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Beck Tickets One Name Many Different Styles

Posted on September 12th, 2008 in Music And Song Information by Global Marketing - Internet Marketing




Beck Tickets – One Name, Many Different Styles

Like the last pea, Beck has been hard to pin down as an artist, and Beck tickets are hard to pin down once his concert dates have been set. Beck’s career has spanned so many years, and his musical performances have crossed into so many different genres that one must not box this artist into one category or another, lest Beck move in another direction after this publication. One thing about Beck has remained throughout his career, and that is his adoring fan base.

Born of a Canadian musician and a visual artist named Bibbe, Bek David Campbell was raised as a scientologist. When his father left him at a young age, the perceptive and curious Beck was raised by his mother and brother in Los Angeles, where his mother’s artistic influence and the culturally diverse musical sounds of the city would have a long-lasting affect on Beck’s career. Beck dropped out of high school to travel and educate himself, staying for a time in Germany with his grandfather, a successful Fluxus artist in Cologne. He then popped up in L.A. in his early twenties, busking and working odd jobs, all the while sleeping in a shed.

After some success in early productions at the KXLU radio station under a fledgling label, Beck was discovered and signed a contract with Geffen Records. And the rest, as they say, is history. Beck’s first great album, Mellow Gold catapulted him to stardom. The debut of his most famous work, the album Odelay in 1996, was met with widespread acclaim in the music industry. Fans got to see Beck for the first time on MTV in the oft-played video for “Where Its At.” The song “Loser” was to be his quintessential hit.

After Odelay, Beck went off into different directions, never doing anything particularly reminiscent of any one artist or genre for more than a little while. Mutations, Midnight Vultures, Sea Change, Guero, and The Information all sold well to the base of fans he had earned and inspired with Mellow Gold.

If Beck happens to play one of his more danceable songs while on stage, then you might be in store for an impromptu exhibition of pop and lock break dancing moves. Beck is known to do a very good “Robot” on stage. He can play many different instruments, his favorite being a Vintage Danelectro Silvertone.

The guitar and drums sound of Beck’s early days gave way to more electronic and psychedelic rock, which gave way to an experiment into country and folk rock. Who knows what Beck will try next? If you get Beck tickets, you might just be in store for something completely different.

Written by Brent Warnken, sponsored by http://www.stubhub.com. StubHub sells Beck tickets, sports tickets, concert tickets, theater tickets and more to just about any event in the world

Beck Tickets – One Name, Many Different Styles / Author: StubHub


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Budget Priced Guitars Not Just For Beginners Anymore

Posted on August 30th, 2008 in Music And Song Information by Global Marketing - Internet Marketing



Budget Priced Guitars Not Just For Beginners Anymore

In the late 70’s, the pressure of corporations to show a profit to their shareholders caused the big guitar manufacturers to go overseas to places like Japan, China, Taiwan and Korea to lower their manufacturing costs. Initially, guitar players felt betrayed by the companies they had supported for years. Imagine the high quality guitars they had grown to love now carried little stickers that said things like Made in Japan and Made in China. The stigma of low quality and “cheap junk” was now attached to their favorite musical instruments. Sales slowed and new American guitar companies were opening up to compete with marquis nameplates. Would Jimi Hendrix have played a Stratocaster that was made overseas? Would it have made a difference in the way he sounded? I would imagine that if he played a cigar box he would be an inspiration to guitar players all over the world.

In the 90’s, more corporate pressure and declining quality had all manufacturers, not jus in the music industry, adopting new quality procedures that included buzzwords like “Sigma Six” and “ISO 9000”. People working for large manufacturers knew that not much had changed except that the quality procedures they had been using for years now included more paperwork to prove that they were complying with these “new” quality standards invented by consultants that convinced companies that this would save American manufacturing. Unfortunately, more paperwork also means higher costs that the average musician wasn’t willing to pay. All of these costs were being passed directly onto the consumers.

What most people failed to realize is that these companies that were making instruments overseas were trained by the American manufacturers how to make high quality instruments to the standards that they had been using all along. They taught them how to make high end marquis instruments with foreign efficiency. The downside of this system for the American manufacturers is that these foreign companies took this knowledge and the extra manufacturing capacity and started to create their own lines of high quality instruments. Engineers from these foreign companies are not constrained by the old notions of how things are supposed to be made and are making improvements in the way things used to be done. This proved to be a huge windfall for the foreign manufacturers because they could provide instruments with the same quality standards at lower, more competitive prices.

