Tuesday, 2 September 2008

Download Kyuss mp3






Kyuss
   

Artist: Kyuss: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Metal
Metal: Alternative

   







Discography:


...And The Circus Leaves Town
   

 ...And The Circus Leaves Town

   Year: 1995   

Tracks: 11
Welcome To Sky Valley
   

 Welcome To Sky Valley

   Year: 1994   

Tracks: 11
Blues For The Red Sun
   

 Blues For The Red Sun

   Year: 1992   

Tracks: 14
Wretch
   

 Wretch

   Year: 1991   

Tracks: 11
Queens Of The Stone Age
   

 Queens Of The Stone Age

   Year:    

Tracks: 6






Hailing from Palm Desert, CA, Kyuss (marked "kai-uss") has turn something like a heavy metal eq to the Velvet Underground. Although they are wide acknowledged as pioneers of the prospering lapidator stone scene of the 1990s, the band enjoyed slight commercial success during their abbreviated creation, merely their combination of sludgy, down-tuned guitars (a great deal played through a bass adenosine monophosphate for maximum, earthshaking intensiveness), spacy jams, galloping convulse alloy rhythms, and organic drums became a blueprint, often copied, only never quite replicated by innumerable resistance alloy bands.


Formed in 1990 by vocalist John Garcia, guitarist Josh Homme, bassist Nick Oliveri, and drummer Brant Bjork, Kyuss (named after a character from Dungeons & Dragons) began electronic jamming at supposed "desert parties," in and around the isolated towns of the Southern California abandon. The band step by step built a local following, sign-language with tiny main label Dali Records, and released their first base album, Poor devil, in 1991. Under-produced and under the weather financed, the album failed to fascinate the band's live sound and went mostly unnoticed until sporadic touring started earning Kyuss a reputation as a fierce hot unit, as well as the esteem of many blighter musicians. One of these, Masters of Reality singer/guitarist Chris Goss, clear-cut to institute out the band's succeeding endeavor, and the collaboration eager fruit in 1992's stunning Blue devils for the Red Sun. Soon hailed as a turning point by critics and fans alike, the album took the underground metallic element domain by storm and accomplished the signature Kyuss sound in one case and for all: the doom heaviness of Black Sabbath, the feedback bull of Blue Cheer, and the blank space stone music of Hawkwind, infused with psychedelic flashes, massive grooves, and a surprising sensitiveness for punk stone, alloy, and flail.


Based on this sudden tide of interest, the band was signed by Elektra Records just as Dali was about to go insolvent, and despite the loss of bassist Oliveri (he was replaced by Scott Reeder, erst of the Obsessed), the band continued construction momentum with 1994's Welcome to Sky Valley. Also recorded under Goss' direction, the album nearly matched the glare of its precursor and sawing machine Kyuss pickings the novel overture of grouping the songs into three extended suites. Still, despite such creative promise and an ever-growing fan home, personal strife had already begun lachrymation the stria apart, and drummer Brant Bjork was the first base to depart when they ended their fall circuit. Then, although they apace recruited the jazz-trained Alfredo Hernandez to supercede him on 1995's observably less elysian ...And the Circus Leaves Town, a concluding falling out between Homme and Garcia finally brought Kyuss' meteorological unravel to a unsatisfying hold.


