---------->wow head spins, dead kennedy's operation mindcrime2

R

rebirth.....

Guest
hahahaha

wow, gud gooie shit, queenscycre..... very interesting 10/10

I hope everyone purchases this amazing band
 
like it alot
i would not say its operation mindcrime II
vox and rumming is totally different


np- buddha bar 5

RTIST: Sworn Enemy
TITLE: The Beginning Of The End
LABEL: Abacus Recordings
GENRE: Metal
BITRATE: 242kbps avg
PLAYTIME: 0h 49min total
RELEASE DATE: 2006-01-24
RIP DATE: 2006-01-20

Track List
----------
01. Forgotten 2:44
02. Scared Of The Unknown 3:40
03. The Beginning Of The End 3:20
04. Save Your Breath 4:05
05. Absorb The Lies 3:16
06. All I Have 3:37
07. We Hate 2:57
08. No Second Chances 2:09
09. After The Fall 2:53
10. Here Today 3:34
11. Weight Of The World 16:51

Release Notes:

New York is known as a sacred institution for heavy music. Shaped by ideals
surrounding everyday life’s trials and tribulations with an honest desperation
and urgency, metal and hardcore have been as much about attitude as about the
music. Ushering in a new age of crossover, paved by acts such as Anthrax,
Agnostic Front and other New York vets, you can now add Sworn Enemy to the list
of bands forming a caustic hybridization of thrashy, intense metal with the
thud, and grit of hardcore.

Formed in Queens, NY in late 1997, it didn’t take long for the music world to
take notice of Sworn Enemy’s crushing sound and delivery. While the hardcore
underground boiled with excitement over the band, Sworn Enemy recorded their
debut EP, Negative Outlook, for Stillborn Records, the label of Jamie Jasta
(Hatebreed), in 2001. With overwhelming positive reactions from fans and critics
alike, the EP pushed Sworn Enemy to the frontlines of proud New York
Hardcore/metal acts. During this time, the band acquired the bass skills of Mike
Couls of Detriot hardcore band Cold As Life, sharpening the band’s impact into
the most hardworking and intense band around. With this incarnation of Sworn
Enemy, they toured relentlessly with acts such as God Forbid, Hatebreed,
Unearth, D.R.I., American Nightmare and many more.

As the band’s popularity grew, they signed to Elektra Records in early 2003 and
released their debut full-length, As Real As It Gets; a lesson in brutal
metal/hardcore crossover. The band earned a coveted spot on Ozzfest 2003, and
continued to tour in support of the record. Parting ways with Elektra, but
undeterred in their quest for delivering no frills, metallic hardcore, the band
re-solidified their line-up with Jamin Hunt on bass to replace Mike Couls (who
went on to join Agents Of Man). Now more dedicated than ever, the band have
signed to Abacus Recordings and are prepared to drop their sophomore record, The
Beginning Of The End, like a battering ram of violence.

Produced by Tim Lambesis (frontman for As I Lay Dying), engineered Steve Russell
and mixed by Zeus (The Red Chord, Shadows Fall), The Beginning Of The End
pulverizes even the most calloused listener. Recorded at Big Fish studios in San
Diego, CA, during June 2005, the new record takes the hostility and conviction
of the band to a new level of destruction.

The band’s mission is simple, “To set the tone for the new age of metal,” says
vocalist/frontman Sal Enemy. “This record signifies a new chapter for us as a
band, a new style of music.” Revolving around topics of Politics, religion and
everyday life, the new album showcases the band in their element, delivering
heavy-hitting music with themes anyone can relate to. Forget what you know about
Sworn Enemy, they’re pushing their personal metallic assault way into the red
without any care or regard to the current metalcore scene. “We don’t follow any
trends. We do it from the heart.”
 
his is how it all started...

