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2009-06-14 - extension: pdf - size: 973 KB
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Video results for: o level englishMore results from video
Ragnarok The Animation Episode 02 ENGLISH SUBS PART 1 EPISODE 02 Part 1
"Nice to meet you, O-nii-chan"
BASED ON THE MMORPG RAGNAROK ONLINE
(More) EPISODE 02 Part 1
"Nice to meet you, O-nii-chan"
BASED ON THE MMORPG RAGNAROK ONLINE
Many young adventurers journey across the changing Rune Midgard Kingdom. Yuufa (Job: Acolyte), who has said her goodbyes to her brother Orki's grave, and Roan (Job: Swordsman), a childhood friend, encounter many people on their fight against the shadows that loom over the kingdom. The two are oblivious to the fate that approaches them. Will they grow stronger on their journeys? And will Roan's feelings for Yuufa take their relationship to a higher level?
Yuufa and Roan meet many unique people on their journey. Maaya, the merchant who is traveling with her Poring "Poipoi". Judia, an excellent hunter who likes fortune telling. Takius, a mysterious mage who is always wearing a blindfold. These encounters with others only adds to the variety of their story. What fate awaits the young adventurers?
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REST OF THE SERIES.
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PART 2
COMING SOON
PART 3
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sz_zvICpHCI
EPISODE 1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kTy1GacWC-E
EPISODE 3
COMING SOON (Less)
KISS ME ~(frm STAR: Lift Off Mit Der Teenage Filmstars 1992) ARTPOP FILMS [If...003]
View non-square-frosted-glass-effect version here- (More) ARTPOP FILMS [If...003]
View non-square-frosted-glass-effect version here- http://myspacetv.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=17336948
Dedicated to Douglas Hart and Angus Cameron.
http://www.myspace.com/teenagefilmstars
Teenage Filmstars are an English, post punk, independent, psychedelic 1980s-90s band, formed in 1979 by Edward Ball, Daniel Treacy and Joseph Foster. The band segued into The Times in 1980, re-appearing on Creation Records in 1992.
TEENAGE FILMSTARS 1979-1980
Having recorded and released the last 'O' Level single "We Love Malcolm" (1978) by himself, Edward Ball dropped the name in favour of the Teenage Filmstars, spring 1979.
Opting to record as a band again, He invited old school friends Daniel Treacy and Joseph Foster to guest on the first single, "(There's a) Cloud Over Liverpool" (1979).
Championed by Radio 1 DJ John Peel (perhaps for the song's sideways nod to Liverpool FC, of whom Peel was a fan), the record received a further lease of life more than a year later when American record shops and college radio stations mistook it for a tribute to the recent death of John Lennon.
http://www.myspace.com/olevel
Followed by the comparatively weak "The Odd Man Out" (1980), which served only to highlight Ball's musical abilities to mimic contemporary pop music at will (ska / electro pop), the Teenage Filmstars and TV Personalities played their first live shows with Ball playing in both groups.
During this period of exposing newly-written compositions to live audiences (sometimes even making them up on the spot) Treacy and Ball nominated personal figureheads that almost personified their own destinies - Teenage Filmstars "I Helped Patrick McGoohan Escape" (1980) and the TV Personalities "I Know Where Syd Barrett Lives" (1981). . .
As the Teenage Filmstars began recording their debut album in November 1980, Ball once again changed the band's name, this time to The Times. These sessions eventually appeared as "Go! With The Times" (1985).
http://www.myspace.com/thetimeslondon
Had the Teenage Filmstars ended here they would perhaps be recalled for two singles of some interest in the formative UK DIY 7" singles foodchain.
TEENAGE FILMSTARS 1992-1999
So when the Teenage Filmstars reappeared on Creation Records 12 years later during that label's most innovative period, with the album 'Lift Off Mit Der Teenage Filmstars' (otherwise known as 'Star' 1992), they stood at the vanguard of an undeniable revolution in sonic experiment.
Partly bearing witness to My Bloody Valentine's release from the previous year, 'Loveless', the forthcoming progressive 90's psychedelia and Ball's own troubled vision of popular music, it prompted Kevin Shields to remark of Ball in 1995, "A sensitive soul from another planet. A modernist musical alchemist - where other people struggle Ed plays what we're thinking."
Following their debut to its next level, "Rocket Charms" (1993) is a tighter concept, though perhaps suffering from this as a result. The band sound, everything recorded backwards with little regard to recognised stereo placement and instrumentation levels is present and correct, but the danger element quota is lower.
So for the third issue by the new Teenage Filmstars to be considered by some to be the last great record released by Creation is more than a little surprising. On "Ssenkcis Rou Troppus Drocer Ruo Yub" aka "Buy Our Record Support Our Sickness" (1997), the Teenage Filmstars fulfill the ambitious psychedelic album concept, and haul in an avant-garde sixties / seventies progressive rock hybrid that resembles the morphing creatures in Alien movies.
http://www.myspace.com/teenagefilmstars
(This article was taken from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teenage_Filmstars#_note-3 (Less)
uz O Henry The Gift Of The Magi English
2009-08-04 - extension: rar - size: 24 MB
uz O Henry The Gift Of The Magi English
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Groups results for: o level english