ringtone from yes man

Song from "Yes Man". what song is his ring at the very beginning?
Separate Ways (Worlds Apart) by Journey http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hwk6TsfVRBQ&feature=related
Bubblegum Octopus – You’re A Bad Cat Man
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Rida Man (Ringtone)
$10 Rida Man (Ringtone) - Terrace Martin |
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Rida Man (Ringtone)
$6 Rida Man (Ringtone) - Terrace Martin |
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Rockit Man (Ringtone)
$10 Rockit Man (Ringtone) - Zion-I & The Grouch |
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Rockit Man (Ringtone)
$6 Rockit Man (Ringtone) - Zion-I & The Grouch |
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Yes
$19.98 On their third release, 1995's Yes, Morphine shied away from the more accessible direction they laid down on 1994's superb Cure for Pain, going for a more challenging (but just as rewarding) direction. While the singles/videos "Honey White" and "Super Sex" did contain a pop edge (and were the album's best), other tracks, such as "The Jury" and "Sharks" pushed the envelope by containing lyrics that sound as if they're stream of consciousness. Like its predecessor, it's a highly consistent album -- even the lesser-known tracks are integral to the album's overall makeup. "Scratch," "All Your Way," "I Had My Chance," "Free Love," and "Gone for Good" all sound like the observations of a broken-down man, steeped in despair. But the mood lightens up on such selections as "Radar" and the title track, plus the aforementioned singles. With nearly all alt-rock bands sounding identical and bashing angrily away at their instruments in 1995, Morphine proved to be in a league all by themselves. Yes is perhaps just a shade less spectacular than Cure for Pain, but certainly not by much. ~ Greg Prato, Rovi |
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Yes
$10.38 On their third release, 1995's Yes, Morphine shied away from the more accessible direction they laid down on 1994's superb Cure for Pain, going for a more challenging (but just as rewarding) direction. While the singles/videos "Honey White" and "Super Sex" did contain a pop edge (and were the album's best), other tracks, such as "The Jury" and "Sharks" pushed the envelope by containing lyrics that sound as if they're stream of consciousness. Like its predecessor, it's a highly consistent album -- even the lesser-known tracks are integral to the album's overall makeup. "Scratch," "All Your Way," "I Had My Chance," "Free Love," and "Gone for Good" all sound like the observations of a broken-down man, steeped in despair. But the mood lightens up on such selections as "Radar" and the title track, plus the aforementioned singles. With nearly all alt-rock bands sounding identical and bashing angrily away at their instruments in 1995, Morphine proved to be in a league all by themselves. Yes is perhaps just a shade less spectacular than Cure for Pain, but certainly not by much. ~ Greg Prato, Rovi |
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Yes
$15.18 Coming down from the ambitious, politically charged Fundamental, Yes is the sound of the Pet Shop Boys unwinding and returning to their usual fascinations: isolation, fashion, grand arrangements, and witty synth pop anthems. Unfortunately, they're in a slump with their songwriting, and subject-wise, every song here has a companion piece on some earlier album, but that doesn't mean the party is spoiled. The delicate electro opener "Love Etc." is PSB perfection with its memorable hook and faultless construction. Brian Higgins and his Xenomania team (Saint Etienne, Girls Aloud) share songwriting and production duties on the track, and while that later credit continues for the remainder of the album, the hip crew becomes invisible as singer Tennant and synth-man Lowe take over. Employing an Abbey Road orchestra and hiring Johnny Marr for some Hollywood guitar seems a familiar Pet Shop Boys maneuver, and when Neil Tennant tops it off with some sardonic lyrics, "Beautiful People" becomes a pleasingly comfortable gift for any fan thrown by Fundamental's action committee attitude. "Did You See Me Coming" is the exhilarated infatuation of "I Wouldn't Normally Do This Sort of Thing" all over again, while "King of Rome" is the spitting image of the duo's 1987 chestnut "King's Cross." These are good things, especially for the sworn fan, and so are the few quirky new ideas, like the duo trading lines Run-D.M.C. style on "Building a Wall." The grand closer "Legacy" is the obvious songwriting highlight, partly because of the Kurt Weill-like breakdown in the middle, but mostly because of the grim way it comforts the brokenhearted. Neil proposes that glaciers melt and stars burn out so there's a pretty good chance that given time "you'll get over it." It's much better than the "Is that a riot/or are you just glad to see me" line in "Pandemonium" and just the touch Yes needs to put this above the standard PSB album. ~ David Jeffries, Rovi Performers: Alex Gardner - Vocals (Background); Brian Higgins - Vocals (Background), Keyboards; Carla Marie Williams - Vocals (Background), Vocals; Jessie Malakouti - Vocals (Background); Johnny Marr - Harmonica, Guitar; London Metropolitan Orchestra - Brass; Miranda Cooper - Vocals (Background); Owen Parker - Vocals (Background), Guitar, Keyboards; |
