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- Published: 28 Dec 2006
- Uploaded: 27 Apr 2011
- Author: exfin07
Native name | |
---|---|
Conventional long name | Republic of Costa Rica |
Common name | Costa Rica |
Image coat | Coat of arms of Costa_Rica.svg |
National motto | ""(Spanish)"Long live work and peace" |
National anthem | (Spanish)Noble homeland, your beautiful flag 1 |
Official languages | Spanish |
Regional languages | Mekatelyu, Bribri |
Demonym | Costa Rican; Tico |
Capital | San José |
Largest city | San José |
Government type | Constitutional democracy(Presidential republic) |
Leader title1 | President |
Leader name1 | Laura Chinchilla |
Area rank | 128th |
Area magnitude | 1 E10 |
Area | |
Area km2 | 51,100 |
Area sq mi | 19,653 |
Percent water | 0.7 |
Population estimate | 4,253,897 |
Population estimate rank | 123rd |
Population estimate year | July 2010 |
Population census year | 2000 |
Population density sq mi | 220 |
Population density rank | 107th |
Gdp ppp | $48.881 billion |
Gdp ppp year | 2009 |
Gdp ppp per capita | $10,579 |
Hdi rank | 62nd |
Hdi year | 2010 |
Hdi category | high |
Gini | 48.0 It is the only Latin American country included in the list of the world's 22 older democracies. Costa Rica has consistently been among the top Latin American countries in the Human Development Index, ranked 62nd in the world in 2010, and is cited by the UNDP as one of the countries that has attained much higher human development than other countries at the same income levels. The country is ranked 3rd in the world, and 1st among the Americas, in terms of the 2010 Environmental Performance Index. |
Title | Geographic locale |
Category:Caribbean countries Category:Central American countries Category:Countries bordering the Pacific Ocean Category:Former Spanish colonies Category:Liberal democracies Category:Spanish-speaking countries Category:States and territories established in 1821
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
Name | Jakob Dylan |
---|---|
Background | solo_singer |
Born | December 09, 1969 |
Origin | New York City, New York, United States |
Instrument | Guitar, piano |
Genre | Alternative rock |
Occupation | Singer-songwriter |
Years active | 1987–present |
Label | Columbia |
Url |
The debut sold poorly however, and after they were released from Virgin Records, the band regrouped. They toured with 10,000 Maniacs, Toad The Wet Sprocket, Cracker, and The Spin Doctors, and gained and lost several band members along the way. With the help of their manager Andrew Slater, the band secured a new major label record deal with Interscope Records.
Their 1996 album Bringing Down the Horse, recorded with producer T-Bone Burnett (and including collaborations with Michael Penn, Adam Duritz, Mike Campbell, Don Heffington of Lone Justice, and Sam Phillips), yielded several singles, including "6th Avenue Heartache" and "One Headlight". The album sold over six million copies worldwide. Burnett stated at the time: "As far as Jakob is concerned, I can't imagine having larger footsteps to follow in. But Jakob's character is clearly defined and he handles success with grace, which also says a lot about Bob as a father." Burnett went on to state that the success of Bringing Down the Horse had nothing to do with the family name: "I don't think Jakob sold a single record because he is Bob's son. I think he sold a lot of records because "One Headlight" is a very good song. I wonder how many Wallflowers fans even know who Bob Dylan is." The Wallflowers won two Grammy Awards, for Best Rock Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group and Best Rock Song. "One Headlight" also won the VH-1 Video of the Year for 1997.
As of 2007, The Wallflowers have recorded five albums.
In the fall of 2007 The Wallflowers performed live for the first time in more than two years. They did a brief tour including dates on the East Coast in October and the mid-west in November. This tour included Jakob Dylan (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), Stuart Mathis (lead guitar), Greg Richling (Bass), and Fred Eltringham (drums). In September 2007 the band announced on their official website that band member Rami Jaffee had left the group. The band played additional dates in southern California in February 2008, some east coast shows in April 2008, and several festival shows in the summer 2008 (OC Fair, South Carolina Balloon Festival, Deadwood Jam, among others). In some of these shows, they played as a three-some, in other shows multi-instrumentalist Ben Peeler joined The Wallflowers.
On September 20, 2006 it was announced by Billboard that Dylan had signed a new recording contract with Columbia Records. The Wallflowers' current situation has remained unknown since their recording contract with Interscope Records ended in 2005.
Dylan wrote and recorded "Here Comes Now" as the theme song for the U.S. television show Six Degrees, which premiered on September 21, 2006. His song "Stardust Universe" premiered on Jericho on October 25, 2006.
A cover of The Band's "Whispering Pines" appears on the tribute CD Endless Highway — The music of The Band, which was released late January 2007. Dylan also contributed backing vocals to the track, "Black Haired Girl," on Jesse Malin's 2007 album, Glitter in the Gutter.
