Sunday, June 22, 2008

[NEW RELEASE] LACOSTE - CABESTAN 75 YEAR

René Lacoste is above all, a legend. A star on the courts of Wimbledon, Forest Hills and Roland Garros, René was one of the famous Four Musketeers (Jean Borot, Jacques Brugno, Henri Cochet and René Lacoste) who dominated the game of tennis in the late ‘20s and early ‘30s. They eventually led France to six straight wins (1927 through 1932) in the Davis Cup, and Rene became the world number one tennis player from 1926-1927. Nicknamed the ‘Crocodile’ and ‘Alligator’ for his tenacious attitude on the court, Rene is now better known for being the namesake and creator of the iconic 12.12 Lacoste Tennis shirt, which debuted in 1933.

Fast forward 75 years and the brand are celebrating this momentous occasion by launching a series of monotone shoes inspired by their tennis and yachting heritage. Unique to the 75 year collection is the use of the original crocodile which originated in 1933 and is embossed onto the uppers of each shoe. Tastefully executed in a consistent black and white scheme, the pack is a fitting tribute to the original purveyor of cool. July Release...

 

Jamorama probably the biggest selling guitar study program on the net. Over 35,000 people have used it to learn to play guitar. Why? I decided to check it out. Upon purchasing Jamorama, you get instant access to the program. This is key because when you buy it, you are "hot" to start practicing. The problem when you are waiting for delivery through the mail is, you can start to lose a little bit of interest. So this feature is great.

4 E-Books become available to you when you order. If you are a beginner, just start with book 1. As you become more advanced, you move through the program. Players with more experience cam start at Jamorama book 2 or 3.

Some of the topics Ben Edwards will teach you are: moveable barre chords, 7th chords, the different types of sus chords and chord progressions. For scales you will learn major and minor scales and pentatonic scales. This way you can be working on your soloing and developing that area of guitar playing.

I think one of the best features of the whole package is the 148 videos so you can see and hear the examples to check if you are doing them right. Also you can tell what needs more work. This is a priceless feature. It's like having a teacher at your side 24/7.

Along with all of this, you also receive and incredible amount of bonuses for free. Included with Jamorama are:

GuitEarIt - Ear Training program. Worth the price alone. Because any good musician knows how important hearing skills are

JaydeMusicaPro - learn to read music a fun way

Guitar Tuner Pro - allows you to always play in tune

Jamorama Metronome - develop your speed beyond your hopes

I give my full recommendation to anyone serious about the guitar to invest in Jamorama. It's a more than complete package and way under priced at this time. I don't know of any other product that gives you as much bang for the buck as Jamorama.

Are you ready to start learning? Visit the only place on the web to get Jamorama and free ckoMusic guitar backing tracks
http://jamplusfreetracks.wordpress.com

[ARTICLES] TOP TEN SNEAKERS IN CRIME!

As one of those aforementioned couch spuds (and a sneaker fan), I have noted with interest that the humble sneaker has left vital clues in many an episode of CSI. but HOW to separate fact from fiction? What role does the sneaker play in the forensic sciences? Aficionados may understandably muse over the merits of the speckled or gum sole, but the folks in the crime lab are more interested in the print shoes leave behind. As it happens, shoe prints are incredibly important clues often left at crime scenes.

The number of shoe print patterns out there is huge. Shoe print indices and databases have been developed in various countries. Commercial company Foster and Freeman have a range of software tools to identify shoes, including SICAR and SoleMate. Forensic Science Services (FSS) is a UK Government owned company that released an online footwear coding and detection management system this year, entitled Footwear Intelligence Technology.

I contacted Laura Mackin at the FSS who informed me that they have records of more than 20,000 shoe prints of which approximately 90 per cent come from sneakers. I was intrigued as to how the database was compiled; were they getting shoes from the manufacturers? From shops? As it happens, all of the prints come from shoes given to the FSS by the 43 police forces around the UK, either from marks left at a crime scene or from sneakers confiscated from a suspect. Interestingly, the FSS don’t have any special agreements with manufacturers. This was a bit of a disappointment as I was hoping to learn that the most comprehensive sneaker collection in the UK was at the FSS.

The FSS also offer the fantastically named ‘Cinderella Service’, which helps identify personal information about suspects including the angle of their footfall and weight distribution. Facey wrote in the journal Pattern Recognition that ‘shape and extent of the the general wear apparent on a shoe sole contains information about the foot function and gait of the wearer.’ The use of US Army anthropometric databases has allowed models to predict height based on shoe size. English tabloid newspaper The Mirror reported this June, with perhaps a hint of schadenfreude at the shoe manufacturer’s expense, that sneakers are the most popular shoes used by criminals as evidenced by shoe prints, and listed the top ten shoes for English crims.

The list I received from the FSS was exactly the same; so there haven’t been any changes in the sneaker buying habits of the criminal world in the last few months. Whilst this list may provoke some tittering amongst tabloid readers or annoyance for the manufacturers PR companies, no mention is made of what the top ten sneakers sold are, and whether the two lists are significantly different; ie most bad boys may wear the top ten listed but perhaps so do the general population in England. It would be interesting to see how these lists vary between countries. The data is also for all crimes, rather than category of crime. The FSS doesn’t store this info, and I can imagine the manufacturers are at least grateful for that.