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Yes
$16.79 Coming down from the ambitious, politically charged Fundamental, Yes is the sound of the Pet Shop Boys unwinding and returning to their usual fascinations: isolation, fashion, grand arrangements, and witty synth pop anthems. Unfortunately, they're in a slump with their songwriting, and subject-wise, every song here has a companion piece on some earlier album, but that doesn't mean the party is spoiled. The delicate electro opener "Love Etc." is PSB perfection with its memorable hook and faultless construction. Brian Higgins and his Xenomania team (Saint Etienne, Girls Aloud) share songwriting and production duties on the track, and while that later credit continues for the remainder of the album, the hip crew becomes invisible as singer Tennant and synth-man Lowe take over. Employing an Abbey Road orchestra and hiring Johnny Marr for some Hollywood guitar seems a familiar Pet Shop Boys maneuver, and when Neil Tennant tops it off with some sardonic lyrics, "Beautiful People" becomes a pleasingly comfortable gift for any fan thrown by Fundamental's action committee attitude. "Did You See Me Coming" is the exhilarated infatuation of "I Wouldn't Normally Do This Sort of Thing" all over again, while "King of Rome" is the spitting image of the duo's 1987 chestnut "King's Cross." These are good things, especially for the sworn fan, and so are the few quirky new ideas, like the duo trading lines Run-D.M.C. style on "Building a Wall." The grand closer "Legacy" is the obvious songwriting highlight, partly because of the Kurt Weill-like breakdown in the middle, but mostly because of the grim way it comforts the brokenhearted. Neil proposes that glaciers melt and stars burn out so there's a pretty good chance that given time "you'll get over it." It's much better than the "Is that a riot/or are you just glad to see me" line in "Pandemonium" and just the touch Yes needs to put this above the standard PSB album. ~ David Jeffries, Rovi Performers: Alex Gardner - Vocals (Background); Jessie Malakouti - Vocals (Background); London Metropolitan Orchestra - Brass; Miranda Cooper - Vocals (Background); Steve Hamilton - Brass; Brian Higgins - Vocals (Background), Keyboards; Carla Marie Williams - Vocals (Background), Vocals; Chris Lowe - Keyboards; |
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Yes
$14.39 Coming down from the ambitious, politically charged Fundamental, Yes is the sound of the Pet Shop Boys unwinding and returning to their usual fascinations: isolation, fashion, grand arrangements, and witty synth pop anthems. Unfortunately, they're in a slump with their songwriting, and subject-wise, every song here has a companion piece on some earlier album, but that doesn't mean the party is spoiled. The delicate electro opener "Love Etc." is PSB perfection with its memorable hook and faultless construction. Brian Higgins and his Xenomania team (Saint Etienne, Girls Aloud) share songwriting and production duties on the track, and while that later credit continues for the remainder of the album, the hip crew becomes invisible as singer Tennant and synth-man Lowe take over. Employing an Abbey Road orchestra and hiring Johnny Marr for some Hollywood guitar seems a familiar Pet Shop Boys maneuver, and when Neil Tennant tops it off with some sardonic lyrics, "Beautiful People" becomes a pleasingly comfortable gift for any fan thrown by Fundamental's action committee attitude. "Did You See Me Coming" is the exhilarated infatuation of "I Wouldn't Normally Do This Sort of Thing" all over again, while "King of Rome" is the spitting image of the duo's 1987 chestnut "King's Cross." These are good things, especially for the sworn fan, and so are the few quirky new ideas, like the duo trading lines Run-D.M.C. style on "Building a Wall." The grand closer "Legacy" is the obvious songwriting highlight, partly because of the Kurt Weill-like breakdown in the middle, but mostly because of the grim way it comforts the brokenhearted. Neil proposes that glaciers melt and stars burn out so there's a pretty good chance that given time "you'll get over it." It's much better than the "Is that a riot/or are you just glad to see me" line in "Pandemonium" and just the touch Yes needs to put this above the standard PSB album. ~ David Jeffries, Rovi Performers: Alex Gardner - Vocals (Background); Jessie Malakouti - Vocals (Background); London Metropolitan Orchestra - Brass; Miranda Cooper - Vocals (Background); Steve Hamilton - Brass; Brian Higgins - Vocals (Background), Keyboards; Carla Marie Williams - Vocals (Background), Vocals; Chris Lowe - Keyboards; |
