PS3Daily have compiled a very useful list of retailers that are having all sorts of special offers due to Black Friday. They have picked out some of the best ones from retailers such as Target, Walmart and Best Buy.
If you don’t own a PS3 yet or are looking to pick up some software for it then make sure you check out the full story over at PS3Daily as they found some amazing deals, saving customers a lot of your hard earned cash.
One of the stand out deals comes from Best Buy where you will be able to pick up an 80GB PS3 bundle complete with Ratchet and Clank and Casino Royale Blu-Ray for just $489! If you fancy going all out, there is a Toshiba 1080p HDTV + 80GB PS3 bundle going on sale at Walmart for $997.
Take a look at the full list of deals over at PS3Daily. Everyone is loving Black Friday week, surely?
Author: Alan Ng
For more on this and other similar news click here
Tuesday, 3 November 2009
Sunday, 1 November 2009
Lil’ Wayne’s Mixtape “No Ceilings” Is Officially Released.
Lil Wayne’s “No Ceilings” official mixtape, that was unofficially available online since the last week of October, has became immensely popular among all the fans of the Rapper Lil’ Wayne. The mixtape proves to be a treat for the fans of the rapper as he delivers his unique style to all the songs that are featured in it. The mixtape comprises of around seventeen most popular tracks in the radio which are given a different edge by Lil’ Wayne.
The mixtape was officially released on October 31, the day of Halloween. This new venture of Wayne's is unique in itself as it is basically a music file that can be downloaded. This release comes at a very crucial time in the life of the rapper as he was in the news recently for all the wrong reasons. Wayne has pleaded guilty for possessing weapons. He will be sentenced next year in the month of February and is expected to receive a jail term of about one year. However, the rapper was scheduled to release his latest rock album “Rebirth” by this year.
Lil’ Wayne, whose real name is Dwayne Michael Carter Jr. is one of the most acclaimed rappers in United States. Wayne who was initially a member of the rap group ‘Hot Boys’ created recognition for himself after the release of his album ‘Tha Carter’ in the year 2004. In the subsequent years, two follow up albums ‘Tha Carter 2′ and ‘Tha Carter 3′ were released which shot the rapper to instant stardom as the albums became immensely successful.
Author: Gina Gomez
For more on this story and related information click http://www.thaindian.com/
The mixtape was officially released on October 31, the day of Halloween. This new venture of Wayne's is unique in itself as it is basically a music file that can be downloaded. This release comes at a very crucial time in the life of the rapper as he was in the news recently for all the wrong reasons. Wayne has pleaded guilty for possessing weapons. He will be sentenced next year in the month of February and is expected to receive a jail term of about one year. However, the rapper was scheduled to release his latest rock album “Rebirth” by this year.
Lil’ Wayne, whose real name is Dwayne Michael Carter Jr. is one of the most acclaimed rappers in United States. Wayne who was initially a member of the rap group ‘Hot Boys’ created recognition for himself after the release of his album ‘Tha Carter’ in the year 2004. In the subsequent years, two follow up albums ‘Tha Carter 2′ and ‘Tha Carter 3′ were released which shot the rapper to instant stardom as the albums became immensely successful.
Author: Gina Gomez
For more on this story and related information click http://www.thaindian.com/
Phish Cover the Rolling Stones’ “Exile on Main Street” at Festival 8
Combining two of their most beloved traditions for the first time - the multi-day festival and the Halloween album "costume" - Phish got their rocks off at their Festival 8 in Indio, California, during the second of a three-day set with a crushing start-to-finish version of the Rolling Stones‘ classic Exile On Main Street. Just a day earlier, Stones frontman Mick Jagger took the stage himself 3,000 miles away, joining U2 at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame concert in New York.
Under pristine conditions at the Empire Polo Field and in front of a devoted Phish crowd of 40,000 fans, the Vermont foursome rollicked in Exile’s swamp blues and roadhouse country, extending several songs with their own jams, highlighted by a spacey interlude between “Ventilator Blues” into the gospel-esque “I Just Want to See His Face.” Special guests Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings added their own flourishes (horns to “Sweet Black Angel”), and each band member took lead vocal turns. Incredibly, four of the double album’s songs made their big-stage live debut —”Soul Survivor,” a scorching “Casino Boogie,” “Turd On the Run” and the flickering ballad “Let It Loose” — having never been performed by the Stones themselves. The set clocked in at nearly a 100 minutes, 33 more than the actual album.
It was perhaps the safest, most durable album choice for the band to tackle — they’ve played the bar-room sing-along “Loving Cup” in their own sets for years — narrowing it down from a list of 99 in September. On their Website the band vowed to play “the last album alive” where albums that didn’t make the cut “killed off” by an ax or arrow.
Besides Exile, the final contenders were Radiohead’s Kid A, Genesis’ epic Lamb Lies Down On Broadway, King Crimson’s Lark Tongues in Aspic, Electric Ladyland by Jimi Hendrix, Prince’s Purple Rain, Hunky Dory by David Bowie and a nod to the kids, MGMT’s Oracular Spectacular.
But like previous Halloweens, where they’ve covered works by the Beatles and the Who, Phish stuck with a formative favorite — lead guitarist Trey Anastasio said he first heard the album in a friend’s dorm in the late ’70s.
For the night’s finale, the band performed for a monster closing set that included faves “Fluffhead,” “Ghost” and “YEM” capped off a with sinister vocal jam augmented by giant flamethrowers shooting off in the concert field. Sharon Jones and Co. returned for some more vocal fireworks on a blistering encore of “Suzy Greenberg.” A hot night in the desert all around.
For more on this, and other Rock n Roll news click the link: http://www.rollingstone.com/
Under pristine conditions at the Empire Polo Field and in front of a devoted Phish crowd of 40,000 fans, the Vermont foursome rollicked in Exile’s swamp blues and roadhouse country, extending several songs with their own jams, highlighted by a spacey interlude between “Ventilator Blues” into the gospel-esque “I Just Want to See His Face.” Special guests Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings added their own flourishes (horns to “Sweet Black Angel”), and each band member took lead vocal turns. Incredibly, four of the double album’s songs made their big-stage live debut —”Soul Survivor,” a scorching “Casino Boogie,” “Turd On the Run” and the flickering ballad “Let It Loose” — having never been performed by the Stones themselves. The set clocked in at nearly a 100 minutes, 33 more than the actual album.
It was perhaps the safest, most durable album choice for the band to tackle — they’ve played the bar-room sing-along “Loving Cup” in their own sets for years — narrowing it down from a list of 99 in September. On their Website the band vowed to play “the last album alive” where albums that didn’t make the cut “killed off” by an ax or arrow.
Besides Exile, the final contenders were Radiohead’s Kid A, Genesis’ epic Lamb Lies Down On Broadway, King Crimson’s Lark Tongues in Aspic, Electric Ladyland by Jimi Hendrix, Prince’s Purple Rain, Hunky Dory by David Bowie and a nod to the kids, MGMT’s Oracular Spectacular.
But like previous Halloweens, where they’ve covered works by the Beatles and the Who, Phish stuck with a formative favorite — lead guitarist Trey Anastasio said he first heard the album in a friend’s dorm in the late ’70s.
For the night’s finale, the band performed for a monster closing set that included faves “Fluffhead,” “Ghost” and “YEM” capped off a with sinister vocal jam augmented by giant flamethrowers shooting off in the concert field. Sharon Jones and Co. returned for some more vocal fireworks on a blistering encore of “Suzy Greenberg.” A hot night in the desert all around.
For more on this, and other Rock n Roll news click the link: http://www.rollingstone.com/
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)