Friday, September 9, 2011

Creating a Music Website

As promised I am back again with another music related article. Today's topic is "how to create a music website". As everyone knows, in this day and age a musician should have a website or at a webpage to help their fans identify them and their brand online. It is up to the artist to ensure that the website includes everything needed to keep their fans satisfied and still wanting more. In the next paragraph or two I will talk about a few key ingredients that should be on every artists website/webpage.

The key ingredients to any artists website are your music, contact information, photos, news, and a biography page. The music page should contain of few of your best high quality songs so your listeners will know what to expect from your upcoming releases. This can be your main page and should contain links to your Twitter, Facebook, Myspace pages etc... The thing to remember is the more links that you provide to your other sites, the more often a person is to add you on those sites which will then help them find your website at a later time.

As far as contact information you don't need an extra page for it but you should have it included on one of the main pages. Your contact information should be in plain view so that anyone that has inquiries about you as an artist can get in touch with you or your manager. The photos page should contain a few high quality photos for press releases. You can also add photos of yourself on tour, doing random activities, or recording music in the studio. The news page can be a blog as well as just a normal text based page. I prefer to run a blog because of the freedom it provides and the fact that I can update it easily from my Blogger account. The last but certainly far from least important part of your website is your biography page. This page gives fans an idea of who you are and where you are from. The biography page also makes it easier for editors to write articles about you for magazines and other forms of social media.

Making a website can be fun and rewarding but it is oftentimes just as challenging and upsetting. It can be rough when you don't have the page views that you desire, but the key to maintaining a great music website is to give it time. Search engines don't just add your page and index it within the first few days of creation, so it could take quite some time before people even know that it exists. In my next article I will explain how to promote your website and use SEO to help even more people find it. I will also go a little in depth about page rank and other factors that affect how easy your website is to identify. Thank you for taking time out of your day to read my articles and I will see you next time. ~Royale~

Christopher "Royale" King
Royal Records (Underground Label)
http://www.thisisroyale.com/
chrisking919@gmail.com


http://EzineArticles.com/6501415

Crooners and Divas - Singing From the Heart - The Incredible Voice of Billie Holiday

Untrained, untamed, yet unbelievably developed. Those are words to describe the voice of one of the most talented female voices to emerge out of the jazz influenced era of the 1930's.

Born Eleanora Fagen Gough on April 7, 1915 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the great jazz and blues vocalist eventually changed her name to Billie Holiday, borrowing the name from her favorite screen star, Billie Dove. Later in her career, she was given the nickname 'Lady Day' by saxophonist, Lester Young. Holiday moved to the Harlem district of New York to live with her mother in her late teens and started singing in nightclubs for tips.

The sometimes gut-wrenching lyrics sung from the depths of her soul, Lady Day told the story of her much troubled life through her songs. Never having one hour of formal training, Holiday had a poignant vocal style that was mesmerizing to her audience. Billie Holiday sang from the heart and hers was a uniquely distinct sound that emotionally drew her listeners in and immediately captivated them.

In the early 1930's a young Holiday was discovered performing in a nightclub by talent scout, John Hammond. He arranged for her to record with well-known bandleader, Benny Goodman in 1933. That session lead to more recordings with the top swing bands of that time and by 1935 Billie Holiday was recording under her own name. She was being recognized as a major vocalist and was setting a standard in jazz music that is still practiced today. Holiday's ability to improvise melodies was phenomenal. Other jazz/blue artists were quickly imitating her style.

Tormented by her past, the demons she battled seemed to consume her throughout her life. Despite imprisonment on more than one occasion for possession of narcotics, Miss Day still managed to grow her fan-base. Her enormous talent seemed to supersede her volatile personal life and she continued to sell records and pack clubs and concert halls.

After working with renowned bandleaders, Count Basie in 1937 and Arte Shaw in 1938, Holiday set an unprecedented record. She was the first black woman to work with a white orchestra. Miss Holiday was very instrumental in helping bridge the gap between blacks and whites in the music arena but she herself was still subject to much prejudice.

Holiday struggled with the injustice of prejudice, which was evident in the lyrics of the songs she sang. This is probably most obvious with her hit Strange Fruit taken from a poem about the lynching of a black man. Prevented by Columbia records to record the song, due to subject matter, Miss Holiday recorded the tune under a different label, 'Commodore', and it became one of her signature hits.

Lady Day's popularity remained stable during the forties and early fifties, although her destructive lifestyle of drug and alcohol use began to take its toll on the talented singer's voice. When her voice began to give out, the sheer depth of her emotion would breathe life into her emotionally wrought songs.

Billie Holiday had stellar hits that are still considered some of the best blues and jazz songs of all time. Spanning over three decades, Lady Day is best known for favorites such as: Them There Eyes, My Man, Don't Explain, Lover Man, God Bless the Child, T'Aint Nobody's Bizness if I Do, and Porgy & Bess.

Performing for the last time on May 25, 1959 in New York City, Billie Holiday gave all she had left to give to an audience who revered and loved her. Lady Day's exceptional contributions to music won her the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1987. A ghostwritten autobiography entitled Lady Sings the Blues gives personal accounts of her preeminent rise to stardom as well as real life testimonies about her tormented early childhood. A 1972 movie is loosely based on the autobiography. Diana Ross starred in the movie version of Lady Sings the Blues as Billie Holiday and was nominated for an academy award for her role.

