⑴ 求专辑《The Best Of Bond James Bond》,是007电影的主题曲。。。
http://lib.verycd.com/2004/12/28/0000032685.html
是电驴的,我已经下载完毕
⑵ MOBYBEST是个什么牌子阿
立简!广州立简实体门店位于广州十三行和平东路6号,地处十三行男装批发核心。 旗下客户遍及中国各省,港台特区。 服装风格以时尚潮流韩版为主,面料选用纯棉。
⑶ mobybest是什么意思
是一个服装的牌子。。
⑷ MOBY的资料
Moby可以说是电子音乐界的异类,家庭环境是造就他特立独行的最大因素,父母亲皆是磕药的摇滚激进份子,早在幼年时期,父亲就因磕药车祸身亡,孤独与不快乐似乎已成为童年挥之不去的阴影,从吃素、不抽烟,磕药及喝酒,提倡环保、人文思想以及反暴力、对社会不平等之看法,一再出现于电子音乐哲学家、思想家的作品专辑中,从最新专辑“PLAY”单曲<Why Does My Heart Feel so Bad?> 的MTV中,Little Idiot Moby (Moby卡通人物化身)身处在已被战争、人类破坏殆尽的地球上,四处可见枯死的树木、荒凉的沙漠及被大海淹没的陆地,孤单的行走而无人理会,始终在他身边的只有一只毫不起眼的小狗,结尾部份在梯子顶端观看月亮,更透露出强烈的落寞感,似乎对他来说孤独已成为日常生活的一部份,甚至全部。
如果说Moby是电子音乐界的鬼才或顽童,我想是没有人会反对的。不按常理、无法捉摸的音乐型式始终是世人对其作品的见地,从单曲<Thousand>得到金氏世界记录“史上最快的歌曲”就可得到映证。对他的作品,要以单一种音乐型式呈现是较为少见的,总是尝试性的融合各种不同类型的音乐型式,又能将旋律诠释的如此完美,就拿这次的新专辑“PLAY”来说,取样自1925年史学家Alan Lomax的田野录音作、黑人灵歌与蓝调福音,搭配着Hip-Hop的节奏和凄美的弦乐与钢琴旋律,再加上Moby透过效果器的人声献唱与轻迷浪漫的民谣吉他,总是很怀疑他的构想来源是如此的精湛及诡异,毕竟天才仍旧是少数的。
年度 专辑名称
1992 Moby
1993 Ambient
1995 Everything Is Wrong
1996 Animal Rights
1996 Everything Is Wrong: DJ Mix Album
1997 I Like to Score
1998 Animal Rights [Japan]
1998 Animal Rights [UK Bonus Disc]
1999 Play
年度 合 辑
1993 Early Underground
1995 Mixmag Live!, Vol. 7
1996 Rare: Collected B-Sides
1999 Story So Far
年度 单 曲
1991 Next Is the E
1991 Drop a Beat [EP]
1992 Go Remixes [EP]
1993 All That I Need Is to Be Loved
1994 Hymn [UK #1]
1994 Hymn [UK #2]
1994 Hymn [US]
1994 Feeling So Real
1994 Move EP [EP]
1995 Everytime You Touch Me
1995 Bring Back My Happiness [EP]
1995 Into the Blue (Remixes)
1996 That's When I Reach for My Revolver
1996 Animal Rights
1996 Come on Baby
1997 The James Bond Theme [US]
1997 James Bond Theme: Re-Version
1998 Honey [UK #1]
1998 Honey [UK #2]
1998 Honey [US CD #1]
1998 Honey [US CD #2]
1998 Honey [US 12"]
1998 Honey (Remixes) 1999 Run On [UK LP Single]
1999 Run On [Germany LP Single]
1999 Honey
1999 Bodyrock [UK]
1999 Bodyrock [US]
1999 Why Does My Heart Feel So Bad? [12"]
1999 Why Does My Heart Feel So Bad [CD #1]
1999 Why Does My Heart Feel So Bad [CD #2]
2000 Why Does My Heart Feel So Bad [Australia]
2000 Natural Blues [US CD SIngle]
2000 Natural Blues, Pt. 1 [UK CD Single]
2001 Natural Blues, Pt. 2 [UK CD Single]
2000 Run on, Pt. 2 [Import CD Single]
2000 Run on, Pt. 1 [Import CD Single]
Moby辉煌史
葛莱美奖提名 Grammy Nominations
最佳另类专辑“PLAY”for Best Alternative Performance (an album category)
单曲<Bodyrock>最佳摇滚乐曲<Bodyrock> for Best Rock Instrumental Performance
英国音乐大奖提名Brit Award Nomination
最佳国际男艺人Best International Male Artist