As with any forensic test, the shoe print is not a tool to be used without caution. A survey in the 1996 issue of Forensic Science International demonstrated ‘remarkable variations’ in conclusions of shoe print reports from different laboratories examining the same cases! Hopefully computer databases have reduced the error rate. Miss Mackin (FSS) informed me that ‘footwear is the second most common evidence type after DNA and is capable of definitively putting someone at a crime scene, particularly thanks to the unique wear marks that each pair will have’.

The Mirror’s article has a quote from someone at Nike who said (in response to their shoes being six of the top ten worn in British crimes): ‘We are Britain’s best-selling trainer manufacturer so we’re not surprised we feature. We’ve no further comment.’ Whilst this indeed is common sense as previously noted, perhaps they should consider another approach; embrace it. I see it now, The Prisoner Pack; all orange Air Max 90s, black and white striped Air Max 95s. And why not cash in on the whole ‘all over print’ phenomenon and do some hyperstrikes that have an all over arrow motif!

This has been Nikolai for Sneaker Freaker
reporting from the Crime Lab.

Huge thanks to Laura Mackin at the Forensic Science Service Labs and Prof James Fraser at The University of Strathclyde.

Are you interested in learning to play the piano? If so, there are a few steps to actually getting started on the path to accomplishing that dream, you have to decide whether or not to buy digital piano equipment or traditional acoustic piano equipment. Also, you have to figure out whether you plan to teach yourself with online courses and books or hire a professional piano instructor. While it is difficult to advise a person as to what the best learning style for them would be, here is a little bit of information that might convince you whether or not you should buy digital piano equipment and learning materials or acoustic material to get started on your path to learning to play the piano.

Just the thought of learning a new instrument is exhilarating and being able to afford the instrument is just as exciting. You actually get to take the instrument home with you to practice where and when you want. Being so lightweight, the digital piano has become the choice for most piano playing novices and professionals alike.

Digital pianos have come a long way since the first synthesized piano, and the selection has grown exponentially. There are those that prefer the older more acoustic piano, but they are becoming too costly to maintain. The upkeep on a traditional style piano costs quite a bit what with cleaning and tuning costs every year.

One of the greatest advantages to a digital piano is that you can record your music in real time and begin to edit as soon as the track is saved. Connections include direct RCA hookup and 8mm plugs for sound card connections. Having the recording function allows you to hear how you play and to spot where you may be flat. Having the music in a digital format will also allow you to cut, scrape and edit the music as well.

The cost of a digital piano starts at roughly $100 and up. Compare this against a traditional piano and you would barely be able to pay the moving mans fee for hauling a piano to your house. A real piano is nice to have and is a great instrument, but when it comes to mobility, nothing beats a digital piano.

Being more mobile allows the user to take the digital piano to classes or jam sessions. For the new student, this is extremely convenient and will definitely cut down on the cost of the instructor's time as they sometimes charge for travel.

Learning the piano is a great way to experience music on all levels. Using a digital piano will allow you to do so much more with your studies and keep your costs down as well.

You can get a more in-depth knowledge about the piano in general and the many types of digital piano in particular by going to the-piano-site.com - The Complete Online Resource For Pianos And Piano Music.

[ARTICLES] ADISKATE - MATT IRVING INTERVIEW

You might not know Matt Irving's name but we can guarantee you've seen or indeed own some of his handiwork. With a knack for geometric flow and a natural flair for clean lines, his style is instantly appealing and offers snippets of humour in unexpected places. From his own work under the banner of Delphi, which included some great designs for Element, and more recently one of our shoes of the year in the Milk Blazer SB, he has had his finger in more than a few pies. Right now though, he's taken on a pretty big job handling all the visuals for the embryonic adidas Skate team. From the ads to bongo vans and videos of the Gonz in full flight, Irving is all over it. The trefoil is in good hands...

How and when did you start working on adidas Skateboarding and in what capacity do you work for them?
It all started about a year ago. My friend Brett Critchlow and I were approached separately by adidas to create concepts for their ads. We were both too busy with other projects so we decided to team up and the next thing you know we got the gig and started working on it full time. We handle everything visual for adidas Skateboarding except for the actual product design. So it’s things like ad campaigns, commercials and video projects, catalogs, website design etc. Two weeks ago we were asked to redesign the paint job for a 1970s split window VW bus for adidas Brasil. Our projects can be really random at times.

What’s your overall goal with adidas Skate? Where do you want to take it?
Personally, I just want it to be sincerely focused on skateboarding and not try to be too much of a fashion thing. Just shoes for skateboarders, and if other people seem to like them, then that’s cool too. I like that the team is solid and respected by skateboarders and adidas is being very slow and steady about what shops carry the program. Being a little bit picky isn’t necessarily being exclusive and snobby, it’s about committing to the skate shops that have been around for a long time and supporting the scene.