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Yes Man
$17.56 The score for director Peyton Reed's Jim Carrey-starring comedy Yes Man consists of instrumental music by Lyle Workman and Mark Oliver Everett, aka E of Eels, drawn from tracks by Eels. This soundtrack album features the original vocal tracks by the band, |
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Pac-Man (Game Theme, Ringtone)
$6 Pac-Man (Game Theme, Ringtone) - DJ Cover This |
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Yes Man
$15.18 The score for director Peyton Reed's Jim Carrey-starring comedy Yes Man consists of instrumental music by Lyle Workman and Mark Oliver Everett, aka E of Eels, drawn from tracks by Eels. This soundtrack album features the original vocal tracks by the band, including one new song, "Man Up," which makes it something of an Eels best-of. In addition to the group's lo-fi alt-rock, dominated by E's scratchy tenor, there are also four songs by Munchausen by Proxy, the fictional band in the film led by Zooey Deschanel and Von Iva. These are synth pop with attitude in the style of the B-52's and the Waitresses. The best of them, "Keystar," isn't actually in the film. (Everett obligingly pens liner notes touting Munchausen by Proxy, while "Allison Monier" -- Deschanel's character in the film -- writes about Eels.) ~ William Ruhlmann, Rovi Performers: Tom Biller - Recorder |
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Cellphone From Heaven (Ringtone)
$6 Cellphone From Heaven (Ringtone) - Marcus D. Wiley |
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Yes Man
$4.99 Yes Man |
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Yes Man
$8.99 Yes Man |
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Yes Man [WS/P&S]
$7.99 Based on Danny Wallace's autobiographical book, Jim Carrey stars as a man who decides to spice up his life by saying yes to everything in his life that he would normally say no to. Fun With Dick and Jane's creative team of director Peyton Reed and writer Nick Stoller head up the production. Zooey Deschanel co-stars as the romantic interest, with Bradley Cooper appearing as Carrey's best friend. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, Rovi lonely life, Carl attends a New Age self-help seminar intended to change no men like Carl into yes men willing to meet life's challenges with gusto. Carl is reluctant at first, but finds the seminar to be ultimately life-changing when he's coerced into giving the say yes attitude a try. As the first opportunity to say yes presents itself, Carl hesitantly utters the three-letter word, setting the stage for a domino effect of good rewards, and giving Carrey a platform to show off his comic chops. But over time Carl realizes that saying yes to everything indiscriminately can reap results as complicated and messy as his life had become when saying no was his norm. The always-quirky Zooey Deschanel adds her signature charm as Carl's love interest, Allison. An unlikely match at first glance, the pair actually develop great chemistry as the story progresses, the actors playing off each other's different styles of humor. Rhys Darby also shines as Carl's loveable but clueless boss, and THAT 70s SHOW's Danny Masterson appears as another one of Carl's friends. While YES MAN marks no major departure from Carrey's previous work, the sweet crowd pleaser manages to showcase two sides of its leading man. |
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Ringtone
$6 Ringtone - Clearwater |
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Powers Collectibles Yes Man Yes Man 5351
$171.11 Powers Collectibles was started by Matt Powers as a way for sports and celebrity enthusiasts and collectors to have a highquality product available at affordable pricing. Having been in the business since 2004 he noticed there wasn t a web site available that included not only sports and celebrity autographs but also high quality custom framing and display cases. Authenticity is the backbone of the company having all of our items come directly from the athlete/celebrity. All items come with a 100 guaranteed authenticity and Certificate of Authenticity. Signed 8x10 By Jim Carrey and Zooey Deschanel |
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Alan Jackson - Small Town Southern Man (karaoke ringtone)
$6 Alan Jackson - Small Town Southern Man (karaoke ringtone) - Stingray Music |
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Mary: God's Yes to Man
