Thursday, April 15th, 2010
Many things in life comfort us when we are not feeling so great. We can do or find ways to make life seem a little bit happier and for some people, they depend on these things to get through the hard times. One type of hard time that many people deal with is the fact that they are going through a divorce. This is a hard time for many people. Many people turn to music for comfort one.
Divorce is sometimes a depressing time in a person’s life and they will find that many emotions go through their body. Sometimes people have a hard time figuring out a way to move past this hard time and get on with the things that are most important to them. Sometimes people will hide from the rest of the world and want to alone. They will use this time to think things over and make decisions about important things.
One way for some people to think is to use music. Many people turn to the power of music to help them cope. Some like to listen to the sad songs or the ballads. These songs may have a meaning to them and help them feel like they are not alone in this type of situation. Other people may like to listen to rock music. This type of music may keep them feeling upbeat and happy.
Other people may find that gospel music is the way to beat the hard times of divorce. This type of music has soul and purpose and may be the one thing that can help a person find their way and get back to their once happy life. This type of music has many strong meanings to the words, many people find comfort in this, and it will guide them to where they want to be in life. This is the spiritual way of getting in touch with music and your inner being.
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Tags: Ballads, Decisions, Depressing Time, Divorce, Emotions, Find Music, Gospel Music, Happy Life, Hard Time, Important Things, Listen Music, Little Bit, Many Things, One Thing, Power Music, Power Of Music, Rest Of The World, Rock Music, Sad Songs, Type Of Music
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Saturday, December 5th, 2009
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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Tags: actual music, Aesthetic Expression, Artefact, Beethoven, Beethoven Symphony, Brainwashing, Classical, Classical Musician, Classical Scores, Click Track, Critical Vocabulary, drum machines, drummer, Explosive Force, Home Recording, John Bonham, Keith Moon, Money, Musician, orchestra, piano concerto, popular music, Rachmaninov Piano Concerto, Serious Music, Sound Waves, Stewart Copeland, Straitjacket, symphony, True Sense, Type Of Music
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