Billie 'Lady Day' Holiday died July 17, 1959 in New York at the age of 44 from cirrhosis of the liver. She was, at the time, separated from her third husband and had no surviving children. As in life, her death was tragic, yet Billie Holiday had an enormous talent and used it to bring beauty out of the ashes and is still considered today to be one of the great musical talents of all time.

Darrell Berg-Smith, CEO of The Asian Regional Impact Initiative, is a professional speaker, author, consultant and entrepreneur who specializes in advising on Corporate Social Responsibility programs and cause marketing resources to NGO's and companies worldwide.

Darrell is also the founder of the Doctors For Cambodia Initiative and The Asian Regional Cancer Initiative... Non Profit Organisation working throughout South East Asia. He is always looking for new talented artists to help advance their career through cause marketing arrangements with these Initiatives.


http://EzineArticles.com/6494724

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Guitar Mistakes - 3 Mistakes Made By Beginner Guitar Players

There are three mistakes that beginning guitar players make that totally destroys their ability for advancing quickly in the mastery of their instrument. If they can avoid these three mistakes, they will see a big changes in how fast they progress as a guitar player.

The three big mistakes are:

Not practicing every day.Not knowing what to practice.Not having a good teacher or mentor to guide the way.

1. Not practicing the guitar every day is a big mistake that many beginning guitar players make. Many new guitar players think that they need to practice for one hour every day. That is not true. Of course, it would be great if they could practice one hour each and every day, but in reality, the time is just not available. Most peoples' lives are just too busy to have that much free time to dedicate to one activity. A more practical approach is for them to find a couple of fifteen minutes blocks of time throughout the day when they can practice. Perhaps while waiting for the dryer to finish drying the clothes, there might be a fifteen minute chunk of time. While cooking dinner, waiting for the pasta water to boil, there's another chunk of time. Here's a good time waster, commercials while watching TV. Use that time to practice guitar. Even better, get rid of the TV and practice guitar. There really is a lot of chunks of time that can be carved out of the daily schedule for some guitar practice. To be successful at this approach though the new guitarist must use some planning and forethought.

Leave the guitar out and readily accessible.Have an idea of what to practice.

2. Not knowing what to practice. The new guitar player needs to know what the material is to practice when they pick up the guitar. Are they working on certain scale fingerings? Are they working on rhythm guitar and different chord changes? Are they working on various blues licks, or a certain song? Not knowing what to practice leads to endless "noodling" on the guitar, and no real practical advancement.

3. The guitar is a hard instrument to play. There are a bunch of technical things about the guitar and music to be learned, and a lot of practical things to be learned that are best learned by being physically shown what to do, and hearing the results. That is where a good teacher becomes invaluable to the guitar student. Whether the teacher is a "live" instructor teaching through some type of formal in-person lessons, a simple DVD video lesson package, or an internet subscription course, a good teacher is necessary for quick advancement on the guitar.

If the new guitar player can avoid these three mistakes, they should be able to progress rapidly and be playing the guitar in a short period of time.

For a link to 10 free beginners guitar lessons or to read more about learning to play the guitar, please click here: http://www.lurnguitar.com/.


http://EzineArticles.com/6505047

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Some Ideas on Ways to Make a Living With Your Musical Skills

Of course change being the only constant, the music industry has changed into a new landscape of opportunity for independent music. Independent artists can now use the internet to share and sell their music, making them an enterprise in themselves. And being enterprising, it may be worth considering how your musical skills could generate more income for you. There are many transferable skills you are not even aware you have and you could be paid for.

There are many opportunities working as a creative facilitator working in mainstream primary and secondary schools and in schools with children with special needs. This may entail writing a song or learn to play an instrument and often leads to a performance or recording. This work is really interesting if you enjoy working with kids and young people and find it rewarding to watch them learn, express their voice and be creative. Other creative facilitator or community musician projects can be working in other contexts such as prisons, community centres and in theatres.

Being a musician you may also be able to teach others one to one how to learn and instrument. This can generate considerable income and you can advertise locally in shops and online for free to find new pupils. Again it helps to be patient, remember what is was like to learn your instrument/craft and be able to break down the steps of development into manageable tasks for your students. You may use a computer to make music, and passing on how to use music software can be much in demand.

You could advertise your musical skills as a session musician - playing music for different musicians and producers in recording studios or for live shows. This can also be a lucrative hourly rate. Contact local recording studios and rehearsal rooms and tell them of your enthusiasm and ability. Be sure to be reliable and friendly and you may get called in on a regular basis - I know of studios who always call on the same drummer and string quartet because they like working with them and they get the job done well.

You may have been recording your music for years to an acceptable standard to sell your independent music at gigs or concerts. You could then offer to be a recording engineer for other musicians you know - especially if you have the equipment and a recording space already set up. This could easily become a nice form of income if word of mouth recommendations come your way. You can also do take an intensive audio engineering course to make sure your skills as a recording engineer are up to a professional standard. If you enjoy engineering it opens you up to so many more musical styles and approaches so you can be expanding as a musician too.