2000's Muchas Gracias: The Best of Kyuss self-contained rare outtakes and hot recordings and efficaciously assign a capper on the Kyuss bequest, just after a period of congeneric placid, each bandmember's natural endowment fund began leaving its gospel singing According to Mark on a turn of relevant projects. Garcia briefly worked with straightforward abandon bikers Slo Burn in 1997 before reuniting with Reeder in the often more hopeful (just at long last ill-fated) Unida, later lending his coveted pipes to Hermano and other bands. Brant Bjork panax quinquefolius and played guitar in his own magnate trio, Che (featuring his Kyuss renewal Hernandez on drums), and released a number of solo albums while connection big top fuzz bikers Fu Manchu on a full-time terms. As for Josh Homme, discounting a short touring stretch as rhythm guitar player for Screaming Trees, he ab initio retreated into production and exhausted much of the later '90s collaborating with an impressive array of musicians on the eclecticist Desert Sessions. Some of this material was later reworked into his following major purpose, Queens of the Stone Age, which saw him mated with original Kyuss bassist Nick Oliveri (wHO had unbroken busy working with Dwarves) and, at first-class honours degree, drummer Hernandez, as good. Ironically, by their third press release (and last with Oliveri), 2002's Songs for the Deaf, Queens of the Stone Age had achieved significantly larger gross tax revenue than Kyuss e'er did, though it's arguable whether they've level matched their predecessor's legendary condition.





Mp3 Download: Dizzee Rascal

Wednesday, 13 August 2008

Tumor Markers For Urothelial Carcinoma

�UroToday.com - Despite continued downward trends of smoking incidence in the United States over the lowest decade, the incidence of bladder cancer continues to rise with an estimated 68,800 new cases expected to be diagnosed in 2008. The proportion of male to female incidence remains steady at 3:1 and, according to the SEER data in 2005, over 521,000 people have a history of bladder cancer in the US. Bladder cancer will account for an estimated 14,C deaths in 2008 and the c. H. Best chance for survival is to diagnose bladder cancer in early stages when it privy be contained to superficial epithelial layers.


Detection of epithelial neoplasia of the urinary tract remains ambitious due to the anatomic contour of the bladder. Papillary growths may be readily visible but other flat lesions and carcinoma in situ, a propagate high grade intraepithelial neoplasia, can be difficult to detect. The same is true of the spectrum of abnormalities that include atypia and dysplasia which are associated with or have malignant potential. Methods of signal detection include visual inspection, fluorescent detection, molecular imaging, and the exercise of tumor-associated markers. Fluorescent detection has improved sensitivity for detection of tumors but with a reduced specificity so its c. H. Best use is in conjuction with standard visual review. Newer diagnostic light technologies such as optical coherent tomography (OCT) provide endoscopic means to improve valuation of epithelial surfaces and the potential for neoplasm invasion.


Bladder tumor markers which may assist in detection are a valuable adjunct to diagnosis. The ideal tumor marker would have both high sensitiveness and high specificity and be inexpensive, performed in the office, and easy to render. Unfortunately the array of tests currently available deficiency one or more of these characteristics and this holy grail of a test has not so far been discovered. Recent discoveries suggest that microarray applied science may provide a powerful tool for tumor detection.


Urinary cytology remains the standard by which early diagnostic tests are compared. Cytology has an average sensitivity of 49% and specificity of 96% in one revue of multiple studies. The use of nuclear mitotic apparatus protein (NMP-22) has an ordinary sensitivity of 71% simply a specificity of 75% in a similar reexamination and is often exploited in combination with cytology for selected higher danger patients. Multicenter clinical trials with fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) have shown an boilersuit sensitivity of 69%, specificity of 78%, and negative predictive value (NPV) of 95%. Fluorescent immunochemistry assaying 3 antibodies to mucin glycoprotein and carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) has provided 85% sensitivity in patients previously treated with Bacille-Calmette-Guerin (BCG) immunotherapy, an improvement over the other tests in this patient group. This fluorescent immunochemistry has a 95% NPV and is a strong predictor of upper urinary tract neoplasia.


