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Some Words on Soul Music

Posted by Concert List | Posted in Country Music, Online Concert | Posted on 21-12-2008

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Some Words on Soul Music-Soul is still a very popular music genre which grew out of fifties rhythm and blues. There were two very diffined record labels which dominated this era, Stax and Tamala Motown.

The record label Stax started life in Memphis in 1959, founded by Jim Stewart and Estelle Axton. Around the same time Berry Gordy was creating the two record labels, Tamla and Motown in Detroit. Stax and Tamla Motown became the biggest of rivals for record sales throughout the 1960’s and 70’s. Their music idiom was the same, with a focus on the Black music form soul, but marketing and style differed significantly.

Motown took the music market by storm at a time when white audiences were ignoring many black music forms. Their success was attributed to their light soul style with their image being aimed at the middle class market. Producing hits such as ‘Stop! In the name of love’ by the Supremes, released in 1965, and ‘Heard it through the grapevine’ by Marvin Gaye, released in 1968. Artists such as the Supremes, the Four Tops and Marvin Gaye developed a clean-cut image, appearing on record sleeves and in concerts wearing formal clothes such as tuxedos and evening dresses.

Stax records concentrated more on the original form of Black American Southern soul. For Stax records the original music form was more important than image and marketing. Artists and songs included ‘In the midnight hour’ by Wilson Pickett, released in 1965, and ‘Sittin’ on the dock of the bay’ by Otis Redding, released in 1968.

Soul music has stayed one of the most popular music styles right through into the 21st century mainly due to the very reason in the title, the music gets into your ‘soul’. A good choice for both young and old!

Music, Culture, and Reality

Posted by Concert List | Posted in Online Concert | Posted on 20-12-2008

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Music, Culture, and Reality-A psychoactive is defined as that which has a profound or significant affect on the mental processes. Although typically used in the context of drugs and substances, this concept is often extended to anything evoking a seemingly ‘mystical experience.’ What people describe as mystical experiences are indistinguishable, neurologically and empirically, from deep and poignant religious experiences. Moments of oneness and insight are typical in both cases. In “The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902),” William James describes mystical experiences as ineffable, noetic, passive (rather, a sense of loss of control), and fleeting. From the remote mystics of Sufism and Kabbalah, to modern day ‘urban shamans,’ psychonauts have sought methods other than imbibement to investigate the cosmos within. Through meditation, breath control, lucid dreaming, sensory deprivation, and a host of other methods, music has stood among cultures in this service probably since early man first danced around campfires.

Ethnomusicolgist Gilbert Rouget explores the connection between music and trance throughout history. Perhaps music is more than simply a mortal construct, rather having cosmic significance. Playing music (and truly appreciating music) forces an individual to focus on the present moment, which in turn is the cornerstone of meaningful experience. This emphasis on the present moment is the consummation of all other psychonautical resources (mediation, entheogens, etc.). Subscribers of the shamanic and mystical often view the passage of time as an illusion of the human mind, and regard a ‘perpetual now’ as true reality. Interestingly this is where science begins to align with the esoteric.

Quantum Mechanics argues that particles move backwards as well as forwards in time and appear in all possible places at once. String theory proposes that the physical world is composed of little, tiny strings of vibrating energy (It seems appropriate to allude to chordophones). Terrence McKenna, recounting a DMT (Dimethyltryptamine) induced experience, asserts that the constant dance of ‘machine elves,’ (entities occupying a parallel world) creates reality as we perceive it. Are the rhythms of music akin to the language of reality? Is music a method of staying in contact with the underlying ‘Logos,’ being the true virtue in which all things exist? Whether it be Spring’s hymn of birds and bees or the elegant, geometrical dance of our physical world, music plays the universal tongue in a reality seemingly ripe with babbling discord.

76.Some Words on Soul Music
Soul is still a very popular music genre which grew out of fifties rhythm and blues. There were two very diffined record labels which dominated this era, Stax and Tamala Motown.

