Saturday 16 January 2016

SAY IT BY BERRYBOY (cover)



DANIEL AJABOR  well known by his stage name "Berryboy" is the most distinguished versatile artist in the Nigerian music industry , and he does the afro pop version of the popular song "SAY IT" by tori lanez, and came out with a spectacular rhythm, enjoy!!
  




Tuesday 12 January 2016

Lil Kesh – Ibile (Prod. PHEELZ AND YOUNG Jonn)


not withstanding the controversies that surrounded the young star lil kesh mr a.k.a his not well, he recently dropped this mad hit IBILE, and its got the streets banging from gidi to the rest of nigeria and africa, this tune was crafted by pheelz and young john, and the sound came out sublime, enjoy!!

download ibile by lil kesh 

2016 Ballon d'Or: Ronaldo, Messi, Neymar, who wins?



Barcelona superstar Lionel Messi is targeting an unprecedented fifth Ballon d’Or award in Zurich on Monday, with the Argentine heavily favoured to reclaim the prize from three-time winner Cristiano Ronaldo. Brazil striker Neymar, who plays alongside Messi at Barca, is also in the running to be crowned world player of the year after he was included on the three-man shortlist for the first time.

Neymar, Messi & Ronaldo
Neymar, Messi & Ronaldo
Messi and Neymar, along with overlooked Uruguay star Luis Suarez, formed a formidable front three that propelled Barca to five trophies in 2015, including a second Champions League, La Liga and Copa del Rey treble in six seasons.

Messi, who won the award four times in a row from 2009-2012, scored 48 goals for Barca in 2015 as the Catalan giants reclaimed their status as the world’s top club side, easily overcoming South American champions River Plate in the Club World Cup in Japan last month.

Former Barca captain Carles Puyol believes Messi is the clear frontrunner for the award and backed the Argentine to rack up yet more honours in the years to come. “You never know what can happen, but it would be a big surprise and injustice if Messi didn’t win the Ballon d’Or,” Puyol told Barcelona’s official website. “The best thing about him is that he continues to evolve and has more records all the time. Now he is more complete and it seems as if he has no ceiling.

“It is difficult to imagine another player winning five Ballon d’Ors, but, moreover, Leo Messi will not retire tomorrow and if he wins on Monday and continues like that, he can win more.” Barca president Josep Maria Bartomeu was also quick to throw his support behind Messi, while Luis Enrique, who is up for coach of the year alongside Bayern Munich’s Pep Guardiola and Chile’s Copa America-winning boss Jorge Sampaoli, called the Argentine “unique and unrepeatable”.

By comparison, it was a turbulent season for Ronaldo — world player of the year in 2008, 2013 and 2014 — and Real Madrid as they played second fiddle to their arch rivals despite a contribution of 54 goals in 52 games from their Portuguese talisman.

Neymar may appear an outsider for the award this time, but the 23-year-old Brazilian is emerging as the main threat to end the Messi-Ronaldo Ballon d’Or stranglehold — Kaka in 2007 was the last player other than the dominant duo to claim the prize — after transforming his prodigious talent into 41 goals of his own this past year.

Enrique also insisted that Messi should walk away with another prize in Zurich after being nominated for the best goal of the year for his sensational solo effort in the final of the Copa del Rey against Athletic Bilbao. Messi’s strike is up against Alessandro Florenzi’s incredible long-range effort against Barcelona for Roma back in September and Brazilian Wendell Lira, but Enrique believes the setting of Messi’s goal in a cup final gives it added value.

“It is more difficult to beat four or five players in a Cup final. The other one is in a Champions League group game and obviously has its merit. Florenzi is a player with a spectacular shot, but for me Messi’s has more merit,” said Enrique. USA World Cup-winning captain Carli Lloyd, Japan midfielder Aya Miyama and now-retired Germany striker Celia Sasic are in contention for the FIFA Women’s World Player of the Year award.

Meanwhile, Jill Ellis (USA/USA national team), Mark Sampson (Wales/England national team) and Norio Sasaki (Japan/Japan national team) are the final trio to battle it out for the FIFA World Coach of the Year for Women’s Football award.

THE LIFE OF CHARLES PERRAULT



Alot of folks wondering and asking the same questions, as to
"who was CHARLES PERRAULT and why the tales you know may not be as they seem"

French author Charles Perrault was born 388 years ago on January 12, and has become immortalised as the father of the fairy tale as we know it.