Molecular biological marker candidates are abundant and under evaluation for clinical use. Fibrin-fibrinogen degradation products (FDP) have a sensitivity and specificity of 68% and 86%, respectively, but suffer from mistaken positive results when haematuria is present, a coarse symptom with urothelial malignance. Telomerase, which blocks programmed cell death, has high sensitivity merely poor specificity and has variable stability. Hyaluronic acid/hyaluronidase has promise with improved sensitivity for lower level lesions. Cytokeratins 18, 19, and 20 are extremely expressed in transitional electric cell carcinoma (TCC) but likewise with infections. The anti-apoptotic protein survivin has been detected in 64% of cystectomy specimen tumors and 94% of metastatic lymph nodes just not in normal tissue in 1 study. A host of other glycoproteins and nuclear matrix proteins are under evaluation as well. Perhaps the nigh promise has been set up through evaluation of DNA microarrays where a late study of 14, 551 different genes identified 40 genes that were upregulated in superficial TCC and 34 different genes upregulated with invasive TCC. The fact that the upregulated genes for superficial TCC were related to epithelial cell dedifferentiation, apoptosis, transcription, cell adherence, and keratinisation while those for invasive disease related to dissimilar cell functions of extracellular matrix abjection, angiogenesis, and immune reply strongly suggests that we may be able to have an array of markers to differentiate superficial from invasive disease. This is an extremely interesting and significant implication for future use of goods and services of bladder tumor markers.


Presented by: Michael J. Manyak, MD, FACS, at the Masters in Urology Meeting - July 31, 2008 - August 2, 2008, Elbow Beach Resort, Bermuda

UroToday - the merely urology web site with original content written by globose urology key opinion leaders actively engaged in clinical practice.


To access the latest urology news releases from UroToday, go to:
www.urotoday.com


Copyright � 2008 - UroToday



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Thursday, 19 June 2008

The Ting Tings slam 'That's Not My Name' cash-in

The Ting Tings have hit out at a former friend who has been selling rare copies of the band's Number One single, 'That's Not My Name', for around �60 each online.

The band originally pressed up 500 copies of the single last year, with the rare vinyl record now hot property since the band became a Number One-selling act.

Writing on Thetingtings.com, the band urged fans not to fork out for the singles.

"Unfortunately, when we put out our first vinyl copies of 'That's Not My Name' with a friend last year for kicks, she kept some back and is now trying to sell them to you guys for �60 apiece," they wrote. "This is nothing to do with us.

"We would never charge that money for our singles. Cashing in is shocking. We pressed up 500 copies which we put on our credit card because we had no money."




May 19, 2008 at Carling Academy, Oxford -
May 20, 2008 at Irish Centre, Birmingham -
May 22, 2008 at Astoria, London -
More The Ting Tings tickets

Saturday, 14 June 2008

Photos by amateur offer glimpse at small town life in 1940s Iowa

DES MOINES, Iowa - He spent his entire savings of $12.50 on the 35 mm Argus AF camera in 1939 and for four years documented life in the small Iowa town of Ridgeway.

But it wasn't until he was diagnosed with cancer more than 60 years later that Everett Kuntz actually printed the more than 2,000 snapshots - church picnics, his mother husking corn, soda fountain scenes from the town's drugstore.

Although Kuntz died in 2003 at age 82, the University of Iowa Press has published dozens of his photos in a book, "Sunday Afternoon on the Porch."

"People thought he was kind of funny," said Kuntz's wife, Helen. "He took all those pictures and didn't even have the money to print them."

After Kuntz bought the camera, he carried it with him everywhere, clicking away during town gatherings, lazy afternoons on a neighbour's porch or even standing before a table piled high with his family's Sunday dinner.

He built a camera case using an old boot and a clasp from his mother's purse, and he bought movie reel film in bulk. He rolled his own film and developed it in a closet on his parents' farm.

The 350 residents of Ridgeway took to calling him "Scoop."

"There are some (photos) in which he seems to have captured so much in one shot, maybe partly by accident," said Jim Heynen, who wrote vignettes to accompany the photos in the book. "They remind people of what you might see in an old collection of family albums from the 1940s."

Heynen described pictures depicting "chiselled-looking prairie people" and a "community gathering spot along the creek with homemade ice cream."

Kuntz left Ridgeway after college, married Helen, had three children and worked as an electrical engineer in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area. He took his photo collection with him - neatly packed in a box and still unprinted - and told no one about it.

After being diagnosed with cancer, Kuntz pulled out the box and developed his photographs. His final months were spent looking over his collection and reminiscing about old times.