On May 13, 2003, a new force in metal was created. George Rose, a mutual friend of Ian McCann and Will Bozarth, introduced the two. Ian, a drummer, and Will, a guitarist and vocalist, joined forces. Immediately after the meeting, they decided to create some music to see how it goes. Will was in a band prior to this, named Death County. Within its walls were Dan Lehman on drums, Mike Simoni on rhythm guitar, Bill Schroeder on bass, and Will on lead guitar and vocals. Will was slowly becoming restless with the slow progress of Death County, so he figured he'd front two bands. Will and Ian began writing a song which turned out to last over 7 minutes. The song was dubbed "Distorted Mind", seeing as though it was the first song the band wrote.

The duo of Ian and Will decided to stay together, but needed more members. Will suggested they try Mike and Bill in to the band. Bill showed up for his band 'audition', but Ian was away for an hour. Will taught him the riffs to Distorted Mind within a half hour, and the song was then completed. Ian came back, the song was jammed to, and success was felt.

The next two weeks involved more jamming with Will and Ian to get used to each other. Drowned Mental Destiny was born. The intro acoustic and distorted riff was the creation of Ian a few years before. He wanted to put it in a song, so Will decided to put it in DMD.

Mike was able to try out after a few weeks, and things seemed to go fine. Although, on June 1st, Mike decided to leave the band. He did not have enough time to practice with his work schedule and school. This left Distorted Mind as a three-piece. They decided to continue, despite no longer having a rhythm guitarist. They made their live appearance in front of the Gloucester County Institute of Technology Talent Show on June 3, 2003. The set consisted of Drowned Mental Destiny and For Whom the Bell Tolls. They were given four minutes to play. They played for nine.

Out of complete boredom, the band decided to write an intro track. The two-minute long track featured a heavy gallop riff and a cheesy wannabe siren made by Will's guitar pedal. The song was later named Sodomy with a Blowtorch. This "song" has long since vanished completely from the band's catalogue.

DM began work on a song that had an interesting structure. Will had wanted to write a song, then have the second half of the song be the first half played in reverse. They accomplished this, and Lost in the Tears of Reality was born. The song was five minutes long. Bill went to Maryland on vacation, and Will began plotting on how to improve the song and Bill's death at the same time. Will twisted the song around and put a riff repeating in between every other riff. This made the song 7 minutes long. Will was not finished. Ian and Will composed a giant middle section to finally put the song at a phwahping thirteen minutes long. Bill came home. He got angry. He wrote bass lines like a nice little bass player. The Mooing Hawaiian-Polka-Video-Game riff was born. All was right with the world.

The next song to be written was A Painting of Winter's Darkness. We won't go in to detail with how it sounds. You can listen to it for yourself. This is currently the band's most "angry" sounding track. The song is about holy wars, and how religion is the only thing that causes them.

The band began absorbing ideas for writing a ballad. Bill wrote some really cool bass lines a while before he joined Death County. He finally used them in a song they called The Endless Breath. Recently, the name of the song has been changed to Division of Past to fit lyrics that Bill has written. Will ran out of ideas on putting riffs under the bass lines, so he decided to play what would be known as "baby notes". They consisted of single-note volume swells! Definitely not the most technical thing Will has written, but it sure makes listening enjoyable.

Frozen Reflections was created while Will was on a Morbid Angel and My Dying Bride kick. Listen to the song, you'll be able to hear it. The lyrics were written about a person peering into the river, and seeing their reflection. The reflection they see is not of current time, but of the past. They see them self having fun, being happy, having no worries, enjoying life. They wish to freeze this reflection and take its shape once again, but it cannot be done.

The band released their first official demo, which was recorded live on March 18, 2004 in Gloucester City, New Jersey. It was dubbed A Demo of Winter's Darkness.

As time progressed, they decided to record an EP. They hit the studio on July 20, 21, and 22, 2004. It was titled 'Thin Air and Empty Shadows'. The track-listing is 'A Painting of Winter's Darkness', 'Frozen Reflections', and 'Division of Past'. While going through two different sound engineers over the course of eight months, the mix was completed.

On April 14, 2005, Distorted Mind parted ways with original bassist, Bill Schroeder. Dylan Jackson took his place, and quickly began learning material to prepare for upcoming live appearances.

On September 27, 2005, Chris Barrett joined the band as the group's 2nd guitarist. Chris was removed from the band on October 13, 2005 due to a lack of involvement and drive to learn the material.