Musicians benefit the most of all from this. Companies like Arbor and JB Player were partnered with American distributors to bring their high quality products to American musicians at competitive prices. Beginners and pros alike can now walk into a store or go to online music stores like BoutiqueMusic.com and purchase instruments that sound just like instruments costing three to five times as much. These beginners are also accustomed to the fact that most of the products they use are manufactured overseas so the old stigmas of “low quality” and “cheap junk” are relatively unknown to them. All they know is that the guitar they are playing is great. This increased demand of the foreign manufactured products has served to fuel the efficiency engine of the overseas manufacturers and driven them to create even better and more affordable products.

Budget Priced Guitars Not Just For Beginners Anymore / Author: Boutique Music


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Perfect Your Guitar Tab Reading Overnight

Posted on August 30th, 2008 in Music And Song Information by Global Marketing - Internet Marketing

Perfect Your Guitar Tab Reading Overnight!

One of the basic lessons that you need to know and learn is to read guitar tabs. A guitar tab is a specialized notation made by guitarists for guitarists. It is quite different from the solfeggio learned by pianists and other classical instruments. It has a standard of its own, and only the guitar can be played with it.

Browsing on various guitar playing sites, you might notice that there are a lot of songs in guitar tabs, aside from guitar chords. Oftentimes, guitar chords are outnumbered even. This is so because guitar tabs are much more specific about which string to pluck and on which fret, making it a popular choice for those who want to perfect their guitar playing in the most detailed way possible.Having this kind of situaton, you must learn to play your tabs right in order to make use of a variety of online song and guitar resources.

Reading tabs is as easy as reading a chord chart. It is just more detailed and much longer to read that in one glance. Every note and the specific fret to be played at is indicated in a tab. In a tablature, you will see six horizontal lines that represent one string or note to be played. These lines represent E, B, G, D, A, E from top to bottom. A number may be placed in any of these lines, and this number signifies the fret to play it at. Therefore, a number 2 in the E line, means you have to play the E string of the second fret.

That is the basic principle of a guitar tab. As a beginner, it is not such a difficult thing to learn it , and moreso, it is the key to a great new variety of music that can be learned along your guitar playing journey.

Perfect your guitar tab reading to be able to play the best songs that catch your fancy online. It all starts there.
So grab your guitar playing E-Book now at http://freeguitarguide.googlepages.com/
to get you started with reading and perfecting your guitar playing OVERNIGHT!

Perfect Your Guitar Tab Reading Overnight! / Author: Patrik Ewriter


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Largest Concert Venues To Listen To Your Favorite Groups

Posted on August 22nd, 2008 in Music And Song Information by Global Marketing - Internet Marketing

Largest Concert Venues To Listen To Your Favorite Groups

New York is the theatre center of the United States. The Americans have a very rich culture with the music and theatres being an integral part of it. Only in West 40 & 50 streets and Broadway, there are around 38 theatres opened in winter and autumn. In mid eighties, there were more than 200 theatres in the New York apart from Broadway which were generally located in Chelsea and Greenwich Village. New York also has more than 400 cinemas, from the very well known Radio City music concert hall to the local cinemas where small halls run elite movies. New York entertainment industry is just unimaginable without its cafes, bars, discos and nightclubs.

Lincoln Center in the Amsterdam district for Performing Arts consists of 3 buildings located just about the square: New York State Theatre built in 1964 is the site for the NYC Ballet, Avery Fisher Hall (built in 1962) hosts the concerts of NY Philarmonic Orchestra and the Metropolitan Opera built in 1966. Other concert halls in New York City are New York City Center, Carnegie Hall and Brooklyn Academy of Music.

The largest concert venues in New York to listen to your favorite groups include: Madison Square Garden, Roseland Ballroom and the Radio City Music Hall.

Madison Square Garden: Madison Square Garden or MSG is the name of 4 arenas in the New York City. It was also the site of the original Madison Square. The first Madison Square opened in the year 1979 at the north eastern part of the Madison Avenue and the 26th street. This is the place where many fights of the legendry boxer Jack Dempsey were held. The 2nd Madison Square Garden replaced the first in 1889. It was designed by the famous Stanford White. The building features a theatre, concert hall, and a roof garden. The building was demolished in 1925 and the Madison Square Garden was relocated to 8th Avenue and the 49th Streets in the New York. Presently, the Madison Square Garden is situated at the Penn Station.

Roseland Ballroom: Roseland Ballroom or the Roseland Dance City, located at New York City in the West 52nd Street of the theatre district. It is a music venue/dance hall /catering hall with a multicolored ballroom pedigree in a transformed ice skating ring. The venue can accommodate around 32,000 standing and about 2,500 for the dance party with about 1,500 to 1,800 in the theatre style and 800 to 1000 for the sit down dinner. The venue has hosted events like Hillary Clinton birthday party, movie premiers and musical performances from celebrities like Nirvana, Madonna, the Rolling Stone, Ramones and the Phish.

