Thursday, July 31, 2008

Starz




Wanna be a cowboy? That's an easy order to fill in Bandera, Texas, nicknamed "The Cowboy Capital of the World." In this community, located 50 miles northwest of San Antonio on TX 16, you cant toss a horseshoe without hitting a dude ranch, rodeo ground, western wear store, or dance hall.

Banderas Western heritage is a big draw to todays travelers but its roots date back to the founding days of Texas. Bandera Pass, located twelve miles north on TX 173, was first the site of numerous battles between the Spanish conquistadors and both Apache and Comanche Indians. According to one local legend, a flag (or bandera in Spanish) was placed here to mark the border between the forces.

Today the Wild West atmosphere lives on both in town and in the surrounding dude ranches. Whether youd like to "cowboy up" for a few days at a dude ranch or just grab some boots and dance to Western tunes along Main Street, Bandera has plenty of opportunities to get in touch with your inner cowboy.

Dude Ranches: Bandera is well known for its many dude ranches, the perfect way for you and your family to experience life as a cowboy for a few days. Properties like the Flying L Guest Ranch, the Mayan Ranch, Dixie Dude Ranch, and Twin Elm Guest Ranch will keep you busy with horseback rides, hayrides, fishing, cookouts, and more. You dont have to have any previous riding experience to enjoy the ranches. Typically the guest rates include three meals a day as well as Western entertainment and even supervised kids' programs. During the peak summer months, expect a minimum stay at many ranches.

Rodeos: Bandera is also synonymous with rodeos. One favorite held every Tuesday and Friday through the summer is at the Twin Elm Guest Ranch. For professional action, check out the Cowboy Capital PRCA Rodeo, held in May.

Honky Tonks: Another city might call them nightclubs, but there's nothing fancy about Bandera; this town proudly calls their downtown bars honky tonks. Live country music can be found most nights. One of the best known is Arkey Blues Silver Dollar. Dont miss the sawdust-covered floor (to encourage plenty of boot-scootin). Also on Main Street, the Cabaret Dancehall has shook to the sounds of country music for seven decades and often hosts many big name acts.

Cowboys on Main: During the warm weather months, downtown Bandera is transformed with a Saturday event called Cowboys on Main. Scheduled from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. right on Main Street, the event features horseback riding cowboys, storytellers, trick ropers, musicians, and a lot more. The event is sponsored by the Frontier Times Museums Living History Project. Save some time for a sop at the Frontier Times Museum. The museum dates back to 1927 and is a good place to learn more about Bandera's early days through cowboy paraphernalia, Native American arrowheads, and prehistoric artifacts.

For more information on vacationing in Bandera, call the Bandera Convention and Visitors Bureau at 800.364.3833 or 830.796.3045.

Paris Permenter and John Bigley are Texas guidebook authors and the editors of TexasTripper.com Travel Guide, an online guide to vacationing in Texas.

ballroom dance music

Cities 97 Sampler, Volume 13

Cities 97 Sampler Vol 13 is dedicated to the memory of the victims of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack on America.




Annie Leibovitz: American Music
Macy's American Music Fridays ... the most acclaimed and beloved artists in the contemporary Latin and folk scene. ... visual artist whose music is difficult ...
http://www.dia.org/exhibitions/leibovitz/livemusic.asp

Collecting culture: collector's converge correcting & corroborating ...
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Latin American Resources--Furman University Libraries
... Latin American artists : exhibitions at the Organization of American States 1941-1964 ... Music Library M1627 .J8 1990. Memorias del subdesarrollo ...
http://library.furman.edu/resources/subject/latin/latinref.htm

~Festival Miami, 24th Gala Season~
SAVOR LATIN AMERICAN MUSIC AT FESTIVAL MIAMI 2007 ... traditional music with original and masterful musicianship, these artists will ...
http://www.music.miami.edu/festivalmiami/pr4.htm

Lila Downs | Putumayo World Music - Official Site
greatest female artists . Latin Playground ... of this fiesta of Latin American music for children and families, featuring 5 new songs ...
http://www.putumayo.com/new_site/en/artist.php?artist_id=6

Music Journals and Magazines, Newspapers and Periodicals
Latin American Music Review -- University of Texas Press (Journal Info., Table of Contents) ... charts, artists profiles, etc.) The Wall Music Home Page ...
http://library.music.indiana.edu/music_resources/journals.html

RhythmLatino-Misic for Latin Dance Sport
... Latin CD produced by Melody Entertainment for Latin American Ballroom Dance Sport. CD includes the hot sounds of Latin ... songs and music on this CD are ...
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Multicultural Kids Inc. :: Educator Resources :: Music :: Latin (Spanish)
... musical styles and artists from one of the most musical countries ... Travel through 8 Latin American countries with fun music and activities for children. ...
http://www.multiculturalkids.com/shop/home.php?cat=122

ASCAP Latin Music Awards
The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP), returns ... His music has been interpreted by such notable artists as: Rocio Durcal, Lucero, ...
http://www.ascap.com/press/2003/latinawards_041503.html

World Music - Latin America
This indigenous music is manifested in the sound of wind ... This is his first North American recording, one which combines sensitive solo ... Various Artists ...
http://www.musicoftheworld.com/latin_america2.html

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Play piano by numbers: an historical overview:
The idea of playing piano by numbers has been around for a long time. In fact, numbering the keys is just an extension of numbering the fingers, which was first done by Carl Czerny early in the 19th Century.

