Friday, May 27, 2011

https://docs.google.com/document/d/16OCndKywtKZ2AHcKmPvBvcE50h3GH2Get9K_ZZw5h1Q/edit?hl=en&authkey=CNffibkO

indigital words


Instant Access To 3000 4500
eBooks, Software, Videos, Graphics,
Articles, Templates... And Many More Products With 
Resale, Master Resell
& Private Label Rights!


If you are fed up with having to pay $49, $69 or even $97 for yet another flimsy guru eBook, Software or Private Label Package that doesn’t deliver half of what they promised this will be the most important site you have ever joined!
go to 

 you buy a single e-book from this collection somewhere else you'll have to pay hundred dollars or so. But here you are getting ebooks for less than a penny each. And not to mention the high profits you can generate from each of them. Many of these e-books come with resell rights title that you can sell with your own price tag and make them your ATM. You can even give them away at special offers or as bonus with your products. Or offer them on your lead capture page to build your list..
Browse all SILVER membership ebooks with resell rightsmaster resell rightsprivate label rightsgiveaway rights and for personal use.


Thursday, May 26, 2011

100 albums all metalhead should hear!!!


We all have our favorite music, but if you like to bang your head from time to time (or all the time), here are 100 albums you should’ve listened to at least once. Or maybe a thousand times. Not all of them are necessarily hard rock or heavy metal albums, but they at least had an influence.

  1. Black Sabbath – Black Sabbath
  2. Paranoid – Black Sabbath
  3. Holy Diver – Dio
  4. The Number of the Beast – Iron Maiden
  5. Gods of the Earth – The Sword
  6. Ace of Spades – Motorhead
  7. British Steel – Judas Priest
  8. Peace Sells … But Who’s Buying? – MegaDeth
  9. Ride the Lightning – Metallica
  10. Master of Puppets – Metallica
  11. … And Justice for All – Metallica
  12. Shout at the Devil – Motley Crue
  13. Danzig – Danzig
  14. Walk Among Us – The Misfits
  15. Suicidal Tendencies – Suicidal Tendencies
  16. Renegades – Rage Against the Machine
  17. Led Zeppelin – Led Zeppelin
  18. Led Zeppelin II – Led Zeppelin
  19. Led Zeppelin IV – Led Zeppelin
  20. Machine Head – Deep Purple
  21. Among the Living – Anthrax
  22. Reign in Blood – Slayer
  23. Rock and Roll Over – KISS
  24. Love it to Death – Alice Cooper
  25. Mechanical Animals – Marilyn Manson
  26. The Downward Spiral – Nine Inch Nails
  27. Straight Between the Eyes – Rainbow
  28. Are You Experienced? – The Jimi Hendrix Experience
  29. Steppenwolf – Steppenwolf
  30. Who’s Next – The Who
  31. Soap Opera – The Kinks
  32. This is Spinal Tap – Spinal Tap
  33. Lovehunter – Whitesnake
  34. Blow by Blow – Jeff Beck
  35. Let it Bleed – The Rolling Stones
  36. White Album – The Beatles
  37. The Dark Side of the Moon – Pink Floyd
  38. The Wall – Pink Floyd
  39. S.F. Sorrow – The Pretty Things
  40. In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida – Iron Butterfly
  41. UFO 1 – UFO
  42. Firefly – Uriah Heep
  43. Blizzard of Ozz – Ozzy Osbourne
  44. W.A.S.P. – W.A.S.P.
  45. Appetite for Destruction – Guns N’ Roses
  46. Seven Churches – Possessed
  47. Walls of Jericho – Helloween
  48. Nothing’s Shocking – Jane’s Addiction
  49. Love at First Sting – Scorpions
  50. Van Halen – Van Halen
  51. Black Metal – Venom
  52. Lightning to the Nations – Diamond Head
  53. Innocence is no Excuse – Saxon
  54. Badmotorfinger – Soundgarden
  55. Metal Health – Quiet Riot
  56. High ‘n’ Dry – Def Leppard
  57. Agents of Fortune – Blue Oyster Cult
  58. Jailbreak – Thin Lizzy
  59. Arise – Sepultra
  60. Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap – AC/DC
  61. Highway to Hell – AC/DC
  62. For Those About to Rock We Salute You – AC/DC
  63. Back in Black – AC/DC
  64. Stay Hungry – Twisted Sister
  65. Taking Over – Overkill
  66. The Legacy – Testament
  67. Fabulous Disaster – Exodus
  68. Headhunter – Krokus
  69. Agent Orange – Sodom
  70. Extreme Aggression – Kreator
  71. All Hell Breaks Loose – Destruction
  72. Siege Perilous – Kamelot
  73. Epicus Doomicus Metallicus – Candlemass
  74. Glory to the Brave – Hammerfall
  75. Thornography – Cradle of Ruin
  76. Dirt – Alice in Chains
  77. My War – Black Flag
  78. Stag – Melviins
  79. Sonic Firestorm – DragonForce
  80. Vulgar Display of Power – Pantera
  81. Welcome to Sky Valley – Kyuss
  82. Undertow – Tool
  83. Mer de Noms – A Perfect Circle
  84. Astro Creep: 2000 – White Zombie
  85. Bleach – Nirvana
  86. Rated R – Queens of the Stone Age
  87. Suck on This – Primus
  88. Enthrone Darkness Triumphant – Dimmu Borgir
  89. A Blaze in the Northern Sky – Darkthrone
  90. Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed and The Way to Suck Eggs – Ministry
  91. Album of the Year – Faith No More
  92. Soul of a New Machine – Fear Factory
  93. Hammerheart – Bathory
  94. To Mega Therion – Celtic Frost
  95. Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols – Sex Pistols
  96. Satanic Rites – Hellhammer
  97. All for One – Raven
  98. Don’t Break the Oath – Mercyful Fate
  99. Bloody Kisses – Type O Negative
  100. The Obsessed – The Obsessed

