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DemBoys
Favorite team: | LSU ![]() |
Location: | NOLA |
Biography: | www.demboysmusic.com |
Interests: | |
Occupation: | Feel Good Music |
Number of Posts: | 19 |
Registered on: | 8/15/2009 |
Online Status: |
Recent Posts
Message
Pre-season Super Bowl Song Becomes Dream Come True for Dem Boys
Posted by DemBoys on 1/26/10 at 12:11 pm
Pre-season Super Bowl Song Becomes Dream Come True for New Orleans Own DEMBOYS
Super Bowl Youtube Video
New Orleans, LA – Before the start of the 2009 NFL season, a talented coalition of New Orleans musicians collaborated and recorded "Roll with the Black and Gold," a tailgate-friendly tune with lyrics that actually predicted the Saints’ now historic run to Super Bowl XLIV in Miami.
As both the Saints winning streak and the bandwagon grew to epic proportions, the city of New Orleans was inundated with new Saints-friendly music. However, DEMBOYS truly set the tone with their inspiring pre-season prediction.
OffBeat magazine summed it up nicely in its October issue: “It’s not hard to picture “Roll with the Black and Gold” playing for a stadium packed with Saints fans. It’s catchy, easy to dance to and an authentic offering by New Orleans natives celebrating the place they love.”
Since its release on September 3rd, “Roll with the Black and Gold” has been blasted on gameday inside the Superdome on multiple occasions, covered in the Times Picayune’s Saints music review, and is now regularly featured on WWL–AM870 as the intro to the most popular Saints talk radio show in the country. Dem Boys also recently opened to a sold-out French Quarter show with the world famous, multi-platinum group, the Ying Yang Twins.
Giving Back to Their Creative New Orleans Community
DEMBOYS is also committed to helping the New Orleans music scene. A majority of the NOLA area musicians are medically uninsured and often lack the proper medical attention they need. DEMBOYS has pledged to donate 20% of the project’s gross sales to the New Orleans Musicians’ Clinic, an innovative not-for-profit wellness partnership offering affordable health care to the NOLA community's most precious resource: its musicians.
The 3 song EP titled “Roll with the Black and Gold” is available through Drake Records on iTunes and Amazon and can be streamed for free at RollWithTheBlackandGold.com The title track is also available for free download at OffBeat.com .
Lyrics to "Roll with the Black and Gold"
Dem Boys are hot and they will not be stopped.
They're going all the way...straight to the top.
Oh can't you see them...in that black and gold.
They're off to the playoffs...and then to the Super Bowl!
Everybody let’s roll!
Roll let’s roll let’s roll let’s roll with the black and gold!
They got what it takes...to put it in that zone.
Those fans be jammin' and they're bout that Superdome.
Oh can't you see them...in that black and gold.
They're off to the playoffs...and then to the Super Bowl!
Everybody let’s roll!
Dem Boys got what it takes...Ain't no brown-bag year.
Hear them Who Dat! calls when you come around here.
Talkin’ bout playoffs...yea we gonna be there.
Super Bowl bound....baby this is our year!
Super Bowl Youtube Video
New Orleans, LA – Before the start of the 2009 NFL season, a talented coalition of New Orleans musicians collaborated and recorded "Roll with the Black and Gold," a tailgate-friendly tune with lyrics that actually predicted the Saints’ now historic run to Super Bowl XLIV in Miami.
As both the Saints winning streak and the bandwagon grew to epic proportions, the city of New Orleans was inundated with new Saints-friendly music. However, DEMBOYS truly set the tone with their inspiring pre-season prediction.
OffBeat magazine summed it up nicely in its October issue: “It’s not hard to picture “Roll with the Black and Gold” playing for a stadium packed with Saints fans. It’s catchy, easy to dance to and an authentic offering by New Orleans natives celebrating the place they love.”
