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ຂຽນເມື່ອ ຂຽນເມື່ອ: Sep. 21, 2008 | ມີ 2 ຄຳເຫັນ ແລະ 0 trackback(s)

Having sold nearly 15 million records worldwide, more than 6 million in the U.S. alone, and earning two Grammys® with their major-label debut Fallen, Evanescence continue their meteoric rise with their latest effort, The Open Door (Wind-up Records). The Open Door debuted at the top of the Billboard charts selling more than 447,000 units in its first week and reached platinum status in just over a month. The album is defined by Amy Lee’s beautiful melodies, compelling lyrics, poignant piano and stunning vocals, fused with Terry Balsamo’s urgent yet intricate guitar to form a seamless, ethereal mixture that perfectly channels the band’s hard rock and classical sensibilities.

“Making this record was really intense,” explains Lee.  “Terry suffered a stroke in October after recording his guitar parts and thankfully continues to recover, we got a new manager [Andy Lurie at 110 Management in Los Angeles], and I’d come out of a difficult breakup.  But everything we’ve been through together has benefited this album.”  With Fallen, says Lee, the band had much to prove while defining its identity.  This time, finding a cohesive writing partner in Terry Balsamo, “we really took our time crafting this album and had the freedom to express a broader range of emotions: not just pain and sadness, but also anger and, yes, even happiness.”

Written late in 2005, The Open Door was recorded at The Record Plant in Los Angeles and mixed at Ocean Way Studios in March 2006.  Marking the return of producer Dave Fortman, the album’s musical elements include a classically-infused choir and strings on several tracks, giving further color to songs of introspection, longing, doubt, self-respect and, ultimately, empowerment.  The album opens with “Sweet Sacrifice,” a post-relationship catharsis that head-dives from an otherworldly intro into a hard-driving thrash of hard rock guitars and soaring rock vocals.  Its first single, the mid-tempo “Call Me When You’re Sober,” reinforces the moving-away-from-dysfunction theme.

Other standout tracks on The Open Door include the second single, “Lithium,” which embraces feeling over numbness, “All That I’m Living For,” Lee’s tribute to band life, “Weight of the World,” her plea for perspective from the expectation of young fans, and “Good Enough,” a string-and-choir-infused closer distinguished as the band’s first truly (almost) contented song (“It feels really good ending the album this way,” says Lee).

Its tour began immediately after the debut of The Open Door, rewarding hardcore fans with a “sneak peak” at the album with handful of more intimate theater dates in the US and Europe before segueing into much larger arena shows at the end of 2006.  Since the album’s release, the band has performed in front of well in excess of one million fans in more than 25 countries, including the US, Canada, France, UK, Spain, Germany, Greece, Turkey, Russia, Israel, Argentina, Chile, Brazil, South Africa, Japan, Australia and New Zealand.

As The Open Door nears sales of 2 million copies in the U.S. and more than 4 million copies worldwide, Evanescence will headline a North American tour, including 3 arena shows in Mexico, this Fall.  The tour will begin October 23rd in Miami and conclude on or about December 10th.   With the recent additions of Dark New Day’s (Warner Bros. Records) Will Hunt on drums and Troy McLawhorn on guitar, Evanescence is poised to finish up 2007 with a bang.  Evanescence has chosen Australian modern rock trio Sick Puppies and electronic rock act Julien-K to support them on the tour.

Evanescence is Amy Lee (vocals, piano), Terry Balsamo (guitar), Tim McCord (bass), Troy McLawhorn (guitar) and Will Hunt (drums).  Fallen, their major-label debut, was released in April 2003 to critical and commercial success and has sold more than fifteen million copies.  Their second major label debut, The Open Door, debuted at Number One on the Billboard charts and reached platinum status in just over a month.

Originally hailing from Little Rock, Arkansas, the band’s evolving sound – a nearly mystical marriage between rock, goth and classical – was informed by a curious duality.  Lee, who spent nine years studying classical piano, explains, “When I was in high school I listened to a lot of death metal bands.  Both genres are intricate, complex types of music that are very dramatic, and I’m naturally drawn to that.”