Monday, May 23, 2011

music is life !! agreee??


________*/•|___________
________*/• \___________
_______*(•_ )_________
_______ .|¯|______________
_______ .|•|____________
_______ .|•|_________
_______ .|•|_________
_______ .|•|_________
_____,__.|•|_________
____/#|_.|•|__/\_____
___(##(_,|•|,_)))____
___\###/ |•|/&&/_____
____\##)&___&&(______
_____)#/&&___&&\_____
____/#|&&&___.&\\____
___(##\__&&&_'._)|___
____\ ######## //____
_____"+,_____,+"____

Friday, May 20, 2011

T-Akia G-enzi

T-Akia G-enzi

mig33

mig33

JINDABAD: PLASTIC HEART


Few of us imagined that five young aspiring musicians, who, while hanging out sipping one chiya after another, could come up with an album so unexpected, so precise, and so mature. That is not to say that it is not full of youthful exuberance, but you'd have to pinch yourself to believe that they're still in their early days.
Nevertheless, the release of Jindabaad's debut album Plastic Heart is a proud and monumental moment, for what they have achieved with limited resources during Nepal's half-lit days is truly exceptional.
Plastic Heart starts loudly with 'Shades of You', a ballad driven by Kiran Shahi's tight drumming. With Sunny Tuladhar's slick guitar overlays and Rajan Shrestha on the howling bass, it transitions into a progressive final third before Rohit Shakya's umpteenth vocal octave wraps it to a distinguished close.
Second comes 'Preset', where Abhishek Bhadra's haunted undertones on the keyboard are complimented by the utopian numbness of the chorus. It is, in fact, poetry in motion, and taken to new heights due to Bhadra's proficiency on the keys.
'Rewind' reminds listeners that as musicians, music is theirs to create – labels mean nothing. They released this song on YouTube a few months back, which earned them a legion of fans then unfamiliar with the band's humble beginnings.