Collaborating can also be rewarding and fruitful financially. You can advertise for and find other musicians to collaborate with, and their complementary skills or style may make music that is more likely to sell as independent music or mean that you may get paid for performing live. I know vocalist friends who work in cover bands that do very well on the wedding and functions circuit. Again it is all practice and you may just get to play and/or sing your favourite music. You could also consider building a portfolio of making music for dance, theatre and film.

So if you are a skilled musician or one of the more independent artists making creative music, you could find other avenues of income to allow you to be making music and learning about music part of your career.

Caro Churchill aka caro snatch is a female solo producer of creative music. She is also a creative facilitator working in school and community settings enabling others to make music.


http://EzineArticles.com/6448914

How to Select a Great Movie to Watch

Sometimes you just feel like a girls' or a blokes' night in, and so comes the question of how to select a great movie to watch. My friend Sam always told us that a group of three people should never go into a DVD rental store at the same time, because you'll end up being there for hours and never really decide on which movies to hire.

When we're selecting movies, we never go for the latest releases, because you pay a premium rate for movies that are new to the DVD shelves.

If you always select the movies that have been around for a while, then guess what? You have your own selection of "new" movies to choose from after a few months sincehat time the latest releases are down graded to recent releases at a discounted price. Not only do you save yourself some money, but you've also got a much better chance of having the "pick of the bunch" of the recent releases.

Here's a list of things to help you decide how to select a great movie to watch:

1. Selection by a theme

Whether it's a blokes night or a chicks night, you can decide a theme. Some great chick flicks include the "Bonnet Movies" the genre of Jane Austin's "Pride and Prejudice", "Emma" and so on.

For the blokes you may select the "X-Men" series, James Bond or such like.

2. Selection by Actor or Actress

Often we'll sit and watch a bunch of Russell Crowe or Nicole Kidman movies, you may have some favorite actors and actresses that will help you in your choice of movies to watch.

3. Selection by Genre

There's some great movies to motivate young sports players, such as Basketball, Baseball, or Grid Iron movies. You may be a fan of horror movies, romantic comedies, or action thrillers.

4. True Stories

They say that there's nothing stranger than real life, and when Hollywood screen writers are looking at new ideas for movie storylines, they often turn to taking historical events and making some great movies.

Within the category of true stories you still have a wonderful selection of movies to watch about sporting heroes, national heroes, and even ordinary folk that have done some extraordinary things.

5. Selection by ratings

When selecting a great movie to watch, you need to consider the audience, as this can help with your decision making. If you are choosing movies for a bunch of young children then it's generally a good idea to have watched those movies yourself first, so that you don't have any surprises that could shock or scare the children.

6. Choosing a Foreign Language Movie

Whilst there's a whole heap of great English Language movies, there's also some fantastic foreign language movies that deserve your attention.

Do not be afraid to consider foreign films just because they have subtitles. After the first few minutes of watching a foreign movie and reading the subtitles you soon get drawn into the movie and almost "forget" that you are not listening to English.

7. Word of Mouth

We've never really found that personal referrals of movie titles from our friends have been of much benefit. Everybody has different tastes, and just because one person doesn't like a particular movie doesn't necessarily mean that you will not enjoy it.

This is often true with media movie critics. We've all heard stories about movies that have been slammed by the critics only to become box office successes.

There's plenty of other ways to decide how to select a great movie to watch that include watching the previews or movie trailers, as well as watching movie review shows on TV and the internet.

The best thing about selecting a great movie is that there's so much choice and so many opinions these days. As each year passes more movies are released and there's still many of the good old favorites around, so sit back, relax and disappear into your own movie world, having made your own selection of great movies to watch.

Jenny Newgate has been a movie fan for many years


http://EzineArticles.com/6499631

What Is a Beatmaker Application?

A beatmaker application is a computer program designed to do the hard work that a producer usually does, namely making beats for whichever type of music your into. Not only do you get to control everything right down to the smallest sample but they help you do everything fast, easily and as cost effectively as possible.

This type of software allows you to create professional sounding beats without the need of a studio and expensive production equipment. Furthermore you will be able to churn out more music faster than would be possible with standard beat making tools. More music produced equals greater chance of earning more money.

If you are new to producing your own beats you will want to do your research and find a beatmaker application that will be efficient and easy to use. Finding one that comes with a tutorial that teaches you the basics while you slowly hone your skills would be a good choice.

There are a large amount of beatmakers available online and they vary in price from free to upwards of a thousand dollars. One thing to keep in mind is that no matter the cost all these softwares basically do the same thing. While the free and thousand dollar versions may do the same thing they differ greatly with sound quality, ease of use, functionality and generally every part of the application. If you are just starting out you will probably want to choose a low end version. There are many beatmaker applications that can be found for around thirty dollars. While these wont be as fancy as the more expensive ones they are more than serviceable and will do any job you need them to do.

These lower end beatmakers are very easy to use and allow you to create high quality beats in a short amount of time. This ease of use is important, you don't want to be wasting time switching through applications. Most of these will come with a video or pdf tutorial. One with a video would be a better choice, being shown exactly how to do something is much better than reading it and trying to do it yourself. Either way you can't go wrong with this type of software they will save you time and money. Beatmaker applications are obviously the way to go.

Choose carefully, pick the right software and you will be able to make professional sounding beats in the comfort of your own home.

