Wednesday, 11 June 2008

Finders Keepers To Release Well Hung Compilation

Finders Keepers Records - a label never short of surprises - has compiled a new collection of 60s/70s Hungarian rock to be released as the aptly named, 'Well Hung'.


Twenty-two rarities, obscurities and potentially lost forever gems will adorn the compilation, that features heavy psych, jazz and glam as found in the vaults of Eastern Europe's "best kept secret", Supraphon Records.


As per usual, a CD and 12" are available - with Finders Keepers selling copies now in their online store, before it hits the shops.


Well Hung Tracklisting:


1. Anna Adamis & Gabor Presser - Ringasd el magad No.2

2. Omega Redstar - Egy lany nem ment haza

3. Metro - A penz

4. Hungaria - Vegallomas

5. Kati Kovacs - Add mar Uram az esot!

6. Corvina - A Tuz

7. Neoton - Nora

8. Tamas Somlo & Omega - Azt mondta az anyukam

9. Meteor & Demjen Ferenc - Kivanj te is nekem szep, jo ejszakat

10. Illes - A bolond lany

11. Omega - Kergeskezu favagok

12. Sarolta Zalatnay - Hadd mondjam el

13. Locomotiv GT - Megvarlak ma delben

14. Nemenyi Bela & Atlantis - Kinai fal

15. Katie Kovacs & Gemini - Nem biztos semmi

16. Piramis - Mondj egy meset

17. Skorpio - Szevasz haver

18. Omega - Felbeszakadt koncert

19. Illes - Nekem oly mindegy

20. Bergendy - Hetkoznapi Balladak




See Also

Thursday, 5 June 2008

Model Bruni marries French president

Former international model Carla Bruni married French president Nicolas Sarkozy on Saturday in Paris.
The couple walked down the aisle at the presidential Elysee Palace, less than three months after they reportedly first met.
In a short statement, the couple said that they "were married... in the presence of their families in the strictest privacy."
The official who had performed the ceremony, Francois Lebel, mayor of Paris' eighth arrondissement said, "The bride wore white; she was ravishing, as usual and the groom wasn't bad either."
53-years-old Sarkozy married Bruni, thirteen years his junior, in the presence of 20 close family and friends, Lebel said.
He called the ceremony "a moment of family intimacy for the young newlyweds, of great simplicity and apparently a lot of affection between the spouses."
"I wished them a lot of happiness," he said.
At a news conference in January, Sarkozy revealed that the relationship was "serious" and hinted that wedding plans were in the works.
However he refused to reveal the date for a wedding, saying only that France might learn about the nuptials once they had already taken place.