 

How do you, in general terms as well as specifically in regards to adidas Skate, feel about non-skate companies entering
the skateboarding world?
It’s all fair game in this day and age. There aren’t any rules about who can and can’t have a skate program. I think that skating has changed a lot since I started doing it. When I was a teenager I probably would have hated it if the bigger companies were getting involved because skating was something to break away from the mainstream. These days skating isn’t what the outcast kids are doing, it’s something that is considered cool. That doesn’t mean that there is a right and a wrong, skating continually eats itself and neglects its roots.

What do you think adidas Skate can offer to skateboarding?
I think they can offer up some really good quality shoes and support some of the best skateboarders to push what is possible on a skateboard. They have a level of quality in materials and production that is much higher than most of what is out there. If they can last longer than an average pair of skate shoes, then that’s good for everyone. I think it’s also really cool that the majority of skate shoes out there have always looked to many of adidas’ classic shoe designs for how they design their shoes. Like the Shelltoe, Stan Smith, Rod Laver, Campus, Gazelle or even just the iconic stripes on a side-panel.

 
What projects are you working on right now?
I just got back from five days of filming in Berlin with the adidas Europe team. It was a really fun time and super productive. That team is so driven to get out and skate. Right now we’re out in New Zealand to shoot Mark Gonzales with a small film crew and studio. It’ll be a three minute film about Gonz out in New Zealand because he has been living out here with his lady-friend while she gives birth to their child. That happened a few weeks ago and it’s a boy.

What new product can we expect from adidas Skate in the future?
Well there’s a new hi-top style of a shoe called the Roster Mid that will be coming out in January, as well as a vulcanized version of the Campus. The Gazelle was just redesigned with subtle improvements so it’s totally skatable. I really like how that shoe turned out and it’s not going to smash the crap out of your heels because of a lack of padding. Then in the middle of 2008 there will be a redesigned Shelltoe coming back that is modeled after an original late seventies model of the shoe. It’s completely dialed in, looks amazing and is true to the style of Shelltoe everyone used to wear in the early nineties.


 

How do you juggle working for adidas and your other projects?
Lately there hasn’t been a lot of juggling actually; Brett and I have just been focused on it as much as we can so the foundation is set for this first year. I still manage to do a few outside co-op projects in the evenings but I’m making a conscious effort to dedicate more time to that sort of stuff. It’s been nice to take a break from Delphi projects and personal artwork. I think I overdid it and kind of got burnt out on work. Now it feels fun again and the ideas flow naturally, I can have a fresh approach and know that it’s art or design projects for that very sake. I can live off the adidas work and keep the personal projects focused on new ideas and personal growth.

What other projects are you working on at the moment? What about Delphi?
I did a bunch of stuff for Nike ACG before I started working for adidas. It’s a Delphi/ACG design co-op collection that drops this spring. I just wrapped up a board, sweater and tee for a German skate brand called Hessenmob. Some shirts and a jacket design for a clothing line in Paris called Sixpack and some board graphics for Element. I might actually get to have some of my photography on wine bottles for Francis Ford Coppola’s winery, but we’ll see how that turns out.


What is floating your boat at the moment? Music? Art? Drinking?

Traveling has been consistent this year and that’s always great. Going to new cities, meeting new people and seeing different art and architecture. I think it’s important to rip yourself out of the your everyday life, it’s easy to get complacent. I also get really hyped on seeing friends starting to gain acknowledgement for their artwork. It’s inspiring to see people become successful at their random ideas and eventually to a level where they can live off of it. I have a friend who shapes surfboards under the name Mandala and his impeccable craftsmanship is blowing up. I don’t really even surf, but I certainly appreciate how cool-looking his boards are and the level of quality that he demands out of himself. I like that, it’s rare!

What keeps you motivated to work in this industry? Inspires you?
I grew up skating and it kept me out of trouble. I’ve always loved it and for some reason the love hasn’t gone away. I really only enjoy working for things that I believe in, and skating happens to be one of those things. Any design work I do out of skating is usually in the streetwear realm, I only do that because I like that world too. It’s young and energetic; I just don’t like the ‘trophy-hunter’ aspect of it.


 

 

What’s your take on the current state of skateboarding and how do you feel about the constant reference of skateboarding in streetwear, despite the fact the majority of streetwear brands have little, if any, history in skateboarding?
That’s a weird one. I actually think that streetwear is loosely tied to skating because a lot of the people that run the companies tend to be skaters or ex-skaters. There’s an entrepreneurial spirit that is sort of consistent from watching skate companies come up and get successful. In many ways, streetwear of today reminds me of the skate companies in the early 90s and I think that’s why I like it.

By Steven Vogel

For more info on Adiskate, hit up their website here

 

Looking for easy acoustic guitar lessons? Well, here are a few suggestions on what to look for when searching for an easy acoustic guitar lesson.

1. The lessons should be what they say... easy! Seriously, lessons don't have to be long and drawn out or difficult to understand. Look for lessons that focus in on just the basics so that you will be able to start playing songs very quickly. This helps to give you a sense of accomplishment ,too.

2. Find lessons that teach with 4 chords or less. This way everything stays easy and playable and you'll learn songs very quickly.

3. Ready to play your favorite songs? That's probably why you're looking for easy acoustic guitar lessons in the first place, right? So find lessons that teach you your favorite songs! It can be very boring to learn a song you don't really like. There's just no motivation. So don't settle for anything less than learning what you like!