Beatmaker applications allow you to make high quality beats without the need of a studio or expensive equipment.They can be found now online for fairly cheap with top notch sound quality. http://eazye123.blogspot.com/2011/08/dubturbo-review-best-beat-making.html


http://EzineArticles.com/6502446

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

The Noughties: The Least Influential Decade in Music Ever

Recently a friend and I were compiling Spotify playlists of favourite music from our childhood and teens.

I realised two things:

Firstly, I have a slightly deluded fondness for the 80s, which I associate with favourite bands such as The Cure and The Smiths, when in reality these were largely crowded out by some of the worst pop music ever made.

Secondly, and far more depressingly: this decade just gone, which will have been the most musically formative era of my life, has to be the worst of the past 60 years.

Popular music has been a mixed bag in every era, but one thing that seems very different about the 00s is that it was the first decade that nothing really radical happened for the whole 10 years.

In the 70s there was Punk. I wasn't alive then, but I've always been fascinated by it. If you haven't seen it, I wholeheartedly recommend watching The Filth And The Fury. Never has music been so life-or-death.

In the 80s they invented electronic music. The Smiths blew people's minds by being so completely alternative. People got passionate and motivated to follow them, just like with The Sex Pistols in the 70s.

In the 90s I was a schoolboy when overnight Nirvana made every kid I knew want to pick up a guitar. They stirred people up, inspiring generations of bands in the future.

So who were the main protagonists of the 00s?

According to Wikipedia, Coldplay, The Killers and Amy Whinehouse were some of the big players.

Other than selling a lot of records, did these people change the world that much?

Of course there there was plenty of good stuff. For me, The Libertines were one of the most exciting bands there's ever been. But they were pretty underground compared to The Sex Pistols or Nirvana.

I don't think you can say that any major revolution took place on the scale of previous decades.

So if music didn't excite people any more, what did?

Facebook. X factor. God knows, but social media, and information in general, seems to be far and away the most important factor in people's lives. Especially since a lot of music seems to be an extension of TV programs.

Maybe I was just getting old in the 00s and so less excitable, impressionable or whatever. But I'd be pretty sad if I had kids who didn't have music that they got the same feeling from as I remember having in the 90s.

Come on tweenies, lets see what you can do.


http://EzineArticles.com/6503936

Monday, September 5, 2011

What Is The Soundtrack To Your Life?

Has there ever been a song that you have felt a strong connection to? Do you have a soundtrack to your life? I can tell you that I definitely do!

Music can be seen as a source of healing for many, giving them an outlet for their emotions or helping them relate to a specific situation in their life that they may have not been able to see through.

A soundtrack to your life usually consists of songs that you will listen to and have a strong connection with no matter how many times you listen to it. This strong connection is usually felt the first time you hear this song.

I am writing this piece about finding the soundtrack to your life because I believe that everyone should have one to help them when they are down in life, or stuck in a situation where they are troubled or confused. Your soundtrack does not have to be long, even if it only consists of 3 songs. As long as your list has songs that personally have meaning to you and to your life.

I am going to explain this further by sharing the soundtrack to my life. I hope that this can demonstrate how having your own soundtrack can make you a stronger person because it allows you to understand and see yourself more clearly.

Songs that I have on my soundtrack are:

• A Little Bit Longer - Jonas Brothers
• Landslide - Stevie Knicks
• Skyscraper - Demi Lovato
• In The Arms Of An Angel - Sarah McLachlan
• Butterfly Fly Away - Miley Cyrus
• My Little Girl - Tim McGraw

If you haven't noticed by now or are unfamiliar with some of these songs, they all have a slow melody. People may see me as an outgoing exited extrovert, but I am actually a shy introvert. My use of being excited a lot is a cover to hide my insecurities, so by having my soundtrack consist of slow music, it truly shows who I am inside.

To immediately show you an example of how a song may be interpreted differently from person to person, I will begin by explaining how the song A Little Bit Longer by the Jonas Brothers has impacted my life.

The song was originally written by Nick Jonas (the youngest member of the band) who was having a bad day because of the effects his Type 1 Diabetes was having on him. The song basically is describing how he just has to wait a little bit longer until he will feel better and will not feel so low. As for me, this was the first song I turned to when I was in the hospital after I had a tumor removed from my right humorous bone. The surgery went well, but there were complications afterword's where the doctors had to call a code blue. My breathing was very low and I was very scared about what was happening, but when I started to calm down I immediately starting thinking 'just a little but longer, and I'll be fine'. Since I am sitting here writing this article, I am happy to say that I am doing very well now.

This is an example of how a song may be written for one purpose, but may be used in different ways to help and inspire others in their own way.

I will not explain the in depth meaning of what the rest of the songs mean to me because of course, they are personal doors into who I am and my deepest emotions that are for me to know and feel.

The reason why I did however show you the list of my soundtrack to life is because I want to inspire you to make your own list.

Make a soundtrack to your life and put aside time within your night to listen to it without any interruption. Use these songs to reflect about your life.

You will learn a lot about yourself and what is important to you in your life.

