Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Common Wealth Games Song by A.R.Rahman

Na Common Wealth Games XIX Theme Song by A.R.Rahman

Common Wealth Games XIX Theme Song(2010)
Download Latest Theme song for CWGXIX by A.R.Rahman [128 Kbps]






Inside Job (2010) - Trailer - HD

Multi Inside Job (2010) - Trailer - HD - 480P - *ing Matt Damon

Inside Job




Code:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1645089/


'Inside Job' is the first film to provide a comprehensive analysis of the global financial crisis of 2008, which at a cost over

$20 trillion, caused millions of people to lose their jobs and homes in the worst recession since the Great Depression, and

nearly resulted in a global financial collapse. Through exhaustive research and extensive interviews with key financial

insiders, politicians, journalists, and academics, the film traces the rise of a rogue industry which has corrupted politics,

regulation, and academia. It was made on location in the United States, Iceland, England, France, Singapore, and China.






480P

     
 
 


     
 

Takers (2010) Exclusive 720p HD Movie Trailer - 3

Mf Takers (2010) Exclusive 720p HD Movie Trailer - 3 Mediafire




Takers (2010) Exclusive HD Movie Trailer - 3 Mediafire
Size:- 47MB
In theaters: August 27th, 2010
Genre:Action and Adventure


TAKERS, directed by John Luessenhop, revolves around a notorious group of criminals (Idris Elba, Paul Walker, T.I., Chris Brown, Hayden Christensen and Michael Ealy) who continue to baffle police by pulling off perfectly executed bank robberies. They are in and out like clockwork, leaving no evidence behind and laying low in between heists. But when they attempt to pull off one last job with more money at stake than ever before, the crew may find their plans interrupted by a hardened detective (Matt Dillon) who is hell-bent on solving the case.

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This image has been resized. Click this bar to view the full image. The original image is sized 1280x602.

This image has been resized. Click this bar to view the full image. The original image is sized 1280x602.


Download Link (Clickable):
Mediafire
Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?l61s9ecjsnlvtvr

Hotfile

Password:
Code:
moviesnhacks

The Virginity Hit (2010) Theatrical Trailer

Multi The Virginity Hit (2010) - Theatrical Trailer - HD - 480P - Comedy

The Virginity Hit




Code:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1695994/


Four guys, one camera, and their experience chronicling the exhilarating and terrifying rite of passage: losing your virginity. As these guys help their buddy get laid, they'll have to survive friends with benefits, Internet hookups, even porn stars during an adventure that proves why you will always remember your first.






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127Hours(2010)-TeaserTrailer-HD

Multi 127Hours(2010)-TeaserTrailer-HD-480P-FromAcademyAwardWinningDirector: DannyBoyle

127 Hours




Code:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1542344/


127 Hours is the true story of mountain climber Aron Ralston's (James Franco) remarkable adventure to save himself after a fallen boulder crashes on his arm and traps him in an isolated canyon in Utah. Over the next five days Ralston examines his life and survives the elements to finally discover he has the courage and the wherewithal to extricate himself by any means necessary, scale a 65 foot wall and hike over eight miles before he is finally rescued. Throughout his journey, Ralston recalls friends, lovers (Clemence Poesy), family, and the two hikers (Amber Tamblyn and Kate Mara) he met before his accident. Will they be the last two people he ever had the chance to meet?






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VA – Music of Makran 320Kbps

Multi VA – Music of Makran[2000-MP3-CBR-320Kbps]