4. Learning to play the guitar should be a fun and restful experience so don't settle on any so called easy acoustic guitar lessons that that don't do just that! The lessons should be simple and easy to understand and should produce some immediate results (that is...a song played by you!) in a short period of time.

5. When looking for easy acoustic guitar lessons , make sure you feel good about the instructor that is teaching you. Is he/she clear about what they are teaching. Is their style compatible with what you enjoy listening to and playing?

Did you know that you can actually learn how to start playing the acoustic guitar in just one weekend?

Check out easy acoustic guitar lessons and see how!

My Morning Jacket - Mahgeetah

Reigniting our popular bootleg feature with a great MMJ set... My Morning Jacket 10-23-2005 Murat Theater Indianapolis, IN Disc 1 01 - Intro 02 - Wordless Chorus 03 - It Beats 4 U 04 - Gideon 05 -… (in post Bootleg Justice - My Morning Jacket Live @ Murat Theater in Indianapolis, IN (10.23.2005) from Musical Justice. Download this at Amazon iTunes More by this artist at eMusic)

It may be that in musical retrospect, from a luxury of twenty-twenty critical hindsight, that Astor Piazzolla will be seen as having done in the twentieth century for the tango what Frederick Chopin did in the nineteenth for the waltz. It is perhaps already an accepted position. With the waltz, Chopin took an established popular form and stretched its boundaries so that what an audience might have expected to be a little ditty was recast to express heroism, sensuality, pride or even occasional doubt. The little dance tune then, in Chopin's slender hands, became an elegant art form, highly expressive, utterly Romantic in its ability to convey human emotion.

The tango represents an apparently different proposition. Already sensuous by definition, there are elements of the romantic towards which the tango need not aspire. If Romanticism placed individual emotional responses upon the pedestal of artistic expression, by the time the tango aspired to truly international currency in the twentieth century, there was no longer any need to worry about an artist's right to make a personal statement.

With the rise of serialism, neo-classicism and, later, minimalism, artistic mores were already, perhaps, heading in the opposite direction, towards a new espousal of rigour and structure. Emotion worn on the cuffs, like concepts plucked from the back of a matchbox, seemed to dominate cultural activities in the latter part of the century whilst, at the same time, Althusser and Derrida, allied with the populism of mass culture, seemed to suggest that there were no new statements, let alone discoveries, to be made. A spectral free-for-all ruled, where distinctions of quality were suddenly both particularistic and individual to the point of exclusion. (This, of course, is necessarily a paradox for people promoting a populist pop culture, since they aspire to mass consumption of a single artistic vision, a statement that by definition cannot be worth more than any other - even randomly selected statement. As a result, those who tend to deny a critic's right to make value judgments must themselves assume that such judgments are perfectly valid in the marketplace. It's a contradictory position, but an essential one for purveyors of pop, since they must continue to describe the form as popular, despite the fact that the vast majority of its products prove themselves to be anything but.) Post-modernists thus hailed the soap opera alongside Shakespeare, a logic that renders a Coca Cola advertisement the greatest film ever made by virtue of its viewer numbers. And then there was Piazzolla, an enigma par excellence.

On the one hand Astor Piazzolla is the quintessential mid-twentieth century composer. Classically trained, a pupil of Alberto Ginastera and Nadia Boulanger, and inspired by the commercial and folk music of his own country, he could have slotted alongside Villa Lobos, Ponce, or even Martinu or Copeland as a contributor to the century's neo-classical-folk music paradigm. But what he did was quite different.

He devoted his compositional energies to recreating and reinventing a popular idiom that was thoroughly specific to his own country, Argentina. The form, of course, was the tango. What is more, Astor Piazzolla concentrated on performance via his own ensembles and he achieved considerable success, albeit local until near the end of his life, over a career that spanned fifty years. But he expressed himself on the bandoneon, a squeezebox that lends itself to staccato, slapping attack, an instrument not peculiar to Argentina, but perhaps only well known to Argentinians. He died in 1992, his Romantic heroism national at best.

It was in the early 1990s that arrangements of Piazzolla's music began to appear on "classical" programmes. By the time a figure as august as Daniel Barenboim recorded his Tangos Among Friends, Mi Buenos Aires Querido, in 1995, they were already becoming established in the repertoire. I personally have heard performances of Piazzolla's music for full orchestra, string orchestra, chamber orchestra, various formats of chamber ensemble, piano trio, solo piano, solo harp, flute and guitar, guitar solo, violin and piano, string quartet, string trio and, of course, bandoneon. But it is surely the chamber group that best fits this music. There is always a toughness to its apparent sensuality that tends to be overstated by the large numbers of a full orchestra. Lack of volume, on the other hand, tends to stress the saccharine.

And if you want to find an exquisite match between the music's toughness and sensuality, its durability versus its novelty, there is surely no better experience than that provided by Camerata Virtuosi, a septet led by violinist Joaquin Palomares and featuring saxophonist Claude Delangle. Their recording of Piazzolla's music features Joaquin Palomares' superb arrangements that capture the music's directness and beauty while preserving its toughness.

