15 May 2008

Chart Music

Feedage RSS directory - Chart Music

3) /< Klax

Posted: 15 May 2008 09:07 PM CDT

Bonjour,Il y a longtemps (en 1992), j'ai commencé, avec un ami, une émission "dance" sur une radio locale liégeoise. Au fur et à mesure et après avoir rencontré Alex Klimow, j'ai voulu apprendre à me servir des SL1200, faire bouger les pitch variateur de vitesse...L'émission s'appelait le Mégadance, il y avait un hit de 10 titres et une heure (par après 1h30) de mix par mes soins.Actuellement, le hit a repris du service en radio sur Net fm le samedi de 19 à 22h. Le Hit est basé sur les ventes de vinyles en Belgique, sur les propositions de notre partenaire disque Sound of Music Liège et sur nos goûts musicaux à Georges Vangossum, mon collègue et moi.Si vous souhaitez en savoir plus, connaitre le dernier classement, la playlist des nouveautés, etc. rendez vous sur la page Mégadance d'Impulsion.Merci de votre visite. Libre à vous de laisser des messages. A bientôt Hi,In 1992, I started, with a friend, a "dance" show on a local radio (near Liège, Belgium). Progressively and after having met Alex Klimow (who is DJ and had a show on Radio21), I wanted to learn how to use the SL1200, to make move the variable speed transmission...Our show was called Megadance, a chart of 10 tracks and one hour (after it was1h30) of dj set by myself.Currently, the chart is broadcasted on Net fm radio on Saturdays between 7and 10 pm. The chart is based upon the sales of vinyls in Belgium, the propositions made by our record seller, Sound of Music Liège and our tastes (Georges Vangossum and me).If you wish to know some more, to know the last chart, to check the playlist of the news, etc. go on the page Megadance from Impulsion website. Thanks for visiting my Multiply site!Feel free to post a reply if you see something you like or just want to get in touch.Ecoute des Listen to the Mix Mégadance :

4) au DOWNLOAD MUSIC CHART blog2

Posted: 15 May 2008 09:07 PM CDT

au DOWNLOAD MUSIC CHART blog2

5) CD's Latest Chart Music

Posted: 15 May 2008 09:07 PM CDT

Best CD's around

6) Chart Chat with JK and Joel

Posted: 15 May 2008 09:07 PM CDT

The gossip and news from the week's Official UK Chart along with interviews with the stars. JK & Joel countdown the top ten singles and albums, talk to the number one artist and other big names in the Top 40. They also preview what is coming up in the chart and give you all the facts and trivia you need. Radio 1 is the home to the Official UK Charts used by the British music industry. Hear the Chart Show with JK and Joel on Radio 1 in the UK every Sunday from 4pm. To find out more, and for the podcast Terms of Use go to www.bbc.co.uk/radio1

7) Music Videos by Usher on Rhapsody Online

Posted: 15 May 2008 09:07 PM CDT

By the time he was upon the threshold of puberty, Usher already had a record deal and a gold album. By the time he graduated from high school, he'd established himself as one of the most visible artists in R&B. Armed with a soulful voice and impressive songwriting skills, Usher's songs vary from floor rattling dance tracks to between the sheets ballads. Between 1994 and 2004, he released six albums, appeared in several films, earned multiple platinum plaques, and collaborated with a wide variety of top shelf artists. Though he was already a well established famous singer (and occasional actor), 2004 was the year he really blew up worldwide, thanks to the infectious, chart topping single "Yeah" produced by Lil Jon. The song, and his album Confessions, netted him three Grammy Awards and propelled him to the upper tier of music superstardom. Kali Holloway

8) Podsafe Music Chart

Posted: 15 May 2008 09:07 PM CDT

http://podsafemusicchart.podomatic.com

9) Unsigned Chart

Posted: 15 May 2008 09:07 PM CDT

Dave Coroner plays music from the Bands at www.unsignedchart.com

10) 90's Rap/Hip Hop Music Videos on Rhapsody Online

Posted: 15 May 2008 09:07 PM CDT

The decade began with a whimper, climaxed with two separate shootings and then concluded with a global cultural blitzkrieg. Following the riotous summer of 1989 when Public Enemy dropped an agitprop A bomb in the form of "Fight the Power," which provided a fitting bookend for hip hop's first "golden age" rap in 1990 focused largely on pop chart presence. The genres first two genuine pop superstars, MC Hammer and Vanilla Ice, released their breakthrough albums that year. And while hip hop had been pop since Run DMC opened their "Rock Box," the one two punch of Hammer's "You Can't Touch This" and Ice's "Ice Ice Baby" caused a backlash, and the genre retreated inwards in an attempt to define itself before others did the job for it. What emerged on both Coasts was a more violent malaise that reflected both the nation's dire socio economic circumstances and the street's desire to essentially reclaim their genre. In the West, it began with Ice Cube. His seminal early '90s albums, from Amerikkka's Most Wanted to Predator, were the soundtracks to the turbulent years around the 1992 Los Angeles riots. Meanwhile, on the East Coast, rappers became increasingly brazen about their political inclinations. Acts such as Brand Nubian, X Clan as well as Pete Rock and CL Smooth injected themes of black pride and, in some cases, racial separatism into their lyrics. Less radical acts such as the Jungle Brothers, Tribe Called Quest and De La Soul also confronted these issues in a more inclusive fashion. This era came to a halt in approximately 1993 with the sudden explosion of a new era of New York hip hop acts. Following the success of groundbreaking group EPMD, crews such as the Wu Tang Clan, Boot Camp Clik and DITC began to emerge, while hardened nihilistic lyricists such as Nas, Big Pun, AZ and Mobb Deep's Prodigy were chronicling the fallout from the crack epidemic. With producers such as Pete Rock, DJ Premier, RZA, Da Beatminerz and Large Professor, their medicine was chased with a teaspoon of grimy jazz.While the East may have been undergoing a renaissance, the West was dominating the pop charts thanks to Dr. Dre. His groundbreaking 1992 album, The Chronic, and its spiritual cousin, Snoop's 1993 Doggystyle, wore their gang colors on their sleeves though they were also less restless than either their East Coast counterparts or their late '80s antecedents. This would all change with the emergence of Tupac Shakur and Death Row CEO Suge Knight. Perhaps the greatest irony in all of hip hop history is the extent to which bitter rivals Tupac and the Notorious B.I.G. will forever be linked together in the hearts and minds of fans. Both were immensely talented, both changed the face of hip hop before their murders and both would prove as influential in death as they ever were while alive. Losing two of its biggest and most talented stars in 1996 and 1997 signaled the end of an era. For the East Coast, it was a first step down a dark and lonely road. For the West, it was the equivalent of stepping off the side of a cliff, and it would take over a decade for that region to stumble back to the high ground. Out of this vacuum, Southern rap emerged. Outkast and Goodie Mob brought politically conscious funk. Jermaine Dupri and his Atlanta ilk focused on creating pop hop. And New Orleans crews such as No Limit and Cash Money filled the void for grimy, gutter hip hop. Most importantly though was the genre's return (with a vengeance) to the pop music arena. What began with P. Diddy's bling culminated with Eminem's angst. The white boy from Detroit was perhaps the most transformative music figure since Bob Dylan, and he carried an ailing hip hop nation on his back. By the end of the decade, hip hop had claimed the throne as the most popular music genre as well as the most prevalent youth culture in the world. It was an odd end to a strange and bloody decade