The record label Stax started life in Memphis in 1959, founded by Jim Stewart and Estelle Axton. Around the same time Berry Gordy was creating the two record labels, Tamla and Motown in Detroit. Stax and Tamla Motown became the biggest of rivals for record sales throughout the 1960’s and 70’s. Their music idiom was the same, with a focus on the Black music form soul, but marketing and style differed significantly.

Motown took the music market by storm at a time when white audiences were ignoring many black music forms. Their success was attributed to their light soul style with their image being aimed at the middle class market. Producing hits such as ‘Stop! In the name of love’ by the Supremes, released in 1965, and ‘Heard it through the grapevine’ by Marvin Gaye, released in 1968. Artists such as the Supremes, the Four Tops and Marvin Gaye developed a clean-cut image, appearing on record sleeves and in concerts wearing formal clothes such as tuxedos and evening dresses.

Stax records concentrated more on the original form of Black American Southern soul. For Stax records the original music form was more important than image and marketing. Artists and songs included ‘In the midnight hour’ by Wilson Pickett, released in 1965, and ‘Sittin’ on the dock of the bay’ by Otis Redding, released in 1968.

Soul music has stayed one of the most popular music styles right through into the 21st century mainly due to the very reason in the title, the music gets into your ‘soul’. A good choice for both young and old!

Pop Music Can Be Creative

Posted by Concert List | Posted in Pop Music | Posted on 19-12-2008

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Pop Music Can Be Creative-Pop music may include elements of rock, hip hop, reggae, dance, R&B, jazz, electronic, and sometimes folk music and various other styles. Pop music performers typically make use of state-of-the-art technology and recording studios to achieve the sound they want, and record producers may have a heavy influence. Pop music generally uses a simple, memorable melody and emphasizes the rhythm, often with syncopation, and stripped down to a basic riff or loop which repeats throughout much of the song. Pop music is often criticized for being overly simple and repetitive.

Popular

Popular music is music belonging to any of a number of musical styles that are accessible to the general public and are disseminated by one or more of the mass media. Popular music is music that is not something else (usually ‘folk’ or ‘art’ music). Popular music is associated with (produced for or by) a particular social group. Popular music is disseminated by mass media and/or in a mass market. Popular music is also rarely entirely instrumental. Popular music is not really about ‘being heard’, but rather about ‘being heard again’; and ‘being heard again and again and again’ is what really popular music is really about. Pop is contemporary music and a common type of popular music (distinguished from classical or art music and from folk music).

The term popular music does not refer specifically to a single genre or sound, and its meaning is different depending on the time and place. Within popular music, “pop music” is often distinguished from other subgenres by stylistic traits such as a danceable rhythm or beat, simple melodies and a repeating structure. The broad appeal of pop music is seen to distinguish it from more specific types of popular music, and pop music performers and recordings are among the best-selling and most widely known in many regions of the world. The development of recording methods is seen as a major influence on the sound of pop, distinguishing it from classical music and jazz, as well as from some types of popular music which may seek a more “natural” sound.

Album

In the recorded music era, the single (a single song) and the album (a collection of songs) are the usual methods of distributing pop music. Notable highlights for pop music in the 1980s are Michael Jackson’s second Epic label release, Thriller, which went on to become the best-selling album of all time. Jackson was the most successful artist of the 80s, spanning nine #1 singles in the United States alone during that decade, and selling over 133 million copies with only two albums — Thriller, and its follow-up Bad.

Pop music in the 1980s was heavily influenced by an electronic sound with synthesizers and drum machines, and dance type music. Pop music, on the other hand, has primarily come into usage to describe music that evolved out of the rock ‘n roll revolution of the mid-1950’s and continues in a definable path to today. Pop music can range from the highly creative, iconoclastic or virtuosic to simple and downright dumb.

Listening to Music – How Do You Do It?

Posted by Concert List | Posted in Concert Promotion, Online Concert | Posted on 18-12-2008

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Listening to Music – How Do You Do It?-In the world of music, there are endless possibilities for creativity in production. But when it comes to sitting down and listening to your favorite artists, what is the best way to do it? Most people don’t think about it, but throughout the course of this article, you will obtain possible life-changing strategies to listen to your favorite music. There are 3 main methods for listening to music; perceptive listening, casual listening, and background listening. Each method will be outlined, and benefits will also be discussed. Now is the time to experiment with all of the ways you can listen to your music!

