en Tren, del Album:Parte de la Religion.-
Charly Garcia a living legend of latin rock in Argentina,jumped from his hotel room and landed in the hotels swimming pool...5 floors down!!The pool was half full of water when he jumped.- He's was ok.
Charly García was the eldest son in an upper-middle class family. His father taught mathematics and physics in elementary school, while his mother produced radio music shows, mainly shows featuring folkloric music.
Charly began to show musical talent at an early age. At three, he received a toy piano as a gift, and soon he surprised his mother with his ability to compose and play coherent melodies, leading her to enlist him in a prestigious conservatory, the Thibaud Piazzini. At age twelve, he received the title of Music Professor. Charly developed perfect pitch as a child.
The Beatles appeared in Charly's life when he was thirteen. Having previously only been exposed to classical music and folk, he would describe the Beatles as "classical music from Mars". In high school he met Carlos Alberto "Nito" Mestre and the two fused their bands to give birth to Sui Generis.
The band at first experimented with psychedelic rock, but its style would quickly establish as folk-rock with some little influence from the symphonic rock of the day. At their first big gig, the band's bassist, guitarist and drummer all failed to appear. Only Charlie (García spelled his name with "ie" back then) and Nito showed up, playing piano and flute respectively. They were forced to play on their own, and were a hit with the audience despite the other musicians' absence. The band's strength lay in the songs' musical simplicity and romantic lyrics, which appealed widely to teenagers.
As the band gained in popularity, García faced mandatory military service. He performed extravagant stunts in an attempt to be discharged from service; for example, he took a corpse in a wheelchair for a walk in the sun because "he was too pale". Eventually, García ingested a large dose of amphetamines and feigned a heart attack, after which he was taken to a military hospital. There, he composed two songs: Botas locas ("Crazy Boots"), which was censored at the time, and Canción para mi muerte ("Song for my Death). He was released from the military due to his purported mental health problems.
In 1972, Sui Generis released its first LP, Vida, which quickly became popular among Argentinian teenagers. Confesiones de invierno ("Winter Confessions"), their second LP, was released in 1973. This album showcased higher production values and better studio equipment, and was very successful commercially.
1974 was a year of changes. Charlie lost interest in "the piano and flute" sound that Sui Generis had been developing, and decided that Sui Generis needed a change; the band would evolve to a more traditional rock sound, incorporating bass and drums. To that end, Rinaldo Rafanelli and Juan Rodríguez joined the band. In many live shows, Sui Generis also counted in with a gifted guitar player, David Lebón, whom Charly admired very much.
In 1982, Argentina was undergoing political change. After the Falklands War (Spanish: Guerra de las Malvinas/Guerra del Atlántico Sur) in June, social chaos erupted and the military government lost much of its power. The kidnappings had stopped and censorship had weakened.
Charly García debuted as a soloist with a double LP, Pubis Angelical ("Angelical Pubis"), which was the eponymous movie's soundtrack, and the powerful Yendo de la cama al living ("Going from the bed to the living room"). Four hit songs from this album left their historical mark:
1:No bombardeen Buenos Aires ("Do not bomb Buenos Aires") showed the panic in lived out in the city during the Falklands war, and strongly criticized the army, especially the President Leopoldo Galtieri (Roger Waters from Pink Floyd, on the other side of the trenches at that time, also criticized Galtieri in their Final Cut 1983 album).
2:Yendo de la cama al living used the experience of being trapped in a confined space as a symbol of the repression of ideas.
3:Inconsciente colectivo ("Collective unconscious") was a message of hope for the stricken Argentinian people.
4:Yo no quiero volverme tan loco ("I don't want to go that crazy") was a beautiful song about the adolescent spirit of freedom and rebelliousness. (Less)
Grtfl Ded From The Mars Hotel
2009-07-27 - extension: rar - size: 92 MB
Grtfl Ded From The Mars Hotel
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wakeoftheflood
2009-05-21 - extension: rar - size: 105 MB
wakeoftheflood
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fromthemarshotel
2009-05-21 - extension: rar - size: 72 MB
fromthemarshotel
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bluesforallah
2009-05-21 - extension: rar - size: 61 MB
bluesforallah
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