Monday, 8 September 2008

Humans have inborn grasp of Nos

PARIS:
Humans have an inborn, intuitive clench of numbers racket that varies sharply from one
person to the next and is tight linked to advanced math skills, according to a
study released on Sunday.




Scientists ascertained that
children whose "close together number system" (ANS) was highly developed were too
good in school-taught math from an early
age.



"It is difficult to
overstate the importance of the �number sense' for all kinds of animals,"
said lead researcher Justin Halberda, a scientist at Johns Hopkins University in
Baltimore.



Halberda and two
colleagues tested this hard-wired ability to judge quantities by showing 64
14-year-olds a series of images containing between 10 and 32 dots that were
either blue or yellow. In some images "flashed for only fifth part of a second
"in that location were double as many dots of one colour. In other images, however, the ratio
was closer to parity with, for example, seven yellow dots and eight-spot blue, and
thus a good deal harder to
discern.



The results showed a
wide variation in the capacity to pick the colour with the most dots at least 75%
of the time, suggesting that some citizenry are but much better at such
lightning-fast "guesstimates."




Even more than unexpected was the
extent to which the deuce distinct kinds of number crunching cognition. Kids that
performed best in the image test were also those who scored the highest in mathematics
achievement tests, going back almost 10 years to kindergarten.



More info

Saturday, 30 August 2008

Mp3 music: Seether






Seether
   

Artist: Seether: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Rock
Alternative
Metal
Rock
Alternative
Metal

   







Seether's discography:


Finding Beauty In Negative Spaces
   

 Finding Beauty In Negative Spaces

   Year: 2007   

Tracks: 12
One Cold Night
   

 One Cold Night

   Year: 2006   

Tracks: 13
Karma and Effect
   

 Karma and Effect

   Year: 2005   

Tracks: 14
Disclaimer II
   

 Disclaimer II

   Year: 2004   

Tracks: 20
Disclaimer
   

 Disclaimer

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 12






Hailing from South Africa and comprising members Shaun Morgan (vocals, guitar), Dale Stewart (bass), and John Humphrey (guitar), Seether embraces a brand of heavy metal mostly associated with the post-grunge era of alternative music, complete with crunchy distortion and brooding textures. The band emerged in 1999 as Saron Gas (a make taken from the back of a intelligent effects CD) and released their debut album, Fragile, the undermentioned class on Musketeer Records. In a country whose melodious tastes center around pop and endemic music, Fragile found impressive chart succeeder. Across the Atlantic, the U.S.-based Wind Up Records caught current of air of the band's growing popularity and sign-language the South African bandmates, wHO changed their name to Seether in tripping of Saron Gas's similarity to the deadly brass agent sarin gun.


An EP vent and a position on the Ozzfest tour preceded the introduction of Seether's full-length debut in the summer of 2002. Issued that August, Disclaimer featured the new john Rock unmarried "Fine Again" and lED to a yearlong tour, during which isaac Merrit Singer Morgan's human relationship with Evanescence siren Amy Lee blossomed. But patch the tour time ensured increasing commercial position for Seether, it likewise delayed the band's return to the studio apartment. In March 2004, a few tracks appeared on the Punisher soundtrack, including a twosome variation of Disavowal's "Broken" featuring vocal contributions from Lee. Disavowal II appeared that June, pairing a fistful of young tracks with remixed or re-recorded versions of the former album's tracks. Seether viewed the album as an chance to reevaluate their debut's release (whose integrate was, according to the band, subpar) and gave listeners new message as a hangover until the band's proper followup. The promised sophomore sweat, Karma and Effect, was released in May 2005 and entered the Top Ten, while the acoustic CD/DVD package Unitary Cold Night appeared in 2006. Following Morgan's separation with Amy Lee and a successful stint in rehab, Seether returned in 2007 with Determination Beauty in Negative Spaces, introducing the album with the sneering and tricky individual "Sham It."






Wednesday, 20 August 2008

Rockers who lead lives away from the stage

IN APRIL, Greg Graffin, a professor in the UCLA living sciences department, arrived on the campus of Harvard University to accept an Outstanding Lifetime Achievement Award in Cultural Humanism, an honor that had bypast to Salman Rushdie the previous year. The studious-looking Graffin stood at a podium and delivered a thoughtful lecture on the history of humanism and its meaning in his life. It was, he says, one of the highlights of his pedantic career.


Weeks later, Graffin is in Irvine addressing a very different kind of audience. He stands in front of 20,000 rock fans at a concert known rather fittingly as the Weenie Roast. It is nearly hundred degrees, and Graffin is pacing endorse and forth as the members of his longstanding punk ring, Bad Religion, play behind him at breakneck swiftness. He raises the mike and sings to the crowd: "If there's a purpose for us all / it remains a secret to me / don't ask me to justify my life." As he does, thousands of young fans, many of them wear Bad Religion shirts, sing along. The band leaves the leg to deafening applause.