Code:
Before I report that this is a wonderful CD which you have absolutely  got to buy, allow me to unload one small bone of contention. I am no  fan of fusion music. For that matter, when I tell the world I dig ethnic  music the most, I specifically disregard the flavoured rock ‘n roll,  which takes up most of the Roots/World Music section in my local HMV. To illustrate this, the booklet supplements that thumbnail geography,  with a potted history of the previous millennium. From these, the  region emerges as simultaneously central and inaccessible. Many of  history?s great land migrations, military and mercantile, hinged around  it. For that matter, the Arabs were famous maritime traders. Makran,  situated on the Arabian Sea, must have been a staging post for  traffickers all over the Middle East, and farther afield. It is no  surprise then that the influences Anderson Bakewell speaks of, stem from  the Middle East, from the rest of the Indian sub-continent, and from  Africa. Also, visual evidence shows that the twentieth century did not  entirely overlook the region. In the back cover photograph of this  booklet, one can see an idiomatic lute, some extravagant looking  beakers, and a monophonic portable radio/cassette player.
 Geographical location notwithstanding, however, sheer impenetrability  made sure that Makran was no easy touch in terms of musical  cross-fertilisation. Indeed, the booklet hints that local politics were a  further source of hindrance, both to the visiting ethnomusicologist,  and to the migrant musical influence. Therefore, integration and  incorporation of disparate cultural elements has been a slow and ongoing  process, ever since the Baloch people of northern Iran settled the  region around a thousand years ago. We are not talking of a fusion  cooked up within the time scale of a recording studio allocation. We are  talking of a compounding of ingredients which has been centuries in the  making.
 Thus, the music of Makran is terra incognita to the visitor, to the  record collector, and to the reviewer. Nevertheless, the image of  inhospitable isolation left me somewhat surprised at how familiar this  music sounds. The whole disc feels like a selective migration from that  other opulent outlet in Topic?s World Series; Music in the World of  Islam. There is no reason why it shouldn?t. First of all, the  inhabitants of Balochistan are followers of Islam, even if they adhere  to the unorthodox Zigir sect. Moreover, it seems to me that musical  change, over the whole of the Middle East and south Asia, proceeds at a  fairly similar rate to our present model. In that part of the world,  inhospitable environments are scarcely a monopoly preserve of the  Makranians. Therefore, we can expect the music, which the Balochs  originally carried from Iran into Balochistan, to bear a significant  resemblance to the present day musics of both these regions. Certainly,  any aural similarity between this and the World of Islam set has to  derive from migration and cross-fertilisation, rather than from similar  recording locations. Of the seventy-four tracks, which made up the World  of Islam set, I could only identify two which were recorded in  Balochistan. It is not clear, from Jean Jenkins? sketchy notes, whether  that means Makran.
 Let us not ponder the question to excess. The disc we are here to  review specifies the recording locations, even if the booklet does not  contain a decent map to show where they are. Six localities are  identified, but we are told nothing about them. Neither are we told much  about the musicians, beyond their names and the instruments they play.  Detailed information, human and geographical, is important, if we are to  understand the contexts in which this music is performed. In this  instance, given that the populace is largely migratory, does that mean  the musicians are also migratory? Alternatively, are the recording  locations also the urban settlements of Makran?
 Lack of information worries me. Therefore, while browsing Britannica  and Encarta, I took a look at the New Grove Encyclopedia of Music and  Musicians. It was not much more helpful than the other sources. However,  it did tell me that the musicians of Balochistan are nearly all  itinerant professionals, with a big repertoire of wedding songs. The CD  booklet appears to concur with the first part of this information,  telling us that musicianship is strongly associated with caste  membership. Fine, but does that mean music is a hereditary profession?  Is it a trade automatically entered into by specific individuals, as a  specific consequence of caste membership? I suspect not, because I was  interested to note that at least two of the performers here are blind.  As observers of other traditions may have noted – pre-famine Ireland and  twentieth century Black America are examples – music is a profession  which is often resorted to by the blind and the crippled. That is  precisely because they are unable to earn a living by any other means.  Such people often lead fairly miserable existences. They eke out a  living on the margins of their own communities, disdained by those who  enjoy their services. I do not know if this is the case in Makran,  because the booklet does not discuss the status of musician-hood there.  It does however devote a sizable section to the musical instruments of  the region. Not for the first time, I find myself exasperated by an  ethnomusicologist, who reports extensively on the artifacts of music,  and says next to nothing about the people who play the artifacts. Yes, I  know the instruments will be unfamiliar to Westerners. Therefore, space  given to their description is entirely justified. But the musicians are  equally unfamiliar, and it is not just a question of asking whether it  is more politically correct to emphasise musical instruments or human  beings. The more we know about the social culture of any human  aggregate, the more readily we can empathise with its music.
 Thereby hangs a tale. The reason why roots music is more successful  than ethnic music, commercially speaking that is, is precisely because  roots never entirely succumbs to the exotic. It always keeps one foot  firmly within the familiar currents of western popular music. Thereby  hangs an audience, an audience which doesn?t need to abandon its  preconceptions as to what music should sound like.
 Thereby also hangs the problem of encapsulation, for our perception  of music is defined by what we know and recognise. Thus, listeners who  are attuned to the short regular geometric patterns of European melody,  may be forgiven for wondering what to make of this stuff. If you are one  of the uninitiated, how do I explain what happens when the musicians of  Makran pick up their axes and blow? How do I convey, in earth-bound  phrases and cyberspatial soundclips, the feelings of exaltation when  this magic carpet of music starts to lift off? Just for once, I?m not  going to kick up at the fact that these are mere excerpts of much longer  performances, or that they show no more than a tiny part of the overall  edifice. They do leave me feeling like a one-eyed intermediary between  the blind man and the Picasso, but that is a reflection of the present  day limitations of western technology. In the absence of anything  approaching virtual reality, though, I did find Anderson Bakewell?s  elegant prose somewhat less than helpful. Consider the following  paragraph.
Over this rhythmic ground of seemingly metronomic regularity, the  extended repetition of melodic phrases further establishes a deceptive  stability. Yet rogue notes infiltrate almost imperceptibly and the  listener can be unaware of a shift of mode until its critical mass  becomes decisive.
 Quite! If I?ve got this straight, the booklet does not apply the word  mode in accordance with western usage. It does not denote the archaic  musical scales, which helped stimulate Cecil Sharp into formulating his  famous conclusions, on the slow and spontaneous evolution of folksong.  Rather, the term seems to refer to a system of note groupings called,  interestingly enough, rags. Unlike Indian classical ragas, however,  these do not provide the framework for continuous, extended  improvisation. Instead, the musicians who play the melody instruments,  perform the rags almost repetitiously. Gradually and progressively,  though, they introduce variant notes, until the whole melodic structure  has been completely revamped. That, at any rate, is what it sounds like.  The effect is rather like the kind of improvisation which west African  kora players indulge in; developing an idea progressively, and  exhausting it before moving on to something else.
I stressed the role of melody instruments just then. However, with the  exception of one track played on the bansari, or flute, all these pieces  are ensemble performances.
Music from Makran, Baluchistan, Pakistan
 The remote coastal area of Balochistan called Makran is the setting  for a fusion of musical cultures from the Middle East, Indo-Pakistan and  Africa, which have developed over centuries into a tradition of great  intensity and beauty. Much of this selection is drawn from the  repertoire performed during healing ceremonies.
Code:
Album Title:     Music from Makran, Baluchistan, Pakistan
Collection title:     Anderson Bakewell
Performance notes:     Peroz – Donali; Rahmat – dambureg
Country:     Pakistan
Culture:     Balochi, Western
Recording date:     1991.11
Recording location:     Gwadar, Makran, Baluchistan, Pakistan
Code:
1. Hukko (Shepherd’s song)
2. [untitled]
3. Bag e sa (camel caravan song)
4. Simorg e saz
5. Sa suli (tribe in Jhalawan)
6. [untitled]
7. Lahara
8. Zargul
9. Saut (Musqat Mehruk)
10. [untitled]
11. Saut
12. Gwati Saz
13. Qalandari (Gwati Saz)
14. Gwati Saz (in honour of Pir Cmar of Panjgur)
15. Mast Qalandar
16-19. [untitled]
20. Saut
21. Saut
22. Zahiruk
     