When in the state of perceptive listening, you are fully aware of your music; that is the lyrics, rhythm, all of the instruments and components of the track. This state may be difficult to achieve if you have never been a perceptive listener before. It is the most rewarding listening experience, clearing our mind of everything but the pure sound of music. We cannot achieve this state if there are other thoughts racing through our head; your mind must be completely blank, letting the music take you away. How do you know when you are in a perceptive listening state? You will become unaware of your environment (closing your eyes is strongly recommended), focusing on nothing in your life but the music going through your head. Your mood will be directed by the type of music you are listening to, and some will experience a state of Euphoria. When in perceptive listening mode, always aim to be in a Euphoric state, as it will make the music that much more enjoyable. This can lead to becoming more relaxed, having less stress, and an overall improvement in life. If you haven’t given perceptive listening a try, do it right after you finish this article. What have you got to lose?

We spend a lot of time in the Casual listening mode, which is the line right between Perceptive and Background listening. You are fully aware of the lyrics/rhythm, and auditory elements are comprehended. We are usually performing some task that distracts us from the full perceptive state, so euphoria cannot be experienced. When listening casually, our mind only donates part of its attention to the music, so only part of us is affected while listening. Our mood does change along with the music, but it is generally a weaker feeling than perceptive listening. While we listen to music casually for a long period of time, our subconscious processes the information, and songs have a tendency to get stuck in our heads. Unfortunately, you cannot be fully immersed in the music, and that takes away a key element of enjoyment. Since we spend so much time casually listening to music, we think this is the most involving method of listening. Practice perceptive listening, and you will see the vast difference.

Sometimes, we have so many mind-numbing tasks to do, hitting the play button is the only way to keep our sanity. This is called background listening, and it helps us get through our challenging days. Casual listening is very common among teenagers who study for tests, and generally people who listen to music while working with their minds. This is when we are in the weakest state of music perception, and auditory elements aren’t usually comprehended. You can get so caught up in a task that you forget any music is playing. Because our mind is focused on so many things, our mood will be least affected by music. Obviously, this isn’t how music was intended to be listened to. So what benefits does this bring? Lets look at Johnny: Johnny is studying for his math test, and he is really struggling on a concept. He puts on his headphones on low volume background listening to help him relax, and suddenly he is able to comprehend his math problems. On the day of the test, he can actually play back the song in his head, then his subconscious will recall his studying, and that helps him recall the important math concepts. Johnny gets an A on his test….So you see where this is going; background listening affects the subconscious mind, which leads us to the final point. Memory. As shown in Johnny’s case, memory can be improved by listening to music in the background. So what are you for? Listen to more background music, improve your memory!

Perceptive Listening, Casual Listening, and Background Listening. Each one has its pros and cons. When possible, try all 3 techniques, and see which one you like the most. If you haven’t experienced the thrill of perceptive listening, you have to try it soon. If you haven’t relaxed to some casual listening, you might want to give it a shot. Some people, however, aren’t able to have music in the background while working. You know who you are. Give these techniques a shot, you never know what kind of amazing improvements could come about in your life. It’s the little things that can make a big difference. Rediscover your music, rediscover the way you listen to it!

Country Western Music?…Yuck!

Posted by Concert List | Posted in Country Music, Online Concert | Posted on 17-12-2008

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Country Western Music?…Yuck!-This is a personal opinion and therefore, I don’t want any hate mail from CW fans, which I know are fanatical and omnipresent. I do have my favorites, from a chauvinistic man’s point of view. I think that Shania Twain and Faith Hill are sexy and I enjoy a few of their videos plus some of their songs. But is it because they’re big country western stars? No way. I have a problem listening to most of the CW stuff because it all is beginning to sound the same. I can’t tell a Randy Travis, Tim McGraw, Toby Keith or Alan Jackson song apart if my life depended on it.