Evanescence self-released two EPs and a first full-length album, the much-sought-after Origin, before finding a home at Wind-up Records.  Fallen, their major-label debut, was released in April 2003 to critical and commercial success.  The internationally appealing Top 10 singles “Bring Me to Life” and “My Immortal” helped drive airplay and led to two 2003 Grammy Awards (Best New Artist and Best Hard Rock Performance for “Bring Me To Life”).  Propelling the band to sales of nearly 14 million albums worldwide, Fallen spent more than 100 weeks on Billboard’s Top 200 chart, was certified gold or platinum in over 35 countries, and sold out arenas globally.  Anywhere But Home, their 2004 live DVD release, has sold over one million copies to date.

The inherent drama in Evanescence’s music – a kind of audio odyssey that can turn on a dime from piano-led introspection to hammering guitar – has resonated with listeners everywhere.  The band’s aggressive core finds a counterpart in Lee’s passionate vocals, lyrics that forge a connection with audiences searching for identity or struggling with feelings of desire, hope love and loss.  The Open Door is a logical (but certainly not predictable) transformation of epic proportions for the band, which, in many ways has only just begun to make its mark on the music world.

ຂຽນເມື່ອ ຂຽນເມື່ອ: Sep. 21, 2008 | ມີ 4 ຄຳເຫັນ ແລະ 0 trackback(s)

ReaD please

 

Laos is an ancient country, inhabited since Paleolithic times by an ever-shifting mix of Southeast Asian people and tribes. The Lao trace their beginnings to the waning days of the Khmer Empire in the mid-14th century, when Prince Fa Ngum, educated at the court of Angkor, founded the Kingdom of a Million Elephants (in Lao, “Lane Xang”). His successors in the 16th century ruled over a powerful realm which, under King Setthathirat, included within its boundaries northern Thailand, encompassing Chiang Mai, and all of northeastern Thailand's Isaan Plateau.

Dissolved at the beginning of the 18th century the kingdom split into three principalities: Luang Prabang in the north, Vientiane in the central region, and Champassak in the far south. Prey to marauding Burmese, Thai, and Vietnamese armies, and to Chinese bandits, Laos fell on hard times. Whether the establishment of a French protectorate in 1893 over the east bank of the Mekong helped is an unanswerable question. It was, perhaps, inevitable that Southeast Asian or European imperialism would have absorbed the small and quarrelsome Lao states of the time.

France ruled the country until 1954, although the King of Luang Prabang, under pressure from the Japanese occupation forces, proclaimed its independence in 1945. From that later date until 1975 Laos shared in the confused and bloody conflict for power which raged throughout Indochina. On December 2, 1975, the monarchy was abolished and a People’s Democratic Republic was proclaimed under the Lao Communist Party.

Today, Laos is a land of great ethnic and linguistic diversity engaged in trying to forge a cohesive nation. The L.P.D.R. (Lao People's Democratic Republic) is one of the world’s poorest countries and faces daunting tasks in every field of economic development. Yet, for all its small population and fragile economy, its long history and deep Buddhist culture give its people a quiet charm that may surprise visitors.

The U.S. closed its embassies in Saigon and Phnom Penh in 1975, but not in Vientiane. Americans assigned to Vientiane may expect an interesting experience at a growing Embassy in a small country that is reaching out economically and socially to the region and the world.

 The Host Country

Area, Geography, and Climate Last Updated: 7/11/2003 11:36 AM

The Lao People’s Democratic Republic, a landlocked nation, lies in the center of the Southeast Asian Peninsula and borders on five countries: Burma to the northwest, China to the north, Vietnam to the east, Cambodia to the south, and Thailand down the length of its western frontier.

The total land area covers 91,425 square miles, about the size of Oregon. Dense jungle and rugged mountains in the north and east cover 6% of the country’s surface. Mountainous topography is characteristic of all of Laos outside the Mekong River Basin. Phu Bia, in Xieng Khouang Province, the highest point in the country, rises 9,249 feet above sea level.

The Mekong River, with its headwaters in Tibet, flows over 2,600 miles to its mouth in the south of Vietnam. One of the world's great rivers, it forms the country’s western boundary for the greater part of its length and is the cradle of Lao culture. Most major Lao towns are on its banks. The largest population center in Laos removed from the Mekong River is Phonsavanh in Xieng Khouang Province. Lately, the Lao Government has encouraged the establishment of new towns and villages in the country's interior.

