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January 6, 2009

Best Audio and Video Cards for Blue-Ray?

Filed under: Uncategorized — tranquilityzone7232eyemaskwiththerapeuticsoundsdr @ 4:13 am

Happy Holidays!!!
First off, I’d like to say congratulations for your worldwide recognition! Cudos!
I recently found your site while I was reading an article in Home Entertainment Magazine under the article “Computer Audio 101″. It was an interesting read, but didn’t talk much about the PC portion itself which is what I’m working on now.

I built my first HTPC a few years ago and about to start my next project. Completely Fanless and totally silent… however, I’m a little stuck on the best Audio and Video Cards.
The kicker is that I want to be able to see and hear the benefits of Blue-Ray and HD-DVD. I know HD-DVD is dead… but you can pick them up for about $2 or $3 each now and LG has a decent combo player. But I digress…

As for Video, several of the new boards from Asus and Gigabyte are coming with HDMI and are HDCP compliant. What should I be looking for and what should I stay away from? Is it similar to on-board audio which I have stayed away from? Any suggestions on the best video cards for movie playback, etc. where playing games is not really an issue.

As for Audio, I used an older card in the past which allowed me to use ASIO which was way better than the on-board audio. How’s the on-board audio now days and can you bypass the K-Mixer and have lossless audio out or do you have to use an external card. If so, is there one that will still be good for Blue-Ray and HD-DVD’s?

Best Audio quality is still the primary objective. Currently I have about 3,000 cd’s in WMA Lossless, so I have already commited myseld to PC rather than MAC.

Hopefully this wasn’t too long winded… any and all help would be greatly apreciated in getting me heading in the right direction again. Much thanks!

Best regards,
Kelton

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January 5, 2009

Music Review: <i>Thieves</i> - British India

Filed under: Uncategorized — tranquilityzone7232eyemaskwiththerapeuticsoundsdr @ 1:36 pm

After their impressive debut album, Guillotine, the evocatively-named Australian punk rock band British India returns with Thieves.

The album begins with some classic strumming on “God is Dead, Meet the Kids” and ‘woo-hoo’ hums that would not be out of place in a more jejune band’s repertoire. As the song proceeds, it gets better (and harder), creating an atmosphere of post-Modernist ruin and neglect, ‘neon lights’ and ‘unspoken truths’

The hard and distortion-heavy “This Dance is Loaded’ layers self-centredness (”it’s so rare that we need somebody else”) with teenage angst about “fucked up dances”. This is one song that makes you stand up and shout, tap a beat, and wiggle your ears.

“I Said I’m Sorry” is the first single from the album, a more radio-friendly song and with a traditional rock beat. Everything from the drums to the bass track to the steady vocals indicate a band maturing to its true potential. This is the kind of song that lingers and hopefully makes a lasting impression on the band’s future ouevre.

“Put it Right Down” doesn’t leave much of a mark, at least for me, being rather generic in structure, yet quite in keeping with the album’s tenor. The song attempts to redeem itself in the final third, not to much avail.

Funeral For A Trend” redeems the band, being a Beatles-esque ballad, the lyrics murmuring about an ‘avalanche of golden teeth’ and how the singer’s ‘chest is caving in’. The guitar work and slow-paced drum beat provide counterpoint to the menacing theme of the song. The song evokes the loss of a
great relationship (”Long time no see, where have you been/Before I get to say it you get taken away/You never go but you never stay”)

“Airport Tags” is a hopeful ditty about growing up and losing what mattered once, and doesn’t any more, about believing that things could revert to a halcyon state and the wishful thinking that “tonight everything’s going to change’. The hope (”Airport tags, she was gone now she’s coming back/I was worried but it’s not that bad/Nothing much has changed”) is belied by the reality (”So hang yourself in the bedroom at your parents’ house/Watch as all your best friends gather round/And you might feel loved/Tonight everything’s going to change”)

“You Will Die And I Will Take Over” gives us the anti-establishment line that is de rigeur in punk. The twist is the apparent realization that the next generation is still more of the same (”A clever clone out on his own”), the systems that make us are the ones that keep us (”When your dad had his heart attack we watched it all on videotape/His shirt was ironed, his teeth were white/He clutched his chest like a commercial break”).