I grew up on the Jersey shore and many of you may, therefore, think I’m unqualified to make such a judgment. But hold on. I’ve spent the last 30 years in Arizona. Does it get more country or western than that? You know, the home of Tombstone, Wyatt Earp, and where the ‘Little House on the Prairie’ was filmed.

So I’m a transplant with an attitude. Don’t get me wrong, because I’ve given it a try. My late wife was from West Virginia and, during her mid-life crisis, began playing CW music continuously for five years. We had all the CD’s, radio stations on preset, and even watched the CW awards on tv. I could recognize all the big names, the latest hits, and who was new to the scene. Through it all, I really tried to enjoy the sound, for her sake. But, eventually, I wandered back to my classic rock and roll, jazz, or blues.

I play the harmonica and keyboard and have oodles of sheet music. I’ve attempted to play a few of the recent CW popular numbers, but to no avail. I have several of the older CW classics that have crept into mainstream by Johnny Cash and Ernie Ford, but they are few and far between. The current songs have become a formula that is fodder for Jeff Foxworthy and his ilk. According to people like him, it goes like this:

You start with a sad premise. You’ve lost your: (fill in the blank) i.e., girl, dog, pickup truck. They were your first: love, companion, way of freedom. You remember their: smiles, wagging tail, leather seats. You wish you could, once again, feel their: hair, fur, gun rack. You really miss their: smell, smell, smell. You would do anything to get them back: tell her you love her, rub her cute little tummy, (or did I have those reversed?) hose her engine compartment. While you’re waiting for them to return, you’ll have to: do your own laundry, fetch your own paper, walk to the liquor store. In other words, it’s not a pretty sight.

So that’s my gripe with CW. They change the harmony, the lyrics and the tempo, but the message is clear. I yearn for a total change of pace where I can get my ‘Satisfaction’ or ‘Light My Fire.’ But I also have troubles with Hip-Hop, Rap, and Grunge. So, let’s say I’ve got issues and be done with it. And, to all you CW lovers out there, stick with your music and don’t let a basher like me change your tune, pardoning the pun. And did I mention the two things I do like about Dolly Parton?

Let the Music Play

Posted by Concert List | Posted in Online Concert | Posted on 16-12-2008

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Let the Music Play-Good music makes it nearly impossible to believe or comprehend that our country is in such turmoil.

Listening to various artists while browsing the Net and reading about the financial disaster we face, the music soothes my soul and tells me that there’s no way a country that fostered these great musicians could be in such dire straits.

The melodies and refrains tell me we are amazing people. We have compassion, talent, integrity, spontaneity, and innocence. We like to have fun. We can get down and boogie all night, then get up in the morning all serious and go to work. Where did all this complicated, deceitful, financial mess come in? Should we take Congress out for a night on the town, make them dance till they sweat so they can remember how it feels to be human?

Do they think about anything but money? Maybe they need to loosen up, remember that life is for living, not for being owned by someone, that the big picture is this: We are here. We can choose to enjoy it, or we can choose to try to control every facet of it and everyone involved.

They have forgotten how to live. They exist to feed, to control, to breed their kind, to be superior, to feel supreme.

Yet, the music still plays for me. If our nation is as desperate as it seems, if all hope is gone, then why hasn’t the music died?

I believe it lives because there still exists a large number of humans who haven’t forgotten what hopes and dreams mean. Through all of this turmoil, we continue to turn on the music, let our feet move, and sway to the beat of love, of life, of self-expression, and to the beat of our hearts saying we are still Americans, we are not to be defeated.

Rock on, Americans. Turn up the volume! They will have to hear us eventually! Let’s make them dance to our tune!

Talkin’ ‘Bout Pop Music

Posted by Concert List | Posted in Online Concert, Pop Music | Posted on 15-12-2008

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Talkin’ ‘Bout Pop Music-“Songs go far beyond words in their ability to insert emotion into
communication.” Robert Sylwester, A Celebration of Neurons

Filmmakers, if they knew who brain researcher Robert Sylwester was, would agree
with him. They often integrate familiar songs into their movies. Pop songs are so
successful that movie producers will pay exorbitant sums, in some cases as much as
$100,000, to acquire the rights for the song.