$10.95 Introduction by Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, Commentary by Hans Urs von Balthasar . Pope John Paul II's only encyclical on our Blessed Mother, with introduction by the Cardinal Prefect of the congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, and commentary by one of the world's leading Catholic theologians, Hans Urs von Balthasar. The Church's supreme magisterium and representative of the Church's most penetrating theological reflection combine to provide for all the faithful a rich and concise compendium of the Mother of the Redeemer. The development of traditional Marian dogma in the light of the present day bears the Pope's unmistakable personal stamp. The three parts of the encyclical ("Mary in the Mystery of Christ", "The Mother of God in the Midst of the Pilgrim Church" and "Motherly Mediation") draw predominantly from two sources: Sacred Scripture and the central documents of the Second Vatican Council. There is a particular emphasis on ecumenism. What binds all Christians to Mary becomes ever clearer: she is the model of their faith. "Preparing for the advent of the year 2000, the great memorial of Christ's birth, is a fundamental concern of the encyclical. In the liturgy, Advent is a Marian time: the time when Mary made room in her womb for the Savior of the world and bore within her humanity's hope and expectation. Celebrating Advent means becoming Marian, imitating Mary's unconditional Yes which is ever anew the place of God's birth, the 'fullness of time'" " Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger ' |
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Ringtone
$10 Ringtone - Bizz Feat Freeway |
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Ringtone
$10 Ringtone - Tom Le Pompier |
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Ringtone
$10 Ringtone - Le P'tit Flic |
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Ringtone
$10 Ringtone - Tom Le Pompier |
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Ringtone
$10 Ringtone - Rene La Taupe |
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Ringtone
$6 Ringtone - Bizz Feat Freeway |
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Ringtone
$6 Ringtone - Just A Girl |
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Ringtone
$6 Ringtone - Tom Le Pompier |
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Ringtone
$10 Ringtone - Le Pâtit Flic |
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Ringtone
$6 Ringtone - Le Pâtit Flic |
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Yes
$10.88 Coming down from the ambitious, politically charged Fundamental, Yes is the sound of the Pet Shop Boys unwinding and returning to their usual fascinations: isolation, fashion, grand arrangements, and witty synth pop anthems. Unfortunately, they're in a sl |
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Yes
$11.68 Coming down from the ambitious, politically charged Fundamental, Yes is the sound of the Pet Shop Boys unwinding and returning to their usual fascinations: isolation, fashion, grand arrangements, and witty synth pop anthems. Unfortunately, they're in a sl |
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Yes
$13.47 Coming down from the ambitious, politically charged Fundamental, Yes is the sound of the Pet Shop Boys unwinding and returning to their usual fascinations: isolation, fashion, grand arrangements, and witty synth pop anthems. Unfortunately, they're in a sl |
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Yes
$9.7 On their third release, 1995's Yes, Morphine shied away from the more accessible direction they laid down on 1994's superb Cure for Pain, going for a more challenging (but just as rewarding) direction. While the singles/videos "Honey White" and "Super Sex |
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Yes
$27.29 On their third release, 1995's Yes, Morphine shied away from the more accessible direction they laid down on 1994's superb Cure for Pain, going for a more challenging (but just as rewarding) direction. While the singles/videos "Honey White" and "Super Sex |
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Yes - DVD
$14.71 Rated: RSynopsis: PreviewsBehind-the-Scenes Photo GalleryFinding Scene 54 FeaturetteSynopsis:Passion has no boundaries. A woman (Joan Allen), feeling betrayed by her husband (Sam Neill), turns to a man from a world away (Simon Abkarian) to fulfill her deepest desires. Their sensuous affairtakes them on a tumultuous journey across continents and cultures that is seen through the eyes of her maid (Shirley Henderson). YES, a lyrical love story directed by Sally Potter (The Man Who Cried, The Tango Lesson, Orlando), will arouse your emotions and capture your heart long after the last frame fades.© 1938, renewed 1966 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. All Rights Reserved., © 1940, renewed 1967 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
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Yes!
