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Jascha Richter MP3


download Jascha Richter :: Album: Where I Belong

Jascha Richter (mp3)

Full album: Where I Belong
mp3 / 2006 year / 220 kbs / 68 mb / 42 min

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Jascha Richter - download

Album: Where I Belong
  1. Without Your Love
  2. Some Things
  3. My Saviour
  4. Bang Bang Bang
  5. Keep My Love Alive
  6. Sleepwalking
  7. This Heart Of Mine
  8. All The Love In The World
  9. Memories
  10. Nature Of Life
  11. Where I Belong

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Led Zeppelin: A brief history

Led Zeppelin formed as a 'supergroup' in 1968, set up by former Yardbirds guitarist Jimmy Page. They were originally going to be called The New Yardbirds until The Who's drummer Keith Moon remarked they would go down like a "lead zeppelin".

Page's first choice for singer, Terry Reid, declined the offer but recommended Robert Plant, who in turn roped in his mate John Bonham on drums. When bassist Chris Dreja opted out of the project to become a photographer, he suggested his mate John Paul Jones, and the line-up was complete.

The band's first four albums - 'Led Zeppelin', 'Led Zeppelin II', 'Led Zeppelin III' and 'IV (Four Symbols)' - are all seen as rock classics, mixing blues, folk and eastern influences and making them increasingly huge, especially in the US and the UK. The band and their manager, Peter Grant, maintained an aggressive pro-album stance - though some singles were released without their consent.

The group also increasingly resisted television appearances, enforcing their preference that their fans hear and see them live in person. This resulted in them becoming a massive live draw.

As well as their music, the band became notorious for their offstage excesses, as noted in Steven Davis' unauthorised autobiography 'Hammer Of The Gods'. As well as all the usual stuff, such as drug use and TVs being thrown out of windows, there were darker episodes, such the infamous 'shark incident', explained further here.

Between 1971 and 1975 Led Zeppelin could justifiably claim to be the biggest band in the world, and the world's premiere live draw. Further albums - 'Houses Of The Holy' and the double 'Physical Graffiti' (widely thought to be their best) cemented their success.

Between 1976 and 1980, things got darker for the Zep. Although albums such as 'Presence' and 'In through The Out Door' still sold shedloads, Robert Plant was seriously injured in a car crash, and infant son Kai died of a chest infection. Jimmy Page was dabbling with heroin, and John Bonham was an alcoholic. The end came in September 1980, when Bonham died at Page's house aged 32 after choking on his own vomit following a drink binge.

There have been brief sightings since - Live Aid in 1985 and an Atlantic Records birthday bash in 1988 - but should the rumours be true, this will be the first full reunion in 27 years.

With songs such as 'Black Dog', 'Communication Breakdown', 'Dazed And Confused', 'Good, Times, Bad Times', 'Rock And Roll', 'Heartbreaker', 'Kashmir' and the ubiqitous 'Stairway To Heaven' still wildly popular after all these years, and with a 'Best Of' due in November, the proposed reunion would undoubtedly be wildly successful.
Patton Gears Up For Fennesz Collaboration

Always willing to collaborate with eclectic artists, Mike Patton will team with experimental Austrian musician Christian Fennesz for a 12-date tour this summer, beginning May 28 at the Moers Festival in Germany.

"I'm a fan of his work and mentioned that it would be fun to do sometime," Patton tells Billboard.com. "Next thing I know his manager got offers for a couple shows, then he built a tour around it -- it just appeared. Like the way most collaborations started, it was mutual admiration."

So fair the pair has "traded ideas" and is planning to play after "very little rehearsal," according to Patton. The collaboration is currently planned solely for the stage, but Patton doesn't rule out a future album between the two. "No plans at the moment, but you never know," he says.

2007 will see several new Patton-released releases, two of which arrive in July: Tomahawk's "Anonymous" (which includes re-workings of traditional Native American songs) and Eyvind Kang's "Atlantis" (classical-sounding compositions for which Patton supplied vocals).

Additionally, there will be a yet-to-be-titled DVD of a Kaada/Patton performance, as well as a Patton-penned soundtrack for the film "A Perfect Place." The release schedule for Patton's Ipecac label is similarly crowded through the end of the year, including projects from Hella, D?lek, Unsane, Young Gods, Goon Moon, Robert Pollard's Circus Devils, Northern State, Imani Coppola, Rahzel and a CD/DVD package with animation by the artist Dalek and music by Tom Hazelmeyer.


A week after the Patton/Fennesz dates wrap up, the singer will play several shows with Peeping Tom in New Zealand and Australia.