In the 1950's, there was the Emenee organ, a keyboard which had numbers printed on the keys, and a book of songs "by number" to go with it. There were even "play by color" products. The concept was always to find a quick way to get people started playing the keyboard.The reason for this is that reading conventional sheet music is not easy, not for adults, and certainly not for children. Why should starting piano be "easy?" Talk to most conventional teachers and they'll say that music is serious and difficult, and piano cannot be made easy for beginners. The truth is that piano students have historically had an 80+% quit rate. 8 out of 10 quit within the first year! Why? The teachers blame the kids, but perhaps the teachers are to blame.

Do you know any method for anything that has an 80% failure rate and calls itself a success? A golf swing? A sewing pattern? A diet regime? It's supposed to work!

Here are a few figures from my private teaching practice: 90 out of 100 children who start piano by numbers are still playing a year later, almost all having made the transition to conventional sheet music. And almost all of those continue, year after year, because they are allowed to learn at their own pace, and started having fun with the piano right away.

Who cares if a child who would normally have quit piano is happily playing songs by number and a few pieces of sheet music a year later? The choice is to have that child quit music altogether.

If a piano method does not work, the method is wrong, it's as simple as that. The professionals tell you otherwise, but common sense tells you this is true: if a piano method does not work, the method is wrong,
But why use numbers to teach beginning piano? What is there about conventional music notation (sheet music) that so confuses almost everyone, and specifically children? The answer is that numbers are understood by everyone. Numbers are essentially one-dimensional, whereas conventional sheet music incorporates concepts from many dimensions to convey the information necessary to play, say, Jingle Bells.

Conventional sheet music and conventional music teachers demand that a child comprehend at least four things in order to "succeed." Find the correct piano keys to play (a big task for a child)
Be able to use the correct names for these piano keys (hard to remember)
Use the correct fingers to play those keys (even harder, especially at first)
Play those piano keys at exactly the correct point in time (add this to the above three)

These four elements are overwhelming to all but the most musically gifted children. Is music only for the musically gifted, or should everyone be able to play piano at their own ability? Kids are often devastated by failure at this ridiculous, conventional system. No wonder they quit.

I'm not saying that the above four elements aren't necessary, I'm saying that almost all children don't respond to this conventional system as a starting point.

We need a better starting point for children and the piano.

Playing piano "by numbers" requires only one thing: play the correct piano key as best you can. Believe me, after watching thousands of kids, this is hard enough to do well. It's a great place to start for everyone. Just press the numbered keys so that it sounds like the song you know.
Music isn't just for musicians and teachers and stars and artists and record companies, it's also for children, an essential part of childhood.

But why "piano by numbers?

The basis of musical construction is mathematical. No one asks kids to start math class in the first grade solving algebraic formula. We let them start adding and subtracting for YEARS until we ask more. Piano by numbers gives children the same "gentle start." It's only logical to start at their level.

Numbers are an essential part of music. When we "number" the piano keys with stickers we do no more than denote the classical "intervals." The numbers that kids learn with this system are the same as the numerical assignments given to the relation between piano keys by classical music. When a child plays the piano key #1 and the key #5, they are playing the same combination of keys known as a "fifth" in classical music.

Everything learned playing piano "by number" will be of value when making the transition to conventional sheet music. Playing "by number" is a reinforcement of classical technique, a "prequel" that conventional teachers have unwittingly left out, to the unintentional detriment of their students.

It's important for children to get started easily, and successfully. I'm not advocating lowering the bar for everything and forever, only for the first year that a child starts music study. The benefits are enormous.

Preview the elements involved in playing piano "by number"

Here's a sample page from both PIANO IS EASY and THE CHRISTMAS CAROL KIT.

Your child will play a single line of numbers, from left to right like a book. There are no other symbols to decipher. There are no chords and no accompaniment. The child is not expected to play with both hands unless this is what comes to them naturally. The object is to have the child make the piano produce the tones of a song they can recognize. Recognition is the key: just watch the smile on their face as they realize they are actually playing a song they know. It's an instant increase in self-esteem, and I have the pleasure of seeing it every day
I've put the stickers on the piano, now what do I do?

You should put the stickers on the piano with your child. Kids emulate what you do. If you play piano and are involved, they will want to do the same. I can't emphasize this enough. Even if you only try playing at the beginning, the sight of you trying piano is enough to let them know that they should try it, too. Make the launch as fun as possible.

Open the book to the songs and try one yourself so you know what it's like. YOU are the teacher. You need to see what the children are attempting to do. Playing piano by number is so easy for adults that you'll get the idea in a few seconds.