“Mona Lisa Overdrive”, also the title of the final volume of William Gibson’s Sprawl trilogy, is a dark song about a crime committed in the heat of passion. The protagonist has been fed some laced drinks (’My mouth is filling with glass/My blood is laced with caffeine”), and he will be ‘dead in an hour’. That is more likely an illusion of the archetypal breakup, the final drink, while ‘a taxi is coming now’. He has the realization that “I’ve been through this before, i hoped I never would again/As girls shine like magazines
Avoid us falling like masonry/I had to ask myself, what are you thinking”. The music is appropriately enough bass-heavy and the rhythm guitar sneaks in at the end with a few choice chords that wrap up one of the best songs on the album.

“Nic the Poet” deals with the general know-it-all awareness every generation has that its fucked up and powerless to do anything about it. “Twenty thousand kids all on their mobile phones” refuse to accept that “This party is finished, give us xanax and fifteen minutes”. The poet’s call to “change the station this bottled water generation” will be ignored, after all they’re just “four white boys getting high tonight”.

The final song “The golden years” is a gentle ballad, giving prominence to Declan Melia’s vocals, a memory of growing up and growing away, of wanting to get back to the temps perdu. The mature realization is that “These golden years that we are drowning in, we’ll spend our whole lives trying to get to one place we don’t want to be.

This is an album, then, of growing up, of coming of age, and by poets of yet another lost generation.

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January 4, 2009

MC Frontalot

Filed under: Uncategorized — tranquilityzone7232eyemaskwiththerapeuticsoundsdr @ 10:42 pm

What? From electro-pop pioneer Thomas Dolby to indie-rock progenitors the Feelies, nerds have always played a subversive but vital role in the field of popular music. The latest calculator-toting egghead? San Francisco’s MC Frontalot, progenitor of “nerdcore hip-hop,” who spits rhymes about video games, computers, and child prodigies over jittery, lo-fi electro-hip-hop beats. His third record, the recently released Final Boss, packs more wit and bumping beats than a T-83 calculator — although, unlike the T-83, Frontalot don’t play no games.


More on SPIN.com:
>> Review: MC Frontalot, Final Boss

Filed under: Uncategorized — tranquilityzone7232eyemaskwiththerapeuticsoundsdr @ 7:50 am

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January 3, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — tranquilityzone7232eyemaskwiththerapeuticsoundsdr @ 4:56 pm

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List : The Definitive Geeta Dutt

Filed under: Uncategorized — tranquilityzone7232eyemaskwiththerapeuticsoundsdr @ 1:58 am

20th July 2008 marked the 36th Death Anniversary of Geeta Dutt. A small tribute to the memory of this enchanting songstress.

Geeta DuttIt is difficult, almost unsettling to think of Geeta Dutt as a shriveled septuagenarian(what she would have been if she were alive). Time stopped aging her voice long before she actually passed away in 1972. Even today her voice represents a youthful joie-de-vivre that can lift anyone out of the bluest of blue moods. Her sad songs have an aching vulnerability that makes one want to weep for her and with her. And her richly-layered bhajans are strangely soothing. No other singer could traverse such a complex range of emotions with the ease and spontaneity that Geeta Dutt did. In addition to the richness in expression, her was voice was rich in tonal quality, robust and sweet quite like a juicy Dasheheri mango!

Despite all these qualities, today she is merely a memory in the history of Indian film music. Slotted early in her career as a ‘club song’ singer, Geeta unfortunately got stuck in the very mold that she created for herself with such blazing individuality. Couple this with her own battles with the bottle, failing marriage to film-maker Guru Dutt and a lackluster approach to her career, Geeta Dutt faded away, much before her times.

Yet, her small repertoire is dazzling to say the least.  This list more than amply strengthens the belief that God sends all good things in limited editions.

Note : Click on the link to view the video of the song

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1. Tadbeer se Bigdi hui Taqdeer Banale (Film : Baazi(1951); Composer: SD Burman; Lyrics : Sahir Ludhianvi) The seductive and persuasive strains of the guitar, SD Burman’s path-breaking western treatment of Sahir Ludhianvi’s ghazal, Geeta Bali’s energetic screen presence and Geeta Dutt’s vibrant singing, the dice had no option but to roll in favour of this ‘Baazi’.  ‘Tadbeer se Bigdi’ was the greatest attraction of Baazi and the audience went to see the film in repeat mode only to witness the magic of the two Geetas.

2. Thandi Hawa Kali Ghata (Film : Mr and Mrs 55(1955); Composer: OP Nayyer; Lyrics : Majrooh Sultanpuri) Raju Bharatan, the much maligned film music critic, summed up the effect of Geeta Dutt’s voice in a rare moment of clarity- “‘Geeta Dutt was thandi hawa and kaali ghata rolled into one. The moment she came, you got the refreshing feeling of aa hi gayi jhoom ke. There was a rare swing in her voice. She hit you like a thunderclap
What more can one say to recommend the freshness in this song other than to say that the effect on yours truly is without fail ‘….naache jiya ghoom ke’ .