A Camerata Virtuosi performance in the Auditori de la Mediterrnia, La Nucia in February 2008 featured all the pieces included in their recording of Piazzolla's music. The group performed all four of the Seasons as a sextet with two violins, viola, cello, bass and piano. These pieces offer Joaquin Palomares a perfect vehicle to display his virtuoso violin playing which communicates the music's line whilst at the same time decorates with highly effective jazz-like riffs. The rest of the pieces were performed by a septet in which Claude Delangle's perfect soprano saxophone bent and teased its way through lambent legato lines. It was playing of the highest quality.

As on the recording, particularly successful were Oblivion and Milonga del Angel. Oblivion is the quintessential Piazzolla, a popular sing-along for the manic depressive perhaps, and not therefore a rarity. But the simplicity and understatement of the piece always works beautifully, even when played twice in the same concert, as in La Nucia. Milonga del Angel is a different kind of piece. Though superficially similar to Oblivion, it manages in its six minutes to develop through its binary form, so that different movements create different moods within the same material. A true highlight.

Joaquim Palomares' violin playing was, as always, more than elegant throughout and by the end the audience had experienced again the genius of Piazzolla courtesy of Palomares' superb arrangements. Great music needs great interpreters, and Piazzolla's has surely found one in Joaquin Palomares.

Philip Spires
Author of Mission, an African novel set in Kenya
http://www.philipspires.co.uk

Michael, a missionary priest, has just killed Munyasya. It was an accident, but Mulonzya, a politician, exploits the tragedy for his own ends. Boniface, a church worker, has just lost his child. He did not make it to the hospital in time, possibly because Michael went to the Mission to retrieve a letter from Janet, a teacher, and the priest's neighbour. It is Munyasya who has the last laugh, however.

How To Find The Best Guitar Software

Any geek on the web who owns a guitar can profess that they're a master guitar player and sell you their secrets, telling you it's the best guitar software, ever! How do you know if it really is the best guitar software? Read on.

Lesson one: Don't believe all the hype.

It's easy to believe in something that you want so bad to be real. For instance, it's easy to believe that you can be Jimmy Page in just a matter of 10 days because you've always dreamed of becoming him all your life. It can be tempting to whip out your credit card once someone tells you that YOU CAN play the guitar in just a day IF you buy their best guitar software, but you shouldnt. If you really want to find great guitar software, you need to look past the hype and zone in on the features.

Lesson two: Buy a software befitting your skill level.

In looking for the best guitar software, never use other peoples opinions as basis. The truly best guitar software is one that addresses your current guitar playing skills. Those reviewed best by others is not necessarily the best for you.

Make an honest assessment of what playing level you are in, and start eliminating your choices from there. There's no one around, so you can be honest. If you really suck at playing guitar, go with a beginner's software.

The best guitar software is one that indicates the playing level. The more specified the level (and the objectives) for teaching you guitar, the more focused the training you will get. General guitar lessons are just that: they are broad, and they don't really hone specific skills. If you are serious and want to make guitar playing a profession, such products may not be enough. But if you just wish to play some songs to impress girls in parties, though, then such simpler, more focused products that teach you how to play specific pop songs may be the best guitar software for you.

Final lesson: Have realistic expectations.

Read any great guitar player's biography from B.B. King to Jimi Hendrix to Steve Vai and they all say the same thing: practice. Some of these guys practice guitar ten hours a day! The sooner you realize that no software can ever make you a master in just a few hours, the greater your chances of finding the best guitar software. If the softwares promises are too good to be true, do not buy it. The best guitar software products out in the market do not claim unrealistic progress levels.

Nick Siegal is a professional guitarist and has been a private guitar instructor for over 15 years. To read his own in-depth Best Guitar Software reviews, head over to his site at http://www.bestguitarsoftware.com You can also grab some cool free guitar software while you're there.

[NEW RELEASE] NIKE 1WORLD - GORE-TEX

The newly launched Nike 1World project has been created in conjunction with select cool kids in the “sports, music, art and design fields”, presumably hand-picked for their innate panache on a global scale. The scope of 1World has been defined as 18 original shoes, which will be launched month by month via Nike's awesome AF-1 website.

Today the first three have now been revealed – from the rainbow excess of Busy P to the refelective digital camo of Gore-Texer (Nitro Microphone Underground) and finally Rasheed’s hightop with ‘Max Air’, you couldn’t find three more different AF-1s if you tried. Definitely a bright start to this project...
Just go to http://www.nikeairforce1.com and hit the 1World button - all will be revealed in due course!

 

Is it the fact that the acoustic guitar is harder to play? Or is it, that it has a more natural sound? Personally I just love what comes out of them (most of the time anyway)! Too me there is not too many things as cool as an acoustic guitar tuned to and open chord. I love the fact that when I do this all the notes are in different places and I come up with new things that I would have in standard tuning.

Maybe it's the fact that there is no distortion or reverb or anything else coming out of an amp. It's just the guitar. Simple as that.

As a kid I hated the acoustic guitar because it was so hard to play. I remember trying to play chords and how bad they sounded. But overtime as I got better at it and practiced it more and more I began to fall in love with the sound. Even the feel. I now love the fact that it is a little harder to play. It's comfortable at this point.