It doesn't matter which finger or hand you use. If you or your child use one finger, most likely the index finger, that's fine. The point is to start playing. It's better to play with one finger than be confused by a flurry of commands and not play at all.

Here's a very important tip: lavish praise on your child. Tell them they are great for playing Jingle Bells. Tell them you want to hear another song. Tell them you want still another, if they seem still excited. Be amazed. It is amazing. Sit with them and listen to them. Be involved.
Stay directly involved until your child seems to be firmly launched, playing song after song on their own. Then back away and let them do it by themselves. If they need help, there's nothing so complicated that you can't help them figure it out. Piano "by number" is that easy, and satisfying to a child.

My object in private teaching is to make a child into a "tinkerer." A tinkerer is a child who:

1. Plays the piano a little bit every time they go past one

2. Likes to try out new songs

3. Doesn't worry about anyone else's opinion of their playing

4. Tries to play songs they hear on TV or elsewhere

5. Is confident and curious about the piano

6. Thinks piano is easy

7. Makes up their own songs

A piano weighs perhaps at least an average of 500-700 pounds. Are there any other 700 pound pieces of furniture your child has exclusive control of in your home? My point is that just playing Jingle Bells on a 700-pound monster is enough to raise the self-esteem of the most humble child.

Never express disapproval.

The only mistake your child can make is to not play the piano. Praise, praise, and then when they are bored, go play the piano yourself. They'll keep coming back, and so will you.

The phrase, "Piano Is Easy!" was in fact the expression of one of my students. I asked a child, after about a month, "Well, Dave, how's it going? Still like piano?"

Dave, about seven years old, said, "Piano is easy!" with a smile that indicated anybody knows that silly piano stuff. I had the title for the book, right there. Thanks, Dave.

By the way, Dave now reads music, plays simple Bach pieces and sight-reads any easy piece of conventional sheet music I put in front of him. Yes, it took two years. But Dave plays (not practices) the piano without being told, because it's a fun activity.

Dave was allowed to discover that piano is fun, even for people who can't read conventional sheet music at first. In my estimation, Dave had a 100% chance of being one of those "quitters" if I hadn't started him with numbers, and then used numbers carefully to prepare his transition to sheet music. I always tried to find HIS level, and help him move up at his own speed.

How do you teach a child at first?

To be honest, I make a game of everything. Kids are always scared and intimidated by the idea of "piano lessons." (In the interest of accuracy, I make only "house calls." I am that rarest of teachers who travels to the child's house and teaches them where they feel most comfortable, at home.)

You have to demystify piano lessons as quickly as possible, and get the fun started. After the kids memorize the location of Middle C, I start playing familiar songs right away.

All you have to do is say, "Dave, play the piano keys that are numbered, just like in the book."
The kids play familiar songs like Jingle Bells right away. In fact, I've never had a kid who couldn't play Jingle Bells in the first two minutes of their first lesson. And then five more songs. And then ten and then twenty.

One important point: I break any tension with jokes and fun and playing silly songs myself as soon as I see the child begin to wander, and kids will wander. Thinking about music is hard work, so break it up with fun. As soon as a child has a small taste of fun (a silly song) they're ready for a little more work.

Fun, work, fun, work. Watch their faces and you'll see exactly which one is right for the moment. The kids will show you what to do! Keep leading them back to the task, for short periods, and they will follow, because music has its own inherent fun. Kids and music, work and fun, in simple combination, are a natural partnership.

The transition from numbers to conventional sheet music

Walden Pond Press recently announced their publication of the new illustrated children's piano activity book, I CAN READ MUSIC available in 2002. This fun piano book contains all the games, tricks and music I use to get a child started reading conventional sheet music. We make a game of it, and after you put stickers on your piano, you're ready to start! Kids find this method really easy. You'll pick it up right away. Five year olds, properly prepared with numbers, catch on right away.

Click here to read more and view sample pages from our fun new piano activity book, I CAN READ MUSIC!

Using other books to prepare the transition

PIANO IS EASY and THE CHRISTMAS CAROL KIT are intended as an ideal starting point for children's music study. Almost all children can and should make a transition from numbers to playing conventional sheet music. For example, there are gifted kids I teach who have Attention Deficit Disorder, and I allow them to play by number as long as it takes me to get them feeling secure about deciphering sheet music. I try every lesson to move forward with reading music, and if the child isn't ready for the transition, we stop and go have fun with games and counting and numbers. This patient "bait and switch" method, in my estimation, always works, with any child.
Numbers are like training wheels on your kid's bike. When they're comfortable with taking them off, you'll be the first to know about it.

Perhaps only the eye of a professional will be able to determine the exact moment for this transition from numbers to conventional sheet music. I also recognize that almost all parents don't have the luxury of a teacher coming to their home once a week. But the principles are the same.
How will you know when your child is ready? As a general rule, later is always better than sooner.