3. Aaj Sajan Mohe Ang Lagalo (Film : Pyaasa(1957); Composer: SD Burman; Lyrics : Sahir Ludhianvi) Guru Dutt’s innovative idea of using a vaishnav bhajan to depict the purity of the romantic situation in the film, was ably supported by his wife’s singing. Geeta brings a very human yearning to her rendition and yet keeps it sublime and other worldly like a true bhajan. Geeta Dutt’s interpretation of bhajans was very distinctive. Whether it is ‘Tora manwa kyon ghabraaye’ or ‘Na mein dhan chahun’ or our chosen ‘Aaj sajan mohe ang lagalo’, she blends the sensual with the sublime seamlessly. This is true to the sufi tradition whose texts abound in erotica that couples with spiritual fervour. It can be argued that if Meerabai made a time-travel trip to the 50s and 60s she would have sung in the voice of Geeta Dutt!

4. Ankhiyan Bhool Gayi Hain Sona (Film : Goonj Uthi Shehnai(1959); Composer: Vasant Desai; Lyrics : Bharat Vyas) The classic Geeta chutzpah brims over in this duet with Lata Mangeshkar. The coy and docile heroine being teased mercilessly (or praised to the heavens) by a bunch of giggling sahelis is one the staple daal-roti situations done to death in hindi film songs. Yet, Geeta’s sweet and wicked take of the situation makes this song a standout. Note the way she sings ‘Sona’ in the first line. This song also represents the female-female genre of songs of which Geeta has many memorable examples like Bachpan ke din, Jaanu Jaanu Ri, Thandi Thandi Hawa , under her belt.

5. Koi Chupke Se Aake (Film : Anubhav(1971); Composer: Kanu Roy; Lyrics : Kapil Kumar) The soft, romantic type of songs flowered in Geeta’s melodious and expressive voice. Geeta’s singing in Anubhav demonstrates how much she still had to offer even at the fag-end of her life. In the chosen song, she is soft, teasing, whimsical, romantic all at once and the ever so slight tinge of pathos in her voice highlights the enigma that was Geeta Dutt.

6. Babuji Dheere Chalna (Film : Aar Paar(1954); Composer: OP Nayyer; Lyrics : Majrooh Sultanpuri) The slow and sensual club song is Geeta’s comfort zone. She could sleep-walk through those kind of songs. Yet, this one stands out for hitting all the right notes at once. The measured sensuality, a hint of vibrancy, a slight edge in the voice and a full throated bass-heavy tone all combine to make this OP Nayyer composition into a classic club song. OP Nayyer composed a slew of such songs for Geeta and later Asha Bhosle. Aayie meherban could be considered the successor to his body of work with Geeta.

7. Mera Naam Chin Chin Choo (Film : Howarah Bridge(1958); Composer: OP Nayyer; Lyrics : Qamar Jalalabadi) This irrepressible upper is arguably Geeta’s signature song. The swing in her voice can get even the most languid of people out there up and jiving. It is high energy, peppy and brimming with the joie-de-vivre that is the quintessential Geeta Dutt.

8. Nanhi Kali Sone Chali (Film : Sujata(1959); Composer: SD Burman; Lyrics : Majrooh Sultanpuri) From the seductive to the soothing - the transition is as smooth as butter. The synergy of the Majrooh-SD Burman combination and the nurturing vocals of Geeta Dutt make this lullaby from Sujata as one of the most memorable loris created for Hindi films.

9. Waqt Ne Kiya (Film : Kagaz Ke Phool(1959); Composer: SD Burman; Lyrics : Kaifi Azmi)A brooding film-maker, his honey voiced wife, the beautiful actress and the inextricable mess of their liason - Life was a pre-scripted tragedy for the Dutt couple. Kagaz Ke Phool was Guru Dutt’s semi-autobiographical magnum opus that immortalised his personal situation. Kaifi Azmi’s lyrics are poignant, SD Burman’s tune wistful, but it is Geeta’s singing that stirs up the storm of emotions. The songs aches with nostalgia. The travesty of time and the indelible stain that it leaves on the soul is universal. Rare is the person who looks back at his life and does not wistfully discover…. ‘hum rahe na hum’ .