BFM' is a politically voiced number, by a band that continues to claim that self-entitlement has little to do with their music. The angry, at times almost 'Zack De La Rocha'-sounding, Shakya helps trigger the frustration of living in a disorderly state with the false autonomy we have created. Bhadra and Sunny, through the mastery of their instruments, heighten the enraged call for an egalitarian society.
PLASTIC HEART JINDABAD
The album finally ends in 'Spoilin'. Heavy and angry at times, vulnerable and moody at others, the tracks always seem to be seconds away from hitting you with another surprising twist. The transitions in tone, emotion and progression have already become a trademark of this band.
Jindabaad produced the album independently, going commercial solely through their fans, their meagre online resources and the occasional gig around town. Despite 20-hour loadshedding, these artists, some of Nepal's youngest and most talented musicians, have managed to produce an album that is quintessentially about music and music alone. Set aside the fact that fame might be awaiting them; these are just five guys in love with what they're doing.

FREEDOM TO ROCK!!


At the Studio 4 premises, located on the dusty stretch of Bagmati river's bank in Kupandol, many aspiring young guys in their skinny jeans and converses anxiously awaited their turns to audition for the third Sprite Rock Band Challenge, each hoping to win the first of a kind competition in Nepal. While some looked totally confident, others were visibly experiencing a nervous breakdown.
Of the sixty-two bands selected, twenty will be competing in the challenge. The number will eventually come down to twelve, then six, from which the winner will be selected. Besides getting a chance to shoot a music video, the winner will also receive a cash prize of Rs 1 lakh. But for that, we will have to wait until 30 April, the grand finale of the competition.
The judges are comprised of a trio of Nepal's biggest rock icons: Robin Tamang, Nepal's ultimate rock star and the lead vocalist of Robin and the New Revolution; Abhaya Subba, the frontwoman of Abhaya and the Steam Injuns; and Dev Rana, a veteran guitarist from the band Prism.
So what will it take to scoop the prize? "The participants will be judged on three basic guidelines: song choice, originality and performance", says Robin. "Personally I am looking for that x-factor", adds Abhaya, who believes that the judges can do a good job of guiding the contenders. Stressing this fact, she shares that a few contestants from last year have come to compete again for this year's challenge, and that their performances have improved significantly.

Genelia D'souza (geneliad) on Twitter

Genelia D'souza (geneliad) on Twitter

lessons in the life of DIBYA SUBBAA


Dibya Subba, now 28, was born in Dharan and moved to Kathmandu when he was a young boy. He was one of the top winners at the Hits FM Music Awards last month, taking home the gongs for Best Rock Composition and Best Performance by a Group or Duo. A new album called "Dibya Subba and the Blue Acids" will be released this month. He talked to WAVE about awards and inspirations.
My favourite artist is Dave Matthews. Recently I have also been listening to a lot of Anni Di Fango. Her music doesn't belong to any particular genre, but this inspires me.

My biggest and only goal in life is to continue working in the music business. I know it's hard to buy a big house and nice cars if I continue working here, but survival isn't that hard. That said, my mother would probably like it more if I could build her a nice house.
I grew up in a musical family. My father, Kewal Subba, worked in Radio Nepal and played guitar and harmonica. I learned how to play guitar from him. He passed away when I was still a teenager.
When I was playing a concert in Hong Kong, a cousin Dai bought me a guitar. It is right now my most treasured possession.
I wish my dad was alive to hear my music and listen to my albums. He is one person I wish I could share my music with.
Music is like meditation. It has changed the way I think about myself. And it has changed the way I think about other people.
I used to get angry a lot, and very quickly. As I have become older, that doesn't happen anymore. I can accept people the way they are.
My most unappealing trait is my lack of willpower. I can't make decisions, and if I make them, I can't stick to them. I have been trying to quit smoking for two years, but unsuccessfully.
I respect Anuradha Koirala a lot for what she has done to help young and vulnerable girls from trafficking. She was apparently at the Hits FM award, but I missed my chance to meet her. I would have liked to take my picture with her.