Give your child the chance to explore the piano at their own pace. If the kids seem to lose interest, you should renew your interest. If they see you keep trying to play piano, they will keep trying, too.

In fact, one element I look for in finding candidates for this transition to conventional sheet music is arrogance: I want a child to say, "This number stuff is too EASY!" That's when kids are ready for conventional sheet music. Remember that by this time (every child differs, a week, a month to a year) any child will be able to play dozens of songs by number from memory, and dozens more with the book in front of them.

Introducing chords to children

There is another element that I always introduce before I make the transition to sheet music: chords. Chords are groups of three piano keys. Kids love chords and take to them readily. The only foolproof way I know to teach chords outside of my private teaching is to use a book like TEACH YOURSELF PIANO STEP BY STEP, which has a video tutor that makes the concept of chords clear to anyone.

TEACH YOURSELF PIANO STEP BY STEP is not intended for children. Chords are too complex a subject to expect a child to comprehend them on their own. Many parents use TEACH YOURSELF PIANO STEP BY STEP as a text to make themselves able to teach their children chords. There is no better teacher than a parent.

TEACH YOURSELF PIANO STEP BY STEP has a companion volume, THE BIG BOOK OF SONGS BY NUMBER, which has 130 songs by number with chords and is a fun book for kids who have learned chords and want to play more songs by number.

In addition, there are many songs in THE BIG BOOK OF SONGS BY NUMBER that don't require "sharps and flats" (the black keys of the piano) making THE BIG BOOK OF SONGS BY NUMBER a great choice for parents looking for more songs "by number" for the kids who have started using PIANO IS EASY or THE CHRISTMAS CAROL KIT.

The advantage of having schooled a child using all three texts, PIANO IS EASY (or THE CHRISTMAS CAROL KIT) TEACH YOURSELF PIANO, and THE BIG BOOK OF SONGS BY NUMBER is that when the transition to conventional sheet music is made the child will surely know:

1. How to play dozens of familiar songs

2. How to play eight of the twelve chords

3. How to play flats and sharps, the black keys of the piano.

A child who has had a positive initial experience with piano, and who already knows their way around the piano, is a much better candidate for conventional music teaching than a child who is simply thrown into complex conventional piano lessons and expected to succeed.

How far can piano by numbers take my child?

The followup texts, TEACH YOURSELF PIANO STEP BY STEP and THE BIG BOOK OF SONGS BY NUMBER, are intended to lay as firm a foundation as possible for the transition to conventional sheet music. To make the transition to sheet music I use our new piano activity book I CAN READ MUSIC.

Every concept learned in the 'piano by number" books is used in reading conventional sheet music:
Melody (numbers on the white keys) PIANO IS EASY

Accompaniment and playing with both hands (chords) TEACH YOURSELF PIANO

Sharps and flats (black keys) THE BIG BOOK OF SONGS BY NUMBER

Piano by numbers, if introduced by a parent or understanding teacher, offers the best possible starting platform. There's no confusion, discipline or force involved.

Do I have to use more than PIANO IS EASY to get started?

Absolutely not. We've created an entire system in case exploring "piano by number" meets the long term needs of our students.

The average child benefits by being able to start playing piano in a positive atmosphere, starting with perhaps PIANO IS EASY or THE CHRISTMAS CAROL KIT, and then proceeding to I CAN READ MUSIC. Here are some of the benefits of starting a child playing piano by numbers:

Start learning piano at home where a child feels comfortable

Use a system which is immediately understandable: numbers

Build confidence with simple, barely perceptible, gradual steps

If all your child gains in starting piano "by number" is a positive attitude towards piano, everyone is a winner. The goal is to see your child start playing piano in a positive atmosphere, and then perhaps go on to private lessons.

I'm not advocating playing piano "by number" for more than the initial experience. In my private practice, I use "numbers" to start the child, and then, as we get started with conventional sheet music, numbers are used as a way of defusing the tension kids feel in learning the more complex art of reading conventional sheet music.

Practical advice for parents: do's and don'ts

Do encourage your child

Don't criticize their playing

Do sit and listen to them play

Don't demand that they "practice."

Do ask them to "play" the piano

Don't set a time limit, such as "Practice half an hour." If a child doesn't do it under their own steam, it's pointless to force them. Five minutes a day is all that a child needs, if it's fun.

Do play piano yourself. I teach in homes everyday where the youngest ones are eager to try piano because Mom does it, Dad likes it, and the older kids play as well.

Don't take playing piano so seriously. If you think it's fun, your kids will, too.

Do this if your child seems to not want to try it: go over to the piano and start trying it yourself. You'd be surprised how quickly your child decides that they want to do it, too.

Don't even think of Carnegie Hall. Don't apply any pressure whatsoever. If you push kids too hard, they turn off right away, and it's hard, if not impossible, to get them back.

Do think about a private teacher for your child if they show interest. But not for a while. Let the child explore the piano on their own.