Enjoy the soundtrack to your life and don't forget to continue to add to it in the future.


http://EzineArticles.com/6501660

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Understanding the Vocal Range - The Soprano Part

To understand the Soprano part it is imperative that you first understand vocal range. Technically, vocal range is "the measure of the breadth of pitches that a human voice can phonate." * In layman's terms vocal range is the musical notes that a person can sing. Vocal range encompasses all of the musical notes that a person can sing from the lowest note to the highest. The highest of the vocal ranges is the Soprano and it is in most cases, especially in the choir, sung by females.

Typically, the Soprano range is from middle C on the piano (also referred to as C4 not to be confused with the explosive) up to two octaves above middle C or C6. In some cases the individual may be able to sing higher or lower or even both but the Soprano range is going to fall within this span. The Soprano part is usually the melody or lead part with the exception of harmony inversions where one of the other parts would take the lead and the Soprano would switch to a harmony part. When the lead part is sung by a male in a quartet it is sung an octave lower.

When referring to Soprano, most all of the time, especially as it relates to Choral or Choir sheet music it is referencing the voice classification. It should also be noted that in referring to Choral or Choir the terms are sometimes used interchangeably, but as a general rule of thumb, Choral or Chorus is usually related to a theatrical group of singers whereas Choir almost always refers to a Church Choir or a religious themed group of singers.

It is common in England in Choral music for males to sing the Soprano in the typical Soprano range using their falsetto voice. In this case, they are either referred to as countertenors or sopranists.

In choir as well as choral music, often referred to as SATB sheet music (for Soprano, Alto, Tenor, Bass) the term Soprano does not necessarily refer to the type of voice but instead refers to a vocal part or voice classification. The term voice classification is by and large related to opera and was developed within the realms of classical music for the purpose of evaluating and designating voice type. There are several other things such as timbre, vocal weight and tessitura to consider but the first thing in determining the voice type is to determine the voice range.

The Soprano voice is most commonly a bright toned high pitched voice. True Sopranos are vocally weaker in their middle voice and much stronger on the upper end of their register.

The untrained vocalist will usually be more limited on their vocal range both on the top and bottom end of their vocal register but can improve and extend this range with proper training.

In standard SATB notation and in most songs arranged for Choir as well as the Old Red Back Church Hymnal the Soprano note is the top note of the Treble or G clef. If you have the ability to read music then sit down and examine a piece of standard SATB sheet music and you will discover that the top note of the Treble clef, the Soprano part, will usually fall in the range of middle C (C4) up to the C6.

* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vocal_range

Dr. Clint Kerns has been an active Music director in three different churches spanning a career over 30 years. Dr. Kerns conducts hundreds of Choir Workshops across the country and holds the Doctor of Theology degree and Master of Sacred Music degree. He has played Guitar for over 30 years and has taught guitar for over 20 years.

ChurchChoirMusic.com
ReviewAcousticGuitars.com


http://EzineArticles.com/6504238

The Strange Story of Mickey and Sylvia's "Love Is Strange"

When Mickey & Sylvia released "Love Is Strange" in late 1956, the track became a Top 20 hit the next year; though innovative enough to influence artists like Jimi Hendrix, the song would be the duo's only chart success.

Sharing the composer credit are Mickey Baker, Sylvia Robinson and Ellas McDaniel, better known as Bo Diddley. For many years, however, who wrote "Love Is Strange" had been in dispute. Diddley's guitarist Jody Williams maintained that the roots of "Love Is Strange" lie in a riff he wrote for "Billy's Blues," singer Billy Stewart's debut. Williams claimed he then used the riff when he co-wrote "Love Is Strange" with Diddley. With Williams on lead guitar, Diddley recorded "Love Is Strange" for Chess Records in May 1956.

But before the song was put on vinyl, Williams claimed that Mickey Baker studied his guitar work on "Love Is Strange" at performances from off stage. Back in Chicago at Chess, Williams says he learned why; Bo Diddley told Williams that he had sold the song to Mickey and Sylvia for $2,000, but assured Williams that he would receive writer's royalties.

Mickey "Guitar" Baker was an in-demand session player in 1955 when singer Sylvia Vanderpool, then a struggling singer known as "Little Sylvia," asked Baker for guitar lessons. (Sylvia later became Sylvia Robinson after marrying Joe Robinson.) Baker, 11 years Robinson's senior, came up with the idea for a duo following the success of Les Paul and Mary Ford. On stage the pair dressed elegantly; they both played guitars as they teased each other in song.

In the studio, writes Dave Marsh, producer Bob Rolontz of RCA's Groove Records helped create Mickey & Sylvia's unique sound. "(I)nstead of going in and cutting live, he began to overdub, building up the guitar parts through multitracking and repeated recordings. The staid RCA engineers told Rolontz he was crazy. He told them to shut up. The result is the most polished version of the Bo Diddley beat ever pieced together."

In their biography of Jimi Hendrix, Harry Shapiro and Caesar Glebbeek write that "Love Is Strange" was "one of the most influential songs of the period" for the young Hendrix, then an elementary school student working out songs on an old ukelele with one string found by his father while cleaning out someone's garage. Hendrix's brother Leon said that after Hendrix heard Mickey Baker's single-string solo, "he really started to look for some outlet, playing songs and figuring out things on one string."

