Safely Get Your Free Full Movie Download

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio | Sunday 7 March 2010 9:02 pm

The ability to get your free full movie download has finally come around. Broadband internet has opened a Pandora’s Box for movie and music downloads. You can now get a free full movie download in a few hours. Thanks to video compression you can fit an entire movie on a couple of CDs or a single DVD.

Now that they have DVD burners people are looking for ways to get DVDs for free. There are tons of DVD rips all over the net. You just have to know where to look. These are high quality rips that give you the exact same performance as regular DVDs. You can download all this and more at little to no cost.

There are a lot of sites out there that you can use to get a free full movie download. You could be a couple clicks away from never paying for a movie again. Imagine never having to dish out 20 bucks for a DVD.

When you download free full movies always make sure you do it safely. You don’t want to end up getting in trouble by the law. I recommend trying out one of these sites that insures safety by blocking your IP or by another means of anonymity. These are your best bet and they don’t cost much at all.

Shared Movies
Movie Download World
Ultimate Movie Download
iMovieSearch
Full Movie Downloads

John Rivers has been involved with music for over 30 years as a student, performer and teacher. His site The-NetGuide-for-MusicDownloads.com helps individuals to find safe and legal Music and Movie download sites. Subscribe to NetMusic News and receive Free music downloads each month.

Shakira Concert Tickets…A Hot Commodity…

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio | Sunday 7 March 2010 5:02 pm

Americans are crazy about Shakira. No, I’m not talking about her latest album sales. We are talking about the craze for Shakira concert tickets. This Spanish diva has left the likes of Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera & Beyonce in the dust, so to speak.

The summer concert tour is starting to heat up and the demand for Shakira concert tickets is unsurpassed by any other performer. How do I know? By using a powerful little tool from Overture.com that displays the number of times a search phrase was typed in the previous month. According to overture, here are some search results for last month:

1) Shakira Concert Tickets: 331,484 searches(wow!)

2) Concert tickets: 219,592 searches (a not so close second)

3) Linkin Park Concert Tickets: 86,438 searches (a lot of searches…but shakira concert tickets got 4 times as many!)

4) Pink Concert Tickets: 80,696 searches (a very popular artist…but not even close to Shakira)

So there you have it. Proof positive that Shakira concert tickets blew other similar search phrases out of the water last month! So….why is Shakira such a superstar anyways? Many music industry experts cite her unique style (a breakaway from the Britney Spears mold) and spectactular, fluent movement on stage while performing. She did dye her hair blonde, however for her 2001 album release, Laundry Service. But we won’t hold that against her.

Shakira continues to capture the awe of millions of American music fans as she continues her summer concert tour. Interested in Shakira Concert Tickets? A great site to purchase Shakira tickets is listed below for fast, secure ordering with fast FedEx shipping.

http://www.ezwaytickets.com Trusted, Verified Online Ticket Broker.

Crunk Music

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio | Sunday 7 March 2010 1:02 pm

Crunk music is a specific type of hip hop music, based out of the southern states. Crunk (sometimes spelled Krunk) is high-energy, club-oriented hip-hop.

In the hip hop society, crunk rappers have been criticized for having no lyrical content and all southern rappers uses the same beats and styles in there music. While other hip-hop styles contain a more conversational vocal approach. Dirty South is notably different from its northern and western counterparts.

Southern rappers can adapt towards either a soul-based or a more street sound. This done sometimes by sampling, while still being creative. Crunk usually involves hoarse chants and repetitive, simple refrains. Lyrics are based on a rhythmic bounce which is very effective in clubs.

Several crunk songs have been banned in venues due to wild crowds. Crunk has established itself as a major sub-division of hip-hop and will likely enjoy greater success due to the increased number of crunk albums being released.

Crunk is to music what Shakesphere is to literature. I mean you can’t get enough of this music. Instead of going to a club and standing on wall and looking pretty you act a fool to crunk music. Crunk music can help with releasing tension and its a good way to get a work out!

