Saturday, 16 August 2008

Download Ed Calle






Ed Calle
   

Artist: Ed Calle: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Jazz

   







Discography:


Twilight
   

 Twilight

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 13
Sunset Harbor
   

 Sunset Harbor

   Year: 1999   

Tracks: 1






Born in Caracas of Spanish parents, Miami-based saxophonist Ed Calle owes his musical life history to his father's sexual love of music. When Calle and his folk moved to America in 1966, his father suggested that Calle fix hold of some music classes. Calle picked stress sax and took to it quickly, soon outlay nearly all his emancipate time practicing.


As a bookman at the University of Miami, Calle decided that music was his career, and received a master's degree in jazz performance. Even before he left schooling, however, Calle played with artists like Gloria Estefan and the Miami Sound Machine, and toured with performers such as Julio Iglesias and Bob James. Calle has besides worked as a sideman for Arturo Sandoval, Jon Secada, Vanessa Williams, and Frank Sinatra, as advantageously as contributory to telecasting and motion-picture show soundtracks.


Along with his Latin roots, Calle's playing way is influenced by his love of mathematics--he too holds a bachelor's degree in maths from Florida International University. Calle shares his technical background and heritage with the elementary school children he lectures as a travelling music instructor. His solo albums Nightgames (1986), Double Talk (1996), and Sundown Harbor (1999) besides reflect his art and passion as a player. The new millennium adage the release of Twilight (2001) on Concord Jazz.





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Thursday, 7 August 2008

CJ

Stephen Chow, as a director anyhow, has a pension for genre-jumping though his picture palace is based almost solely on the idea of frenzy. Admittedly, my knowledge of this peculiar Chinese director-writer-actor is relegated to his American-released, pictures only I'm calling it as I realise it. Chow's most relevant hit, 2004's Kung Fu Hustle, gained notoriety based completely on the fact that it was, pound-for-pound, the craziest action film to come along in years. In a more minor way, the same can be said for his Shaolin Soccer: Even the most careless of Disney sports outings hasn't resulted in something as playful as Chow's concoction. The man's prowess comes from being half-animated and mostly insane.


For these reasons and a few more, CJ7, Chow's excursion into child-friendly filmmaking, comes cancelled as beleaguered, if not irrefutably endearing. Ti (Chow) works as a construction worker in Hong Kong and spends his nights rooting just about in garbage piles for things he can pay back for his son Dicky (played by actress Xu Jiao). It's under i particular pile of humiliated televisions and discarded wear that Ti finds a UFO that quickly zooms away after expelling a little green River ball with a lowly circle on the top.


After a few tosses and some expected fidgeting with the small circle, the ball morphs into a little puppet in battlefront of Dicky's eyes, a furry alien-puppy that Dicky imagines will be able to beat up the meanest weenie in all of China, create technological advances in test unsporting, and pattern bionic footwear that would allow Dicky to one-up his schoolmates. As it ends up, CJ7 lav only recreate objects: a busted electrical fan, a rotted apple, a few soured relationships.


Chow has never been afraid of convention, a fact apparent by his tempting embracing of genre schematics. Both Soccer and Hustle are structured like a 12 other activity flicks or sports-story retreads, but instead of being laid with red brick and cement, Chow's features are built with silly putty, dynamite, and peanut butter. This delirious vitality still courses through his latest movie but the degree has changed. Instead of expectations being upstaged, they ar merely tickled and given a good mussing.


As with his deuce previous efforts, the shining gem in CJ7 is the graphic design and animation. Certainly no Mogwai, CJ7 withal is a creative