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Post by wal on Nov 10, 2015 7:32:55 GMT -5
Adam Lambert Sverige @adamlambertswe Notis i dagens Metro Stockholm (10 nov) om Queen +Adam Lambert på Sweden Rock. Notice in today's Metro Stockholm (10 November) about Queen + Adam Lambert at Sweden Rock.
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Post by nica575 on Nov 10, 2015 7:41:15 GMT -5
</img> this one is working for me quite nicely, with slight buffering: zy.youku.com/s11 (the rest are restricted)
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Post by wal on Nov 10, 2015 7:51:37 GMT -5
</img> this one is working for me quite nicely, with slight buffering: zy.youku.com/s11 (the rest are restricted) YW, Yes! That link works for me as well! Also this (full screen, but buffering, too bad): www.hlyy.cc/zxtv/hnws.html
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Post by wal on Nov 10, 2015 7:55:34 GMT -5
mmyy9 @mmyy9 9m9 minutes ago 朝日新聞2015年11月10日朝刊(東京) The Asahi, Nov 10, 2015, Tokyo Morning Ed. (Presale/General sale info for Tokyo Jan 16 show)
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Post by Deleted on Nov 10, 2015 8:44:51 GMT -5
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Post by wal on Nov 10, 2015 8:53:23 GMT -5
alidol @glam_alidol 2m
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Post by wal on Nov 10, 2015 9:17:28 GMT -5
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irish1139
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Post by irish1139 on Nov 10, 2015 9:32:58 GMT -5
This video and song is amazing. This kid has a beautiful voice with a soul-wrenching song. Please listen.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 10, 2015 9:38:30 GMT -5
How fun that Adam was able to meet up with Johnny and BabyGarza of the Kiss boys. They haven't had a chance to get together in quite a while.
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Post by Jablea on Nov 10, 2015 9:40:56 GMT -5
Wall Street Journal - China blogs.wsj.com/chinarealtime/2015/11/10/billboard-teams-with-local-firm-to-declare-chinas-no-1-song/Billboard Teams With Local Firm to Declare China’s No. 1 Song Pop star Adam Lambert at a news conference in Beijing on November 9, 2015 announcing the launch of Billboard’s partnership with Chinese music streaming site Yinyuetai.com Yinyuetai.com It’s probably something by the clean-cut TFBoys, or from the soundtrack to the local comedy film “Goodbye, Mr. Loser.” But for industry insiders and music fans alike, it can be hard to tell exactly what China’s top song might be. That’s in part because China has a lot of music charts – 213, according to a government-backed report released last week. Music video-streaming site Yinyuetai.com would like to be the authoritative voice. This week it said it teamed up with Billboard, the U.S. music-industry magazine that keeps a widely quoted list of top songs and albums in the U.S. and elsewhere. Billboard will include the Chinese firm’s weekly Chinese pop-music statistics on its website. The two hope to make Chinese chart-toppers recognizable as Adele and Justin Bieber, who are currently leading Billboard’s Hot 100 song list. “Enough eyes are around the music business of China now and people really need and want to know who is up and who is down,” said Jonathan Serbin, Billboard’s head of Asia. “In the past few years, China’s music industry has developed a critical mass that can support a chart to really track what is happening in the music business.” U.S. pop star Adam Lambert, who will tour Shanghai and Beijing next year, also presented at Monday’s press conference in Beijing announcing the move.By money standards, China’s music market is tiny compared with the U.S. Last year, China’s digital music revenue stood at $91.4 million, while the U.S. led the list with $3.5 billion, according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, a music lobby group. As the industry has shifted to online, companies have struggled to get music listeners to pay. Still, the promise is there. Official statistics show that 478 million people in China listen to music online. “The market is at a inflection point in size from a developing market to a very large music market,” said Mr. Serbin. It already tracks hit songs in Japan and South Korea. “Charts can definitely help stimulate music consumption,“ said Zhang Dou, founder and CEO of Yinyuetai.com. “I see too many fans who cannot find the right place to spend money on their idols.” Yinyuetai.com, or V Chart, has more than 50 million registered users. Its weekly songs chart is generated by fan clicks and posts on its own official site as well as data from microblog platform Sina Weibo, search platform 360.com and QQ music, a Spotify-like service owned by Chinese Internet giant Tencent Holdings. The Chinese music ranking for Billboard will include both Mandarin and Cantonese songs. Mr. Zhang said he was amazed by the power Chinese fans before. For example, fans of TFBoys, a trio of teenage crooners, paid 1 yuan each (about 16 cents) to vote them as Yinyuetai’s most popular artists in the site’s annual music awards in 2014. The band got about 300,000 votes, he said. (Bought votes won’t count toward the new chart with Billboard, Yinyuetai says.) Beijing has moved to help record labels tap the market. This week it ordered the local music-streaming sites to step up censoring of unwanted and unlicensed content. “The government crackdown brings us huge opportunity,” said Mr. Serbin. “The hope is as the fight to piracy continues, the legitimate market will continue to grow.” –Lilian Lin. Follow her on Twitter @lilianlinyigu.
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