Laos has a monsoon climate with three overlapping seasons. The rainy season is about 5 months, June-September. In October, rains start to taper off, and the cool season begins in November, lasting through February. In March “mango rains” occur. March, April, and May are hot and humid. In April, the hottest month, temperatures in Vientiane range from 72°F to 93°F, and in January, the coolest month, 52°F to 83°F. Temperature extremes of 103°F (April) and 39°F (January) have been recorded. Those familiar with Singapore, Jakarta, or Bangkok will be glad to know that Vientiane's climate is more varied, drier, and cooler.

Dust during the dry season and mud during the wet season are common, but tolerable, facts of life. Flooding in Vientiane has decreased with the construction of dikes and improved drainage systems. The Embassy can count on the flooding of the Chancery compound for 1 or 2 days each year.

Tropical flowers flourish in the Lao climate, and tropical gardeners will be delighted by the prospects. With the abundant flowers and plants, however, come the common pests: mosquitoes, ants, and termites.

Population Last Updated: 7/11/2003 11:38 AM

Laos has the smallest population of any Southeast Asian state, except Brunei. In 1998, the figure was estimated at 5 million. Thus, Laos, unlike its neighbors Vietnam and Thailand, is sparsely populated, and the population unevenly distributed. The greatest concentration is along the valley of the Mekong, especially in the Vientiane Plain and the Savannakhet Basin.

Vientiane municipality, the capital of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, has a population of 285,000. The Vientiane province has a total population of 569,000. Savannakhet province has the largest population with 729,000, followed by Champassak with 544,000, and Luang Prabang with 396,000. Eighty-five percent of the Lao people live in the countryside.

One of the remarkable things about Laos is its extraordinary ethnic diversity.

About half of the population is composed of ethnic Lao, known as “Lao Loum.” The Lao Loum dominate the country politically, culturally, and economically. The rest of the Lao population is divided into a mix of ethnic groups, some sizable, some tiny. These are roughly grouped into two categories: the “Lao Theung,” dwellers on the mountain slopes, and the “Lao Sung,” dwellers on the mountain peaks. These groups include tribes of Tai (“Tai” means speaker of the Tai family of languages; “Thai” is used to designate a citizen of modern Thailand), Tibeto-Burman, and Malayo-Polynesian language groups. Although no one is quite sure of the exact number of tribes or ethnic groups, the Lao Government uses the figure of 64 to enumerate the groups making up the human patchwork quilt that populates its upland. Among the better known hill tribes are the Hmong, the Yao, and the Akha.

Other significant minority groups are the Chinese and Vietnamese. Small groups of Thai, Cambodians, Indians, and Pakistanis also inhabit Laos. The Chinese and Vietnamese populations are much smaller than they were before 1975, and their roles in Lao society are correspondingly reduced. The lowland Lao and the population of northeastern Thailand are ethnically the same and share the same language—with some dialectal differences. In fact, Laos is unique in that more ethnic Lao live outside of it than within its boundaries.

A large foreign community is resident in Vientiane: Australians, French, Japanese, Swedes, and other Europeans and Asians working for Embassies, U.N. agencies, NGOs, and businesses. At this writing, there are about 400 Americans in Laos. With the Lao Government's new economic initiatives of 1988, foreign investors are expressing interest in setting up businesses and assigning representatives in Laos. This has caused the foreign community to expand over the last 5 years.

ຂຽນເມື່ອ ຂຽນເມື່ອ: Aug. 17, 2008 | ມີ 3 ຄຳເຫັນ ແລະ 0 trackback(s)

I can be medecine when you get ill;

I can be a pillow when you needa sleep and lay your head down;

I can be like a star when you need some little light to make you feel like in paradise;

Don't mention about saying "THANK YOU";

'cause I can be anything that you want me to be...

