Concorra a ingressos para o show de comemoração de 40 anos da banda Nazareth, dia 28 de Maio, no Citibank Hall.Então capriche e responda com criatividade à pergunta: Por que você merece ganhar ingressos para o show? no site da promoção. Os autores das 05 (cinco) respostas mais criativas receberão, cada um, 01 par de ingressos para o show, no Citibank Hall, dia 28 de Maio, em SP.Promoção
A muchos grupos(no se sabe muy bien porqué) no se les ha reconocido el hecho de haber aportado una serie de discazos al mundo de la música rock,y ese caso puede ser el de uno de los mejores grupos que ha dado este mundo,Nazareth.Bien es cierto que muchas veces se llevan toda la gloria grupos de mera pose,con imagen de cartón piedra y con una discografía más que discutible,ese podría ser el caso de Manowar,que la verdad,para que engañarnos sus últimos trabajos parecen los de una banda de cuarta fila.Nazareth,grupo escocés de mucho talento posee un montón de álbumes de intachable calidad,pero hay que destacar por encima de todos a "Hair of the dog" donde se reúnen una serie de canciones con un valor súmamente incuestionable.La formación de Nazareth en "Hair of the dog" era:Dan
It appears that the Vatican has done it again, i.e. changed what is clearly stated in the Bible, God’s Word, to something else at their whim and fancy.
This time, it has to do with where our Lord Jesus Christ was at His birth.
Now, I don’t care much for putting up the Christmas tree or nativity scene during Christmas as I don’t really celebrate the festival as a Christian, but this piece of news piqued my interest because by doing this, the Vatican is in fact saying, “Let’s ignore both Gospel records and the fulfillment of Biblical prophecy!”.
(more…)
Do you still remember probably an entry or so ago, I mentioned that I was from a Convent school and that the bible is no stranger to me?
Well, it isn't (I mean the bible of course), in fact, I somewhat like reading the "novel version" of the bible.
I don't know what hit me, but I suddenly had the urge to look up the internet about the bible and some historical mambo jumbo, and that's when I chanced upon this site:
The title of the page states:
Nazareth Cross, the world s largest and most impressive Cross
Okay... So it's the largest and most impressive, but you do know that it's just a cross right?
Erm... Come to think of it. Ignore this whole context complete.
Anyway...
Continue reading...
Um christliche Touristen wieder vermehrt in die wirtschaftlich schwer getroffene Kindheitsstadt Jesu zu locken, soll ein Kreuz von 60 Meter Höhe in der Altstadt errichtet werden.Das größte Kreuz der Welt soll in der israelisch-arabischen Stadt von Nazareth gebaut werden, um Millionen von christlichen Touristen in die Kindheitsstadt Jesu zu locken, dies bestätigten Beamte bezüglich des geplanten privaten Bauvorhabens am Sonntag wie die „Jerusalem Post“ berichtet. Das Projekt, das noch in der Planungsphase ist, wird von einer Gruppe wohlhabender christlicher Geschäftsmänner aus Israel und dem Ausland getragen. Das massive Kreuz, dass den Titel “Nazareth Kreuz” trägt, soll 60 Meter hoch sein und mit 7,2 Millionen glänzenden Mosaikkacheln aus Steinen aus Nazareth geschmückt sein, dies berichtete Projektberater Ibrahim Boulous. Die Pläne für den Bau des Kreuzes in der Nähe des englischen Spitals in der Altstadt werden derzeit noch überarbeitet und könnten in den komme
It seems that Joseph and Mary stayed with their baby in Judea for some time. Within six weeks of Jesus’ birth, they carried out several ceremonies required by the law of Moses, and for some of these they made the 10 km journey to the temple in Jerusalem. Back in Bethlehem, travellers who came for [...]
We're about to begin reading Jesus of Nazareth by Pope Benedict XVI. Our goal is to take a chapter or sub-chapter a week. Woodward will post his thoughts on the book either Saturday, Sunday, or Monday, and I'll post mine either Wednesday, Thursday or Friday.So I'll be kicking this thing off in a day or two.At that rate, it will take us several months to work our way through Jesus of Nazareth. But what does that matter? It's a book that deserves to be savored.