Don't expect your child to understand things like using the "correct fingers" or playing "in rhythm." All you want at first is to have your child enjoy sitting at that great big piano for a few minutes a day. There will be lots of time to pursue further interest if and when your child decides they want to take lessons. And when they start those lessons, they'll already have a relationship with the instrument. It's much easier to interest a child in conventional music study when they think they already can play!

Do make games out of everything connected to music:

"You play a song, then Mom will play a song.""Let's see who can play Jingle Bells the fastest without any mistakes.""Let's each play our favorite song.""Let's play the song backwards!" (Kids love this one!)

"I'm going to try a song using both hands.""I'm going to play three songs, and you play three songs.""Does this song sound happy or sad?""I'm going to use lots of different fingers on this song." "Let's play name that tune.""Let's play musical chairs."

Don't be impatient. Don't expect anything, and you'll be pleasantly surprised. Expect lots of conventional accomplishment and your child will lose interest as soon as they see they cannot please you. Make it easy to please you.

Mom and Dad say you have to practice.

One case comes to mind, regarding forcing kids to "practice." I had a student, six, who was a great, zesty boy, clumsy and sensitive and athletic and curious. I used all my usual methods to get him started. He became a tinkerer, making up little songs, always playing a few minutes every day or so. He was progressing well enough toward learning the first five notes of the conventional sheet music staff. I never gave him assignments, or homework, but I always brought him new conventional sheet music which he had the option of exploring that week. He always tried the pieces I left him.

After five months he was intrigued by a silly beginner's song called "My Wigwam" and played it at home, according to his Mom's account, 500 times a day. His Dad hated this song. I tried to get the parents to see that it was important for the child to memorize and own a song that he liked. I advised them to grin and bear it, be thankful you have a child who goes to the piano under his own steam, with no one nagging him to practice.

But Dad instituted a new program, demanded assignments and started forcing the child to practice half an hour a day, with Dad watching sternly, which was very uncomfortable for this child who thought it was fun to play the piano by himself.

After two weeks, I watched the child give up and want to quit. I told the child that he didn't have to play piano if he didn't want to, that it should be fun, and that maybe he would start again some day. This was a child who had waited by the living room window for me to arrive for our crazy, fun lessons for five months.

After a month the parents decided that piano "Just wasn't for him."

How do I choose a piano teacher?

Very carefully. Look for the following list. Some elements below are obviously hard to find, but you won't find them unless you look for them.

Look for a teacher that has a fun, warm manner. Don't choose that great teacher down the block that everyone says is great but has a distant, professional manner. You can come back to that teacher when your child shows promise and is older. Start with someone friendly, professional and skilled with children.

Look for someone with the patience of a kindergarten teacher.

You need someone who is willing to go slowly, who doesn't emphasize accomplishment as much as very patient skill building. The truth is that music and piano study is hard, and it takes a brilliant, patient teacher to inspire kids. Look for a teacher who also teaches music theory to kids, not just piano, and has a reputation for making music theory fun. Kids like to know how music works from the inside, but it takes unbelievable patience on the part of the teacher.

Try to find a teacher who will come to your home. This is not easy or inexpensive, but for a beginning child, it is often the difference between getting started and quitting. A child is most comfortable at home. You can see and evaluate the teacher's manner and "method." From the child's point of view, you've never seen a child as uncomfortable as a beginner sitting in a stranger's music studio, unless the teacher really has a handle on putting kids at ease with games and fun.

If you can't find a "house call" teacher, ask to sit outside the teacher's studio room until the child feels comfortable. It's hard enough to comprehend music, much less do so with a stranger in a strange house. Make your child as comfortable as possible.

Here's my most important point. Listen to your child. If they say again and again that they don't like lessons, that it's too hard, get another teacher and start over. Kids don't lie about this: if they say piano is too hard very often, the method is wrong. Get another, more sympathetic teacher. Every child is unique, and too many teachers forget this in their passion to teach their "method."

I'd rather have a child love the piano and happily play six simple songs than hate piano as they play some complex piece like a robot performing pointless drudgery.

There's time enough to work on the hard stuff after a child is inspired to do so.

In conclusion:

A child who has a positive start on the piano at home is more likely to make the transition to private lessons outside the home.

In former times, before radio and television, the piano was the entertainment center for the family. The whole family at least tried to play an instrument.

I believe beginning to play piano "by numbers" helps move a family toward that perhaps unattainable but noble ideal. There can be only a good result from more people discovering the pleasures of the piano and music, no matter how humble their current abilities.

It's better to start playing piano with a simple system than to be confused with a flurry of conventional commands and thus quit trying altogether.

What I try to do as a teacher is to communicate the excitement I felt for the piano as a child to each and every child as an individual.

Copyright 2001 Walden Pond Press

Visit http://www.pianoiseasy.com to see the PIANO BY NUMBER method.

John Aschenbrenner is a leading children's music educator and book publisher, and the author of numerous piano method books in the series PIANO BY NUMBER.