Radio City Music Hall: The Radio City Music Hall, located in the Rockefeller Center in the New York City is an important entertainment center. It has been nicknamed as the
Showplace of the Nation and was among the favorite tourist destinations. Radio City has the capacity of seating 5,933 spectators and was the World’s largest movie theater at its time of opening. The interior of Radio City Music Hall was declared landmark in the year 1978.

Erica Maurer is a partner at EMRG Media New York’s premiere event planning and marketing company. She has done a thorough research on restaurants, event spaces and night clubs in New York City. To know hot information’s about clubbing, dining and other entertainment facilities, keep reading her articles.

Largest Concert Venues To Listen To Your Favorite Groups / Author: EricaMaurer


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Barbecue Music

Posted on August 21st, 2008 in Music And Song Information by Global Marketing - Internet Marketing

Barbecue Music

Americans disagree, often fanatically, on the definition of a barbecue. In Texas, where I come from, for example, it means smoking meat — most prominently brisket, sausage and ribs — “low and slow,” with indirect heat from hardwood coals; variants on this, often using different meats, are standard operating procedure in Kansas City, Memphis, the Carolinas, and other parts of the South. But to many people, barbecuing still means grilling hot dogs, hamburgers and steaks quickly over intense direct heat from charcoal briquettes.

There is one thing about barbecues, however, that we can all agree on: To have a good one, you must have good music. (A swimming pool doesn’t hurt, either.) Barbecue music should be summery, rollicking and upbeat, with a deep groove. It should also be familiar to most of the guests — the better to bind them in a copacetic communal bond — though the host is advised to throw in a few left-fielders just to prove that he definitely knows his stuff. There are many songs about barbecue; to hear some, simply go to the top of this page and select “track” in the search box and the words “barbecue,” “bar-b-q” or “BBQ” in the slot next to it. You’ll get a slew of song titles. But this list ignores music about barbecue; this is barbecue music.

Willy and the Poor Boys
Artist: Creedence Clearwater Revival
Release Date: 2000
No band from the classic rock era created better barbecue music than John Fogerty and crew. Recasting their hard rockabilly as a kind of jug-band stomp, this represents their most good-timey effort — even “Fortunate Son,” one of the most biting topical songs ever, can sound kinda fun. That jug-band feeling permeates “Down on the Corner,” “Cotton Fields,” “Poor Boy Shuffle,” “The Midnight Special” — the ghost of Lead Belly also hovers over these proceedings — and even the Cold-War-paranoia allegory “It Came Out of the Sky” uses gleeful satire to make its point with a laugh.

Night Train
Artist: King Curtis
Release Date: 1995
Dilettantes used to debate whether Curtis was “really” jazz or “just” r&b, as if the two weren’t already joined at the hip. In truth, Curtis is groove, and that’s all you need to know. He yakety-yakked wooly tenor sax solos on hits by everyone from the Coasters to John Lennon to Aretha, but his own records work by cutting a fat, funky night-time-is-the-right-time groove and holding it until the last partier drops. This works just as well outdoors, especially when you’re strutting tunes like “Honky Tonk,” “Hot Saxes” and “(Let’s Do) The Hully Gully Twist” with a band that combines r&b blowers like fellow tenorman Sam “The Man” Taylor and jazzmen like organist Brother Jack McDuff.

Giant Sand - Backyard Barbecue Broadcast
Artist: Giant Sand
Release Date: 1996
A drum roll, please, for our sole high-concept selection. This was recorded partly at a backyard-barbecue benefit for WFMU in New Jersey, and audience members definitely like what they’re hearing. So you might say this music has already test-marketed high for our list. And well it should. Giant Sand, the forerunner to Calexico, hails from the desert college town of Tucson, and knows how to make hot-weather music for people in pursuit of the good life. Indeed, the 22:40 “BBQ Suite” moseys haphazardly but purposefully all over the place, like a slacker wandering around town in search of the next opportunity for free beer and food.

America’s Most Colorful Hillbilly Band - Vol. 1
Artist: The Maddox Brothers and Rose
Rose Maddox and her brothers, who ruled the West Coast country scene in the ‘40s and ‘50s, were also America’s most clattering hillbilly boogie band; with Rose singing in a near-bray, their country music approached sheer foolishness in its purest form. But it’s the kind of exuberant, irreverent foolishness any crowd can get into — and best of all, underneath the hilarity was some fiery, abandoned and daring picking. The instrumental “Water Baby Boogie” is as hot as any music in any genre of this era (1946-51), and their repertoire was wildly eclectic, taking in religious and traditional music as well as pop, novelties, blues and then-current country hits.

