Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers: Mojo (2010) Blu-ray 1080p AVC DTS-HD 5.1
BD-25 Single-Layer Disc 1080p AVC MPEG-4 | DTS-HD MA 5.1 4769 kbps | 01:04:59 | 3.78 GB +3%
Genre: HD Audio, Rock, Blues
This disc contains all 15 tracks from 'Mojo' in high-resolution 48K 24 bit PCM stereo and DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 surround sound. It is an audio-only disc, with basic navigation and song information displayed on screen.
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The December '08 issue of MOJO magazine celebrates "deep and moving music, the kind of stuff we need in the run up to the holiday period" with a tribute CD to Leonard Cohen. Explains MOJO: "Straddling the world of literature and music, his talent as a deeply personal wordsmith allows his music to remain open to endless interpretation and accounts for the 300-plus cover versions of of his material that have been recorded to date. Fifteen of the finest of these have been hand-picked for inclusion here on this exclusive MOJO tribute to a truly remarkable artist, a man who has become a restless citizen of the world, as was James Joyce."
Muddy Waters - Got My Mojo Working: Rare Performances 1968-1978 (2000) DVD5
DVD5 | 53 Min | NTSC 720x480 | 29.97 fps | MPEG-2@8000 kbps | AC3@384 kbps | 3.01 GB Genre: Electric Blues, Music Video | Label: Shanachie
These rare performances -- all electric -- capture Muddy as the embers of his career glowed anew. By 1968, the folk blues had waned and the sound he popularized in the mid-1950s was returning to the fore. Over the next decade, Muddy secured his place as the godfather of rock and roll.
VA - American Pop: An Audio History - From Minstrels To Mojo On Record, 1893-1946 (9CD Box set) (1998)
Audio CD (May 19, 1998) | Number of Discs: 9 | EAC Rip | FLAC(Tracks - Cue - Log) | Cover | Size: 2.21 GB Genre: Jazz, Blues, Folk | Format: Box set | Label: Silva America
Amazon.com
With American Pop: An Audio History, saxophonist Allen Lowe has assembled something truly impressive, a mammoth, nine-hour-long box set of early popular music in America, from 1893 to 1946. That's a lot of tunes--everything from Vess Ossman and John Philip Sousa's concert band to Frank Sinatra, Charlie Parker, and Roy Acuff. The evolution and branching out of the music is impressive enough, but so are Lowe's liner notes, which stretch past 100 pages and somehow succeed at tying all these tunes together. Unlike another canon of early recorded music, Harry Smith's Anthology of American Folk Music, the tunes here are arranged chronologically; it's a staggering affair filled with pop's earliest moments on record--from the Unique Quartette's 1893 cylinder recording of "Mama's Black Baby Boy" to Lenny Tristano's "What Is This Thing Called Love" from 1946. As Lowe explained in a 1998 interview with Amazon.com, the juxtaposition of genres and styles takes over and the tunes--not necessarily bestsellers but always well-chosen--taken as a whole give a history of music like nothing else. An overwhelming set and a must-have for fans of pop music's roots. --Jason Verlinde
Mojo: How to Get It, How to Keep It, How to Get It Back if You Lose It (FSN,Wupload,FSV)
Publisher: Hyperion | ISBN: 1401323278 | 2010 | PDF | 224 pages | 12 Mb
In his follow-up to the New York Times bestseller What Got You Here Won't Get You There, #1 executive coach Marshall Goldsmith shares the ways in which to get--and keep--our Mojo. Our professional and personal Mojo is impacted by four key factors: identity (who do you think you are?), achievement (what have you done lately?), reputation (who do other people think you are--and what have you've done lately?), and acceptance (what can you change--and when do you need to just "let it go"?). Goldsmith outlines the positive actions leaders must take, with their teams or themselves, to initiate winning streaks and keep them coming.