On January 19, 2006, Mike Simoni rejoined the band as the 2nd guitarist. This is looking to be a permanent change within the band. Songs are being reworked for the inclusion of a second guitar. New music is being written for two guitars, as opposed to the previous 'single-guitar' musical direction.

On January 24, 2006, Bill Schroeder rejoined the band as the bassist, replacing Dylan Jackson. This has caused the band to enter a time warp, as this completes the original lineup from May of 2003.
 
The 7 December 1941 Japanese raid on Pearl Harbor was one of the great defining moments in history. A single carefully-planned and well-executed stroke removed the United States Navy's battleship force as a possible threat to the Japanese Empire's southward expansion. America, unprepared and now considerably weakened, was abruptly brought into the Second World War as a full combatant.

Eighteen months earlier, President Franklin D. Roosevelt had transferred the United States Fleet to Pearl Harbor as a presumed deterrent to Japanese agression. The Japanese military, deeply engaged in the seemingly endless war it had started against China in mid-1937, badly needed oil and other raw materials. Commercial access to these was gradually curtailed as the conquests continued. In July 1941 the Western powers effectively halted trade with Japan. From then on, as the desperate Japanese schemed to seize the oil and mineral-rich East Indies and Southeast Asia, a Pacific war was virtually inevitable.
 
Caramel Flan - Recipe
More Desserts/Baked Goods Recipes Solutions

Adapted from “The New England Cookbook” by Brooke Dojny (Harvard Common Press, 1999).

You will find flan on the menu of almost any Mexican restaurant, since a smooth, soothing caramel custard makes the perfect finish to any hearty, spicy, intensely flavored main course. This version is easy to make and works beautifully all by itself or with a bowl of fresh strawberries to spoon alongside.

Rich in Omega-3 oils and the ultimate in creamy pleasure.


Simple Solution:
printer friendly version


INGREDIENTS

½ cup plus 2/3 cup sugar or Succanat
3 whole eggs
3 egg yolks
3 cups whole milk
2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Have ready an ungreased 9-inch round or square 1 ½ to 2 quart baking dish.

2. Cook ½ cup of the sugar over medium heat in a heavy medium-sized saucepan, stirring almost constantly with a long-handled wooden spoon, until it is melted and turns first golden and then very dark brown, about 5 minutes. (Use extreme caution! Cooked sugar is very hot and can burn the skin if it spatters.) Immediately pour the hot caramel syrup into the baking dish and swirl the pan until it coats the bottom. The caramel will harden at this point and melt again later as the flan bakes.

3. Gently but thoroughly whisk together the eggs, egg yolks, and the remaining 2/3 cup sugar in a mixing bowl until smooth. Gradually whisk in the milk and vanilla. Pour the custard mixture into the prepared dish. Set the dish in a larger baking pan and fill the larger pan with hot water to come halfway up the sides of the baking dish.

4. Bake until a knife inserted two-thirds of the way to the center comes out clean, 35 to 45 minutes. The center should still be slightly soft, as the flan will finish cooking after it is removed from the oven. Cool in the water bath, then remove baking dish from water bath and refrigerate for at least 1 hour or up to 8 hours.

5. Before serving, run a sharp knife around the edge of the flan to release it. Place a large rimmed serving plate over the baking dish and, using both hands, invert both dishes so that the flan and the liquid sauce unmold onto the platter. Refrigerate again until serving time.

Serves 8.
 
lant active components – a resource for antiparasitic agents?

Jean-Paul Anthonya, Lorna Fyfea and Huw Smithb, E-mail The Corresponding Author

aDepartment of Dietetics, Nutrition and Biological Sciences, Queen Margaret University College, Clerwood Terrace, Edinburgh, UK, EH12 8TS
bScottish Parasite Diagnostic Laboratory, Stobhill Hospital, Glasgow, UK, G21 3UW

Available online 15 August 2005.