Sylwester, in his book A Celebration of Neurons, went on to explain:

“The songs of our adolescent years often become the beacons of our adult life
because they can help us to recall the important developments of our adolescence.
We often listen to this music to relive the memories in the extended reverie of song.
The song slows the simple message so that we can savor all the emotions of the
experience.”

In a film composer’s hands, pop songs are chosen and linked to those memories in
a way that adds emotional texture to the film. Films with pop music scores function
on two distinct levels. The first level is the application of the song in the film. Every
song lyric tells a story and a well placed song’s story will dovetail with the film’s
visual.

The second, and deeper, level is the emotional meaning the use of specific songs
brings forth within the listener. The songs become metaphors, placing the subject
to be taught in the context of the learners prior experiences. When people hear
songs they know, and have personal memories of, they immediately are drawn back
into those memories, and the experience is enhanced. In essence, pop music helps
us relate to the story being told in a deeply personal, highly emotional way.

Three famous films used this technique to achieve success.

American Graffiti (1973), telling the story of a group of early 1960s high
schoolers enjoying a last summer before adulthood, was intentionally designed as a
series of pop music vignettes. George Lucas, the film’s director, developed the
storyline, and selected the songs to almost simultaneously.

Each scene matched the length of the song accompanying it. For example, Bill
Haley’s “Rock Around The Clock,” played during the opening credits, set up the
film’s innocence of summer theme. The Crests’ “Sixteen Candles” accompanied a
young girls sixteenth birthday. “Teen Angel” by Mark Dinning was played when a
character dies in a drag race. The film ends with the Spaniels’ “Goodnight, Well It’s
Time To Go.”

The Big Chill tells the story of a group of former 1960s radicals turned
1980s yuppies who gather to mourn the passing of an old friend. Like American
Graffiti, The Big Chill uses pop songs, although in this case, to add commentary to
the on-screen occurrences.

Marvin Gaye’s “I Heard It Through The Grapevine” accompanied the actors as they
hear about their friend’s passing. “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” by the
Rolling Stones is played as an ironic commentary on the friend’s death. As the
friends discuss relationships, The Young Rascals “Good Lovin’” is performed. Finally,
“Bad Moon Rising’” by Credence Clearwater Revival is played immediately after a
former lover proposes that she and her old flame reunite for an evening.

The best subconscious music placement occurs in a supermarket between the two
former lovers who contemplate rekindling their relationship. Although their desire
for each other is palpable, both hold back, only conversing about the shopping task
at hand as the store’s Muzak system plays Frank Sinatra’s “Strangers In The Night.”

Forest Gump tells the story of a dimwitted man who experiences a series of
life adventures over several decades. Because the film’s extended time frame, the
music serves to establish the time and place.

Credence Clearwater Revival’s “Fortunate Son” sets up Gump’s Vietnam tour. To
state that Forest’s girlfriend has moved to California, California Dreaming” by the
Mamas and Papas is used. “San Francisco” by Scott Mackenzie frames Forest’s 1960s
visit to San Francisco. When Forest returns home to Alabama, Lynyrd Skynyrd’s
“Sweet Home Alabama” is played. These music placements help the films listeners
comprehend the different locations and eras represented in the film.

American Graffiti, The Big Chill, and Forest Gump were all highly successful films,
and their pop song application played a huge part in creating that success. All three
films appealed to people at a deeply personal level.

Pop Songs in Learning
In Training With A Beat, I discussed at length the application of pop songs in the
learning environment. In part, I said:

“Concert halls, ballrooms, parties, and yes, the class room, can be uncomfortable
environments. When people hear a song they’ve listened to in the privacy of their
home, they relax. Comfortable music emotionally warms the training room, placing
learners in a receptive frame of mind for learning. Songs with lyrics, especially
popular hits of the last 50 years, are extremely useful for this reason. They are old,
well worn, welcome friends.”

Songs with lyrics also engage learner brains in multiple ways. The words and rhythm
of a song are largely processed in the brain’s left hemisphere, where the melody is
largely processed by the right hemisphere. By using songs with lyrics, you help your
learners engage both hemispheres. In the process, they gain a deeper meaning than
is possible with one hemisphere alone.