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James' Latin Page
A must for learning to play and arrange Salsa music . ... Afro-Cuban Music and the evolution of Salsa in New ... CD German Music Express (GMX). Ritmo-Y-Mas (US) ...
http://www.edinburghtango.org.uk/latin/booksandmusic.html

Salsa Cubana: Shopping
How and where to buy salsa music and videos ... CDnow/amazon.com is almost as cheap as CD Universe, but the choice in latin/ salsa is less good. ...
http://www.salsacubana.no/cdshop.htm

Dance SF - A Salsa Dance Academy - Links and Ressources
Links and ressources for DanceSF: A San Francisco Bay Area Salsa Dancing School. ... gives information in DJs, book reviews, technology and CD reviews of Latin music . ...
http://www.dancesf.com/salsa-links2.htm

Sunrise Imports
World Music CD : Salsa Around the World $15.95 ... s music as well. On Salsa Around the World one can hear. salsa -influenced music sung in Greek, Arabic, Hindi, ...
http://www.sunriseimports.net/salsaaroundtheworld.html

Listen to Thousands of Free Online Radio Stations - Live365 Internet Radio
Classic Salsa . salsa , latin, latin jazz. CD 64k. Classic Salsa . ... CD 64k. Crazy Trax - A Complete Crazy mix of many different styles of music . ...
http://www.live365.com/cgi-bin/directory.cgi?first=31&searchdesc=salsa&charset=UTF-8&sort=T:U

Artist Profile for Salsa Celtica - WindowsMedia.com Media Guide
Salsa Celtica. Buy CD . CD : Monstruos y Demonios, Angels and Lovers. Salsa ... to be fusing Afro-Cuban salsa and Celtic music , someone who hasn't heard their ...
http://www.windowsmedia.com/MediaGuide/Templates/ArtistProfile.aspx?p_id=P+++528279

Black Sea Salsa Official Web Page
Buy a CD , buy a T-Shirt all without leaving the comfort of your own home! ... For more information call the Black Sea Salsa Hotline 781-646-5539! ...
http://www.blackseasalsa.com/

Salsa Music
Fun and friendly salsa dancing in Wokingham ... a listening' CD than a dancing one - but great for getting into the salsa feel! ...
http://www.purplesalsa.co.uk/Music.aspx

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Coldplay Band Black And White Music Art Poster Print - 24" X 36"

This poster is 24 inches by 36 inches approximately and is in mint condition


When a landscape artist wants to get the essence of a beautiful scene, they make a quick pencil sketch of it.

The artist doesn't want to represent the entire landscape as it is, but as they feel it to be. A few lines scribbled here and there indicate the feelings the artist wishes to convey. We musicians can do the same thing! We can quickly sketch out our ideas on paper by using chords and a chord chart.

A chord chart is just a way to notate when chords change through time. You can write out 8-bars to begin with (as I do). Now let us suppose you have the urge to capture something musically. What do you do? Well, for starters, you can pick a key to compose with.

For example, let's choose the Key of C. Now after deciding that, we know that the piece will have a Major sound to it. We also know that we have 6 chords to create with from the C Major scale. With these primary decisions out of the way we now can focus on notating our musical ideas and capturing a mood. Here's how I do it:

I start by just improvising and letting the music come out naturally. For example, I play a C Maj. 7 chord and I like what I hear. I'll write down the first 2-bars of the melody, then place a chord symbol on top of the chart so I now have the musical idea in place.

My goal is to finish charting the 8-bar phrase with chords all the way through. Once this is accomplished I have the first section of music. If more is to come, I simply write out another 8-bar phrase and keep adding more music.

Edward Weiss is a pianist/composer and webmaster of Quiescence Music's online piano lessons. He has been helping students learn how to play piano in the New Age style for over 14 years and works with students in private, in groups, and now over the internet. Visit http://www.quiescencemusic.com now and get a FREE piano lesson!

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Malus Clothing - Latin For Evil - T-Shirt




Freddie Hubbard has released him most recent album entitled Sky Dive.

Sky Dive will grab your attention right from the very first note with Povo and wont let go until the very last note of the very last song Naturally, which by the way is another great track.

Sky Dive has a nicely varied, mix of 6 tracks that are very well written songs by this clearly outstanding artist. Most of the songs display a lot of the kind emotion that makes for a really great listen. Clearly drawing from what I can only imagine are him own personal experiences. At different points touching on the most real emotions like love, heartbreak, pain, failed relationships and unattainable romance. Theyre all here.

Overall Sky Dive is an outstanding release. Quite possibly Freddie Hubbard's best to date. Really sensational from beginning to end. If you're even mildly into Jazz music you'll enjoy this album.

While this entire album is really very good some of my favorites are track 2 - In A Mist, track 6 - Naturally, and track 5 - Sky Dive

My Bonus Pick, and the one that got Sore [...as in "Stuck On REpeat"] is track 1 - Povo. Outstanding!

Sky Dive Release Notes:

Freddie Hubbard originally released Sky Dive on October 25, 1990 on the CTI/ CBS label.

