Saturday, 30 August 2008

Mp3 music: Haywire






Haywire
   

Artist: Haywire: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Other

   







Haywire's discography:


Get Off
   

 Get Off

   Year: 1992   

Tracks: 12






From Prince Edward's Island, Canada, Haywire was formed in 1982 by guitar player Marvin Birt, vocalist Paul MacAusland, keyboard player David Rashed and bassist Ron Switzer. After drummer Sean Kilbride joined the ring, Attic Records sign them and released Bad Boys in 1986. Haywire has released iV albums since: Don't Just Stand There (1987), Nuthouse (1991), Get Off (1993) and Wired: The Best of Haywire (1994).






Wednesday, 20 August 2008

Defiant Veitch: I'll clear my name

A�defiant Tony Veitch will strenuously abnegate the charges of assaulting his late girlfriend - and both he and the crime syndicate of his alleged dupe have uttered relief that he has at net been charged.



"I am more determined than ever to fight to clear my name," the former TVNZ and Radio Sport broadcaster said outside Auckland District Court yesterday.


"There are two sides to every narration and I guarantee that will come out in the end."


Police have charged the 34-year-old with various counts of assaulting his former partner Kristin Dunne-Powell - half a dozen weeks after The Dominion Post revealed the January 2006 assault in which he kicked her as she lay on the floor of his St Heliers nursing home, breaking her back in four places.


He now faces seven charges spanning nearly four eld - six counts of male assaults female from March 2002 to December 2005, and one of injuring with reckless brush aside relating to the January 2006 incident.


The charge of male assaults female carries a upper limit penalty of two years' imprisonment for each enumerate, while injuring with reckless disregard carries five years.


Dressed in a casual shirt and a suit jacket when he appeared in court, Veitch rocked back and onward on his heels, looking strained and tired. He was supported by his wife, Zoe Halford, and the couple's families.


He was not asked to go in a plea and his lawyer Stuart Grieve, QC, said he would "strenuously defend" all the charges.


He was remanded on bail till September 29.


In an emotional statement outside the court after his appearance, Veitch, world Health Organization has admitted "lashing out" during the incident in January 2006, said the past six weeks had been difficult and frustrating.


"I can candidly say I am absolutely relieved now that at that place is clarity going ahead and I now know what I'm up against," he said.


Ms Dunne-Powell's father of the Church, Stephen Dunne, also aforesaid the charges were a relief for the family.


A spokesman for Ms Dunne-Powell, Alan McDonald of Star PR, said: "She's non interested in talking about it. Now it's a police matter, we've got nothing to say anyway."


Police have been investigating since Ms Dunne-Powell laid a formal complaint last calendar month. Officers searched his home in the Auckland suburban area of Herne Bay on Friday.Broadcasting Minister Trevor Mallard has sought a report into the case from TVNZ chairman Sir John Anderson after questions were raised about how much TVNZ knew about the January 2006 incident.


Prime Minister Helen Clark said she did not know if the charges would detain the report's release.


"I've plain observed the media reports that he has been arrested and charged but I don't have whatsoever information about that report."


CHARGES:


MALE ASSAULTS FEMALE


This can range from a minor altercation such as a force or shove up to a more serious ravishment. The upper limit penalty is two years in jail.


Veitch faces six counts of male assaults female.


The first base is alleged to have occurred between April 14, 2003, and April 9, 2005, in Mangawhai, north of Auckland, where it is tacit Veitch had a holiday house.


Other assaults are alleged in Auckland between March 15, 2002, and April 19, 2003; in Auckland on July 8, 2005; in Auckland on November 5, 2005; in Auckland on December 18, 2005; and in Rotorua between June 3 and June 4, 2003.


INJURING WITH RECKLESS DISREGARD


This is a more serious charge, with a maximum penalty of five years in prison.


Veitch faces one charge of injuring with reckless disregard, which relates to an incident in which he allegedly kicked Ms Dunne-Powell and broke her back in January 2006.








More info

Sunday, 10 August 2008

50 Cent

50 Cent   
Artist: 50 Cent

   Genre(s): 
Rap: Hip-Hop
   Drum & Bass
   Hip-Hop
   Other
   



Discography:


Straight to the Bank CDS   
 Straight to the Bank CDS

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 4


Freestyle B4 Paystyle   
 Freestyle B4 Paystyle

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 28


Curtis   
 Curtis

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 17


Classics Remastered   
 Classics Remastered

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 27


The Massacre   
 The Massacre

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 22


The After Party   
 The After Party

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 1


Candy Shop (Dnb Mixes) CS001   
 Candy Shop (Dnb Mixes) CS001

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 2


Candy Shop   
 Candy Shop

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 4


Battle for the Throne (with DJ Game)   
 Battle for the Throne (with DJ Game)

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 14


Behind Da Bars   
 Behind Da Bars

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 23


50 Minutes Of 50 (A 50 Cent Mixtape)   
 50 Minutes Of 50 (A 50 Cent Mixtape)

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 59


The New Breed   
 The New Breed

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 21


Rap From Mafia   
 Rap From Mafia

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 14


Massacre   
 Massacre

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 22


Get Rich Or Die Tryin'   
 Get Rich Or Die Tryin'

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 19


Gangsters and A Gentleman   
 Gangsters and A Gentleman

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 33


24 Shot   
 24 Shot

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 21


21 Questions   
 21 Questions

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 21


Guess Who's Back?   
 Guess Who's Back?