Moments from This Theater
Artist: Dan Penn and Spooner Oldham
Release Date: 1999
You know most of these songs in versions by everyone from the Box Tops (“Cry Like a Baby”) to James Carr (“Dark End of the Street”) and Aretha (“Do Right Woman, Do Right Man”). Now hear them done by their writers, Penn on guitar and Oldham on piano. The former proves to be a great backwoods singer, and they harmonize like brothers, which they sorta are. They personify that distinctly Southern musical paradox by being simultaneously intense and laid-back, or maybe just intensely laid-back; at any rate, this is both deeply passionate and seemingly carefree, a perfect soundtrack to lazy, languorous days.

Haul Up Your Foot You Fool
Artist: Mr. Peter’s Boom And Chime
Release Date: 1997
Backed by a four-piece Belizean band whose members play guitar, boom and chime — a bass drum struck on one side with a mallet (the boom) and on the other with something called a “drum sack” (the chime) — tumba (aka conga), the jawbone of an ass and an auto brake drum, Wilfrid Peters carries on the traditional polyrhythmic music of 19th-century mahogany camps in what used to be called British Honduras. He sings his often-bawdy brukdowns (including a customized version of Merle Haggard’s “Today I Started Loving You Again”) in chipper, Creole-inflected pidgin English, and plays driving/droning accordion. It’s so infectious you’ll involuntarily haul up your own foot and start dancing.

Remember Me
Artist: Otis Redding
Release Date: 1992
Sure, they dubbed it soul, but they might as well have called it “heart music.” Did any performer ever display a bigger heart than Otis Redding? He can lift a party — any party, anytime, anywhere — the instant he opens his mouth to sing, whether it’s to sigh “I’ve Got Dreams to Remember,” to admonish “Try a Little Tenderness” or to cry out for “Respect.” And you haven’t fully experienced summer until you’ve heard the sound of “The Dock of the Bay” riding a balmy breeze to mingle with the smell and smoke of barbecue. Remember that.

The Very Best of Jimmy Reed
Artist: Jimmy Reed
Release Date: 2003
Reed’s laconic ’50s update of Delta blues seemed so simple that he’s likely the most widely-covered bluesman ever — but his timing, sound and mood proved so subtle and deceptive that nobody’s ever gotten it quite right (except possibly Charlie Rich). With his sweet, nasal singing set off by walking bass, sighing countrified harp and insistent boogie guitar, songs like “Big Boss Man,” “Bright Lights, Big City” and “Baby What You Want Me To Do” may go down easy, but they never really go away; they’re like a part of the air they inhabit. Jimmy’s timeless music is not just agreeable, it’s downright irresistible.

30th Anniversary Tour: Live
Artist: George Thorogood
Release Date: 2004
Everybody’s favorite white blues blusterer, Thorogood is so enthusiastic that his technical limitations as both a singer and guitarist become an important element of his charm. And it’s not like he doesn’t know that, either, which only makes it more so. In front of this British audience, the Delaware Flash careens through raunchy, high-volume faves like “Who Do You Love” and “Bad to the Bone” with — after all these years — his usual boozy, bloozy panache, giving inspiration to air guitarists everywhere. Guileless and unabashed, he’s the consummate fan-as-musician, and who (besides sober-sided purists) can’t relate that?

New Orleans’ Funkiest Delicacies
Artist: Various Artists - Funky Delicacies
Release Date: 2005
In the steamy Crescent City, where the second-line beat and its variants are second nature, there’s more to funk than just the Neville Brothers. New Orleans fans might recognize some names, like Eddie Bo (the surging “Hey Mama, Here Comes the Preacher”) and Willie Tee (whose “Teasing You Again” faintly recalls ’70s Marvin Gaye), but most of these performers will be unfamiliar to nearly everyone. No matter: with influences ranging from the Nevilles to Tower of Power, Sly Stone, George Clinton and Donald Byrd, they tighten up the NOLA carnival tradition as they get in the groove and let the good times roll.

Author Detail: -
Here author John Morthland writes about Barbecue music which he says is rollicking and upbeat, with a deep groove. Visit emusic.com and enjoy the real taste of some good music combinations and real good titles with free music downloads, Audio Books, mp3 downloads, Online Music, etc…

Barbecue Music / Author: John


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