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R Studio 4 6 crack
2009-06-14 - extension: rar - size: 55 MB
R Studio 4 6 crack
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R Studio 4 6
2009-07-23 - extension: exe - size: 6 MB
R Studio 4 6
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Roy Head Roy Head (born January 1, 1941, Three Rivers, Texas) is an American singer, best known for his hit (More) Roy Head (born January 1, 1941, Three Rivers, Texas) is an American singer, best known for his hit "Treat Her Right." After moving to San Marcos, Texas in 1955 he formed his first group, The Traits, in 1957. The original group consisted of Roy Head;vcl, Tommy Bolton:rh.gtr, Gerry Gibson:dms, Dan Buie:pno, Clyde Causey:ld.gtr, and Bill Pennington:bs. When Causey joined the military he was replaced by George Frazier just before starting their recording career at Tanner N Texas (TNT) Recording Company located in San Antonio, Texas. Roy Head and The Traits experienced several regional hits at TNT with songs such as "One More Time," "Live It Up," both released in 1959, and "Summertime Love" (1960); [1] establishing themselves in the late 1950s and the early 1960s as one of the premier teenage Texas-based rock n roll bands while playing the concert, sock hop, college and university and dance hall circuit throughout Texas. In 1962-1963 additional Texas/regional hits were released by Roy Head and The Traits from Renner Records with their versions of Linda Lou and Got My Mojo Working. In 1965 the band, with only two original Traits remaining in the group, signed with Huey Meaux of Back Beat Records. They continued to use the name "Roy Head and The Traits." "Treat Her Right" reached #2 on both the US Pop and R&B charts in 1965, behind the Beatles' "Yesterday." "Treat Her Right," with its blazing horns and punchy rhythm, credited to Roy Head and bass man Gene Kurtz, established Roy Head as a prime exponent of "blue-eyed soul." "Just A Little Bit" and the rockabilly styled "Apple Of My Eye" also cracked the Top 40 in 1965 and 1966. Unfortunately, the enormous success of the songs recorded and released on the Back Beat label spelled the end of Roy Heads association with what has come to be thought of as the second group of Traits. See The Story of Roy Head and The Traits Later releases on Dunhill and Elektra contained elements of rockabilly and psychedelia, but by the mid 1970s his solo career had led him to country signing first with Mega Records and then with Shannon Records and later on with ABC Records and Elektra Records. Between the mid 1970s and the mid 1980s Roy Head's music visited the US C&W Top 100 24 times. In 1975 he had a US C&W Top 10 hit with "The Most Wanted Woman in Town" and again in 1981 with "Come To Me," which reached the C&W Top 20. Even the earliest recordings of Roy Head and The Traits have demonstrated lasting power by continuing to make periodic surges into the Top 40 in various parts of Europe. Discographies reveal that the music originally written, composed and recorded by the Traits at TNT between 1958 and 1961 has been re-released over the past 4 decades numerous times by as many as 15 different recording companies both in the US and abroad. One such compilation album was released as late as 2007. Roy Head and The Traits are listed among the 200 Greatest Rock n Roll Artists of the 1960s, and most lists of the Top 500 rock n roll songs ever recorded include "Treat Her Right." Roy Head is a member of the Gulf Coast Music Hall of Fame, the Texas Country and Western Music Hall of Fame, and Roy Head and The (original) Traits are members of the international Rockabilly Hall Of Fame, joining a long list of other honorees and distinguished artists which includes Elvis Presely, the Everly Brothers, Jerry Lee Lewis, Gene Vincent, Buddy Holly and the Crickets, Patsy Cline and Bill Haley & His Comets. A half century after originating The Traits at San Marcos High School and after having pioneered the music genres of rockabilly, blue-eyed soul and Texas Blues while still making his mark in the Country and Western Music field, you will find the Hall Of Fame Singer traveling the country performing his trademark songs, working with his music in a recording studio or fishing in the lake behind his home located outside Houston, TX. Sporting a James Brown styled dancing routine, having had sectional hits too numerous to count and registering Top 10 hits on the Pop, R & B and C & W charts over a period of 40 years has made Roy Head one of America's most versatile, musically interesting and enduring entertainers. Roy Head's son, Jason "Sundance" Head, was a contestant on Season 6 of American Idol and has recently signed a recording contract with Universal Motown Records where he and Sabrina Sloan, another American Idol 6 contestant plan to release a duet CD in late 2007 or early 2008. (Less)
Daryl Hall & John Oates Maneater ( Extended Club Mix Video ) Daryl Hall & John Oates Maneater ( Extended Club Mix Video ) Sergio Luna Video Remix for etv (More) Daryl Hall & John Oates Maneater ( Extended Club Mix Video ) Sergio Luna Video Remix for etv & youtube free for all comunity ! data take from classicsband.com
Daryl Hall and John Oates were a hit-making phenomenon in the 1970s and '80s, who landed 29 singles in the Top 40 and sold more than 40 million albums, making them the most successful recording duo in history.
