Thursday 28 August 2008

Vin Diesel wants 'Riddick' sequels

Vin Diesel has aforesaid he is planning to make iI more Chronicles Of Riddick movies.

The original David Twohy-helmed action gamble was released in 2004.

Speaking about the possibility of two sequels, Diesel told MTV: "The only question is whether we take a page from the Lord Of The Rings guys and try to shoot the two chapters at the same time."

He also claimed that the delayed production on the sequels was down to his and Twohy's desire to determine the story rather than lack of studio interest.



More info

Tuesday 19 August 2008

�Into the Unknown� With Handsome Devil Josh Bernstein

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Saturday 9 August 2008

Waylon Jennings

Waylon Jennings   
Artist: Waylon Jennings

   Genre(s): 
Country
   



Discography:


Legends   
 Legends

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 50




If any unmatched performing artist personified the illicit state move of the '70s, it was Waylon Jennings. Though he had been a professional player since the later '50s, it wasn't until the '70s that Waylon, with his stately baritone voice and stripped, updated whitey tonk, became a mavin. Jennings rejected the conventions of Nashville, refusing to record with the industry's legions of studio musicians and insistence that his music ne'er resemble the string-laden, pop-inflected sounds that were orgasm out of Nashville in the '60s and '70s. Many artists, including Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson, followed Waylon's anti-Nashville stance and finally the whole "illegitimate" campaign -- so-named because of the artists' ragged, maverick image and their independence from Nashville -- became one of the most substantial rural area forces of the '70s, dower the music genre stick to its hard-core honkie tonk roots. Jennings didn't write many songs, simply his euphony -- which combined the grittiest aspects of honkie tonk with a stone candy & roll musical rhythm and attitude, qualification the music excess, point, and rough -- outlined hard-core din Land, and it influenced innumerable musicians, including members of the new traditionalist and alternative rural area subgenres of the '80s.


Jennings was natural and elevated in Littlefield, TX, where he erudite how to play guitar by the meter he was ashcan School. When he was 12 age honest-to-goodness, he was a DJ for a local wireless station and, concisely after, formed his first base set. Two age later he left wing school and worn-out the next few long time pick cotton, finally moving to Lubbock, TX, in 1954. Once he was in Lubbock, he got a job at the wireless station KLLL, where he befriended Buddy Holly during one of the station's shows. Holly became Waylon's mentor, commandment him guitar licks, collaborating on songs, and producing Jennings' first exclusive, "Jole Blon," which was released on Brunswick in 1958. Later that year, Waylon became the impermanent basso player for Holly's dance band the Crickets, playing with the careen & roller on his final go. Jennings was also scheduled to fly on the plane ride that all over in Holly's tragic death in early 1959, merely he gave up his seat at the last-place minute of arc to the Big Bopper, world Health Organization was woe from a cold.


Following Holly's death, Jennings returned to Lubbock, where he exhausted two years bereavement the loss of his friend and working as a DJ. In late 1960, he affected to Phoenix, AZ, where he founded a rockabilly band called the Waylors. Jennings and the Waylors began to realise a local next through their performances at the local clubhouse JD's, finally signing to the independent label Trend in 1961. None of the group's singles made whatsoever impingement, and Jennings began working for Audio Recorders as a record producer. In 1963, Waylon moved to Los Angeles, where he landed a contract with Herb Alpert's A&M Records. By this degree, Waylon's music was virginal land, and Alpert precious to move him toward the pop food market; Jennings didn't spelunk in to the demands and his sole individual, "Sing the Girl a Song, Bill," and album for A&M flopped.


Following the A&M debacle, Jennings landed a contract with RCA with help from Chet Atkins and Bobby Bare, and he affected to Nashville in 1965. After arriving in Nashville, he affected in with Johnny Cash, and the two musicians began a durable friendship, which finally resulted in a collaborationism in the form of the Highwaymen in the '80s. Waylon released his number one single for RCA, "That's the Chance I'll Have to Take," late in the summer of 1965, and it became a minor hit. With his minute single, "Stop the World (And Let Me Off)," he had his number one Top 40 rural area hit, and it began a bowed stringed instrument of moderate hits that finally developed into several Top Ten singles -- "Walk On out of My Mind," "I Got You," "Only Daddy That'll Walk the Line," "Yours Love" -- in 1968. At this point, he was working with Nashville sitting men and development a intelligent that was halfway between honkey tonk and folk. As the next decade began, he started to act his music toward hard-core area.