Since its release on September 3rd, “Roll with the Black and Gold” has been blasted on gameday inside the Superdome on multiple occasions, covered in the Times Picayune’s Saints music review, and is now regularly featured on WWL–AM870 as the intro to the most popular Saints talk radio show in the country. Dem Boys also recently opened to a sold-out French Quarter show with the world famous, multi-platinum group, the Ying Yang Twins.
Giving Back to Their Creative New Orleans Community
DEMBOYS is also committed to helping the New Orleans music scene. A majority of the NOLA area musicians are medically uninsured and often lack the proper medical attention they need. DEMBOYS has pledged to donate 20% of the project’s gross sales to the New Orleans Musicians’ Clinic, an innovative not-for-profit wellness partnership offering affordable health care to the NOLA community's most precious resource: its musicians.
The 3 song EP titled “Roll with the Black and Gold” is available through Drake Records on iTunes and Amazon and can be streamed for free at RollWithTheBlackandGold.com The title track is also available for free download at OffBeat.com .
Lyrics to "Roll with the Black and Gold"
Dem Boys are hot and they will not be stopped.
They're going all the way...straight to the top.
Oh can't you see them...in that black and gold.
They're off to the playoffs...and then to the Super Bowl!
Everybody let’s roll!
Roll let’s roll let’s roll let’s roll with the black and gold!
They got what it takes...to put it in that zone.
Those fans be jammin' and they're bout that Superdome.
Oh can't you see them...in that black and gold.
They're off to the playoffs...and then to the Super Bowl!
Everybody let’s roll!
Dem Boys got what it takes...Ain't no brown-bag year.
Hear them Who Dat! calls when you come around here.
Talkin’ bout playoffs...yea we gonna be there.
Super Bowl bound....baby this is our year!
re: Free Download of Saints Song
Posted by DemBoys on 12/27/09 at 7:52 am
Game day!
re: Free Download of Saints Song
Posted by DemBoys on 12/26/09 at 7:45 am
Who dat!
Free Download of Saints Song
Posted by DemBoys on 12/24/09 at 9:07 am
Merry Christmas from Dem Boys and Offbeat:
Dowload "Roll with the Black and Gold" for Free at Offbeat.com
Dowload "Roll with the Black and Gold" for Free at Offbeat.com
Home- The Most Influencial Film You've Never Heard Of
Posted by DemBoys on 11/15/09 at 10:16 am
Home
Link to HD Youtube
Free climate documentary is worldwide hit but bombs in U.S.
Publication: Environment and Energy Daily | Article Date: 11/10/2009 | Author: Nathanial Gronewold
NEW YORK-- It's arguably the most famous and influential environmental documentary you've probably never heard of.
This past summer, on June 5, the film "Home" opened at box offices worldwide in front of millions. It caused a sensation in Europe and reverberated across much of Africa and Asia, especially China. To date, at least 200 million people have seen the film, and that number grows every day as schools around the world request DVDs to screen in front of their students.
But aside from an opening-day screening in New York's Central Park, reviewed later by The New York Times, the film has received barely any mention in the United States.
"It was not distributed in any theater here. There was a public screening in Central Park in New York, and I'll organize a screening in Los Angeles myself," said the film's French director, Yann Arthus-Bertrand, in an interview. "In America, it was quite difficult to show the movie."
"Home" is a film comprised entirely of aerial photographs of the Earth's landscape and oceans, and mankind's mark on them. The English version is narrated by the actress Glenn Close and recounts the origins of life on this planet and the factors that made life possible. The film argues that humans are actively destroying those life-support systems, but ends on a hopeful note.
Arthus-Bertrand is famous throughout Europe for his work mixing aerial photography and environmental activism. He is an award-winning photographer and hosts a popular weekly television show on environmentalism. But even though he continues to receive accolades for his motion picture debut on the other side of the Atlantic, Arthus-Bertrand says he is struggling to get the movie's central message across to American audiences.