Song lyrics can, as was the case in The Big Chill, speak directly to the learning topic.
The many applications are too numerous to state in this one article, but a few
examples should prove the point:

Career planning – “All Star” by Smash Mouth

Change management – “Bad Day” by Daniel Powter

Communication – “Hello, Goodbye” by the Beatles

Conflict management – “Shut Up” by the Black Eye Peas

Customer service – “Lean On Me” by Bill Withers

Diversity – “Short People” by Randy Newman

Finance – “Takin’ Care of Business” by Bachman-Turner Overdrive

Project Management – “One Little Slip” by the Bare Naked Ladies

Sexual harassment – “Respect” by Aretha Franklin

Time management – “Right Place, Wrong Time” by Dr. John

Once you’ve decided on an appropriate song, placement is simple Considering the
Randy Newman song “Short People” for example:

Introduction – Play the song as the learners enter. Once the song is over call
attention to the songs lyrics and ask for comments about the meaning conveyed by
those lyrics. Use those comments as a transition to your presentation.

Filler – Play the song during breaks to add a subliminal message to your content.

Activity – Divide your learners into groups and instruct them to read and discuss the
lyrics. Then lead a general discussion to share each group’s observations.

Conclusion – Conclude your session by stating, “We are all short people in
someone’s eyes.” Then ask the rhetorical question, “If none of us were welcome
around here, who would be left to complete our work?” Start the song and thank
everyone for attending. Your learners will walk out of the classroom with the song
and its lyrics firmly implanted in their brains, and you will have closed with a visually
powerful learning point.

Given the large number of pop songs available, the options are limited only by your
imagination and the musical preferences of your learners. You too can have your
learners, in the words of the old song by “M”, “talkin’ ‘bout pop music.”

Pop- Music Uncorked!

Posted by Concert List | Posted in Pop Music | Posted on 14-12-2008

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Pop- Music Uncorked!-Pop music is a genre of popular music notable from classical or art music and from folk music. The term indicates specific stylistic qualities, but the genre also includes elements of rock, hip-hop, dance, and country, making it a flexible musical form. The definition of pop music is purposefully flexible as the music that is identified as pop is constantly changing.

The expression pop music may also be used to refer to particular subgenres (within the pop music genre) that are referred to as soft rock and pop/rock. The pop music genre also often involves mass marketing and consumer-driven efforts by major record companies and music labels, which makes it an often-scorned genre by non-mainstream musicians as they feel that the quality of music suffers.

The average consumer of pop music is often identified to be in his or her teenage years, making it an important icon of youth culture. Pop music has always been the source of numerous moral panics, especially as many of the styles that influence it trickle up from minority groups (racial, ethnic, sexual or class-based). This is partly because youth culture itself is an object of social trepidation. It is tempting for anyone to confuse pop music with popular music. According to the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, popular music is identified as the music since industrialization in the 1800’s that is most in line with the tastes and interests of the urban middle class.

This would include an extremely wide range of music from vaudeville and minstrel shows to heavy metal. Pop music, on the other hand, has primarily come into usage to describe music that evolved out of the rock n roll revolution of the mid 1950’s and continues in a definable path to today.

One of the steadiest elements of pop music since the 1950’s is the pop song, which is not usually written, performed and recorded as a symphony, suite, or concerto. The basic form for pop music is the song and usually a song consisting of verse and repeated chorus. They are short in length but there have been notable exceptions though. The Beatles Hey Jude was an epic 7 minutes in length. However, in many cases, if the song is abnormally long, an edited version is released for radio airplay such as in the case of Don McLean’s very famous American Pie. It was edited down from its original 8 1/2 minutes length to just over 4 minutes for radio airplay. While on the other extreme, some hit songs clocked in less than 2 minutes in length.

Like other art forms that aim to attract a mass audience (movies, television, Broadway shows), pop music has been and continues to be a melting pot that borrows and absorb elements and ideas from a wide range of musical styles. Over the past five decades, pop music has been influenced and incorporated genres of music like Rock, R&B in various ways. Most recently, Latin music seems to be impacting pop music more significantly than at any point in the past.