Both were raised in Philadelphia suburbs. Oates had moved there when he was four from New York City, and he began playing guitar at age eight. As a child, Hall studied voice and piano. While in their teens, the two frequented Philadelphia ghettos, where they joined doo-wop groups. In 1967 Hall recorded a single with Kenny Gamble and the Romeos (which included future producers Gamble, Leon Huff and Thom Bell). He met Oates later that year when his group, the Temptones, and Oates' group, the Masters, competed in a battle of the bands at Philadelphia's Adelphi Ballroom; they shared a freight elevator while escaping a gang fight. At Temple University, Oates earned a degree in journalism and Hall studied music, but dropped out in his senior term.
Hall formed Gulliver, a group that recorded one LP on Elektra in 1969, and Oates joined just before it disbanded. Oates then traveled to Europe and Hall became a studio musician, singing backup for the Delfonics, the Stylistics, and the Intruders. Upon Oates' return, the two decided to team up. In 1972 they signed with Atlantic Records and released their Arif Mardin-produced debut, "Whole Oates", a folksy album that attracted little attention. Their next LP, the R&B-oriented "Abandoned Luncheonette" (also produced by Mardin), yielded "She's Gone," that was a flop for Hall and Oates but a #1 R&B hit for Tavares six months later. In 1974 the two recorded "War Babies", a concept LP, with producer Todd Rundgren. A drastic departure from their earlier efforts, the LP sold 100,000 copies in the New York area, but, citing a lack of hit singles and stylistic inconsistency, Atlantic dropped them. Surprisingly, "She's Gone" was re-released in 1976 and made it to #7 on Billboard's Hot 100.
Their RCA debut album, "Daryl Hall and John Oates", contained a soft ballad sung by John Oates called "Sara Smile", that became a #4 hit. The tune was co-written by Hall for his frequent collaborator/girlfriend Sara Allen (whose sister Janna Allen helped write "Kiss on My List," "Private Eyes," and other Hall and Oates songs; she died of leukemia in 1993). With the release of 1976's "Bigger Than Both of Us", the two previous albums went gold. "Bigger" eventually became their first platinum LP and contained their first #1 single, "Rich Girl."
Hall, the more prolific writer of the two, began working with Robert Fripp on a solo LP, "Sacred Songs", which RCA refused to release until 1980. He also sang on Fripp's "Exposure". Yet apart from the Top Twenty "It's a Laugh" from "Along the Red Ledge" and "Wait for Me" from "X-Static", the duo hit a late-Seventies commercial slump.
Hall and Oates retrenched and decided to produce their next LP themselves. The result, 1980's platinum "Voices", returned the duo to the singles chart with a vengeance, with "How Does It Feel to Be Back" (#30), "Kiss on My List" (#1), a cover of the Righteous Brothers "You've Lost That Loving Feeling" (#12), and "You Make My Dreams" (#5). The following year's "Private Eyes" was similarly successful; the title cut and "I Can't Go for That (No Can Do)" were both #1, while "Did It in a Minute" went Top Ten.
The album "H20" yielded still more hits with "Maneater" (#1), "Family Man" (#6), and "One On One" (#7). Even the two new songs included on a best-of LP, the double-platinum "Rock 'n' Soul, Part 1", cracked the Top Ten: "Say It Isn't So" (#2, 1983) and "Adult Education" (#8, 1984). (Less)
rsdne 4 6
2009-07-14 - extension: rar - size: 7 MB
rsdne 4 6
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