A bigger global movie than Al Gore's
The film he is working so hard to promote in the United States is the culmination of his work promoting environmental protection through vivid visual representations. For two hours, the film's cameras sweep over ancient volcanoes, lakes, mountain ranges and dramatic scenes of human alterations to the environment. In a review, environmental magazine The Ecologist says that after viewing "Home," "you come away with these fantastic images floating around in your head, reminding you of how beautiful this planet actually is."
The movie intersperses images of a vast stretch of frozen Siberian lakes with the black, churned earth of Alberta's oil sands. Pristine wilderness is juxtaposed with vast expanses of Southeast Asian rainforests converted into palm oil plantations. Compact villages living off the land are contrasted with the urban expanses of Los Angeles and Tokyo.
Producers say the film about three years to make and cost roughly $15 million. Hundreds of days were spent shooting over locations in 54 different countries. Rosita Crone, an official with the Paris-based GoodPlanet Foundation, one of the sponsors of the film, said the film continues to run in syndication on television in Europe and Asia and likely enjoys a broader distribution than former Vice President Al Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth."
"It was distributed all over the world," Arthus-Bertrand said. "In France and some countries, the impact was very big. In some other countries, we don't know exactly."
Arthus-Bertrand says that although the movie's worldwide premier went off without a hitch, distribution in the United States is now the main challenge he faces. And he believes he knows why it has been such a flop in this market so far: because the movie is free.
In an effort at environmental philanthropy, the financial backers of the $15 million project decided early on to distribute "Home" entirely for free, with no copyright or licensing restrictions. DVDs are sent out for free upon request or handed out at private screenings organized by activists. Television stations are invited, even urged, to air the film freely and without having to obtain the requisite permissions beforehand. The entire film has already been uploaded to YouTube.
An inconvenient business plan
The aim was to reach as many people as possible, to visually represent to the world what humans are doing to the planet, how modern practices are unsustainable, and how mankind has to find a new development model to avoid catastrophe. But ironically, the model the film's boosters used to reach the world makes it almost impossible to screen it in the largest movie market of them all.
"When there's no money involved to show the movie, the circuit breaks down completely," said Arthus-Bertrand. "It's quite difficult when you have a nonprofit movie. I think it was a mistake to do a movie like that."
The promoters of "Home" say U.S. television stations largely don't know what to do with a film they can screen for free. Its untested nature makes them reluctant to spend money promoting the film. Arthus-Bertrand says National Geographic ran it recently but did almost nothing to advertise or promote the film, resulting in a very weak response from viewers.
An agreement has been reached with FOX to distribute the film to U.S. audiences, but to almost no effect. "The guys at FOX don't believe in the movie. I don't know why," Arthus-Bertrand complains.
"Home" will have another shot at gaining notoriety next month. Officials say a screening is being organized in Copenhagen to coincide with the year's international climate change conference. Three thousand copies of the film's DVD will be handed out like candy at the talks, with the hope that at some point, an American attendee will pick up the film and spread the word as broadly as it has already been spread elsewhere.
Link to HD Youtube
Free climate documentary is worldwide hit but bombs in U.S.
Publication: Environment and Energy Daily | Article Date: 11/10/2009 | Author: Nathanial Gronewold
NEW YORK-- It's arguably the most famous and influential environmental documentary you've probably never heard of.
This past summer, on June 5, the film "Home" opened at box offices worldwide in front of millions. It caused a sensation in Europe and reverberated across much of Africa and Asia, especially China. To date, at least 200 million people have seen the film, and that number grows every day as schools around the world request DVDs to screen in front of their students.
But aside from an opening-day screening in New York's Central Park, reviewed later by The New York Times, the film has received barely any mention in the United States.
"It was not distributed in any theater here. There was a public screening in Central Park in New York, and I'll organize a screening in Los Angeles myself," said the film's French director, Yann Arthus-Bertrand, in an interview. "In America, it was quite difficult to show the movie."