CD Track List Follows:

1. Povo

2. In A Mist

3. Naturally

4. Godfather, The - (from "The Godfather")

5. Sky Dive

6. Naturally - (previously unreleased, alternate take)

Personnel: Freddie Hubbard (trumpet); Alan Rubin, Marvin Stamm (trumpet, flugelhorn); Wayne Andre, Garnett Brown (trombone); Paul Faulise (bass trombone); Tony Price (tuba); Phil Bodner (piccolo, flute, alto & bass flutes, bass clarinet); Wally Kane (piccolo, bass clarinet); Hubert Laws (flute, alto & bass flutes); George Marge (flute, alto flute, clarinet, bass clarinet); Romeo Penque (flute, alto flute, clarinet, oboe, English horn); Keith Jarrett (acoustic & electric pianos); George Benson (guitar); Ron Carter (bass); Billy Cobham (drums); Ray Barretto, Airto Moreira (percussion). Producer: Creed Taylor.

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The Latin Bass Book

This is a practical, comprehensive approach to learning Afro-Cuban, Brazilian and South American styles of bass playing, featuring 3 CDs of Berklee professor Oscar Stagnaro playing with three different world-class rhythm sections. The book consists mostly of transcriptions of every note Oscar plays on the accompanying CDs. Some amazing music, and logically progressing from simple to complex examples of each style.
Customer Review: What does one say?
This is a MASSIVE book (262 pages!) of latin bass in all it's various styles. We are not talking simple repetive patterns here either, we are talking from moderate to complex lines with excellent notation and a top notch CD set behind it. If you want to learn Latin Bass, you can start here, and stop here, as you won't find more and better probably anywhere else. Although it is not a Real Book, You can think of that kind of setup and variety.
Customer Review: Good intro to latin bass playing
This book is well thought, thorough and enjoyable. Comes with 3 CDs that stand alone on their own, if you don't mind having bass on one side and the rest of the band on the other. This arrangement allows you to pan the track and play along with the band, or focus on the bass line only. I googled some of the guys who play with Oscar in these CDs and they are first rate musicians with impressive resumes (try Rebeca Mauleón). It comes with no tab, but the first bass lines are simple enough so it wouldn't be a bad place to start reading, and once you understand the beats and where the bassline falls, you should be in a good position to read almost anything! The book takes you to a series of concepts that become more complex from track to track in a well thought way, so you build on your understanding of the subject. Probably the hardest part is to keep yourself from dancing while you play along to the CDs! A good purchase.


Here is a news-worthy material that will never find its way into the mainstream media. Is your daughter grinding? First, what is "grinding." According to Mariam's Webster dictionary it is "to rotate the hips in an erotic manner." So, to paraphrase the question, I will ask - is your daughter rotating her hips in an erotic manner? To add to that, is she doing that while a guy is standing behind her?

I don't want to be a party pooper, but the chances are that if your daughter has danced at a party, she has grinded, because it is the most popular way to dance nowadays. It is fascinating to think about the ways that dancing has changed in order to speed things up. It makes me wonder every time I see people dance this way. Are we that primitive, that we actually have to simulate a sexual act on the dance floor in order to show affection? The days of the tango and waltz are gone. Sure, some people still enjoy that kind of dancing, but the most common way to dance at a party nowadays is indeed grinding.

No, I don't need statistics or all kinds of data to back my claim up, if you go to any sort of disco, frat house, party, etc. you will find an awful sight. I am not here to tell you how messed up your kids are, or about modern values - I just find it fascinating that if I were a parent, I would really feel embarrassed to find out that my daughter is grinding.

Why embarrassed? Maybe embarrassed at the path that our society is taking, the awful music videos being promoted on TV and the never-ending sexual ads on billboards and the media. As comedian Steve Byrnes said, it is funny slash depressing at the same time. Where are the romance and the anticipation? They are nowhere to be found.

One should really look at this issue at a different, more global perspective. We are evolving. We want things faster and ready-to-go. Our world is getting smaller and smaller, to the point where we can never leave our room and still get the information we need. We also want instant gratification, instant success, instant downloads and instant fun. So, when you asks your daughter if she has grinded, don't be surprised if she instantly says "yes."

The author has a blog entitled http://www.badgeneration.com It is for observational humor and social commentary on today's insanities. The author does not support grinding. Any affiliations with grinding, or acts of grinding nature ought to be erased and forgotten.

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Cities 97 Sampler, Volume 15

2003 marks 15 Years of outstanding special performances by both established and up-and-coming artists and bands. It's through their willingness to play live and their generosity to donate this unique and rare compilation of music. Studio C has become not only a vehicle for great music, but also a way to give back to the adored community in which we live and work. We hope you enjoy this 15th Anniversary Cities 97 Sampler and we thank you for your listenership and continued support of this project that helps so many in our community. Some of the many charities the Cities 97 Sampler benefits: Camp Heartland, University Pediatrics Foundation, Make-A-Wish Foundation, The Humane Society for Companion Animals, Bridging Inc., Tubman Family Alliance.