10. Na Jao Saiyan (Film : Sahib Bibi aur Ghulam(1962); Composer: Hemant Kumar; Lyrics : Shakeel Badayuni)
The character of Chhoti Bahu in Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam is undoubtedly one of the greatest written for mainstream Indian cinema. Meena Kumari immortalised the tragic Chhoti Bahu with a stellar performance. Anguish, devotion, desire, self-disgust, rebellion and a repressed sexuality every little facet that constituted the complex character of Chhoti Bahu comes to life in this song. When Geeta Dutt poignantly mentioned that this song represented her own emotions rather than that of the film’s character, Chhoti Bahu, Meena Kumari and she all fused into the same person. This song is a fitting finale to the list.

See Also

Upperstall Profile : Geeta Dutt

Raaga : Geeta Dutt songs

Geeta Dutt : Biography

Note: This is an edited version of a longer article. The complete article along with some pictures can be found here

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January 2, 2009

Netgear Digital Entertainer

Filed under: Uncategorized — tranquilityzone7232eyemaskwiththerapeuticsoundsdr @ 10:56 am

Might treat myself eventually -

http://www.engadget.com/2008/11/28/netgear-digital-entertainer-elite-med…

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January 1, 2009

Sony BMG News | Commercial Sales Division announcement

Filed under: Uncategorized — tranquilityzone7232eyemaskwiththerapeuticsoundsdr @ 7:54 pm

Ged Doherty, Chairman SONY BMG Music Entertainment, UK & Ireland, announces the formation of a new division, the Commercial Sales Division.

The new division sees the previously separate Sales and Commercial departments forming one new business unit. On top of its existing sales remit across the whole group, it will be tasked with bringing SONY BMG’s extensive catalogue even closer to the new business opportunities constantly emerging in the market. Nicola Tuer is promoted from her role of SVP Sales to head the new group as SVP Commercial Sales Group.

“This is an exciting new chapter for the company,” says Sony BMG UK & Ireland Chairman, Ged Doherty. “By bringing together these traditionally different functions of the company under one roof, we are creating an entirely new area of product development allied to ever-changing consumer demand. We’ll be able to respond more quickly to opportunities coming from our retail and business partners across the entire industry.

“Nicola Tuer is the perfect person to lead the new group. She has fantastic relationships across the whole business and a great grasp of what’s required to compete in the modern marketplace.”

“This is a fantastic opportunity,” says Nicola Tuer. “Our vision as a company is to focus relentlessly on connecting artist and fan. I have spent many years close to the fan in my various sales roles and now have the opportunity to work with SONY BMG’s great catalogue and develop bespoke products to satisfy customer demand to receive our music in new formats and new ways.”

The new group is effective immediately.

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Filed under: Uncategorized — tranquilityzone7232eyemaskwiththerapeuticsoundsdr @ 4:55 am

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December 31, 2008

Coconot

Filed under: Uncategorized — tranquilityzone7232eyemaskwiththerapeuticsoundsdr @ 1:56 pm

What? Recording as El Guincho, Pablo Díaz-Reixa crafted drum-heavy, carnival-esque sounds on Alegranza (No. 33 on our 40 Best Albums of 2008 list). While that album contains enough moments of repetitious bliss to keep parties across the planet gyrating for years to come, Díaz-Reixa’s main outfit, Coconot, provides the perfect soundtrack for winding down without dropping the beat. The group’s hypnotizing second record, the recently released Cosa Astral, features swaths of gauzy keyboards and Animal Collective-worthy yelping while never forgetting to pack a rhythmic punch in each track.

Who? In a matter of happenstance, Coconot was formed in March 2005 by Díaz-Reixa and former member Alfredo Montes after the two met while traveling Western Africa and shared a discussion about their love of Brazilian music. Current members Jens Neumaier and Cristian Subirà joined Coconot’s lineup when the band recorded their debut, Novo Tropical Errado, in June 2005. After a break to craft music as El Guincho, Díaz-Reixa returned to Coconot — now a trio, following Montes’ departure — to write and record what would become Cosa Astral.

Fun Fact: Díaz-Reixa isn’t the only member of Coconot that’s been a part of other musical projects: Neumaier was the saxophonist/keyboardist for the recently defunct Barcelona-based post-rock act 12Twelve, while Subirà is the brains behind the electro-psych outfit Summer Recreation Camp.

Listen: Coconot, “Verbena de los Delfines” (DOWNLOAD MP3)

Buy: Cosa Astral at Stickfigure Distribution

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