"Home" is a film comprised entirely of aerial photographs of the Earth's landscape and oceans, and mankind's mark on them. The English version is narrated by the actress Glenn Close and recounts the origins of life on this planet and the factors that made life possible. The film argues that humans are actively destroying those life-support systems, but ends on a hopeful note.
Arthus-Bertrand is famous throughout Europe for his work mixing aerial photography and environmental activism. He is an award-winning photographer and hosts a popular weekly television show on environmentalism. But even though he continues to receive accolades for his motion picture debut on the other side of the Atlantic, Arthus-Bertrand says he is struggling to get the movie's central message across to American audiences.
A bigger global movie than Al Gore's
The film he is working so hard to promote in the United States is the culmination of his work promoting environmental protection through vivid visual representations. For two hours, the film's cameras sweep over ancient volcanoes, lakes, mountain ranges and dramatic scenes of human alterations to the environment. In a review, environmental magazine The Ecologist says that after viewing "Home," "you come away with these fantastic images floating around in your head, reminding you of how beautiful this planet actually is."
The movie intersperses images of a vast stretch of frozen Siberian lakes with the black, churned earth of Alberta's oil sands. Pristine wilderness is juxtaposed with vast expanses of Southeast Asian rainforests converted into palm oil plantations. Compact villages living off the land are contrasted with the urban expanses of Los Angeles and Tokyo.
Producers say the film about three years to make and cost roughly $15 million. Hundreds of days were spent shooting over locations in 54 different countries. Rosita Crone, an official with the Paris-based GoodPlanet Foundation, one of the sponsors of the film, said the film continues to run in syndication on television in Europe and Asia and likely enjoys a broader distribution than former Vice President Al Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth."
"It was distributed all over the world," Arthus-Bertrand said. "In France and some countries, the impact was very big. In some other countries, we don't know exactly."
Arthus-Bertrand says that although the movie's worldwide premier went off without a hitch, distribution in the United States is now the main challenge he faces. And he believes he knows why it has been such a flop in this market so far: because the movie is free.
In an effort at environmental philanthropy, the financial backers of the $15 million project decided early on to distribute "Home" entirely for free, with no copyright or licensing restrictions. DVDs are sent out for free upon request or handed out at private screenings organized by activists. Television stations are invited, even urged, to air the film freely and without having to obtain the requisite permissions beforehand. The entire film has already been uploaded to YouTube.
An inconvenient business plan
The aim was to reach as many people as possible, to visually represent to the world what humans are doing to the planet, how modern practices are unsustainable, and how mankind has to find a new development model to avoid catastrophe. But ironically, the model the film's boosters used to reach the world makes it almost impossible to screen it in the largest movie market of them all.
"When there's no money involved to show the movie, the circuit breaks down completely," said Arthus-Bertrand. "It's quite difficult when you have a nonprofit movie. I think it was a mistake to do a movie like that."
The promoters of "Home" say U.S. television stations largely don't know what to do with a film they can screen for free. Its untested nature makes them reluctant to spend money promoting the film. Arthus-Bertrand says National Geographic ran it recently but did almost nothing to advertise or promote the film, resulting in a very weak response from viewers.
An agreement has been reached with FOX to distribute the film to U.S. audiences, but to almost no effect. "The guys at FOX don't believe in the movie. I don't know why," Arthus-Bertrand complains.
"Home" will have another shot at gaining notoriety next month. Officials say a screening is being organized in Copenhagen to coincide with the year's international climate change conference. Three thousand copies of the film's DVD will be handed out like candy at the talks, with the hope that at some point, an American attendee will pick up the film and spread the word as broadly as it has already been spread elsewhere.
re: Saints Hype Video
Posted by DemBoys on 11/13/09 at 1:19 pm
Bump
Saints Hype Video
Posted by DemBoys on 11/2/09 at 6:43 pm
re: Seeking Video Editor for Saints Video
Posted by DemBoys on 10/6/09 at 10:23 am
asap
Seeking Video Editor for Saints Video
Posted by DemBoys on 10/5/09 at 8:07 pm
Whats happenin Saints fans..