Stereophile: Kazaa's Plan to Pay Artists
Internet audio file-sharing service Kazaa is the music industry's pariahand it wants artists to get paid for their work. Kazaa has teamed up with telecommunications ...
http://www.stereophile.com/news/11345/

Search: Download Music - InfoSpace Canada
Search results for Download Music from InfoSpace Canada Metasearch. ... Free Download Music . Kazaa . Free MP3 Music Download. Morpheus. Napster ...
http://www.infospace.com/canada.befree/search/web/Download+Music/

AOL Offering Music Catalog for Downloads
... like KaZaA , a subscriber can listen to MusicNet's downloads on no more than two computers. ... So far, legitimate music download services have not been a ...
http://comet.lehman.cuny.edu/mendel/Articles/AOL%20Offering%20Music%20Catalog%20for%20Downloads.htm

Kazaa - BearShare 5.2.0 is the latest version of our leading file ...
How about Free exclusive BearShare music , help with common questions and Free tools! ... The main difference is that KaZaA Lite has been modified so that it does not ...
http://kazaa.softalizer.com/

Blue Haven Media
Free P2P-related software for the masses, including KaZoom and KaZaA skins. ... Download Music Digital Media Player Backup Dvd Software Hip Hop Music Video Buy ...
http://www.bluehavenmedia.com/

Technology Review: Buying the Song
At first glance, the vital signs of the music industry don't look so good. ... The judge ordered Kazaa's parent company to modify its software application to ...
http://www.technologyreview.com/printer_friendly_article.aspx?id=14868

Kazaa --Maybe Not So Free - Kazaa Media Desktop - Epinions.com
Kazaa Media Desktop - User Rating: 4 stars. Review Summary: Probably the best ... My favorite free streaming music player, Spinner, does that, but the advertising ...
http://www.epinions.com/content_110990429828

The RIAA Prank: Do They Really Care About Kazaa , Grokster, and Napster?
ZUG is the world's only comedy site, featuring articles, opinions, and ... Prank Phone Calls to Music Companies. Part 5: Prank Letters to Rock Stars ...
http://www.zug.com/pranks/riaa/

odd time signatures " Blog Archive " Rip Your CDs; Go to Jail? Or ...
Posted by Karoli in Music , Technology, Web December 29th, 2007 ... had NOT been placed into his Kazaa folder, but remained in his My Music folder. ...
http://www.drumsnwhistles.com/2007/12/29/rip-your-cds-go-to-jail-or-bankruptcy-court/

kaZaa .com - Review - AAAh Kazaa , Music To My Ears
kaZaa .com: Compare prices for MP3 Download. Read 43 reviews for kaZaa .com and make a good deal. ... Kazaa is a peer 2 peer file sharing network where you can ...
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Clocks 2

The Third of Three Single Parts of One of the Standout Songs from their "a Rush of Blood to the Head" Breakthrough Album. Each Part Includes Exclusive Live Tracks Recorded at Rotterdam's Famed Ahoy Ballroom in 2002.
Customer Review: Great CD-Set (very rare) Live in Holland
One of a three CD-Box only released in Holland. Actually, this is not Clocks 3, but Clocks 2 !! Tracklistings: Clocks 1: Clocks (Edit), Politik/Shiver/Daylight (Live), Clocks 2: Clocks (Album Version), Trouble/The Scientist/Green Eyes-Mooie Ellebogen (Live), Clocks 3: Clocks/In My Place/Everything's Not Lost/Yellow (Live). All Live Tracks are recorded in Ahoy, 5 Nov. 2002 and especially Green Eyes/Mooie Ellebogen is very rare, because the song didn't go quite well (wrong chord) and it features Coldplay's only Dutch song :-)


Have you been pulling your hair out trying to download music to your Sony PSP?

I am going to give you my quick and easy recipe for putting your favorite music on your PSP. There are only a few steps and it is a cinch on you know how.

1. First off you need to get what they call a cd ripper and while you are at it I would definitely grab a psp video converter. A cd ripper lets you pull music (rip) of your cd's
that you have now. The psp video converter will let you rip and convert video files to watch on your PSP...so you can watch and listen to music videos and music, cool heh!

2. Load your cd and fire up your cd ripper select the song or songs you want to put on your PSP and hit the "extract and encode" to PSP.

3. If you already have music files on your pc then all you need to do is hit "add" from your cd ripper or psp video converter.

4. Make sure on all of the above you select the "PSP" format.

5. How to download or transfer your music to PSP? Just connect your PSP with your PC with the USB cable, and copy your mp3 file(s) into "H:PSPMUSIC" where H: would equal the drive of your PSP.

That's it. It is real simple to put music on your PSP!

Travis Sago is a computer technician and PSP enthusiast and fanatic. Don't have a good cd ripper or psp video converter? You can learn more about both at http://www.the-psp-pimp.com/pspvideoconverter.html

How to download music to PSP

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