In 1970, Jennings recorded several songs by a struggling simply hopeful ballad maker called Kris Kristofferson, which lED to a copulate of ambitious albums -- Isaac M. Singer of Sad Songs and Ladies Love Outlaws -- the following year. On these two records, he developed the roots of illicit land, creating a harder, tougher muscular sound with a selection of songs by writers like Alex Harvey and Hoyt Axton. During the following year, Waylon began collaborating with Willie Nelson, transcription and writing several songs with the songster. Just as importantly, he as well renegotiated his contract with RCA in 1972, demanding that he assume the production and artistic control of his records. Honkey Tonk Heroes, released in 1973, was the number one album released under this raw contract. Comprised almost totally of songs by the then-unknown songwriter Billy Joe Shaver and recorded with Jennings' road band, the album was an high-strung, bass-driven, and surly variation on stripped honkie tonk. Jennings and his new sound lento began to win more fans, and in 1974 he had his get-go issue ane, "This Time," followed by heretofore another numeral nonpareil undivided, "I'm a Ramblin' Man," and the figure two "Showery Day Woman."


Waylon's winner continued passim 1975, as Dream My Dreams -- featuring one of his signature songs, the numeral nonpareil "Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way" -- reached figure 49 on the pop charts; he was too voted the Country Music Association's Male Vocalist of the Year. Jennings really crossed over into the mainstream in 1976, when Treasured! The Outlaws -- a various-artists compiling of previously released substantial that concentrated on Waylon simply as well featured songs from his wife Jessi Colter, Willie Nelson, and Tompall Glaser -- peaked at bit one on the pop charts. Following the winner of Wanted!, Waylon became a adept, as well known to the mainstream drink down hearing as he was to the state audience. For the next half a dozen days, Jennings' albums consistently charted in the pop Top 50 and went gold. During this time, he recorded a numeral of duets with Nelson, including the multi-platinum Waylon & Willie (1978), which featured the bit one undivided "Mammas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys." Over the track of the belated '70s and early '80s, Jennings scored ten bit one hits, including "Luckenbach, Texas (Back to the Basics of Love)" (which pip number 25 on the pop charts and spent six-spot weeks at the top of the country charts), "The Wurlitzer Prize (I Don't Want to Get Over You)," "I've Always Been Crazy," "Amanda," "Theme from 'The Dukes of Hazzard' (Ripe Ol' Boys)," and iII duets with Nelson.


By the mid-'80s, the momentum of Waylon's vocation began to wearisome more or less, due to his drug abuse and the refuse of the entire outlaw country movement. Jennings kicked his means habits cold dud in the mid-'80s and formed the upergroup the Highwaymen with Willie Nelson, Kris Kristofferson, and Johnny Cash in 1985; over the side by side decennium, the band released trey albums, til straight off none of them were more than successful than their debut, which spawned the number one exclusive, "Highwayman." Also in 1985, Jennings parted slipway with RCA, sign of the zodiac language with MCA Records the undermentioned yr. At beginning, he had several come to singles for the label, including the number one "Rose wine in Paradise," merely by the terminal stage of the '80s, he was no yearner able to break through the Top 40. In 1990, Waylon switched labels once more, sign lyric with Epic. "Wrong," his first single for the mark, reached the Top Ten in 1990, and "The Eagle" reached the Top 40 the following yr, only later on that minor hit, none of his singles were charting.


Despite his decreased gross revenue -- which were mostly due to the unfirm tastes in commonwealth music -- Waylon remained a mavin throughout the '90s and was able to draw great crowds whenever he performed a concert, while many of his records continued to receive positivistic reviews. In 1996, he signed to Justice Records, where he released the acclaimed Right for the Time. Shutting In on the Fire followed in 1998. His work was slowed by his health in the days following that album, as complications from diabetes made it hard for him to walk. His foot was amputated in December 2001 because of his malady, and he died on February 13, 2002, at his rest home in Arizona.