1999年美国得奖成绩 Best of 1999
村声音乐杂志 Village Voice 年度最佳专辑第1名
独奏音乐杂志 Solo Magazine 年度最佳专辑第3名,"Honey"年度最佳单曲第10名及90年最佳专辑第20名
美国娱乐周刊 Entertainment Weekly 年度最佳专辑第4名
滚石杂志 Rolling Stone 年度最佳专辑第5名
男性风尚杂志 GQ 年度最佳专辑第2名
亚马逊网络书店 Amozon.com 年度最佳专辑第4名
美国今日杂志 USA Today 年度最佳专辑第4名
美国专业杂志Gear Magazine 年度最佳专辑
时人杂志 People Magazine 年度最佳专辑
华盛顿日报Washington Post 年度最佳专辑第10名
芝加哥论坛 Chicago Tribune 年度最佳专辑第3名
波士顿全球日报Boston Globe 年度最佳专辑第2名
美国洛杉矶时报 L.A. Times 90年最佳专辑第10名
美国校园电台杂志 CMJ 年度最佳专辑第4名
美国DJ专业杂志 Mixer 年度最佳专辑第3名
1999年英国得奖成绩
英国Heal杂志 年度最佳专辑
英国The Face杂志 年度最佳专辑第4名
英国DJ专业杂志 Jockey Slut 年度最佳专辑
英国Muzik音乐杂志 最佳单曲<Why Does My Heart Feel So Bed?>
英国Esquire杂志 年度最佳专辑
英国Ministry舞曲专业杂志 年度最佳专辑第8名
英国Evening Standard杂志 年度最佳专辑
英国Flipside杂志 年度最佳专辑第2名,年度最佳单曲<Run On>
英国Molo专业杂志 年度最佳单曲<Honey>
英国Q专业杂志 年度最佳专辑
英国Sky杂志 年度最佳专辑第8名
⑸ 莫比的荣誉
Moby辉煌史
葛莱美奖提名 Grammy Nominations
最佳另类专辑“PLAY”for Best Alternative Performance (an album category)
单曲<Bodyrock>;最佳摇滚乐曲<Bodyrock> for Best Rock Instrumental Performance
英国音乐大奖提名Brit Award Nomination
最佳国际男艺人Best International Male Artist
1999年美国得奖成绩 Best of 1999
村声音乐杂志 Village Voice 年度最佳专辑第1名
独奏音乐杂志 Solo Magazine 年度最佳专辑第3名,Honey年度最佳单曲第10名及90年最佳专辑第20名
美国娱乐周刊 Entertainment Weekly 年度最佳专辑第4名
滚石杂志 Rolling Stone 年度最佳专辑第5名
男性风尚杂志 GQ 年度最佳专辑第2名
亚马逊网络书店Amozon.com年度最佳专辑第4名
美国今日杂志 USA Today 年度最佳专辑第4名
美国专业杂志Gear Magazine 年度最佳专辑
时人杂志 People Magazine 年度最佳专辑
华盛顿日报Washington Post 年度最佳专辑第10名
芝加哥论坛 Chicago Tribune 年度最佳专辑第3名
波士顿全球日报Boston Globe 年度最佳专辑第2名
美国洛杉矶时报 L.A. Times 90年最佳专辑第10名
美国校园电台杂志 CMJ 年度最佳专辑第4名
美国DJ专业杂志 Mixer 年度最佳专辑第3名
1999年英国得奖成绩
英国Heal杂志 年度最佳专辑
英国The Face杂志 年度最佳专辑第4名
英国DJ专业杂志 Jockey Slut 年度最佳专辑
英国Muzik音乐杂志 最佳单曲<Why Does My Heart Feel So Bed?>
英国Esquire杂志 年度最佳专辑
英国Ministry舞曲专业杂志 年度最佳专辑第8名
英国Evening Standard杂志 年度最佳专辑
英国Flipside杂志 年度最佳专辑第2名,年度最佳单曲<Run On>
英国Molo专业杂志 年度最佳单曲<Honey>
英国Q专业杂志 年度最佳专辑
英国Sky杂志 年度最佳专辑第8名
⑹ moby dick中主要的几个人物的名字是什么,最好有中英文对照
Characters in Moby-Dick
The crew-members of the Pequod are carefully drawn stylizations of human types and habits; critics have often described the crew as a "self-enclosed universe".
[edit] Ishmael
In the novel's first sentence, the narrator famously declares, "Call me Ishmael." Initially, he is the only narrator, but after the Pequod leaves port, he repeatedly fades (including the narration of several scenes he could not possibly have witnessed firsthand) and comes back to full prominence.