Mickey & Sylvia formally broke up by the late 1950s but would occasionally record together until 1965. Guitarist Jody Williams, at Chess' urging, went to court in 1957 claiming "Love Is Strange" was copied from "Billy's Blues." Williams lost the case in 1961 and never again spoke to Diddley, who has said he too never received any royalties for the song.

Lee Jensen unearths the secrets behind the writing, production and recording of the great hits of rock, doo-wop, the British Invasion and Rhythm & Blues on Rockaeology at http://rockaeology.com/.


http://EzineArticles.com/6503685

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Teaching Intervals

I teach theory to all of my music students, beginning from the first lessons. Every teacher will have to start with some theory, but after teaching the clefs, note names, note durations and a few other signs, often the theory gets lost, particularly if the teacher is inexperienced or not very interested in theory themselves. To me this is a real disservice and most students without theory eventually know they don't understand something but can't put their finger on what it is, or are too embarrassed to ask.

Why are intervals important?

Intervals form the basis of harmony, and the outline of melody. Without knowing intervals, you can't transpose music accurately (put it in another key). You don't understand structure, particularly of major and minor scales which most students learn in their first year. You can't even begin to progress to writing cadences and harmony. Before teaching intervals, your student should have learned at least one scale, if not two or three, both major and harmonic minor.

Teaching intervals

Anybody learning piano or a keyboard instrument will have intervals laid out in front of them. It is very easy to teach intervals when you can press down keys. Conversely, it is really much harder to teach intervals when playing a violin or a flute or percussion. It's not easily visible, so if you play or teach something other than piano, it's a great idea to get a little keyboard just for teaching or learning theory.

To start

Pointing out the difference between repeated (same) notes, steps (adjacent notes), skips and jumps (wider intervals) is the start, particularly with small children. Teach them to recognise a step up and a step down, a skip up and a skip down. Play intervals for them to pace out on the floor - same, step, skip, jump!

With children of 7 or younger, it is probably too early to teach them intervals by written work, but you can certainly teach the concept. Use an interval piece, such as the one at the back of the Leila Fletcher Piano Course Book 1, or make something up for yourself. Get them to play, sing and speak it.

Writing intervals

With older children or adults, I make up sheets, starting with thirds and fifths which are both odd numbered intervals. This means that both notes will either be on lines or spaces. For a third, the notes almost touch each other. When you see a fifth, there is a line or space in between. Actually there's more than that, but keep it simple and visual. The top half of the sheet is the instruction, and below I put four lines of 3rds and 5ths in different clefs and positions which the student has to identify. At this stage I do not talk about major or minor, perfect or any other type of interval. Just the numbers.

Next lesson

Then I progress to 4ths and 6ths, with the practice incorporating revision of the previous week's work. Then it's 7ths and octaves. Unisons and seconds are so obvious, I explain them, and put them in the final exercises, but don't devote a whole sheet to them. Next I start using the intervals on the piano. "Play me a 6th with your right hand" or "What interval do the first two notes in this piece mark out?"

Relating intervals to scales

When my student has a thorough understanding of intervals just as distance, I begin to add perfect, major and minor to their repertoire. Perfect is easy: unison, octave, fourth and fifth are all perfect, and I just need the student to remember them. I said above that I expect students to have learned some scales when I teach intervals, and this is where it becomes necessary. All they need is C major and a minor, but a few others are good for them to experiment with. They should already know the tones and semitone structure of a major scale, and you can teach them the harmonic minor scale structure if that hasn't already been done.

Major and minor intervals

Look at C major scale. Demonstrate C-E as a 3rd. Call it a major third. Then play c minor scale. How does the 3rd differ? It's C-Eb, one semitone lower. Do the same for 6ths. C-A in C major and C-Ab in c minor. The principle is that the minor interval is always a semitone less than the major interval and the correct 3rd or 6th occurs in the respective scale. You can also show them that inverting the interval swaps major and minor. For example if you invert C-E to E-C, you go from a major 3rd to a minor 6th.

Teaching major and minor 2nds is also easy. A minor 2nd is a semitone, and a major 2nd is a tone. They just have to identify them correctly.

It's only 7ths that are tricky and you may need to prepare your student for this before you go on, because the leading note can be very confusing. Stick to the principle of what is in the key signature for the minor 7th, and tell them it's one of the few times they can ignore the leading note.

Practice

If you do this over a period of a couple of months for children, depending on their ability, they will grasp intervals. Use singing, humming, playing, writing, games on the whiteboard or anything at your disposal to get them to instantly recognise the size of interval. Keep on testing every week. Find songs that begin with a particular interval and relate that to their study. They may have to work out if it's major or minor for a while, but that's just fine.

Instant recognition of the basic interval will help their sight reading, let them progress to learn harmony, help them to improvise or compose, and form an important basis to understanding how music works. Please don't neglect it.

(c) Patrice Connelly, 2011

Patrice Connelly is an Australian musician who specialises in early music, and teaches piano, viola da gamba, music theory and history. She has an M.Mus (Hons) degree in musicology from the University of Sydney. Her business Saraband Music imports/exports, wholesales/retails and publishes sheet music, and she is involved in research, writing, editing, speaking and teaching music. Visit the Saraband Music website at http://www.saraband.com.au/


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Friday, September 2, 2011

How To Protect And Preserve Your Singing Voice

Do you have a good voice for singing? Everyone can work with good vocal exercises to improve their voice quality. However your voice can be destroyed if you do not protect your vocal cords from damages. Therefore if you want to preserve a good singing voice, then you must know what to do in order not to lose it.