"He was emotional," said Kuntz's son, David. "You could see it in his eyes that it brought back memories."

One particular photograph seemed to interest Kuntz more than the others, his wife said. It showed his parents harvesting on their farm - his father carrying stalks of oats and his mother driving a team of horses.

"He stared at that one for 20 minutes," Helen Kuntz said. "In those last months, it all came alive for him."

His fondest memories of Ridgeway are captured on film. Like wading along the sandy Turkey River, or the day he walked past the railroad as workers laid down track with shovels and hammers.

It's a nostalgic collection Kuntz's family cherishes. His wife has several photos on display at her Minnesota home in the Twin Cities suburb of Mounds View, as does David Kuntz at his law firm in St. Paul.

"I kind of have tears," Helen Kuntz said, pausing to compose herself. "It's a fun tribute to him. ... It would have been such a blessing if he could have seen this book."

The photos represent more than her husband's legacy. For Helen, it's a reminder of the way America used to be - a lifestyle it should strive to rediscover.

"The idea of family is reflected there," she said. "Friends and the simple life."










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Sunday, 8 June 2008

Three Day Threshold embarks on tour of duty

It’s as if Uncle Sam stared out from his famous 1917 U.S. military poster, looked at Three Day Threshold and said, “I want you.”
The ferocious local bluegrass punk band has been enlisted to fly down to Honduras later this month to perform live for U.S. troops. When Uncle Sam calls, it’s tough to say no.
“We got asked by the Pentagon - no joke - to tour military bases overseas to support the troops as part of their Fourth of July celebrations,” said Three Day Threshold bossman Kier Byrnes. “We got asked about doing Greenland and Honduras, but the Honduras tour schedule worked better with our schedule.”



The band will perform five shows starting June 30 and finishing with some alt-country fireworks on July 4.
Before heading out, Three Day Threshold kicks off a three-night stand Thursday at the Chicken Box on Nantucket. A new live CD, recorded earlier this year in Belgium - appropriately titled “Lost in Belgium” - will drop later this year.
All set for the Presets
It seems every week another top-notch electro act is hitting Boston. Tonight, the Presets, the creators of perhaps the best electronic album of 2008, are at the Paradise (7 p.m., 18-plus, $12).
The Australian dance duo’s sterling new album, “Apocalypso,” officially dropped in mid-May on the Modular Interscope label, the home to fellow Aussie’s Cut Copy. The album has been killing dance floors from Allston to Perth on the strength of the stylishly cool synth-pop pulse of current single “This Boy’s in Love” and the faux-industrial boot-stomp rallying cry of “My People” - which was spun to raucous applause by Ed Banger label boss Pedro “Busy P” Winter earlier this year at the ’Dise.
Despite a few fleeting moments of pure cheese (check the painfully laughable lyrics to “Yippiyo-Ay”), “Apocalypso” could thrust the Presets to mainstream success.
The only wrinkle is an appearance by the equally fantastic (though slightly less danceable) electronic act M83, which is performing across the Charles at the Middle East tonight, too.
Making rock Fantasy a reality
The Rock ’n’ Roll Fantasy Camp sets up shop at the Bank of America Pavilion July 31, but camp founder and music producer David Fishof will be holding court tonight at Guitar Center, 750 Commonwealth Ave., from 7 to 9.
Fishof will spill the details on how some lucky and talented camp attendees will find themselves opening for Extreme at the Pavilion later this summer.
The event is free and features a performance by guitar slinger Jay Geils and a chance to win a guitar signed by one of the camp’s rock-star faculty, which has included Slash, Brian Wilson and Roger Daltrey.

Friday, 6 June 2008

Tron

Tron   
Artist: Tron

   Genre(s): 
Trance: Psychedelic
   



Discography:


Existence   
 Existence

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 1




 






Mumblz

Mumblz   
Artist: Mumblz

   Genre(s): 
Drum & Bass
   



Discography:


Blow CDS   
 Blow CDS

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 1




 





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