I also love the fact that I can take an acoustic guitar with me and go walk into some field where t
What is it about the acoustic guitar that everybody loves? I know so many players of all types of music. Some of them love every kind of music; some of them only like their kind of music. All of them however love any kind of music we play on acoustic guitar. We can play folk tunes together or blues or fiddle tunes, it doesn't matter we just jam.
here is no one around and just play. If you have never sat on a rock by a stream with the sun reflecting off the water and just had a jam I highly recommend it. No one around, no distractions, just you the guitar and nature. It's pretty amazing.

I think maybe there are a many reasons to love acoustics, as there are players. It's just a beautiful invention and I am glad I got involved with acoustic guitars.

Want to know even more about playing acoustic guitar and easy ways to speed up your learning? Visit my site below.
http://FreeAcousticGuitarLessons.wordpress.com

Albert Hammond Jr. - Bargain Of A Century

So, I am (as I should be) really happy right now. This is one of the strangest feelings I've ever experienced: total freedom, and a lack of purpose. I must admit, I've been diffident and hard work over… (in post One To Watch: Albert Hammond Jr. from The Cold Cut. More by this artist at eMusic Amazont iTunes)

This is the time for you to learn the most popular song in the English language according to Guinness Book of World Records. You do not need to know sheet music. You only need a guitar so let's start!

We will use guitar tab notation which will show you where to put your fingers on your guitar strings as you play. We will explain how to use it later on.

Here are the lyrics:

Happy Birthday To You Happy Birthday To You Happy Birthday Dear_____ Happy Birthday To You

Let's learn to play the first line with guitar tab:

Happy Birthday To You

1. ----------------------

2. ---------------1--0---

3. -0--0--2--0-----------

What does the lines and numbers mean? Good question!

The three lines represent the three highest strings on your guitar. Highest in pitch that is! If you hold your guitar the usual way it will be the three strings nearest your feet.

The numbers indicate which fret you are to press down. 0 means that you play a string without pressing down a fret. This is called to play an open string.

The first notes 0 0 2 0 means that you play the third open string twice, then play the second fret on the third string and then back to the third open string.

Hopefully you are recognizing the melody by now!

We will now learn the next line with guitar tab:

Happy Birthday To You

1. ---------------------

2. ---------------3--1--

3. -0--0--2--0----------

What right hand finger should you use? Well, there are many ways to play this song. If you are a complete beginner maybe you can use your right hand thumb to pluck the notes. It should be the easiest way to play the melody, I guess.

We will now learn to play the third line with guitar tab. We will use a name. Let's take the name Peter, that is my name by the way! :

Happy Birthday Dear Peter

1. -------3--0-----------

2. -------------1--0-----

3. -0--0--------------2--

What about the left hand fingers? You can of course use your index finger to play all the notes.

This way to play guitar will work with slow easy pieces but it does not work with more complicated guitar melodies and when you start to play pieces with more than one not at a time.

If you want to learn to play guitar in a more professional way you can use your left hand index finger to play the notes on the first fret, the middle finger to play the notes on the second fret and the ring finger for the third fret.

Time to finish this guitar lesson!

We will now learn to play the last line with the following guitar tab:

Happy Birthday To You

1. --1--1--0-----------

2. -----------1--3--1--

3. --------------------

As all people have a birthday there will be many occasions to play this song! I suggest that you learn the melody by heart, one line at a time.

Peter Edvinsson invites you to download your free sheet music, guitar tabs, ebooks, music lessons and read his music blog at Capotasto Music

The Handsome Family - 5 and 6

My cherished iRiver H120 is broken and I am rather depressed about it. Its last will and testament was a frustratingly obscure Kurtz-like ata error -32 My efforts to revive it have been rather cack-handed and have only… (in post But Mary you are with me now, all around me in the waves from Partly Porpoise. More by this artist at eMusic Amazont iTunes)

Mackie is a subsidiary of Loud Technologies. Mackie has been producing the musical equipment for about 15 years now and has gained a very good reputation from the professional music artists. Mackie has been known to produce the best mixers. The Mackie D2 Splash is one of the best mixers that Mackie has produced. The Mackie D2 Splash has gained its credibility with the superior sound and its design and stands at the top among the DJ mixers produced by other companies.

The Mackie D2 Splash is the worlds first DJ mixer that has the FireWire operation card for recording as well as mixing the files, which can be done directly from your computer. The other feature that was introduced in Mackie D2 Splash was the Infinium optical cross fader that has the adjustable tension, a turntable that is genuine and the mic prepams to get incredibly low noises, as well as a massive punch and knobs that are backlit and they can be used in very dim lights.

Among the other outstanding features of Mackie D2 Splash is that it has a very classic finish and has a bulletproof make with a premium analog VCA circuitry, as well as the ultra high performance components. With the Infinium, the mic and turntable preamps, it also has a 3-postion spring loaded transform switches and a solid 14-gauge steel body. The Mackie D2 Splash can also be connected to the computer to playback from any software application including Live, iTunes, Windows Medial Player etc. You can set the Input Select switch of the channels to the FireWire and can mix the two tracks with your computer.

