Jul 01 2007
Make Your Own Music With Splice
This is a really cool vid I found on YouTube about making your own music with Splice. I’m gonna surf on over and make some and post it here. Try it. It’s pretty easy.
Mail this postPopularity: 2% [?]
Jul 01 2007
This is a really cool vid I found on YouTube about making your own music with Splice. I’m gonna surf on over and make some and post it here. Try it. It’s pretty easy.
Mail this postPopularity: 2% [?]
Jul 01 2007
Just passing on the luv. . . .
Yahoo has joined Facebook and hit a home run in the process with the Yahoo Music Videos Application. This is an official application from Yahoo Music. This application is one of the best designed, executed and deeply integrated Facebook applications we have seen yet. The user interface is amazing and very intuitive.
With this Yahoo Facebook application you can have access to the largest collection of music videos online. You can easily post your favorite video on your profile; watch videos by your favorite artists; search, discover and share favorite videos with your friends; send and receive video dedications; and more.
Check it out and read the full article on at FaceReviews.com
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Jun 30 2007
Kids love to listen to music, and if they want to learn how to play a harmonica, you?re in luck. There are a lot of benefits for kids to learn harmonica songs. Don?t fear that if your child learns how to play one that they?ll be limited on the different types of music that they can play. Harmonica songs are versatile for just about any occasion.
Songs that you can play on the harmonica have a lot of style, and if your child learns how to play one it teaches them so many other things. Eye hand coordination is one of the first things that they?ll learn when playing harmonica songs. Kids as young as three years old can start learning how to play a harmonica, and older kids from 8 years old and up can take lessons. At that age they have the ability to better control their diaphragm, so they can play their harmonica songs they?ve learned.
Cowboys in the wild west of the 1800s took their harmonicas to the plain to relieve boredom, and to entertain others. Beautiful harmonica songs like Red River Valley and Clementine could be heard across the plains, and your kids can do the same. Don?t fret though if they aren?t wild over western themed harmonica songs. There are a lot of other styles and tempos of music like the Westphalia Waltz, or even a few polka songs.
If your kid wants to learn how to play it?s best to start them out with a diatone one. These types are easy to use and only have 10 holes to deal with. They?re also cheaper in price, running on an average of $50.00 and upward. After they?ve mastered it they can move on up to a one that is called a chromatics harmonica. Your child will be able to play minor keys by sliding a bar and this can fluctuate the sounds too. Soon they?ll be playing harmonica songs like a lonesome dirge, or snappy Irish jig.
You can, of course, purchase sheet music, but it might be best to start your child out using books that tell them with simplified graphics on how to play a song. Usually, the more complicated chromatics style requires a formalized training with traditional sheet music to learn how to play. Sheet music or graphic style instruction music can be ordered from most music stores that sell instruments, or over the Internet. Price ranges for harmonica songs sheet music are from a couple of dollars to a few cents.
When we have the ability to play a music we can tell others what type of music we like, but it also says how we?re feeling too. This is one of the best ways that your child can express their feelings. All types of music help kids deal with the issues of life. It?s nice too that they can play their harmonica songs anytime they like because the harmonica is just a pocket away.
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Jun 29 2007
There are singing competitions all over the country now, where young singers can compete for cash prizes, and the chance of fame and fortune. American Idol is the best known of these singing competitions, but there are many others as well. There is one in Las Vegas with a $50,000 cash prize just for winning the singing contest. Besides that, there is European Idol, which is sweeping much of the rest of the world with its unprecedented popularity.
My friends and I all love to sing, but we basically completely ignore these singing competitions. I don’t even think the singing is particularly good. It is all bad pop music, saccharine sweet and completely without soul. We have our own singing competitions, and although no one ever gets 50 grand for winning them, I think that they are a lot more fun anyway.
Sometimes, after several rounds of drinks, we will pick a song and compete, doing different renditions of it. Whoever can sink it in the loudest, grittiest, most raucous and audacious intonation automatically wins, and everyone has to buy him or her a drink. By the next round of that contest, the winner of the previous one has a clear advantage, and usually whoever wins the first one wins all night, or until he passes out.
Because we are classically trained vocalists, our singing competitions are not always quite so ridiculous. Sometimes we form duos, trios, or quartets among ourselves, and entertain our other non-singing friends at parties. They have to vote on which piece is best, or perhaps we informally decide among ourselves.
Additionally, because we are all in professional choirs, sometimes we go to attend real singing competitions. Although they receive little attention, and many professionals shun them, nonetheless there are in fact singing competitions where choirs from all over the state compete for a prize and the recognition of their peers. The best thing about these singing competitions isn’t actually the trying to win (although the winning is nice). It’s the festive atmosphere of the whole thing. It is wonderful to spend all day just singing some classics with some of the best singers in the country, singing our pieces and listening to them singing theirs. These singing competitions are always the highlights of the seasons, because it is such an opportunity to be around other great artists, hear what they are doing, and pick up new ideas.
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Jun 28 2007
There are many places to get a drumming lesson if you really look, but it isn’t as easy as with some instruments. For guitar, there are millions of teachers crawling out of the sewers, six strings blazing, in every city on earth, but you might just be somewhere that makes it difficult to get a drum lesson. I played in band growing up, and let me tell you, the percussion that you learn in band is alright, but it isn’t really enough to get you far. You won’t learn enough to find your way around a kit unless you begin with a drum lesson outside of school. Otherwise, you’ll learn stick control, fundamentals, and nothing else, and that won’t get you anywhere.
Some people are so desperate to get a drumming lesson or two that they spend their summer at some kind of rock and roll camp. This is a good place for teens who want to play music to get away and learn under the guidance of experienced musicians, but if you ask me it is a kind of lame idea. I mean, as far as it goes for me, rock and roll is about experimentation, and learning yourself with your friend. Sure, you can benefit from a drumming lesson or whatever, but really spending your summer in a place where they try to teach you rock sounds kind of weak to me.
Other people get drum lessons online, which is even sillier. Sure, you can get your first drumming lesson or two from a computer which shows you where to put the beats with some live recorded video, but I feel like you’d do better to just do what I did, and listen to some of your favorite bands. Start with something where the percussion is kind of simple and straight forward, so that it will be no strain for you to follow, and then work your way up to more intricate musical forms as you go. You can get a good drumming lesson just from listening to the experts do it. Also, hang out with musicians. Even if no one in your area advertises a drumming lesson, you should be able to find someone who will show you something. Many of the greats got every single drumming lesson they ever needed from older, more experienced musicians who they met at shows and gigs, and went on to be successful.
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