 

Phir Mile Sur (2010) Pop Album

Mu 

Phir Mile Sur (2010) Hindi Pop Album Mp3 Songs Download





Album : Phir Mile Sur
Artist : Various
Genre : Pop
Year : 2010
Label : Times Music



Track List


1. Phir Mile Sur
2. National Anthem
3. Vande Mataram
4. Vaishnava Jana To
5. National Anthem (Original Rendition)
6. National Anthem (Instrumental)


Download All Songs In One File From Below Link


Steamy Nights 3 - DJ Umer Khan (2010)

Ziddu

Steamy Nights 3 - DJ Umer Khan (2010)

M M B




Tracklist:-

1 Hairat (Ultimate Power Mix) - DJ Umer Khan
2 Shaam (Midnight Dance Mix) - DJ Umer Khan
3 Tujhe Bhula Diya (Bed Lounge Mix) - DJ Umer Khan
4 Gal Mithi Mithi (Electro Bounce Mix) - DJ Hamza
5 Madno (Electric Club Mix) - DJ Umer Khan
6 Sajde (Reggaeton Passion Mix) - DJ Aviek
7 Pee Loon (Groovy Trance Mix) - DJ Umer Khan
8 Lehrein (Mystic Vibration Mix) - DJ Umer Khan
9 Bin Tere (Progressive Love Mix) - Dj Bijit
10 Tum Jo Aaye (Acid House Mix) - DJ Umer Khan


Download:-

Code:
http://www.ziddu.com/download/11444400/Steamy%20Nights%203%20-%20DJ%20Umer%2

Udaan (2010) - 1CD

Na Udaan (2010) - 1CD - DTH - Rip - [DDR]



Udaan (2010) - 1CD - DTH - Rip - [DDR]







Quote:
Release Date : 16 July 2010
Genre : Drama, Family
Cast : Rajat Barmecha, Ronit Roy, Aayan Boradia, Ram Kapoor, Manjot Singh, Anand Tiwari, Suman Mastkar, Raja Hudda, Varun Khettry, Shaunak Sengupta, Akshay Sachdev
Producer : Anurag Kashyap, Ronnie Screwvala, Sanjay Singh
Director : Vikramaditya Motwane
Music : Amit Trivedi
IMDB :
Code:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1639426/













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