I Need may refer to:
"All I Need" is a song by American musician-singer-songwriter Dan Hartman, released as the third and final single from his 1981 album It Hurts to Be in Love.
Released in America only, the single followed Hartman's previous singles from the same album; "It Hurts to Be in Love and Heaven in Your Arms, which were both minor hits on the Billboard Hot 100 (the former also a minor hit on the Dance Music/Club Play Singles Chart). "All I See" did not reach the Top 100 and instead peaked at #110 on the Bubbling Under the Hot 100 Chart. It made its debut on September 26, 1981, and stayed on the chart for a total of three weeks. The song also peaked at #41 on the Billboard Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks Chart.
The song, like the entire It Hurts to Be in Love album, was recorded at The Schoolhouse, mixed at Power Station and mastered at Sterling Sound. The Schoolhouse was Hartman's own home studio in Connecticut.
The single was released via 7" vinyl by Blue Sky in America only, where it would be Hartman's last single on the label. It was distributed and manufactured by CBS Records. Two editions of the single were issued. The main release featured the b-side "Forever in a Moment", which was an album track on the It Hurts to Be in Love album, and was also written and produced by Hartman. The other edition was a promotional 7" single which featured "All I Need" on both sides of the vinyl. Both editions of the single did not feature a picture sleeve but a generic Blue Sky Records sleeve instead.
All I Need is the second extended play from Mike Lee. Mike Lee Music released the EP on June 16, 2015. Lee worked with Ed Cash, Scott Cash, and Cody Norris, in the production of this album.
Awarding the EP four stars from CCM Magazine, Andy Argyrakis states, "Mike Lee makes another artistic and spiritual leap forward on this impressive EP". Amanda Furbeck, giving the EP four stars at Worship Leader, writes, "All I Need lends itself well to personal times of devotion". Rating the EP an eight out of ten for Cross Rhythms, Stephen Curry says, "Lee has a habit of coming up with singable lines". Jonathan J. Francesco, signaling in a three star review by New Release Today, describes, "Mike Lee has crafted a deeply personal and relevant EP. Filled with honest reflections, powerful worship, and effective music...it's a success on many fronts, and it is a commendable achievement". Indicating in a four and a half star review from Louder Than the Music, Jono Davies replies, "The word that keeps coming to mind with this release is beauty."
Remix: Making Art and Commerce Thrive in the Hybrid Economy is Lawrence Lessig's fifth book. It is available as a free download under a Creative Commons license. It details a hypothesis about the societal effect of the Internet, and how this will affect production and consumption of popular culture.
In Remix Lawrence Lessig, a Harvard law professor and a respected voice in what he deems the "copyright wars", describes the disjuncture between the availability and relative simplicity of remix technologies and copyright law. Lessig insists that copyright law as it stands now is antiquated for digital media since every "time you use a creative work in a digital context, the technology is making a copy" (98). Thus, amateur use and appropriation of digital technology is under unprecedented control that previously extended only to professional use.
Lessig insists that knowledge and manipulation of multi-media technologies is the current generation's form of "literacy"- what reading and writing was to the previous. It is the vernacular of today. The children growing up in a world where these technologies permeate their daily life are unable to comprehend why "remixing" is illegal. Lessig insists that amateur appropriation in the digital age cannot be stopped but only 'criminalized'. Thus most corrosive outcome of this tension is that generations of children are growing up doing what they know is "illegal" and that notion has societal implications that extend far beyond copyright wars. The book is now available as a free download under one of the Creative Commons' licenses.
Remix'5 is a Candan Erçetin album. It was remixes of Melek. There's also a song from "Les Choristes" movie, 'Sevdim Anladım'.
Mission grapes are a variety of Vitis vinifera introduced from Spain to the western coasts of North and South America by Catholic New World missionaries for use in making sacramental, table, and fortified wines.
The original European strain, until recently, had been lost, thus the grapes' being named "Mission grapes" since the Spanish missions are where they were generally grown. The grape was introduced to the Las Californias Province of New Spain, present-day California, in the late 18th century by Franciscan missionaries. Until about 1850, Mission grapes, or Criolla, represented the entirety of viticulture in California wines. At the present time, however, Mission represents less than 1000 acres (4 km²) of total plantings in the entire state. Most of the state's remaining plantings are in the Gold Country, the Central Valley, and Southern California.
Red and white wine, sweet and dry wine, brandy, and a fortified wine called Angelica were all produced from Mission grapes. Though Mission grape vines are heavy producers and can adapt to a variety of climates, table wine made from the fruit tends to be rather characterless, and thus its use in wine making has diminished in modern times. However as both contemporary accounts and those of the last two centuries attest, Angelica, the fortified wine made from the grape, is sometimes a wine of note and distinction. The Mission grape is related to the pink Criolla grape of Argentina and the red País grape of Chile.
555 Mission Street is a 33 story, 147 m (482 ft) office tower in the South of Market area of San Francisco, California. Construction of the tower began in 2006 and the tower was finished on September 18, 2008. It is the tallest office building constructed in San Francisco since the 1980s.
The building is the part of a new generation of skyscrapers in San Francisco's downtown built on Mission Street since 2000, including The Paramount, the St. Regis Museum Tower, Millennium Tower, 101 Second Street, and JP MorganChase Building.
The tower was originally approved by the Planning Commission on April 5, 2001 to rise 137.5 m (451 ft) and 30 stories. A revised plan, adding three stories and raising the height to 147 m (482 ft), was approved on December 13, 2001. However, due to the downturn in the office market after the dot-com bust, developer Tishman Speyer froze the project waiting for economic conditions to improve. In 2006, five years after the building was approved for construction, work on the tower finally began.
I need
I need
I need
I need
I used to only want but now I need
To get by with what I got but now I need
I need
I used to only want but now I need
I need sex
I need love
I need drink
I need drugs
I need food
I need cash
I need you to love me back
I need
I need
I need
I need
I just can't do without 'cos now I need
The things I care about 'cos now I need
I need
I used to only want but now I need
I need sex
I need love
I need drink
I need drugs
I need food
I need cash
I need you to love me back
I need
I need
I need
I need
And now I have to dream because I need
Of a necessary scheme to get me what I need
I need
I used to only want but now I need
I need
I need
I need
I need
The things I used to crave for now I need
Have made me just a slave for what I need
I need
Yes I am just a slave for what I need
I need sex
I need love
I need 'flu
I need drugs
I need food
I need cash
I need you to love me back
You to love me back