Although pop music continues to be a melting pot of styles, there is a genre of pop music that claims to be pop music in its purest form. This music, usually called pure pop or power pop, typically consists of relatively brief (not over 3 1/2 minutes) songs played on the standard electric guitar, bass and drums with vocals that have a very strong catchy chorus, or hook.

In the 2000s, hip-hop blended in with pop music, is paving the way for the multi platinum successes of artists like Nelly, Eminem, 50 Cent, Ludacris, Ciara, Beyonce, Justin Timberlake, Nelly Furtado, Christina Aguilera, Gwen Stefani and especially Britney Spears. Artists such as Mariah Carey and pop queen, Madonna, presented comeback albums that continued to make them rule the music charts and keep their titles.

For the past 50 years the most successful musical styles on the pop charts have continually changed and evolved and times will tell as how much more popular they become in future.

Music and You

Posted by Concert List | Posted in Concert Promotion, Online Concert | Posted on 13-12-2008

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Music and You-Music is always the part of our lives ever since the stone age.

There are many types of instruments which make their own sounds as well as certain pieces of junk. The stringed section allows one to make sound by using the strings like on guitars, and violins. The strings are tightened at a certain length for notes high and low. Wind instruments, such as wood and brass, make soft sounds and loud sounds with air flow and valves to control the notes. Symbols and bells of all kinds and sizes can be heard when tapped on and drums are the same way but with beating sounds. Computers and simple objects have their own sounds which can be used for music.

Many famous names today and in history dedicated their lives for music and wrote a lot of famous numbers that are forever remembered in all fountains of information. As known, tribal music came first with primitive drums and other simple instruments. Classical was next in line with more sophisticated instruments making it loud and lively. After classical, many kinds came to existence like early rock and roll, modern rock, and hip hop. There is reggae, jazz, rhythm and blues, barber shop style singing, and cultural music. Many people who love music so much that they may want to make a career out of it to be famous and/or just for fun.

It keeps us entertained even if we feel down in the dumps. A lot of kinds of music were invented from many cultures around the world past and present. Voices and instruments make this activity come to life in many ways.

Indie Music Industry – Believe in Yourself

Posted by Concert List | Posted in Indie Music | Posted on 12-12-2008

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Indie Music Industry – Believe in Yourself-I have been doing this music caper for twenty years.

However, I have only believed in myself for the past five years and in that time I have achieved much more than the fifteen years preceding it.

I don’t remember that moment when I finally climbed up the top of the mountain and put my flag of belief into the summit but I remember the feeling of knowing that it was okay to be doing what I am doing and it was also okay to be ME.

I can’t tell you how to believe in yourself, only you can do that but I can tell you that if you are lacking in belief then you are not alone.

We live in a world that is not overly tolerant to artistic endeavours. I mean just the other day I had someone ask me at a party the most boring question.

Q – “What do you do for a living?”

A – “I am a musician”

Q – “Oh, that’s nice. So what is it that you really do?”

That really threw me back. I was initially insulted but I proudly answered that being a musician was my ‘real job’.

We as musicians are always being told that we:

1. Can never make a living out of a hobby

2. Need something to fall back on (just incase this ‘music thing’ doesn’t work out)

3. Should go and get a real job.

If you do have a day job, I am certainly not telling you to give it up.

All I am saying is that when you have belief in yourself and what you do any decision that you make is made for you only, not to appease well meaning friends or family.

Be proud of what you do but don’t be too proud to not take advice from people that have trodden the path that you are about to take. Use this channel for instance to ask any question that you want. I will only give you encouragement because I have been there myself.

Always remember, no matter how many articles you read, how many courses you take, how many bands you play in or how many gigs you do, you can’t get others to believe in you unless you start believing in yourself.

Starting tomorrow, go and look at yourself in the mirror and tell yourself that you deserve to be a musician and that you are not going to feel guilty about it.

After that its time to go forth and ROCK (or country or punk or whatever you do)!!!