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Zachariah MP3


download Zachariah :: Album: White Jesus

Zachariah (mp3)

Full album: White Jesus
mp3 / 2007 year / 172 kbs / 57 mb / 45 min

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Zachariah - download

Album: White Jesus
  1. Cool J Planets
  2. Pimps N' Poets
  3. Sub Shop
  4. Making Babies
  5. Circle Of Friends
  6. Up On You
  7. Rock & Roll Ain't Dead
  8. Hear What I Say (Two)
  9. Reality Rap
  10. White Jesus
  11. Meet The Parents
  12. Drugs Or Shoes
  13. Emo Rap

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News
Jon Bon Jovi objects to name of energy drink

Jon Bon Jovi has objected to the name of an energy drink, which the rocker says is too similar to his own moniker.

Bon Jovi wants the owner of the Mijovi coffee-based energy drink to change its name, but owner Marcos Carrington says that the drink is named after his girlfriend, Jovita, and not the rock star.

Bon Jovi has also taken issue with the drink's marketing materials, which include the phrases 'itsmijovi' and 'itsmilife', which he says resembles the title of his hit song 'It's My Life'.

Bon Jovi's lawyer, Peter Laird, has sent a letter to the owner demanding that he "cease and desist all further use of the name 'Mijovi' and 'It's My Life'," reports the Associated Press.

Carrington has said that he is willing to stop using the phrase 'itsmilife', but intends to keep the name Mijovi.
`Monster Mash' Singer Pickett Dies at 69

He does the "Monster Mash" no more.

Bobby "Boris" Pickett, whose dead-on Boris Karloff impression propelled the Halloween anthem to the top of the charts in 1962, making him one of pop music's most enduring one-hit wonders, has died of leukemia. He was 69.

Pickett, dubbed "The Guy Lombardo of Halloween," died Wednesday night at the West Los Angeles Veterans Hospital, said his longtime manager, Stuart Hersh. His daughter, Nancy, and his sister, Lynda, were at Pickett's bedside.

"Monster Mash" hit the Billboard chart three times: when it debuted in 1962, reaching No. 1 the week before Halloween; again in August 1970, and for a third time in May 1973. The resurrections were appropriate for a song where Pickett gravely intoned the forever-stuck-in-you r-head chorus: "He did the monster mash. ... It was a graveyard smash."

The novelty hit's fans included Bob Dylan, who played the single on his XM Satellite Radio program last October. "Our next artist is considered a one-hit wonder, but his one hit comes back year after year," Dylan noted.

The hit single ensured Pickett's place in the pantheon of pop music obscurities, said syndicated radio host Dr. Demento, whose long-running program celebrates offbeat tunes.

"It's certainly the biggest Halloween song of all time," said Demento. The DJ, who interviewed Pickett last year, said he maintained a sense of humor about his singular success: "As he loved to say at oldies shows, `And now I'm going to do a medley of my hit.'"

Pickett's impression of Karloff (who despite his name was an Englishman, born William Henry Pratt) was forged in Somerville, Mass., where the boy watched horror films in a theater managed by his father.

Pickett used the impersonation in a nightclub act and when performing with his band the Cordials. A bandmate convinced Pickett they needed to do a song to showcase the Karloff voice, and "Monster Mash" was born ? "written in about a half-hour," said Dr.