The Resource DVD1
2009-12-08 - extension: rar - parts: 12 - size: 299 MB
The Resource DVD1
Hosted on: netload.in
The Resource DVD1
2009-12-08 - extension: rar - parts: 12 - size: 299 MB
The Resource DVD1
Hosted on: rapidshare.com
Video results for: the resourceMore results from video
How to Extract All the Resource Files from Flash Visit www.sothink.com for more tutorials on flash extract. This tutorial will show you how to (More) Visit www.sothink.com for more tutorials on flash extract. This tutorial will show you how to extract all the resource files from Flash with Sothink SWF Decompiler. (Less)
The Flamingos The Flamingos were a doo wop group from the United States, most popular in the mid to late 1950s. (More) The Flamingos were a doo wop group from the United States, most popular in the mid to late 1950s. Cousins Jacob Carey (Jake) and Ezekial Carey (Zeke), bass and 2nd tenor respectively, formed the group in Chicago, Illinois, after meeting baritone Paul Wilson and first tenor John E. "Johnny" Carter at a black Messianic Jewish synagogue. Earl Lewis (not the Channels lead) soon joined, and after a series of name changes (The Swallows, El Flamingos, The Five Flamingos) wound up being known as The Flamingos. Sollie McElroy soon replaced Lewis (who joined The Five Echoes). The Flamingos' first single (for Chance Records), "If I Can't Have You", was a moderate local success, as was the follow-up "That's My Desire", but it was Johnny Carter's composition of "Golden Teardrops," with its complex vocal harmonies and Carter's soaring falsetto, that cemented their reputation as a top regional act of the day (and for all time among group harmony aficionados and record collectors).[citation needed] The Flamingos left Chance Records sometime after their December 1953 session and signed with DJ Al Benson's Parrot Records. Sollie McElroy was on their first Parrot session, but left the group in December 1954, to be replaced by tenor Nate Nelson (who was on their second Parrot session; he's lead on "I'm Yours," released in January 1955). In early 1955, the Flamingos signed with the resource-rich Chess Records, to record for their new Checker subsidiary. At Chess/Checker, the Flamingos achieved their first national chart hit with "I'll Be Home", which went to #5 on Billboard's R&B charts (Pat Boone's cover version, complete with incorrect lyrics, was a hit on the pop charts). The group also made moderate noise for the label with other chestnuts like "A Kiss From Your Lips," "The Vow," and "Would I Be Crying", which to this day hold up as some of the finest R&B records of all time. The Flamingos also appeared in the 1956 Alan Freed movie Rock, Rock, Rock. In 1956, both Zeke Carey and Johnny Carter were drafted (Johnny in September). [citation needed] Nate Nelson, Jake Carey, and Paul Wilson continued the group with new member Tommy Hunt (added in October of 1956). Another new member, tenor/lead, guitarist, and arranger Terry "Buzzy" Johnson, joined in late December of that year. This group (Nate Nelson, Tommy Hunt, Terry Johnson, Paul Wilson, and Jake Carey) began recording for Decca Records in April 1957. Their most notable single was Johnson's arrangement of "The Ladder of Love", but legal entanglements between Checker and Nate Nelson ruined any chance of commercial success. Zeke Carey returned to the Flamingos in 1958, making the group a sextet. (When Johnny Carter was discharged, he joined the Dells; he has been with them for almost 50 years.)[citation needed] (Less)
The Arts of Korea
2009-05-15 - extension: rar - size: 5 MB
The Arts of Korea
The Arts of Korea: A
Resource for Educators
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Groups results for: the resource