Plant essential oils (and/or active components) can be used as alternatives or adjuncts to current antiparasitic therapies. Garlicnext term oil has broad-spectrum activity against Trypanosoma, Plasmodium, Giardia and Leishmania, and Cochlospermum planchonii and Croton cajucara oils specifically inhibit Plasmodium falciparum and Leishmania amazonensis, respectively. Some plant oils have immunomodulatory effects that could modify host–parasite immunobiology, and the lipid solubility of plant oils might offer alternative, transcutaneous delivery routes. The emergence of parasites resistant to current chemotherapies highlights the importance of plant essential oils as novel antiparasitic agents.
 
Everyone LOVES FLAN!!!!!

Kids come on, the FLAN is ready!!!!!!!!


quote=Wolftribe]Caramel Flan - Recipe
More Desserts/Baked Goods Recipes Solutions

Adapted from “The New England Cookbook” by Brooke Dojny (Harvard Common Press, 1999).

You will find flan on the menu of almost any Mexican restaurant, since a smooth, soothing caramel custard makes the perfect finish to any hearty, spicy, intensely flavored main course. This version is easy to make and works beautifully all by itself or with a bowl of fresh strawberries to spoon alongside.

Rich in Omega-3 oils and the ultimate in creamy pleasure.


Simple Solution:
printer friendly version


INGREDIENTS

½ cup plus 2/3 cup sugar or Succanat
3 whole eggs
3 egg yolks
3 cups whole milk
2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Have ready an ungreased 9-inch round or square 1 ½ to 2 quart baking dish.

2. Cook ½ cup of the sugar over medium heat in a heavy medium-sized saucepan, stirring almost constantly with a long-handled wooden spoon, until it is melted and turns first golden and then very dark brown, about 5 minutes. (Use extreme caution! Cooked sugar is very hot and can burn the skin if it spatters.) Immediately pour the hot caramel syrup into the baking dish and swirl the pan until it coats the bottom. The caramel will harden at this point and melt again later as the flan bakes.

3. Gently but thoroughly whisk together the eggs, egg yolks, and the remaining 2/3 cup sugar in a mixing bowl until smooth. Gradually whisk in the milk and vanilla. Pour the custard mixture into the prepared dish. Set the dish in a larger baking pan and fill the larger pan with hot water to come halfway up the sides of the baking dish.

4. Bake until a knife inserted two-thirds of the way to the center comes out clean, 35 to 45 minutes. The center should still be slightly soft, as the flan will finish cooking after it is removed from the oven. Cool in the water bath, then remove baking dish from water bath and refrigerate for at least 1 hour or up to 8 hours.

5. Before serving, run a sharp knife around the edge of the flan to release it. Place a large rimmed serving plate over the baking dish and, using both hands, invert both dishes so that the flan and the liquid sauce unmold onto the platter. Refrigerate again until serving time.

Serves 8.[/quote]
 
On Monday September 10, 1945, farmer Lloyd Olson of Fruita, Colorado, had his mother-in-law around for supper and was sent out to the yard by his wife to bring back a chicken. Unfortunately Olson, trying to pander to his mother-in-law's liking for chicken necks, failed to completely decapitate the five-and-a-half month old bird, leaving one ear and most of the brain stem intact.

Not quite sure what to do with his by now loose head, on the first night after the decapitation Mike slept with it under his wing; it was this touching tenacity to life and the now redundant organ that convinced Olson to reprieve Mike from the cooking pot.

Despite Olson's botched handiwork, the by-now-headless Mike was still able to balance on a perch and walk clumsily; he even attempted to preen and crow, apparently not noticing that neither activity could be accomplished properly without a head. After the bird did not die, a surprised and no doubt guilty Mr. Olson decided to continue to care permanently for Mike, feeding him a mixture of milk and water via an eyedropper; he was also fed small grains of corn. Despite all this, the unfortunate Mike occasionally choked on his own mucus, which the Olson family would clear using a syringe.

When used to his new and unusual centre of mass Mike could easily get himself to the highest perches without falling. His crowing, though, was less impressive and consisted of a gurgling sound made in his throat, leaving him unable to crow at dawn.

Being headless did not stop Mike putting on weight; at the time of his beheading he weighed some 2 1/2 pounds and at the time of his death, this had increased to nearly 8.