Graffin signs autographs, so retreats into an air-conditioned trailer. Asked what it feels like to have such a passionate following, he seems unfazed. "If you don't have adept self-awareness, organism in a successful stripe will really screw you up," Graffin says. "I don't have any mastery what people think about me. And I realise that they don't in truth know me. What you saw out there were thousands of totally different experiences. But my end has constantly been to elevate the art form. If a fan tells me they did a term paper on organic evolution because of one of my songs, it's selfsame touching."


























There's a feeling that rock candy musicians wHO have tasted even the smallest amount of success will, like the proverbial high school quarterback, pass their left days longing for past glories and lamenting what might have been. It can be nearly impossible to replicate the benjamin Rush of playacting in presence of a rapturous herd, and anything like normality can appear a devastating comedown.


So they cling. Scan the music listings on any hebdomad and you'll find reunification shows, many for bands that hardly warranted attention even in their prime. Retread, not reinvention, is too often the formula. But in that respect are, of course, some notable exceptions.


Jeff "Skunk" Baxter, guitarist for Steely Dan and the Doobie Brothers, managed to parlay an interest in recording engineering into a career as one of the nation's leading counterterrorism experts. Queen guitarist Brian May returned to school, received a PhD in physics, contributed to a book on the big bang theory and was of late appointed chancellor of a university. Alannah Currie, the geometrically coifed singer of new wave ensemble the Thompson Twins, is now an creative person who, among other things, designs piece of furniture made from roadkill. Jethro Tull singer and flautist Ian Anderson now runs a consortium of successful salmon farms.


It's an odd assortment of pursuits entirely uniform with the individualistic spirit of the music -- and proof that, for those willing to look forward, lifespan after stone needn't be an inevitable descent into drudgery and stagnation.


Sometimes, what's required is a rekindling of interests held earlier music careers took off.


At a coffee house skinny the UCLA campus where he teaches, Graffin explains how hebecame interested in evolutionary biological science as a high school punk rocker in the San Fernando Valley. "I had expectant questions approximately where we come from. The things that religion usually satisfies, I was learning from science. The band had started deuce years earlier that, and it was really a good synergism because we were talk about Bad Religion, and it's unquestioning in evolution that at that place are no gods."


On one of Bad Religion's earliest recordings, a teenaged Graffin reveals that fascination with organic evolution: "Early gentleman walked away, as advanced man took control, their minds weren't all the same, to conquer was his braggart goal. So he built his gravid empire and slaughtered his own kind. Then he died a confused serviceman, killed himself with his own mind."


Graffin says he fully expected to go after an academic career with the band remaining as a rocking horse. But in the early '90s, Bad Religion recorded an album called "Suffer," which nigh single-handedly enkindled a hoodlum rock revitalization. Suddenly the band's audience was growing and its records selling more than ever. In response, Graffin put his academic pursuits on hold and concentrated on his music career.


Since then, the band has had a number of radio hits and maintains a prominent international following. Amid all this, Graffin eventually earned a PhD from Cornell University and became tenured at UCLA. He now divides his year betwixt teaching and playing with Bad Religion.


"I actually think it's made us a far more interesting band," he says. "And I consider it's possible that if I hadn't maintained my academic pursuits, the band would have burned out earlier. But in terms of satisfaction, there's no difference to me between lecturing and performing. It's all entertainment. You're just trying to inspire people."

For his next trick . . .


TO FIND Dave Lovering, drummer for the Pixies, at his new job, one first arrives at a large Victorian perched supra the lights of Hollywood. You walk through a hidden door in a bookcase, tortuous up in an flowery bar filled with people in formal dress. Then it's a roundabout route to another stairway that descends into what appears to be the basement. Lovering is there waiting in a dark suit and a tie. His hair is closely cropped, his beard full. His co-worker, Rob Zabrecky, stands next to him, pale and cadaverous, wearing a similarly dark suit. The two introduce themselves, then disappear.


The room fills with people, most carrying cocktails. Soon a dissonant song plays and Lovering and Zabrecky re-emerge on a small level along with a third base man called Fitzgerald. For the succeeding 30 minutes, they do a blend of delusion, dark funniness and something resembling performance art. At one point, Lovering straps a winking antenna to his head and identifies playing card game concealed by audience members until his head begins to smoke. The act, called the Unholy Three, has been performing in the basement of the Magic Castle every week now for nearly fivesome years.