$14.42 Sometimes the only preparation needed to record a stirring album is a longtime friendship. Bassist Ali Jackson, pianist Aaron Goldberg and drummer Omer Avital have known each other since their years in college, have played more gigs then they count and consider each best of friends. On Their new CD YES!, the three came together to record a spirited program of original compositions from each member of the group along with some tremendous interpretations of material from artists like Abdullah Ibrahim, Duke Ellington and Thelonious Monk. |
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Yes Man (OST)
$8.49 Yes Man (OST) |
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I'm Your Yes Man
$11.55 I'm Your Yes Man |
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Yes
$14.49 Filmmaker Sally Potter directed this artful meditation on the dynamics of the romantic and sexual relationship. She (Joan Allen) is an intelligent and gifted genetic scientist of Irish-American heritage who feels smothered in her marriage to a British politician (Sam Neill). While dining at a friend's house, She meets He (Simon Abkarian), a handsome Lebanese exile who was a respected surgeon in his homeland but now supports himself in London as a cook. He flirts with her, and She is pleased with his advances; weeks later, she contacts him, and an affair begins. However, despite their mutual attraction, He and She find it difficult to set aside their political and national differences for very long, as love and lust wage a quiet war against the conscience and the intellect. Yes also features supporting performances from Shirley Henderson and Sheila Hancock. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi |
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Yes
$16.95 Filmmaker Sally Potter directed this artful meditation on the dynamics of the romantic and sexual relationship. She (Joan Allen) is an intelligent and gifted genetic scientist of Irish-American heritage who feels smothered in her marriage to a British politician (Sam Neill). While dining at a friend's house, She meets He (Simon Abkarian), a handsome Lebanese exile who was a respected surgeon in his homeland but now supports himself in London as a cook. He flirts with her, and She is pleased with his advances; weeks later, she contacts him, and an affair begins. However, despite their mutual attraction, He and She find it difficult to set aside their political and national differences for very long, as love and lust wage a quiet war against the conscience and the intellect. Yes also features supporting performances from Shirley Henderson and Sheila Hancock. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi |
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Yes
$38.39 Yes' debut album is surprisingly strong, given the inexperience of all those involved at the time. In an era when psychedelic meanderings were the order of the day, Yes delivered a surprisingly focused and exciting record that covered lots of bases (perhaps too many) in presenting their sound. The album opens boldly, with the fervor of a metal band of the era playing full tilt on "Beyond and Before," but it is with the second number, a cover of the Byrds' "I See You," that they show some of their real range. The song is highlighted by an extraordinary jazz workout from lead guitarist Peter Banks and drummer Bill Bruford that runs circles around the original by Roger McGuinn and company. "Harold Land" was the first song on which Chris Squire's bass playing could be heard in anything resembling the prominence it would eventually assume in their sound and anticipates in its structure the multi-part suites the group would later record, with its extended introduction and its myriad shifts in texture, timbre, and volume. And then there is "Every Little Thing," the most daring Beatles cover ever to appear on an English record, with an apocalyptic introduction and extraordinary shifts in tempo and dynamics, Banks' guitar and Bruford's drums so animated that they seem to be playing several songs at once. This song also hosts an astonishingly charismatic performance by Jon Anderson. There were numerous problems in recording this album, owing to the inexperience of the group, the producer, and the engineer, in addition to the unusual nature of their sound. Many of the numbers give unusual prominence to the guitar and drums, thus making it the most uncharacteristic of all the group's albums. [Its first decent-sounding edition anywhere came with the 1997 remastering by Atlantic.] ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi |
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Yes