 

CArrY_

ຂຽນເມື່ອ ຂຽນເມື່ອ: Aug. 10, 2008 | ມີ 3 ຄຳເຫັນ ແລະ 0 trackback(s)

Just a friend
That’s all I’ve ever been to you ;
I'm just a girl
Who wants to be the center of your world ;
But I ain’t got much to offer
But my heart and soul ;
And I guess that’s not enough
For you to notice me
I’m just your girl
And I guess that’s all I’ll ever be to you

In my dreams
I see us both together constantly ;
Why can’t you see
This love that’s here for you inside of me ;
What do I have to do
For you to notice this ;
You look at her with love
With me it’s just friendship ;

What do you see in her ?
You don’t see in me
Boy you’re so hard to believe ..!!!
Why do you show her love ?
But there’s none for me
Boy you don’t make sense to me ...

so, I try to smile when I see other girls with you
Acting like everything is ok
But You don’t know how it feels to be so in love
With someone who doesn’t even know
My secret love

 

CArrY_

ຂຽນເມື່ອ ຂຽນເມື່ອ: Aug. 4, 2008 | ມີ 1 ຄຳເຫັນ ແລະ 0 trackback(s)

Listen to each drop of rain
whispering secrets in vain,

Frantically searching for someone to hear
their story before they hit ground.

Please don't let go!
Can't we stay for awhile?
It's just too hard to say goodbye.
Listen to the Rain!

I stand alone in the storm.
Suddenly sweet words take hold:
"Hurry!" they say, "for you haven't much time!
"Open your eyes to the love around you;
"you may feel you're alone,
"but I'm here still with you.
"You can do what you dream,
"just remember to
"Listen to the Rain."

CArrY_


 

ຂຽນເມື່ອ ຂຽນເມື່ອ: Aug. 4, 2008 | ມີ 1 ຄຳເຫັນ ແລະ 0 trackback(s)

He was always such a nice boy
The quiet one
With good intentions
He was down for his brother
Respectful to his mother
A good boy
But good don't get attention
One kid with a promise
The brightest kid in school
He's not a fool
Reading books about science and smart stuff
It's not enough, no
Cause smart don't make you cool,

He's not invisible anymore
With his Father's 9 and a broken fuse
Since he walked through that Classroom door
He's all over primetime news

Mary's got the same size hands
As Marilyn Monroe
She put her fingers in the imprints
at Mann's Chinese Theatre show
She could've been a movie star
Never got the chance to go that far
Her life was stole
Now we'll never know

They were crying to the camera
Said he never fitted in
He wasn't welcomed
He showed up to the parties
He was hanging in
Some guys was puttin' him down
Bullyin him round round
Now I wish I would've talked to him
Gave him the time of day not
turn away
If I woulda been the one to maybe go this far
He might have stayed at home
Playing angry chords on his guitar

He's not invisible anymore
With his baggy pants and his legs in chains
Since he walked through that classroom door
Everybody knows his name

Greg was always getting net from 20 feet away (20 feet away)
He had a try out with the Sixers
Couldn't wait for Saturday (Saturday)
Now we're never gonna see him slam
Flying high as Kobe can
His life was stole (Stole)
Oh now we'll never know

CArrY_


ຂຽນເມື່ອ ຂຽນເມື່ອ: Aug. 3, 2008 | ມີ 4 ຄຳເຫັນ ແລະ 0 trackback(s)

Stoplight lock the door
Don't look back
Undress in the dark
And hide from you
All of you

You'll never know the way your words have haunted me
I can't believe you'd ask these things of me
You don't know me
Now or ever

You belong to me, my snow white queen
There's nowhere to run, so let's just get it over
Soon I know you'll see, you're just like me
Don't scream anymore my love, 'cause all I want is you

Wake up in a dream
Frozen fear
All your hands on me
I can't scream
I can't scream

I can't escape the twisted way you think of me
I feel you in my dreams and I don't sleep
I don't sleep

So you belong to me, my snow white queen
There's nowhere to run, so let's just get it over
Soon I know you'll see, you're just like me
Don't scream anymore my love, 'cause all I want is you

I can't save your life
Though nothing I bleed for is more tormenting
I'm losing my mind
And you just stand there and stare as my world divides

You belong to me, my snow white queen
There's nowhere to run, so let's just get it over
Soon I know you'll see, you're just like me
Don't scream anymore my love, cause all I want is you
All I want is you

 

CArrY_



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