The Mackie D2 Splash has a rotatable spring loaded 3-position switches to provide the Transformer effects. There is a Reverse switch and a variable Contour control provided for each of the fader, which allows the DJ to dial in with the feet. The DJs can get up to 10 dB of boost through the channel EQ. With the Mackie D2 Splash, you can connect the dynamic mics and the studio condenser mics, as the Mackie mic preamp gives about 50 dB of gain with the +48V Phantom Power. Mackie D2 Splash can be connected with the PA system through the balanced XLR Main outputs with a mic/level line switch.

In order to prevent the recording levels getting shattered, Mackie D2 Splash is equipped with the RCA outputs, which includes the live/record switch. There is also a built-in Stereo FX Loop that presents a dual 1/4-inch inputs and outputs along with the Send and Return level knobs. There are also 1/4 inch Booth outputs that have a volume control, a stereo and a mono switch. This feature just allows the adjustments as per the adjustments of the software.

Another best feature is that the Mackie D2 Splash now comes with a battery of 100-240 VAC/50-60 Hz. The Mackie D2 Splash has just brought a revolution in the world of DJ Mixers and has become the first choice for DJs throughout the world.

For further information on this product please visit http://www.guitarampkeyboard.com

Today's Blog Music - The Hype Machine

latest mp3 blog tracks from all over

If you enjoy songs like Party Like A Rock Star By Shop Boyz, why not download it to your portable player? Be it Apple's iPod or Microsoft's Zune, you can listen to your favorite song or even watch a video while being on the move. Apple's iTunes Store and Zune Marketplace, as well as large music and video selling online stores should have this hit for download, but let us first consider cheaper options.

In case you already have "Party Like A Rock Star" By Shop Boyz or any other of your favorite songs on a CD or DVD, you can copy the audio or video to your portable player. There are quite a few programs on the Net that can help you in doing this. But in many cases, even the Windows Media Player should do.

The first step is to rip the sound or video track to your PC. Next, you need to make sure it is in a format that is compatible with your player. Mp3 is the most common format for audio files and mpeg4 - for videos. Chances are you will need to convert the files into the needed format before transferring them to your device. Search the Internet for conversion software - you will find a few, free to use.

But this method, even if you have done everything right, does not guarantee that your favorite tune will play on your player. CDs and DVDs can be protected from ripping due to Digital Rights Management. Also, your computer might contain a virus that can spread onto the music or video file, modifying it. In both cases, the file will not play on your portable music device, showing an error message.

So, your next option is to download your favorite song from the internet. Let us use Party Like A Rock Star By Shop Boyz as an example. But most probably, this is not the only song you are looking to have in your player. As other media player owners, you might be hunting for quite a number of catchy tunes and cool videos. Even here you have budget options as opposed to costly official music-selling websites.

For safe and quality downloads, check out websites for unlimited music and video downloads. They are not free, but what they offer is a fantastic deal: unlimited number of various downloads for a one-time fee. Of course, given the extensive databases of media files that such sites would have, you are bound to find not only a song like Party Like A Rock Star By Shop Boyz, but a thick bundle of other music and videos for your little music player.

Download your favorite hits such as Party Like A Rock Star By Shop Boyz and Sarah Brightman's La Lune within minutes - my music blog provides links to the best Internet resources ready to be used immediately.

Find out about hot and limited offers for unlimited music downloads.

The Hood Internet - I'm Good, I'm Ghost (Lykke Li vs Holy Ghost)

The mixes are finally back and that is really all that I have to say. Enjoy! The Republic Tigers - The Nerve Flying Foxes - Lost In Low Cloud Jack Peate - Have I Been A Fool? Someone… (in post This Week's Mix from Instrumental Analysis. More by this artist at iTunes)

A subliminal message is a signal or a message recorded in a video or audio beneath the original text. Such subliminal messages have no influence on our conscious mind but affect our subconscious. The subconscious may then influence our conscious actions to act in according to the message embedded within the message. Some argue that effects of subliminal messages are rather insignificant while others argue that they are unfair and potentially harmful, especially if abused

These days subliminal messages are very much popular in music industry. Subliminal messages in music have been given a name of 'Backward Messages' or more commonly 'Backward Masking'. It is very easy to record backward messages on existing sounds or subliminal messages in music with the help of the computer on simply a click of mouse. An interesting thing about subliminal messages in music is that they can easily be disguised with other natural or unnatural form of sounds such as blowing wind, traffic noise, rain falling or even water crashing. Since subliminal messages in music have been discovered many controversial examples can be found.

In the late 60's a Beatles album was supposedly contained one example of a subliminal messages in music, a suggestion that Paul McCartney had died. The controversy raged extensively when some religious groups claimed that Satan was possessing the singers and causing them to insert subliminal messages in music.

Another popular example of subliminal messages in music is the popular song Stairway to Heaven" by Led Zeppelin. This song contained not one but many subliminal messages. "Play backwards. Hear words sung", is the message you hear at the very end of the song. Amazingly, if you play the song backward you will find many satanic related messages. For example, somewhere in the middle of the song it says, "It's my sweet Satan. The one whose little path would make me sad whose power is fake."