$16.95 Filmmaker Sally Potter directed this artful meditation on the dynamics of the romantic and sexual relationship. She (Joan Allen) is an intelligent and gifted genetic scientist of Irish-American heritage who feels smothered in her marriage to a British politician (Sam Neill). While dining at a friend's house, She meets He (Simon Abkarian), a handsome Lebanese exile who was a respected surgeon in his homeland but now supports himself in London as a cook. He flirts with her, and She is pleased with his advances; weeks later, she contacts him, and an affair begins. However, despite their mutual attraction, He and She find it difficult to set aside their political and national differences for very long, as love and lust wage a quiet war against the conscience and the intellect. Yes also features supporting performances from Shirley Henderson and Sheila Hancock. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi Movie Guide the human condition and the fragility of love in this unusual and extraordinary film in which all of the characters speak in iambic pentameter. In addition to mixing in different styles, including slow motion, grainy shots, and freeze frames, Potter has a series of maids, especially the one played by Shirley Henderson, face the camera, reacting to what is going on around them. Henderson often addresses the audience, humorously pointing out that no matter how thorough people are, there is still always a little dirt to be cleaned up. |
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Yes & No
$15.98 Drummer Paul Joseph's debut album runs for more than an hour. Normally, credit should be given for that generous amount of playing time. But this album might actually benefit from being shorter. The group seems to run out of ideas on most cuts, yet the play list is a challenging one, with jazz and standard classics dominating. Michael Bartolomei has a deft touch at the piano -- minimalist and relaxed. He doesn't clutter the melody line with extraneous chords. Leader Joseph doesn't take advantage of his leadership position to dominate the solos. In fact, he seems to be quite submissive. The concern is that it's difficult to separate one track from another. There's a certain sameness about them, in tempo and overall approach. Of course, the melodies are different. But it takes more than that to keep listener attention through 70 minutes of playing time. Horace Silver's "Nica's Dream" and Sonny Rollins' "Pent-up House" should sound significantly different from "I've Got the World on a String," for example. The group gets appropriately sentimental on a tune like "Polka Dots and Moonbeams." But even here they don't attain separation from versions done by other trios thereby failing to stamp their imprimatur on the music. On Nellie Lutcher's "He's a Real Gone Guy," with Bartolomei letting loose, the trio swings this tune along, showing a semblance of enthusiasm. But even here, there's a feeling that they're holding back. The original material is more absorbing than anything else on the program. "Mal's Groove" offers intriguing exchanges between Bartolomei and Brendan Clarke. If you want an album with variety to sink your teeth into, look elsewhere. If, on the other hand, you are satisfied with a session of enjoyable music, you could do much worse than Yes & No. ~ Dave Nathan, Rovi |
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Yes
$28.37 Debut album from Perth six-piece pop electro indie rockers Boys Boys Boys! Debut album from perth six-piece pop electro indie rockers boys boys boys! Lead track "seeya later lovie" aired on episode of "90210!" Have toured with van she, the galvatrons, mat |
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Yes
$10.45 The narrator, a scientist working on antibodies and suffering from emotional and mental illness, meets a Persian woman, the companion of a Swiss engineer, at an office in rural Austria. For the scientist, his endless talks with the strange Asian woman mea |
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Yes
$31.19 Debut album from Perth six-piece pop electro indie rockers Boys Boys Boys! Debut album from perth six-piece pop electro indie rockers boys boys boys! Lead track "seeya later lovie" aired on episode of "90210!" Have toured with van she, the galvatrons, matt + kim. |
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Yes & No
$18.88 Drummer Paul Joseph's debut album runs for more than an hour. Normally, credit should be given for that generous amount of playing time. But this album might actually benefit from being shorter. The group seems to run out of ideas on most cuts, yet the pl |
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Yes [2CD]