The Scottish hard rock quartet Nazareth had a handful of hard rock hits in the late '70s, including the proto-power ballad "Love Hurts." Formed in 1968, the band featured vocalist Dan McCafferty, guitarist Manny Charlton, bassist Pete Agnew, and drummer Darrell Sweet. The band had relocated to London by 1970, and they released their self-titled debut album in 1971. Both Nazareth and 1972's Exercises received favorable attention by British hard rockers, but it was 1973's Razamanaz that moved them into the U.K. Top Ten (both "Broken Down Angel" and "Bad Bad Boy" were hit singles). Loud 'n' Proud and Rampant (both 1974) followed the same formula, yet were slightly less successful.Released the following year, Hair of the Dog established Nazareth as an internationally popular hard rock band. Featuring their revamped version of the Everly Brothers' "Love Hurts," the album sold over a million copies in the U.S. Until the end of the '70s, the band continued successfully as a quartet, re
Nazareth - Hair Of The Dog(1975)320kbpsAfter slowly but surely building a fanbase around the world with albums like Razamanaz and Loud & Proud, Nazareth finally hit the big time in 1975 with Hair of the Dog. The title track sets the mood for this stark album of hard rock with its combination of relentless guitar riffs, a throbbing, cowbell-driven beat, and an angry vocal from Dan McCafferty that denounces a "heart-breaker, soul-shaker." The end result is a memorably ferocious rocker that has become a staple of hard rock radio stations. The remainder of the album divides its time between similarly pulverizing hard rock fare and some intriguing experiments with the group's sound. In the rocker category, notable tracks include "Miss Misery," a bad romance lament driven by a doomy riff worthy of Black Sabbath, and "Changin' Times," a throbbing hard rock tune driven by a hypnotic, circular-sounding guitar riff. In the experimental category, the big highlight is "Please Don't Judas Me,"
Nazareth - Snaz (Live-1981)320kbpsOriginally released on A&M records in 1981, Snaz is one of the better, and least recognized, live '70s (as a style, not necessarily a period in time) hard rock recordings. Unlike more recognized '70s metal artists like Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, Thin Lizzy, and others, Nazareth -- even in their Hair of the Dog heyday -- never were able to put much "heavy" into their heavy metal guitar attack when they recorded in the studio. There wasn't much of a thump coming from the drums and bass either, and the overall affect was a wimpy sound that didn't nearly serve the band's fine material as well as it should have. All of this left Nazareth's otherwise respectable '70s studio recordings with much to be desired sonically. Recorded live in Vancouver, Snaz is a production and engineering highlight in the band's career. The energy and recklessness of Nazareth's material is much more palpable on these live versions, and while things get a little sloppy at
Nazareth - Razamanaz (1973)224kbps After pursuing a Rolling Stones-styled blend of rock and country elements on their first two albums, Nazareth segued into a harder rocking style with 1973's Razamanaz. The resulting album has a lot of energy and drive and much of this can be credited to Roger Glover's production, which tempers the group's tendency to experiment with different musical styles by imposing an overall sound that play's up the group's hard rock edge. The end result is an album that rocks consistently throughout but works in intriguing musical elements to keep things interesting. For instance, "Alcatraz" and "Night Woman" work a glam-styled tribal drum rhythm into the group's sound, and "Vigilante Man" starts out as a straight blues tune but soon mutates into a stomping slice of heavy metal. The most successful experiments come when the group works a country element into their rock attack: "Broken Down Angel" sounds like an early 1970s Rolling Stones track with heavier
Nazareth - Loud 'n' proud (1974)[Bonus Tracks]320kbpsAfter putting themselves on the hard rock map with Razamanaz, Nazareth took their new, forceful style even further the next year on Loud & Proud. With Roger Glover once again at the controls, the group added even higher levels of distortion and energy to create one of the hardest rocking items in their catalog: "Go Down Fighting" starts the album with a sonic boom thanks to its blend of furious riffing with a breathless tempo, and the group's cover of "Teenage Nervous Breakdown" transforms this Little Feat into a runaway locomotive of hard rock riffing. However, the album's definitive moment of heaviness is their extended reworking of Bob Dylan's "The Ballad of Hollis Brown," which drenches the tune in ungodly levels of feedback to create an ominous, horror movie-style feel. Loud & Proud also produced another hit single for the group with a cover of Joni Mitchell's "This Flight Tonight," which transforms the wistful origina
1. Cansei
2. Let There Be Light (demo)
3. Carpates
4. Waters of Nazareth (Justice Remix)
5. Let There Be Light (DJ Funk Bounce That Ass Remix)
6. Waters of Nazareth (Erol Alkan's Durrr Durrr Durrrrrr Re-Edit)
Download: gigasize
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