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Trans Siberian Orchestra Ringtones | Christmas Eve / Sarajevo 12/24 Ringtone – Trans Siberian Orchestra Ringtones 0

Posted on December 13, 2010 by Jennib And Friends

Click Here & Sign Up to Download Trans-Siberian Orchestra Ringtones

The Trans-Siberian Orchestra (often abbreviated as TSO) is a rock orchestra founded by Paul O’Neill, Robert Kinkel, and Jon Oliva in 1996. The band’s musical style is often described in different terms, incorporating progressive rock, symphonic metal, and heavy metal, with influences from classical music. The group is based in New York City, but frequently tours worldwide. The Trans-Siberian Orchestra is known for its renditions of traditional Christmas songs. During December, these awesome holiday songs become popular online downloads and are the perfect choice for your next cell phone ringtone. Christmas Eve/Sarajevo 12/24 is one of the most popular songs in the world on iTunes right now. Click on the link below and sign up to download the Christmas Eve/Sarajevo 12/24 Ringtone now:

Click Here to Download the Christmas Eve/Sarajevo 12/24 Ringtone

Some of their best known works include such songs as “Christmas Eve/Sarajevo 12/24″ (a rendition of “Carol of the Bells” and “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” originally featured on Savatage’s 1995 album, Dead Winter Dead), “Christmas Canon”, and “Wizards in Winter”, all of which are popular selections of radio DJs during the Christmas season. The Christmas Eve/Sarajevo 12/24 Ringtone is an awesome choice for your next ringtone to celebrate the holiday season. Simply click on the link below and sign up – you will instantly be able to download the Christmas Eve/Sarajevo 12/24 Ringtone and other popular Trans-Siberian Orchestra Ringtones. Don’t wait, download these cool Christmas ringtones by

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Trans Siberian Orchestra Rocks Christmas Music 0

Posted on November 14, 2010 by Jennib And Friends

Christmas music brings out the holiday cheer. You can sing along in the car driving to your grandparent’s house, you play it when you decorate your home, and you are filled with memories from Christmas celebrations with your family. A lot of Christmas music can be repetitive or sound out of date. Modern musicians remake our favorite holiday classics and make them sound more pop or country sounding. One of my favorite bands that have remade my favorite Christmas songs is Trans Siberian Orchestra. They bring a whole new meaning to rockin’ around the Christmas tree. Trans Siberian Orchestra eloquently keeps the holiday spirit alive by bringing together the sounds of rock, progressive rock, heavy metal, symphonic metal, and classical music. In 1996, Paul O’Neil had the idea to bring his musician friends Jon Oliva, Robert Kinkel, and Al Petrilli together to remake Christmas songs with a more up to date and new sound. They formed the group which has become a sensation for their music and live tours. Paul O’Neil knows his music and is the right man for producing rock and roll Christmas music. He managed rock bands such as Aerosmith, the Scorpions, and Humble Pie to name a few. Their live tours are incredible and sell out all over the country. They have two casts for the east and the west sides of their touring schedules. This allows for their tours to be seen by more people around the nation. They tour during the holiday season and they wouldn’t be able to fit in as many cities in their schedule by Christmas if they didn’t have two casts. Their live performance is multi faceted with light shows, music, and pyrotechnics. The streams of light and fire are synchronized with the music so the performance stimulates more than your sense of hearing. The performance is long, but you don’t want them to end when you are at their concert. The first half is dedicated to Christmas songs, and the encore is filled with rock and roll music. They have seven

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The Classical Musician is Right on The Money 0

Posted on December 05, 2009 by Jennib And Friends

It is true that drum machines are wonderful for home recording. You may be lucky enough to know a drummer with the invention of Stewart Copeland, the power of John Bonham or the explosive force of Keith Moon. Unfortunately,though, if you stick this drummer in your home studio/front room/flat, the neighbours are not going to be very happy.

That said, click tracks and drum machines are two of the worst things ever to happen to popular music. First, drum machines like all machines are expressionless in the true sense. No human being is behind the sound at the moment that sound is made. Of course, the technology is a human artefact, and the programming carries human intention that may contain aesthetic expression. But it is the machine that executes the actual music. The essential
link in the moment of performance between the soul and sound waves is not there. The music is literally “soul-less”. It is a huge irony that “beatboxes” came to dominate a type of music that once termed itself “soul”.

Second, both click tracks and drum machines force an inhuman straitjacket onto music-making. Much of the prejudice against popular music that exists in the field of so-called “serious music” is based on a mixture of ignorance, cultural brainwashing and an inadequate critical vocabulary with which to describe how popular music achieves its greatest effects. But with regard to tempo, for once, the reaction of the classical musician is right on the money. If you suggested to an orchestra that they could improve their performance of a Beethoven symphony or a Rachmaninov piano concerto with a click track, so they would all be perfectly in time, they would fall off their stools laughing. When they recovered, they would insist that your click track idea would, at one digital stroke, remove all the expression from the music. In order for music to “breathe”, performers must be free to pause slightly before a chord or modulation or phrase. Classical scores are full of terms such as accelerando, ritenuto, rallentando,a tempo all of which indicate departures from strict time. In other words, “TPV” is an essential element of music performance. Why should popular music be any different?

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