Dylan collaborated with Dhani Harrison on the John Lennon song, "Gimme Some Truth," for Lennon's tribute album, "", which was released on June 12, 2007. As of early 2007, Jakob Dylan had performed with his father only once, at a corporate gig for semiconductor company Applied Materials on November 14, 1997, although they played the same show, they did not play together.
Jakob Dylan is also featured on the Court Yard Hounds (2 members of the Dixie Chicks) album. He sings background vocals on the song “See You in the Spring.” He joined them on stage at two SXSW performances for that song. At one performance they all performed Rod Stewart's "You Wear It Well."
In May 2010, the second volume of a soundtrack for the HBO Series True Blood was released. Dylan's song, "Ain't No Invisible Man" premiered on that soundtrack.
In the spring of 2008 a series of tour announcements were made that Dylan would be performing with his touring band The Gold Mountain Rebels at Bonnaroo, at the new Rothbury Music Festival, in Rothbury, Michigan, Summerfest in Milwaukee, the Newport Folk Festival, and the Austin City Limits Festival. A number of tour dates in the south, east, and mid-west were also confirmed. He played on Late Show with David Letterman show in June 2008, the Tonight Show with Jay Leno in July 2008, The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson in August 2008, and Late Night with Conan O'Brien in September 2008, and taped performances for a number of folk radio programs that aired throughout the summer. On the Conan performance, Dylan performed "War Is Kind" with Norah Jones. Jakob Dylan and the Gold Mountain Rebels did a 10-day tour in Europe opening for Eric Clapton in mid-August, and some shows in August and September opening for Willie Nelson at FarmAid in the U.S. In October he did a ten day tour in Europe playing shows in Germany and the UK. On October 21, he appeared in the UK on BBC2's Later... with Jools Holland. During the show he sang "Evil Is Alive And Well" and "Something Good This Way Comes". This was the first time that Dylan performed solo on television. During the week of October 25, Dylan appeared with the Gold Mountain Rebels on PBS' Austin City Limits. On the television show NCIS, Dylan performed a song called "No Matter What" and it is featured on .
Beginning March 2010, Dylan did a series of public performances. He was accompanied by Neko Case and Kelly Hogan on background vocals and members of Case's band, musicians Paul Rigby, Jon Rauhouse, Tom Ray, and Barry Mirochnick. Case, Hogan, and the musicians took the name 'Three Legs' for the 'Women + Country' tour. On April 2, 2010, they performed a "Tiny Desk Concert" for NPR's All Songs Considered, and appeared on the April 3 episode of Weekend Edition with Scott Simon. Dylan also performed on a number of television shows during the spring and summer 2010. On April 1, he was interviewed by Tavis Smiley on his PBS show (no performance). He performed "Nothing But The Whole Wide World" on Letterman on April 21, and Craig Ferguson on May 18, and "Everybody's Hurting" on Leno on May 13. Dylan also performed on national radio shows that were broadcast on the internet including etown, Woodsongs, and Daytrotter. They recorded some songs at Rolling Stone Magazine, who archived the songs online. They performed "Nothing But The Whole Wide World, "Holy Rollers For Love," and "They've Trapped Us Boys.".
Jakob Dylan and Three Legs performed concerts in mostly eastern and midwestern states in April and May 2010. They did a second leg of the tour in June and July 2010 that included some states in the west, (Oregon, Idaho, Utah, New Mexico, Colorado) the mid-west (Illinois and Ohio) and east (Pennsylvania, Connecticut, New York). They toured the UK with stops in London, Glasgow, and Dublin in late July 2010. This second leg of the tour involved the same musicians, but Nora O'Connor replaced Case on background vocals. Dylan started singing a previously unreleased song, "Down In A Hole" in the encore of most of these shows. On July 9, Dylan and Three Legs played the Bearsville Theatre in Woodstock, New York. In the encore, Garth Hudson from The Band, joined them on stage for several songs. A video of them playing Dylan's "On Up The Mountain" (from 2008's Seeing Things) was captured by a fan.
Dylan & Three Legs performed at numerous Music Festivals during the summer and fall of 2010, including Maine's Nateva Music Festival (July 2), headlining the Main Stage at the 6th Annual Pleasantville (NY) Music Festival (July 10), Port Eliot Festival, Cornwall, UK (July 24), the Luna Lunera Festival in Spain (July 30), Quebec's Festivent (August 5), Edmonton's Folk Festival (August 8), KMTT's Music Festival in Seattle (August 14), and on Halloween weekend, Dylan is scheduled to perform at the VooDoo Experience Music Festival. On October 29, 2010, Dylan and Three Legs taped an episode of "Sun Studio Sessions" in Memphis, Tennessee, expected to air in early 2011 on PBS affiliates. A series of shows scheduled the week before the VooDoo festival included a three-night artist in residence at New York City's City Winery, a show in Atlanta, and a show in Nashville.
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Category:1969 births Category:Living people Category:Bob Dylan Category:American rock singers Category:American male singers Category:American rock guitarists Category:American singer-songwriters Category:American singers Category:People from New York City Category:Musicians from New York Category:Grammy Award winners
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.