Some of the things we are to discuss may be sheer common sense, but the problem is that many singers do not even bother with them. Take for example warming up your voice before you sing. Many people don't do that. Even some professionals take it for granted.

When your vocal folds are properly warmed up, they are more flexible and pliable. You can then be able to sing with more flexibility and can hit higher notes more easily. Failing to properly warm up before using your voice can cause strains on your vocal folds and in the long run, your vocal cords can be damaged.

As with warming up before you sing, do you cool down your voice after a performance or practice session? Many people think that performing cooling down exercises after singing is not important. They are wrong because when you sing, you build up tension in your singing and voice mechanism and as such you have to release the tension.

Furthermore, the tension can last for a long time and accumulate even more tension the next time you sing and in the end is that your singing will sound very strained until real physical damage is done to your vocal cords. So you need to cool down after each singing session to prevent this from happening.

Do you speak loudly in day to day conversations or do you shout, yell or scream when you sing? Many people do not know that doing all those things mentioned can damage to their vocal cords. You need proof?

If you listen to all heavy metal rock singers when they speak, you will find that all of them have raspy scratchy voices. Steven Tyler, one of the judges for The American Idol is no exception. If you are a rock star, then a raspy voice may be considered as being sexy, but most singers are not rock stars and besides, do you want to have a permanent scratchy voice.

Are you a smoker? If you intend to continue smoking, then say goodbye to a smooth sexy velvety voice. Look, if smoking can cause massive throat cancer that can destroy the entire throat, needless to say, grave damages are being done to your vocal cords each time that you smoke.

What about your breathing technique? Are you trained to breathe with your diaphragm when singing? In fact, breathing with your diaphragm is the right way to breathe even when you are not singing.

All babies naturally breathe with their diaphragm and that is why they can throw their voices so far when they cry. The weird thing is that as we grow older, most of us simply lost this ability.

When you are breathing correctly when you sing, your voice will soar effortlessly and you are able to hold notes steadily or even longer. As such, you will less likely be straining your vocal cords because your singing will be smoother and easier. So if you want to have a good singing voice, then you must know how to cherish, protect and preserve it.

Chris Chew is a music consultant and said that if you want to be a good singer, then read How to be a good singer and how to be a better singer and become a star.


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Playing the Blues - Tips for Playing the Blues on Guitar

So you want to play blues guitar! Here are three tips to help you achieve your goal.

1. Learn the "twelve bar blues" format. Most blues songs are structured in a certain form that all musicians have come to know as the "twelve bar blues". What this means is that 12 measures of music, or "bars" have a certain set pattern, and the twelve bar pattern is repeated over and over throughout the song. This is great, because, musicians who have not played with each other before can get an impromptu jam session going just by deciding to play a slow blues in the key of E. This will let them know that they will be playing with the chords of E, A and B, or certain variations of these three chords. Also, they will know that the structure will be (usually) 4 bars (music measures) of E, two bars of A, two bars of E, one bar of B, one bar of A and two bars of E. The final two bars usually are called the turnaround, and leads the tune back into the original four bars in E.

2. Learn the blues scale. There are certain notes that sound really good together for playing the blues, and these notes are called the blues scale. These notes and the fingerings of the scales must be memorized and mastered by a guitar player who wants to be able to play the blues. The good thing is that the fingerings for the patterns can be memorized and then moved to different locations on the neck, to go along with whatever key the blues song is being played in. Their is basically five main patterns along the length of the guitar neck, all are interconnected, and all are movable along the neck. Practice time must be dedicated by the beginning guitar player to memorize and understand how these patters work.

3. Learn how to play the guitar with feeling. A good blues guitar player uses certain "tricks" to make their guitars "wail and sing". The main tricks of the trade that good blues guitar players use are:

VibratoString bendingSliding up to and away from the noteHammering on to a notePulling off from a note

Using these gimmicks is part of the essential sound of the blues, and must also be mastered. Luckily, none of these techniques are real hard to learn, they just take some practice and finger development to become proficient in them.

The best way to practically learn these three tips is to be taught by a professional either through books, videos or online teaching subscriptions. The concepts are not difficult, but there is a little little bit of theory that needs to be understood, and also some memorization.

To learn more about beginners guitar and the blues for guitar click here: http://www.lurnguitar.com/. For a 10 pack of free video lessons, click here: http://www.lurnguitar.com/.


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Thursday, September 1, 2011

Fundamental Information for Everyone Who Wants to Master Guitar Scales

Guitar scales are said to be uninspiring, imaginary and useless. Well, really? The truth is that practicing them is one of the best ways of achieving guitar mastery. Basically, learning a guitar scale is simple. You just have to memorize the notes and then play them in a successive order.

First, let's make all things clear. Guitar scales come from hundreds of different styles. Not only that, but they also come from different parts of the world like: China, Polynesia, Eastern Europe and other regions. For example: Hungary, where they have the Hungarian gypsy scale. Their music is clearly influenced by the culture.

Surely enough, the western world has created a few guitar scales of its own as well. These are: major scales, minor scales, pentatonic scales, chromatic scales, and a few more that were developed based on the previous ones.