Charles Perrault, author of Little Red Riding Hood, Sleeping Beauty and Cinderella was born 388 years ago, and has been commemorated with a Google Doodle.
Perrault was born in Paris in 1628, and was a lawyer before turning his hand to the written word.
Charles Perrault (1628-1703)
Charles Perrault (1628-1703)
While the Brothers Grimm are widely credited with creating the fairy tale as we know it, Perrault actually wrote Le Petit Chaperon rouge, La Belle au bois dormant and Cendrillon a full 200 years before.
In 1695, aged 67, he wrote Tales and Stories of the Past with Morals, a series of moral tales designed to prompt the reader to reflect on the dilemmas presented to the protagonist, which were well-known from folklore even then.
The volume contained the story now known as Mother Goose, alongside perrenially recognised titles such as Puss in Boots, Blue Beard and Cinderella, and less famous stories Ricky of the Tuft and Little Thumb.
Puss in Boots Google Doodle
The book was enormously successful, and was eventually translated into English in 1729 by Robert Samber.
However, readers may be shocked to discover that Perrault's original tales have lost much of their grisly detail today.
His version of Little Red Riding Hood, for example, made it more explicitly obvious that the 'wolf' is a man intent on preying on young girls who wander alone in woods.
"From this story one learns that children, especially young lasses, pretty, courteous and well-bred, do very wrong to listen to strangers, And it is not an unheard thing if the Wolf is thereby provided with his dinner," he wrote.
"I say Wolf, for all wolves are not of the same sort; there is one kind with an amenable disposition – neither noisy, nor hateful, nor angry, but tame, obliging and gentle, following the young maids in the streets, even into their homes. Alas! Who does not know that these gentle wolves are of all such creatures the most dangerous!"

The version of Sleeping Beauty we know now is a combination of a tale by Perrault (which in turn was based on older stories dating back to the 14th century) and the Grimm Brothers's Briar Rose, which was an oral version of Perrault's.
Confusing? It can be. Disney's 1959 film sweeps away the darker elements of the Sleeping Beauty stories – and they can be very dark – in favour of Princess Aurora, her three fairy godmothers, and the vengeful fairy Maleficent, who uses an enchanted spindle to put the princess into a deep sleep.
Yet another reason to avoid doing your own sewing.
In 2011, a version of Sleeping Beauty, directed by Julia Leigh, harked back to Perrault's original tale. Emily Browning played a cash-strapped student who takes a job at a brothel.
She strips naked and is drugged into a stupor, before equally naked old men pay to climb into bed with her.


The story of Maleficent was turned into a film in 2014 with Angelina Jolie in the title role. The character's wickedness is limited to a fit of rage at Princess Aurora's christening, for which she spends much of this film trying to make amends.

Only five years after the Lumière brothers recorded what is widely considered as the first film ever made, French director Georges Méliès made the first cinematic contribution to the Cinderella dynasty in 1899.

Based on Perrault’s story it contains all of the classic plot points: a fairy godmother who turns Cinderella's rags into a beautiful dress and a pumpkin into a coach, the tick of time, and a charming Prince. At the time, the six-minute film was considered a complete failure – not so anymore.
Disney's latest film of Cinderella, directed by Kenneth Branagh, came out in cinemas last year.

In this version of the fairy tale, Lily James and Richard Madden come together over a lost slipper, while Cate Blanchett plays a perfectly evil Lady Tremaine.
Branagh and screenwriter Chris Weitz stick with almost doggedly traditionalist reverence to Disney’s 1950 animated version, with just a few tactful innovations here and there.
• The 20 best fairy tale movies
In 1901, Méliès made a film based on Perrault's Bluebeard, the story of a maniacal aristocrat with a penchant for slaying his young wives and the attempts of one wife to avoid the fate of her predecessors.
In 2010, the tale was adapted for film by French novelist and director Catherine Breillat, with Dominique Thomas as Barbe Bleue (Bluebeard).
Since the first Google Doodle in 1998, more than 2,000 have been created for Google homepages around the world. Find out more about the history of the Google Doodle at

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/google/google-doodle/12093512/Who-was-Charles-Perrault-Why-the-fairy-tales-you-know-may-not-be-as-they-seem.html