The name Ishmael also appears in the Bible as that of the first son of Abraham in the Old Testament. The name has come to symbolize orphans, exiles, and social outcasts—in the opening paragraph of Moby-Dick, Ishmael tells the reader that he has turned to the sea out of a feeling of alienation from human society. In the last line of the book, Ishmael also refers to himself symbolically as an orphan. Ishmael has a rich literary background (he has previously been a schoolteacher), which he brings to bear on his shipmates and events that occur while at sea.
Ishmael resembles Melville in several ways (as well as the narrator of Melville's White-Jacket), being well-ecated and reflective. Ishmael sees his shipmates as archetypes of human nature and society, and tells his story couched in a vast array of detail, largely occurring ring sections in which Ishmael takes an almost-omniscient viewpoint.
[edit] Elijah
The character Elijah (named for the Biblical prophet, Elijah, who is also referred to in the King James Bible as Elias), on learning that Ishmael and Queequeg have signed onto Ahab's ship, asks, "Anything down there about your souls?" When Ishmael reacts with surprise, Elijah continues:
"Oh, perhaps you hav'n't got any," he said quickly. "No matter though, I know many chaps that hav'n't got any – good luck to 'em; and they are all the better off for it. A soul's a sort of a fifth wheel to a wagon."[4]
Later in the conversation, Elijah adds:
"Well, well, what's signed, is signed; and what's to be, will be; and then again, perhaps it wont be, after all. Any how, it's all fixed and arranged a'ready; and some sailors or other must go with him, I suppose; as well these as any other men, God pity 'em! Morning to ye, shipmates, morning; the ineffable heavens bless ye; I'm sorry I stopped ye."[5]
[edit] Ahab
Ahab is the tyrannical captain of the Pequod who is driven by a monomaniacal desire to kill Moby Dick, the whale that maimed him on the previous whaling voyage. Despite the fact that he's a Quaker, he seeks revenge in defiance of his religion's well-known pacifism. Ahab's name comes directly from the Bible (see 1 Kings 16:28).
Little information is provided about Ahab's life prior to meeting Moby Dick, although it is known that he was orphaned at a young age. When discussing the purpose of his quest with Starbuck, it is revealed that he first began whaling at eighteen and has continued in the trade for forty years, having spent less than three on land. He also mentions his "girl-wife," whom he married late in life, and their young son, but does not give their names.