Upstairs all over dinner, Lovering says that, like Graffin, he never intended to have a career in music. He had calibrated college with a level in technology, and a subsequent job building lasers was fitful by the band's unexpected success. When the Pixies disbanded in 1993, he moved to Los Angeles. It was here that the longtime science buff and practical joker was introduced to magic by local musician Grant-Lee Phillips, who took him along to a local magic convention. "I saw stuff and nonsense there that just completely blew me away," Lovering says. "There was one particular card trick that I just couldn't catch over. I had to learn how to do it."


Around that same time, his cohort Zabrecky was in New York recording the third and final record album for his alternative pop up band Possum Dixon. Far from existence distraught over the group's impending demise, Zabreckey says he knew exactly what direction his new career would go. In fact, during that last recording session, producer Ric Ocasek had to remind Zabrecky that they were there to finish an album, not perfect his illusion tricks.


Back in Los Angeles, Lovering and Zabrecky were introduced by mutual friend Phillips. The two auditioned for and became members of the Magic Castle, and since then they get spent most of their nights making friends with, and learning from, the veteran magicians who usage the place as an unofficial clubhouse. "We arrived here as total outsiders," Zabrecky says. "We came from the rock world, which was really different than most magicians. It's sort of like if two old magicians of a sudden formed a rock

Sunday, 10 August 2008

Dreaded Youths

Dreaded Youths   
Artist: Dreaded Youths

   Genre(s): 
Jungle
   



Discography:


Dreaded Youths-CCR001 Vinyl   
 Dreaded Youths-CCR001 Vinyl

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 3




 






Tuesday, 1 July 2008

Elisa

Elisa   
Artist: Elisa

   Genre(s): 
Ethnic
   Other
   Soundtrack
   Rock: Pop-Rock
   Pop: Pop-Rock
   Pop
   Rock
   



Discography:


Caterpillar   
 Caterpillar

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 13


Soundtrack '96-'06-Greatest Hits   
 Soundtrack '96-'06-Greatest Hits

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 17


Alcatraz.Milano 01.05.06   
 Alcatraz.Milano 01.05.06

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 7


Lotus   
 Lotus

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 16


Then Comes the Sun   
 Then Comes the Sun

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 12


Pearl Days   
 Pearl Days

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 10


Live @ Mtv Supersonic   
 Live @ Mtv Supersonic

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 13


Elisa   
 Elisa

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 12


Asile's World   
 Asile's World

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 16


[1997] -ristampa 1998] Pipes and flowers   
 [1997] -ristampa 1998] Pipes and flowers

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 12




Born in 1977 outside of Monfalcone, Italy, singer Elisa Toffoli's first steps into the euphony world came through the way of dance, only it was telling that captured her spirit and brought out her natural talents. Elisa grew up with a love for music outlay hours of her childhood singing along with recordings by a wide-cut diversity of artists, such as Ray Charles, Michael Jackson, Aretha Franklin, Ozzy Osbourne, Whitney Houston, Liza Minnelli, Otis Redding, and Madonna. Later, still non regular in her teens, Elisa went from singing with recordings to taking guitar lessons so she could accompany herself and then began written material songs. At 14 she became a member of a blues and rock'n'roll dance band called Seven Roads. The "Septenary" came from the fact that at that place were seven members. Elisa calibrated from Seven Roads into singing for cover bands to make more live and pay. When she was 16, she joined a fully grown band, the Blue Swing Orchestra.


In 1994 Elisa, with the help of a kin friend, finished her first-class honours degree demo. That demonstration made it to Sugar Records. A year later Elisa was in San Francisco, recording her starting time single for the well-known producer Corrado Rustici. The individual carries deuce tracks, "Inside A Flower" and "So Delicate So Pure." In 1997 Elisa recorded her debut uncut album, Pipes & Flowers, which went bivalent platinum. A issue of the tracks were made into euphony videos, including "A Feast for Me" and "Maze." Some of the reviews the album received compared Elisa's sour to that of Alanis Morrisette and groups care Sonic Youth. Elisa was named as one of the topper new artists for 1997 by the Italian Music Award Show. She likewise won the Premio Tenco Award in 1998 for c. H. Best debut album. In 2000 she completed her soph album, Asile's World. Elisa travels and performs with her have circle by and large, consisting of guitar player Andrea Rigonat, keyboardist Christina Rigano, drummer Carlo Bonazza, bassist Max Gelsi, and, final merely not least, Andrea Fontana as percussionist.






Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Schnittke, Alfred

Schnittke, Alfred   
Artist: Schnittke, Alfred

   Genre(s): 
Classical
   Soundtrack
   



Discography:


String Quartet N3 (Kronos Quartet)   
 String Quartet N3 (Kronos Quartet)

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 3


String Quartet N2 (Kronos Quartet)   
 String Quartet N2 (Kronos Quartet)

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 4


Cello Sonatas (Alexander Ivashkin, cello - I. Schnittke, piano)   
 Cello Sonatas (Alexander Ivashkin, cello - I. Schnittke, piano)

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 10


Schnittke, Alfred - Film Music   
 Schnittke, Alfred - Film Music

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 28


Symphony no.1   
 Symphony no.1

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 5


Konzert Fur Viola Und Orcheste   
 Konzert Fur Viola Und Orcheste

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 3


Schnittke - Concerto Grosso N1   
 Schnittke - Concerto Grosso N1

   Year: 1988   
Tracks: 2


Symphony No. 4   
 Symphony No. 4

   Year:    
Tracks: 1


Symphony No. 2 (Rozhdestvensky)   
 Symphony No. 2 (Rozhdestvensky)

   Year:    
Tracks: 6


Symphony No 3   
 Symphony No 3

   Year:    
Tracks: 4


Kontsert Dlya Al'ta S Orkestro   
 Kontsert Dlya Al'ta S Orkestro

   Year:    
Tracks: 1


Dedication To Igor Stravinsky, Sergej Prokofiev, Dmitri Shostakovich   
 Dedication To Igor Stravinsky, Sergej Prokofiev, Dmitri Shostakovich

   Year:    
Tracks: 1


Concerto Grosso ¹2 Dlya Skripk   
 Concerto Grosso ¹2 Dlya Skripk

   Year:    
Tracks: 1


Concerto Grosso 1   
 Concerto Grosso 1

   Year:    
Tracks: 1




 





Nathalie Cardone

Sunday, 22 June 2008

Ana Popovic

Ana Popovic   
Artist: Ana Popovic

   Genre(s): 
Blues
   Other
   



Discography:


Comfort To The Soul   
 Comfort To The Soul

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 11


Hush!   
 Hush!

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 12




If you're non a vapors purist, you'll love the perfervid, passionate playing and singing of Yugoslavian blues-rock guitar player, vocalist, and songwriter Ana Popovic. Thanks to her father, the Belgrade-raised Popovic was introduced to the vapours at an early age, through his varied phonograph recording accumulation and throng sessions hosted at the Popovic abode. Born on May 13, 1976, Popovic took up guitar when she was a stripling and formed her low gear band, Hush, in 1995. Within a year, with the burst of Communism in Eastern Europe, she was playing vapors festivals in Greece and Hungary and on the job as an opening act for American vapours edgar Lee Masters, including Junior Wells.


Popovic recorded her debut album with Hush in 1999, when she as well affected to the Netherlands to subject field jazz guitar and mankind and pop music at the Conservatory of Music. She had the chance to take care blues guitarist Bernard Allison at a club in Germany. He asked her to come onstage and jam at the end of the show. While Allison invited Popovic to join him on a spell, she had to make back to the Jazz Academy in Holland. Allison asked for a copy of Popovic's record with Hush, and he sent it on to executives at Ruf Records in Germany, wHO were impressed with Popovic's powerful guitar playacting and telling. Ruf contacted her to be percentage of their Jimi Hendrix tribute compiling, and then signed her to a recording sell of her possess.


Various months after this, she was on her path to Memphis to record Hush! The album was well standard by vapors wireless programmers and the non-blues purist segments of the American, European, and Canadian vapours fete circuits. In the spring of 2001, she performed at the Memphis in May Festival alongside Bob Dylan, the Black Crowes, and Ike Turner. Within five age of going away Yugoslavia, Popovic, at present in her late twenties, had the probability to do at many of the major European vapours festivals, including Peer, Bishopstock, and Notodden. Along the room she's sabbatum in with the likes of Allison, Michael Hill, and Kenny Neal.


Popovic has two albums out on the New Jersey-based Ruf Records America label, Hush!, released in 2000, and Comfort to the Soul, her 2003 button. Jim Gaines and David Z., wHO have worked with early blues-rockers, including Stevie Ray Vaughan, Santana, and Jonny Lang, had roles in recording and admixture both albums. Five of Popovic's sparkling originals polish on Comfort to the Soul, including her homage to the tragic life-time of jazz bassist Jaco Pastorius, divine by a book she read, as well as the album's opening track, "Don't Bear Down on Me (I'm Here to Steal the Show)." She too provides inspired, imaginative covers of Howlin' Wolf's "Seance on Top of the World" and Steely Dan's "Night by Night."


Popovic guests on Hill's 2003 two-disc Galvanic Storyland live album. In 2003, Popovic was nominative for a W.C. Handy Blues Award for Best New Artist of the Year and was the commencement European creative person to do at the Handy Awards. Two years later, Popovic released her commencement alive endeavour, Ana! Live in Amsterdam.





So Who's Looking After the Kids?