We recently recorded a song about the Saints called "Roll with the Black and Gold" and we're looking for a video editor to help us cut a youtube hype video to our song...
If you or anyone you know is interested in making a few extra bucks - send us an email at DemBoysMusic@gmail.com
You can stream the song from Dem Boys Music dot com
Who Dat!
We recently recorded a song about the Saints called "Roll with the Black and Gold" and we're looking for a video editor to help us cut a youtube hype video to our song...
If you or anyone you know is interested in making a few extra bucks - send us an email at DemBoysMusic@gmail.com
You can stream the song from Dem Boys Music dot com
Who Dat!
re: New Saints Music! PROMO UPDATE
Posted by DemBoys on 10/4/09 at 1:44 pm
Who Dat!
re: TD.com Raffle Ticket Give Away...Winners Announced...
Posted by DemBoys on 10/2/09 at 5:36 pm
I'm in...the prize money will be donated.
re: New Saints Music! PROMO UPDATE
Posted by DemBoys on 10/2/09 at 3:36 pm
quote:
I can't get in the car without my 2 year old demanding that we play it.
Putty - that's what I'm talkin bout!
re: New Saints Music! PROMO UPDATE
Posted by DemBoys on 10/2/09 at 3:10 pm
Check out this Article in Offbeat Magazine
re: New Saints Music! PROMO UPDATE
Posted by DemBoys on 10/2/09 at 10:02 am
Promo Update - The first five people to email their address to demboysmusic@gmail.com will recieve free CDs in the mail...
re: New Saints Music! PROMO UPDATE
Posted by DemBoys on 10/1/09 at 12:02 pm
Thanks!
New Saints Music! PROMO UPDATE
Posted by DemBoys on 9/25/09 at 3:45 pm
Whats happenin Saints fans. Yall check out the tune we just recorded in NOLA called "Roll with the Black and Gold." Its streaming at our website Dem Boys Music dot com and available on iTunes and Amazon.
Tigerdroppings Promo: first 5 people to email us your address at demboysmusic@gmail.com will recieve free disks in the mail....
Who Dat!
Article in Offbeat Magazine
Review by Scott Richard
The New Orleans Saints are one of the few teams in the NFL that have had a team song. Since the inaugural season in 1967, the team song has been the old jazz standard "When the Saints Come Marching In." There's no denying that that song will always be a cherished part of football in New Orleans and of the city itself, but it lacks something that is a big part of the city and the very thing that is at the heart of Who Dat Nation: a party. What the old standard and every Saints song since has lacked is more than made up for in "Roll with the Black and Gold." Music is the heart of New Orleans, and "Roll with the Black and Gold" is exactly what the New Orleans Saints and the Who Dat Nation need to roll this season's party into Miami. It is a must for every Saints fan and will be the new Saints anthem for this season and seasons to come.
Tigerdroppings Promo: first 5 people to email us your address at demboysmusic@gmail.com will recieve free disks in the mail....
Who Dat!
Article in Offbeat Magazine
Review by Scott Richard
The New Orleans Saints are one of the few teams in the NFL that have had a team song. Since the inaugural season in 1967, the team song has been the old jazz standard "When the Saints Come Marching In." There's no denying that that song will always be a cherished part of football in New Orleans and of the city itself, but it lacks something that is a big part of the city and the very thing that is at the heart of Who Dat Nation: a party. What the old standard and every Saints song since has lacked is more than made up for in "Roll with the Black and Gold." Music is the heart of New Orleans, and "Roll with the Black and Gold" is exactly what the New Orleans Saints and the Who Dat Nation need to roll this season's party into Miami. It is a must for every Saints fan and will be the new Saints anthem for this season and seasons to come.
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