In Ishmael's first encounter with Ahab's name, he responds "When that wicked king was slain, the dogs, did they not lick his blood?" (Moby-Dick, Chapter 16).[17]
Ahab ultimately dooms the crew of the Pequod (save for Ishmael) to death by his obsession with Moby Dick. During the final chase, Ahab hurls his final harpoon while yelling his now-famous revenge line:
... to the last I grapple with thee; from hell's heart I stab at thee; for hate's sake I spit my last breath at thee.
The harpoon becomes lodged in Moby Dick's flesh and Ahab, caught in his own harpoon's rope and unable to free himself, is dragged into the cold oblivion of the sea with the injured whale. The whale eventually destroys the whaleboats and crew, and sinks the Pequod.
Ahab has the qualities of a tragic hero – a great heart and a fatal flaw – and his deeply philosophical ruminations are expressed in language that is not only deliberately lofty and Shakespearian, but also so heavily iambic as often to read like Shakespeare's own pentameters.
Ahab's motivation for hunting Moby Dick is perhaps best summed up in the following passage:
The White Whale swam before him as the monomaniac incarnation of all those malicious agencies which some deep men feel eating in them, till they are left living on with half a heart and half a lung. That intangible malignity which has been from the beginning; to whose dominion even the modern Christians ascribe one-half of the worlds; which the ancient Ophites of the east reverenced in their statue devil; -- Ahab did not fall down and worship it like them; but deliriously transferring its idea to the abhorred white whale, he pitted himself, all mutilated, against it. All that most maddens and torments; all that stirs up the lees of things; all truth with malice in it; all that cracks the sinews and cakes the brain; all the subtle demonisms of life and thought; all evil, to crazy Ahab, were visibly personified, and made practically assailable in Moby-Dick. He piled upon the whale's white hump the sum of all the general rage and hate felt by his whole race from Adam down; and then, as if his chest had been a mortar, he burst his hot heart's shell upon it.
[edit] Moby Dick
Moby Dick is the antagonist of the book. The color white is explored in the chapter "The Whiteness of the Whale." It calls into question the meaning of the chapters on cetology. In popular culture, Moby Dick is often depicted as being an albino whale. For example, in the huge whale mural at the New Bedford Whaling Museum, a white sperm whale with a red eye and several harpoons (detached from their boats) stuck in its back is prominently displayed. This seems accurate, since the aforementioned chapter "The Whiteness of the Whale" refers explicitly to "the albino whale." Others however claim that this is inaccurate, and that Moby Dick is colored like an average sperm whale, but with so many scars as to appear white or is gray with several patches and streaks of white. He is also described as having a wrinkled brow, a crooked jaw and three gashes in his right tail fluke.
Moby Dick's dimensions are never specified, but he is said to be one of the largest, if not the largest sperm whale known. Subsequently, Melville states (Chapter 103) that bull sperm whales can grow to the length of ninety feet; (this would be disputed by modern marine biologists who maintain they rarely exceed sixty feet). Moby Dick also appears to be unusually intelligent, resorting to many clever strategies to defeat Ahab and his crew. He also seems to be capable of using his injuries to great advantage. On the second day of the chase, he allows Ahab and his men to strike him with their harpoons ring a head-on charge; he then swims around wildly to entangle the harpoons before yanking Ahab towards him in order to cut him up with the harpoons embedded in his flesh. Moby Dick then smashes Stubb and Flask's boats with his flukes, before sending Ahab's boat flying with a powerful headbutt.
[edit] Mates
The three mates of the Pequod are all from New England.
[edit] Starbuck
Starbuck, the young first mate of the Pequod, is a thoughtful and intellectual Quaker from Nantucket.