$17.58 Coming down from the ambitious, politically charged Fundamental, Yes is the sound of the Pet Shop Boys unwinding and returning to their usual fascinations; isolation, fashion, grand arrangements, and witty synth pop anthems. Unfortunately, they're in a slump with their songwriting, and subject-wise, every song here has a companion piece on some earlier album, but that doesn't mean the party is spoiled. The delicate electro opener "Love Etc." is PSB perfection with its memorable hook and faultless construction. Brian Higgins and his Xenomania team (Saint Etienne, Girls Aloud) share songwriting and production duties on the track, and while that later credit continues for the remainder of the album, the hip crew becomes invisible as singer Tennant and synth-man Lowe take over. Employing an Abbey Road orchestra and hiring Johnny Marr for some Hollywood guitar seems a familiar Pet Shop Boys maneuver, and when Neil Tennant tops it off with some sardonic lyrics, "Beautiful People" becomes a pleasingly comfortable gift for any fan thrown by Fundamental's action committee attitude. "Did You See Me Coming" is the exhilarated infatuation of "I Wouldn't Normally Do This Sort of Thing" all over again, while "King of Rome" is the spitting image of the duo's 1987 chestnut "King's Cross." These are good things, especially for the sworn fan, and so are the few quirky new ideas, like the duo trading lines Run-D.M.C. style on "Building a Wall." The grand closer "Legacy" is the obvious songwriting highlight, partly because of the Kurt Weill-like breakdown in the middle, but mostly because of the grim way it comforts the brokenhearted. Neil proposes that glaciers melt and stars burn out so there's a pretty good chance that given time "you'll get over it." It's much better than the "Is that a riot/or are you just glad to see me" line in "Pandemonium" and just the touch Yes needs to put this above the standard PSB album. [The "Special Edition" of Yes comes with a bonus CD featuring six "Dub" remixes from Xenomania plus the synth pop lover's dream track "This Used to Be the Future" featuring the Human League's Philip Oakey.] ~ David Jeffries, Rovi Performers: Alex Gardner - Vocals (Background); Brian Higgins - Vocals (Background), Keyboards; Carla Marie Williams - Vocals (Background), Vocals; Jessie Malakouti - Vocals (Background); Johnny Marr - Harmonica, Guitar; London Metropolitan Orchestra - Brass; |
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Yes Man
$7.51 Rated: PG13Synopsis: Carl shakes free of post divorce blues by embrasing life and saying yes to everything. |
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Yes, I Know the Monkey Man
$12.65 Smitty is never late for school. Not when his shoes get stuck in a sea of tar. Not when the sky rains snowmen down on the city streets. Not when he uses his coat for a sail to catch a gale and is swallowed up by a whale. Or when he encounters a robot from |
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Ringy Ringtone
$10 Ringy Ringtone - Ringtone Hits |
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Saw Ringtone
$10 Saw Ringtone - Ringtone Hits |
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Scary Ringtone
$10 Scary Ringtone - Ringtone Hits |
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Storm Ringtone
$10 Storm Ringtone - Ringtone Hits |
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Thunder Ringtone
$10 Thunder Ringtone - Ringtone Hits |
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Swirly Ringtone
$10 Swirly Ringtone - Ringtone Hits |
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Tombs Ringtone
$10 Tombs Ringtone - Ringtone Hits |
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Train Ringtone
$10 Train Ringtone - Ringtone Hits |
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Windy Ringtone
$10 Windy Ringtone - Ringtone Hits |
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Airy Ringtone
$10 Airy Ringtone - Ringtone Hits |
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Alarm Ringtone
$10 Alarm Ringtone - Ringtone Hits |
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Monsters Ringtone
$10 Monsters Ringtone - Ringtone Hits |
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Say Yes