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 17


Power Of The Dollar   
 Power Of The Dollar

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 18


Promotional Use Only ('97-'98)   
 Promotional Use Only ('97-'98)

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 12


The Hood News   
 The Hood News

   Year:    
Tracks: 19


How 2 Rob   
 How 2 Rob

   Year:    
Tracks: 19


Have A Party   
 Have A Party

   Year:    
Tracks: 1


Bulletproof   
 Bulletproof

   Year:    
Tracks: 13


Before Curtis   
 Before Curtis

   Year:    
Tracks: 12




Though he would by and by contend with the nature of his celebrity as considerably as market expectations, 50 Cent endured substantial obstacles throughout his young yet unmistakably dramatic life earlier bonnie the most discussed figure in hip-hop, if not pop music in general, circa 2003. Following an unsuccessful late-'90s black market at mainstream success (thwarted by an effort on his life in 2000) and a successful function on the New York mixtape circuit (compulsive by his early-2000s bout with Ja Rule), Eminem sign-language 50 Cent to a seven-figure shrink in 2002 and helmed his warm ascend toward crossover winner in 2003. The product of a unkept home in the rough Jamaica neighborhood of Queens and, in turn, the storeyed hood's hustling streets themselves, 50 Cent lived everything most rappers save rhymes about just non all actually get: drugs, crimes, imprisonments, stabbings, and to the highest degree infamously of all, shootings. Of line, such experiences became 50 Cent's rhetorical stock-in-trade. He reveled in his oft-told past, he called out wannabe gangstas, and he made headlines. He tied looked like the ideal East Coast hard-core doorknocker: big-framed with oft-showcased biceps, 002 for grease-gun monomania. The media recounted his biography storey ad nauseam, specially his historied copse with death -- and not simply the expected media outlets like MTV -- even such unlikely mainstream publications as The New York Times ran feature stories ("Amid Much Anticipation, a Rapper Makes a Debut"). By the fourth dimension Get Rich finally streeted on February 6, 2003, 50 Cent had become the almost discussed figure in the medicine manufacture, and bootlegged or not, his initial sales figures reflected this (a record-breaking 872,000 units touched in five days, the best-selling debut album since SoundScan started its trailing system in May 1991), as did his ubiquitousness in the media. Late in the year, undermentioned some early round of pop hits, "21 Questions" (which charted number one on the Hot C) and "P.I.M.P." (number threesome), 50 Cent made his group debut with G-Unit, Beg for Mercy. The album charted at number deuce and spawned a couple Top 15 hits, "Stunt one hundred one" and "Wanna Get to Know You." In 2004, 50 Cent stayed on the sidelines for the most share as G-Unit affiliates Lloyd Banks and Young Buck released pop solo albums. Another G-Unit affiliate, the Game, released his debut in January 2005, and it proved the to the highest degree successful among these solo spin-offs, in special the singles "How We Do" and "Sexual love It or Hate It," both Top Five hits that prominently featured 50 Cent. As these singles were riding high on the charts, however, 50 Cent and the Game were feuding, and the latter was acrimoniously booted kO'd of G-Unit. There were also feuds with Fat Joe and Jadakiss (instigated by the birdcall "Shoat Bank") during the sew to the March 2005 spillage of The Massacre, 50 Cent's second album. Nearly as popular as Get Rich or Die Tryin', The Massacre debuted at number one, sold millions (over ten one thousand thousand oecumenical), and spawned a series of dash hits ("Disco Inferno," "Confect Shop," "Hardly a Lil Bit").


By this point in time, 50 Cent's renown overshadowed his music, thereby predicating "street" credibleness issues that would frequent him in the years to keep up. For example, the marketing rollout of The Massacre carried over into ventures such as the video game 50 Cent: Bulletproof, the semiautobiographical film Get Rich or Die Tryin', and the soundtrack to that film -- all released in 2005, along with former product. The radioactive dust from 50 Cent's overexposure was manifest via the singles from the film soundtrack ("Hustler's Ambition," "Window Shopper," "Topper Friend," "Sustain a Party"), which failed to bring in a good deal traction in the market place, charting modestly relative to past singles. The side by side round of golf of G-Unit solo releases (Tony Yayo's Thoughts of a Predicate Felon, 2005; Mobb Deep's Blood Money, 2005; Lloyd Banks' Rotted Apple, 2006; Young Buck's Buck the World, 2007) didn't do commercially well, either, and it's wasn't completely surprising when plans for another, Olivia's In arrears Closed Doors, were shelved. The gloomy mentality didn't foretell well for 50 Cent's side by side album, which was pushed back repeatedly and retitled a duet multiplication. The net title, William Curtis, was inspired by yet another feud, this one with Cam'ron, wHO taunted 50 Cent, more or less peculiarly, by addressing him by his innate name. After a mate of lead singles, "Unbowed to the Bank" and "Amusement Park," failed to connect in the market place, William Curtis was reworked unrivalled last-place time and pushed back from a summer loss date to a fall one (i.e., the memorable particular date September 11, which -- to the mirth of industry observers -- cavitied the album against Kanye West's Graduation). A second round of golf of singles, "I Get Money" and "Ayo Technology," was released in the latter half of the summer, spell the video for a fifth individual, "Keep up My Lead," was leaked to the Internet -- to the foiling of 50 Cent, wHO reportedly doomed out Interscope for endangering the commercial prospects of his album -- over a calendar month before street date.