Subliminal message in music are mostly popular amongst rock and electronic bands. There are many thousands of albums containing subliminal messages. Some bands do this through hidden means while some of them do it openly. Pitcher Shifter, known for incorporating technology in their music, has been openly making use of subliminal messages in their music for years. In their album Infotainment released in 1996 they included two tracks and went as far as to include a warning message at the start of its first track that a subliminal message is about to be played.

On the other hand, the band Judas Priest was taken to court for using subliminal messages in their songs which believed to have urged the listeners to commit suicide. The case was discharged and they were never proven to have used these techniques.

Josie and the pussycats, a movie released in year 2001, It focuses on the concept of subliminal messages in music and effects on teen minds when constantly listened to subliminal music but also assures viewer that the spell can be broken and one can return to a normal life.

Subliminal messages in videos have been proven to affect sales of condiments at the movie theatres, and in 2006 Derren Brown, and English illusionist, did an experiment which showed how subliminal messages could cause such dramatic effects as to cause 65% of people who had watched a movie to have completely forgotten the plot.

Subliminal messages in music do not necessarily need to be all bad. If one was to listen to a subliminal message in music designed to help them lose weight, studies indicate that they would, more than likely, be able to lose weight dramatically. Utilizing subliminal messages in music has not been studied long enough to determine their effectiveness, but should they prove to be effective, they can shave years off of your own personal change, whether you want more confidence, to lose weight, or to quit smoking.

Robert Watson is a certified hypnotherapist with the ABH and the NGH, and has worked with affirmations and subliminal messages for over ten years. Visit his Subliminal Messages website for more information about using affirmations and subliminal messages to help you lose weight, quit smoking, have a more positive outlook and more.

The Irish Harp

The harp that once through Tara's halls the soul of music shed,
now hangs as mute on Tara's walls, as if that soul were fled.
So sleeps the pride of former days, so glory's thrill is o'er,
and hearts that once beat high for praise,
now feel that pulse no more

To tell the history of the Irish harp is to tell the history of the Irish people. This ancient folk instrument with its beautiful, delicate sound is played today despite being ignored, derided and proscribed for centuries. Harpers, who in earlier days would have been hanged for their art, now flourish throughout the world, as do the Irish themselves

Legend tell us the first harp was owned by Dagda, a chief among the Tuatha De Danaan. At one time during a war with the Fomorians, the gods of cold and darkness, his harp was stolen but later recovered by Lugh and Ogma. When it was returned it had aquired two secret names and the ability to call forth summer and winter. From then on, when Dagda played, he could produce a melody so poignant, it would make his audience weep, he could play an air so jubilant it would make everyone smile, or bring forth a sound so tranquil, it would lull all who listened to sleep. So thus did the harp became the dispenser of Sorrow, Gladness and Rest.

Harps are played throughout much of the world. From ancient artworks, epic tales and poetry, we learn of harps in Babylonia and Mesopotamia. We see them in the tomb of Pharaoh Ramses III , votive carvings from Iraq and sculptures of ancient Greece. From Africa, which has more than 100 harp traditions, the instrument travelled north to Spain and soon spread throughout Europe. Strung with sinew, silk or wire, harps vary in size, structure and decoration according to the physical and technological environments of their origins. African harps have been made from wood and gourd covered with cowhide, the Burmese sang auk has an arched soundbox similar to the Turkish ceng while European harps feature a triangular frame, There is one feature that all harps share: the strings run vertical (rather than parallel) to the sound box.

Griffith of Wales employed harpists in his court at the end of the 11th century and the monk-historian Geraldus Cambrensis admired the great skill of the Irish harpers and remarked that some even considered the Scots to be better players. For Irish and Scottish harpers commonly visited each others countries to study, to learn and exchange tunes and their music was admired throughout Europe. Another twelfth century archivist, John of Salisbury, wrote that " ... had it not been for the Irish harp, there would have been no music at all on the Crusades."

These harps were quite different from the large pedal harps we see in modern symphony orchestras. They were much smaller, originally held on the harper's lap, leaning against the left shoulder, had no pedals, and usually were carved in one piece from bog wood. The Trinity College Harp and Queen Mary's Harp are the oldest surviving Celtic harps and both date from the 15th or 16th centuries and illustrate the similarity between the Irish and Scottish harps. A distinguishing characteristic of these Gaelic harps was that they were wire-strung, rather than gut strung. The word "harp" has its roots in the Anglo-Saxon, Old German and Old Norse words which mean "to pluck." In Gaelic they were known first as cruit and later as clarsach or clirseach.

The harp isn't peculiar to Ireland but subsequently became its national emblem. (Nowadays you can even see it on the Guiness label) Harpers were highly trained professionals who performed for the nobility and enjoyed political power - so much so that during the 16th century, Queen Elizabeth I issued a proclamation to hang Irish harpists and destroy their instruments to prevent insurrection.

Sadly, while this oldest emblem of Ireland is still with us today most of the ancient airs and melodies it once produced are long gone, but younger harpers are taking up the challenge to reawaken the pride of former days.

Susanna Duffy is a Civil Celebrant, grief counsellor and mythologist. She creates ceremonies and Rites of Passage for individual and civic functions, and specialises in Croning and other celebrations for women. http://celebrant.yarralink.com