$13.58 Part of the Sacred Steel movement, the Lee Boys (most of whom are related) put pedal steel at the front of their gospel. But unlike contemporaries like the Campbell Brothers, there's a slight and unusual country tinge to their blues-y gospel sound, making them sound, at times, a little like the Allman Brothers circa 1973-74, as they show on "Walk With Me." They're all fiery players, but it's Emanuel Roosevelt Collier, the pedal steel man, who's the standout, with a seemingly endless bag of tricks and licks, although he can lay back and let the melody work, too, as he does on "Amazing Grace." While he takes the spotlight, everyone contributes, from guitarist Alvin Lee (not to be confused with the bloke from Ten Years After), and singers Keith and Derrick Lee, who each bring different qualities to the music. The rhythm section is rock-steady, but the band rocks the house like no one's business. A fabulous record from a band that's going to be heard more and more. ~ Chris Nickson, Rovi Performers: Alvin Jr. Cordy - Bass (Electric); Emanuel Roosevelt Collier - Pedal Steel; Alvin Cordy Jr. - Guitar (Bass); Alvin Lee - MIDI Guitar, Guitar; Derrick Lee - Vocals; Keith Lee - Vocals; Kenneth Earl Walker II - Drums; Kenneth Earl Walker - Drums |
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Yes Man
$11.2 The journalist author of Join Me describes his experiences of saying yes to every opportunity that came his way, a personal journey during which he won and lost $45,000 on a scratch ticket, was promoted beyond his level of experience at the BBC, earned a |
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Yes Man Fallout Light T-Shirt by CafePress
$20 Proudly proclaim your Wild Card choice with the Yes Man t-shirt. The exact face of Fallout featured on the securitron bodied pal from the New Vegas strip. Fallout Light T-Shirt Tee, TShirt, Shirt Look cool without breaking the bank. Our durable, high-quality, pre-shrunk 100% cotton t-shirt is what to wear when you want to go comfortably casual. Preshrunk, durable and guaranteed.5.6 oz. 100% cotton. Standard fit. |
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Ringtone-Hater
$10 Ringtone-Hater |
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Groovy Ringtone
$10 Groovy Ringtone |
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Smash's Ringtone
$10 Smash's Ringtone |
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Operettique Ringtone
$10 Operettique Ringtone |
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Etiquette-Ringtone
$10 Etiquette-Ringtone |
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The Grandest Ringtone
$10 The Grandest Ringtone |
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The Classiest Ringtone
$10 The Classiest Ringtone |
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Hiyaah-Ringtone
$10 Hiyaah-Ringtone |
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The Ringtone Awards
$10 The Ringtone Awards |
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The Ringtone Of The Day
$10 The Ringtone Of The Day |
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Business-Ringtone
$10 Business-Ringtone |
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Reverb Ringtone
$10 Reverb Ringtone |
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Metallic-Ringtone
$10 Metallic-Ringtone |
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The Phone - Ringtone
$10 The Phone - Ringtone |
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Country-Ringtone
$10 Country-Ringtone |
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Depressive Ringtone
$10 Depressive Ringtone |
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Erection-Ringtone
$10 Erection-Ringtone |
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Cool Ringtone
$10 Cool Ringtone |
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Reverb Ringtone
$6 Reverb Ringtone |
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Business-Ringtone
$6 Business-Ringtone |
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The Classiest Ringtone
$6 The Classiest Ringtone |
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The Grandest Ringtone
$6 The Grandest Ringtone |
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Groovy Ringtone
$6 Groovy Ringtone |
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Metallic-Ringtone
$6 Metallic-Ringtone |
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Ahaha-Ringtone
$6 Ahaha-Ringtone |
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Operettique Ringtone
$6 Operettique Ringtone |
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Dingaling-Ringtone
$6 Dingaling-Ringtone |
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Smash's Ringtone
$6 Smash's Ringtone |
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Depressive Ringtone
$6 Depressive Ringtone |
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Heeha-Ringtone
$6 Heeha-Ringtone |
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Hiyaah-Ringtone
$6 Hiyaah-Ringtone |
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Groovy Ringtone
$6 Groovy Ringtone |
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Cool Ringtone
$6 Cool Ringtone |
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Cool Ringtone
$6 Cool Ringtone |