Uncommonly conscientious for a seaman, and ened with a deep natural reverence, the wild watery loneliness of his life did therefore strongly incline him to superstition; but to that sort of superstition, which in some organization seems rather to spring, somehow, from intelligence than from ignorance... [H]is far-away domestic memories of his young Cape wife and child, tend[ed] to bend him ... from the original ruggedness of his nature, and open him still further to those latent influences which, in some honest-hearted men, restrain the gush of dare-devil daring, so often evinced by others in the more perilous vicissitudes of the fishery. "I will have no man in my boat," said Starbuck, "who is not afraid of a whale." By this, he seemed to mean, not only that the most reliable and useful courage was that which arises from the fair estimation of the encountered peril, but that an utterly fearless man is a far more dangerous comrade than a coward.
— Moby-Dick, Ch. 26
Little is said about Starbuck's early life, except that he is married with a son. Unlike Ahab's wife, who remains nameless, Starbuck gives his wife's name as Mary. Such is his desire to return to them, that when nearly reaching the last leg of their quest for Moby Dick, he considers arresting or even killing Ahab with a loaded musket, one of several which is kept by Ahab (in a previous chapter Ahab threatening Starbuck with one when disobeying him, despite Starbuck being in the right) and turning the ship back, straight for home.
Starbuck is alone among the crew in objecting to Ahab's quest, declaring it madness to want revenge on an animal, which lacks reason. Starbuck advocates continuing the more mundane pursuit of whales for their oil. But he lacks the support of the crew in his opposition to Ahab, and is unable to persuade them to turn back. Despite his misgivings, he feels himself bound by his obligations to obey the captain.
Starbuck was an important Quaker family name on Nantucket Island, and there were several actual whalemen of this period named "Starbuck," as evidenced by the name of Starbuck Island in the South Pacific whaling grounds. The multinational coffee chain Starbucks was named after Starbuck, not for any affinity for coffee but after the name Pequod was rejected by one of the co-founders.
[edit] Stubb
Stubb, the second mate of the Pequod, is from Cape Cod, and always seems to have a pipe in his mouth and a smile on his face. "Good-humored, easy, and careless, he presided over his whaleboat as if the most deadly encounter were but a dinner, and his crew all invited guests." (Moby-Dick, Ch. 27) Although he is not an ecated man, Stubb is remarkably articulate, and ring whale hunts keeps up an imaginative patter reminiscent of that of some characters in Shakespeare. Scholarly portrayals range from that of an optimistic simpleton to a paragon of lived philosophic wisdom.[18]
[edit] Flask
Flask is the third mate of the Pequod. He is from Martha's Vineyard.
King Post is his nickname because he is a short, stout, ruddy young fellow, very pugnacious concerning whales, who somehow seemed to think that the great Leviathans had personally and hereditarily affronted him; and therefore it was a sort of point of honor with him, to destroy them whenever encountered.
— Moby-Dick, Ch. 27
[edit] Harpooners
The harpooners of the Pequod are all non-Christians from various parts of the world. Each serves on a mate's boat.
[edit] Queequeg
Main article: Queequeg
Queequeg hails from a fictional island in the South Seas inhabited by a cannibal tribe, and is the son of the chief of his tribe. Since leaving the island, he has become extremely skilled with the harpoon. He befriends Ishmael very early in the novel, when they meet in New Bedford, Massachusetts before leaving for Nantucket. He is described as existing in a state between civilized and savage. For example, Ishmael recounts with amusement how Queequeg feels it necessary to hide himself when pulling on his boots, noting that if he were a savage he wouldn't consider boots necessary, but if he were completely civilized he would realize there was no need to be modest when pulling on his boots.
Queequeg is the harpooner on Starbuck's boat, where Ishmael is also an oarsman. Queequeg is best friends with Ishmael in the story. He is prominent early in the novel, but later fades in significance, as does Ishmael.
[edit] Tashtego
Tashtego is described as a Native American harpooner. The personification of the hunter, he turns from hunting land animals to hunting whales. Tashtego is the harpooner on Stubb's boat.
Next was Tashtego, an unmixed Indian from Gay Head, the most westerly promontory of Martha’s Vineyard, where there still exists the last remnant of a village of red men, which has long supplied the neighboring island of Nantucket with many of her most daring harpooners. In the fishery, they usually go by the generic name of Gay-Headers.