Now let me tell you what the important reasons why you have to learn them are.

First of all, don't be discouraged right away because it doesn't mean that you have to learn all of them at the same time. It's best to study one scale at a time.

Let's talk benefits for a moment. One of which is the fact that learning different guitar scales improves the strength and agility of your fingers. More than that, practicing them will help you in training your ear to identify typical note arrangements. It is particularly useful when choosing notes as you do song improvisation and/or writing. Just by being aware of the notes you can add your personal color, depth, mood and feeling to your guitar playing.

I hope you can see the value of guitar scales by now. So it's about time to learn some of them. Here's my suggestion, among so many guitar scales that you can choose from, I'd say you start with major scales. They are actually the most important scales when it comes to suitability and application in most styles of music. Moreover, other types of scales were fundamentally derived and created from them.

A standard major scale comprises of seven distinct notes, where the first note is the root note. Once you've mastered it you can easily learn its minor equivalent, which is basically covered inside the major scale. The one that I suggest you to start with is the C major scale. It's the most basic scale with no sharp or flat sounds.

Now the tough truth. Learning your first scale can be really challenging, but you just have to be patient and go through with it. Once you're fluent with the C major scale you can learn the other four most basic major scales. These are: G, D, A and E. It all starts with those five.

The next step after mastering the basic major scales is to try the minor scales, then the pentatonic scales, then the blues scales, and so on. It's almost a never-ending journey, but it's surely worth the effort. If you want to be able to improvise around a popular song with your own sounds then there's no better way of achieving this than by focusing on various guitar scales.

In order to fully know your scales, make sure to practice them as a warm up before the actual lesson. Also, memorize the proper placement of the fingers on each fret. Then practice the scale from the beginning to end and vice versa.

If you really want to improve and go further with your guitar skills, then this is the answer! Mastering, or at least familiarizing yourself with guitar scales will surely be a great addition to your standard guitar lessons.

There are tens or even hundreds of various guitar scales. There's just one question: where to get some charts? You can visit my site and get free guitar scales chart consisting of 70 different scales in a friendly, printer-ready format (the link earlier in the sentence).


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Three Ways to Tune Your Guitar Without an Electronic Tuner

If you play guitar, you know how important it is to have a good sense of pitch so you can keep your instrument in tune. Few things are worse than strumming a chord and finding there are two strings so flat they sound like they've been hit by a steamroller.

Learning to keep your guitar in tune can help you develop that sense of pitch, as you come to recognize what exactly a well-tuned guitar sounds like. Let's face it, anyone can turn their tuning peg until the tuner light turns green instead of red, but when you can tell your strings are properly pitched without mechanical aid you're starting to get somewhere.

Here are three different ways to tune a guitar without an electronic tuner.

1. Matching pitches with another instrument (simplest)

The best method of tuning for a beginner is simply to get the pitches from someone playing another instrument.

If you're playing with woodwind or brass players, make sure to request your notes in concert pitch. For example, someone playing a B-flat trumpet will need to play her D to produce a concert C. That means to match all six strings of a guitar in standard tuning you'll need her to play F#, B, E, A, C#, and another F#.

As the other player gives you the notes, simply tune each string until the pitches match.

2. Fretting the notes for the next string (intermediate)

This is the most common method for tuning. Simply play the note on a lower string that matches the pitch of the next higher one. For example, to tune the A string, you would fret an A on the low E string (the 5th fret). Then you turn the tuning peg for the A string until the pitch matches exactly.

Of course, you have to remember that how hard you press the strings will affect the pitch. So if you push down on the E string until your knuckles turn white, you will likely make your A string sharp. Always be relaxed and touch the strings as lightly as you can while still getting a clear tone. You'll need to make sure your low E string is in tune before you begin.

Every string will be tuned to the pitch of the next lower string when played on the 5th fret except the B string. To tune the B string, play the G string while holding it down at the 4th fret. Once you're finished tuning all the strings, play a couple of chords to make sure the whole instrument is in tune.

3. Tuning with harmonics (advanced)

This method requires that you understand how to play natural harmonics. If you lightly touch a string on the 12th, 7th, or 5th fret, then pluck it, you'll hear a natural harmonic if you don't dampen the string too much. On the 12th fret you'll hear a tone an octave above the open string. The 7th will be an octave plus a fifth, and the 7th two octaves.

The low E string played with a natural harmonic two octaves above the open string pitch (or fundamental) will produce the same pitch as the A string played with a natural harmonic an octave and a fifth above the fundamental - an E, equal to the pitch of the open high E string.

You can continue up the strings, tuning the A, D, and G strings this way. As usual, B is the odd string out. To tune the B string, play the low E string with a harmonic on the 7th fret and pluck the B string open. Adjust the B string to match the pitch of the harmonic. Then you can tune the high E to the B in harmonics.

Learning to tune your guitar is a great way to become familiar with and learning to match pitches, which will help greatly when it comes to playing with other musicians or making your own adjustments on the fly. Each of the three methods has its own advantages, and each will help you hone your skills in a different way.

Jason Barr is a writer, musician, and web designer/developer from South Bend, Indiana.

For more about guitars and the best acoustic guitar strings, check out Guitar Strings and Reviews.


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