— Moby-Dick, Ch.27
[edit] Daggoo
Daggoo is a gigantic African harpooner from a costal village with a noble bearing and grace. He is the harpooner on Flask's boat.
[edit] Fedallah
Fedallah is the harpooner on Ahab's boat. He is of Indian Zoroastrian ("Parsi") descent. Due to descriptions of him having lived in China, he might have been among the great wave of Parsi traders that made their way to Hong Kong and the Far East from India ring the mid-19th century. At the time when the Pequod sets sail, Fedallah is hidden on board, and he emerges with Ahab's boat's crew later on, to the surprise of the crew. Fedallah is referred to in the text as Ahab's "Dark Shadow." Ishmael calls him a "fire worshipper" and the crew speculates that he is a devil in man's disguise. He is the source of a variety of prophecies regarding Ahab and his hunt for Moby Dick.
Tall and smart, with one white tooth evilly protruding from its steel-like lips. A rumpled Chinese jacket of black cotton funereally invested him, with wide black trowsers of the same dark stuff. But strangely crowning this ebonness was a glistening white plaited turban, the living hair braided and coiled round and round upon his head.
— Moby-Dick, Ch.48
[edit] Other notable characters
Pip (nicknamed "Pippin," but "Pip" for short) is a black boy from Tolland County, Connecticut who is "the most insignificant of the Pequod's crew". Because he is physically slight, he is made a ship-keeper, (a sailor who stays in the Pequod while its whaleboats go out). Ishmael contrasts him with the "ll and torpid in his intellects" — and paler and much older — steward Dough-Boy, describing Pip as "over tender-hearted" but "at bottom very bright, with that pleasant, genial, jolly brightness peculiar to his tribe". Ishmael goes so far as to chastise the reader: "Nor smile so, while I write that this little black was brilliant, for even blackness has its brilliancy; behold yon lustrous ebony, panelled in king's cabinets."[19]
The after-oarsman on Stubb's boat is injured, however, so Pip is temporarily reassigned to Stubb's whaleboat crew. The first time out, Pip jumps from the boat, causing Stubb and Tashtego to lose their already-harpooned whale. Tashtego and the rest of the crew are furious; Stubb chides him "officially" and "unofficially", even raising the specter of slavery: "a whale would sell for thirty times what you would, Pip, in Alabama". The next time a whale is sighted, Pip again jumps overboard and is left stranded in the "awful lonesomeness" of the sea while Stubb's and the others' boats are dragged along by their harpooned whales. By the time he is rescued, he has become (at least to the other sailors) "an idiot", "mad". Ishmael, however, thought Pip had a mystical experience: "So man's insanity is heaven's sense." Pip and his experience are crucial because they serve as ambration, in Ishmael's words "providing the sometimes madly merry and predestinated craft with a living and ever accompanying prophecy of whatever shattered sequel might prove her own." Pip's madness is full of poetry and eloquence; he is reminiscent of Tom in King Lear.[19] Ahab later sympathizes with Pip and takes the young boy under his wing.
Dough-boy is the pale, nervous steward of the ship. The Cook (Fleece), Blacksmith and Carpenter of the ship are each highlighted in at least one chapter near the end of the book. Fleece, a very old African-American with bad knees, is presented in the chapter "Stubb Kills a Whale" at some length in a dialogue where Stubb good-humoredly takes him to task over how to prepare a variety of dishes from the whale's carcass.
The crew as a whole is exceedingly international, having constituents from both the United States and the world. Chapter 40, "Midnight, Forecastle," highlights, in its stage-play manner (in Shakespearean style), the striking variety in the sailors' origins. A partial list of the speakers includes sailors from the Isle of Man, France, Iceland, Holland, the Azores, Sicily and Malta (Italy), China, Denmark, Portugal, India, England, Spain, Chile and Ireland.
中文可参考链接