My name is Juanita Clark and I own a relationship blog on the internet. The name of the blog is What A Girl Wants Advice On Understanding Women. On this website there is an open discussions, polls, quizzes and the website is http://www.7daycyle.blogspot.com.

Beginner Piano Lesson For Parents How To Have Fun With Kids In Piano

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio | Sunday 7 March 2010 9:02 am

Raising children can be trying. At times so much so that it even tempts devoted parents to wonder, ?How does the world manage to re-populate itself?? So keeping a sense of humor is really important. Here?s some crazy things kids say when taking piano lessons and practicing that parents need to be prepared to laugh at. Let?s start with the whining. Amazingly these are things I?ve heard young, beginning piano students say right after they have played a simple piece of music beautifully?

Student: ?But it?s too hard.?

Parent: ?It?s only too hard if you think it is.?

Student: ?My fingers nails hurt.?

Parent: ?We can trim your nails.?

Student: ?Why do I have to look at the music??

Parent: ?Do you think I should look at the road when I?m driving??

Student: ?I?m thirsty.?

Parent: ?I?m Dad.?

Student: ?When can I play Fur Elise??

Parent: ?When you know how.?

Student: ?When will I know how to play every song on the piano that I hear??

Parent: ?When you?re 18.?

Student: ?Why do I need to play at home when I played piano at my lesson??

Parent: ?Because we can?t afford to play on your teacher?s piano every day.?

Here?s what parents of young children need to get. Kids whine. Everything your child complains about doesn?t mean anything. It?s kind of like my cat. He always stands at the door and whines, even when I just let him out. He will then whine by his food dish even though I just filled it up with his favorite kitty pellets. Why? Because it makes him feel secure to see me open the door for him one more time, and put a few more pellets in his bowl. Will he ever get tired of me opening the door and giving him more kitty pellets that he isn?t going to eat? No.

So don?t take your little kitten in piano lessons too seriously and in a few years they?ll be saying, ?I can play the piano better than my parents, because I?ve been taking lessons and they didn?t get to do that.?

For great home piano activities parents can use to help children ages 5 to 11 develop their musical talent, visit Piano Adventure Bears Music Education Resources You?ll find a treasure box filled with piano resources to create an exciting musical adventure for your child – right in your own home! Visit their website and subscribe to their f?ree internet newsletter so you can download f?ree piano sheet music and mp3s of original piano compositions.

These exciting stories, games, piano lessons, and inspirational gifts feature the Piano Adventure Bears, Mrs. Treble Beary and her new piano student, Albeart Littlebud. Young students follow along with Albeart to learn what piano lessons are all about in a fun way that kids readily understand appreciate. Click here to visit PianoAdventureBears.com For a wealth of information about piano lessons, visit tallypiano.com

Legal Music Downloads

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio | Sunday 7 March 2010 5:02 am

On July 28, 2004, French Internet access providers and music copyright owners signed a joint national charter aimed at cracking down on illegal downloads and expanding the amount of legal music tracks available online (AFP). This is the latest in a series of moves taken across the world to combat music piracy as production labels see more and more of their profits being lost to illegal downloads of music files.

The music industry has been saying the same thing for several years now: peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing networks are exponentially distributing pirated music across the world through the Internet, and this constitutes a copyright infringement. In English, this means that the fact that I downloaded a Tori Amos track through Kazaa yesterday and am listening to it right now makes me a criminal. So far, so good. Quite true as well.

But the real problem is not that people do not want to pay for music. Often I sample new music off the Internet before buying the CDs. Chances are that if I like most of the album, I?m going to buy it. On the surface this is what radio stations do when they play music. The difference, however, is that it has become insanely easy for me to acquire almost-as-good-as-original quality mp3s of any track that I want to listen to, and even if I don?t pay a dime, no one is there to catch me.

The principle of accountability has vanished. When one sees that there are two ways to acquire the same product, but by sacrificing a ?little? bit of quality you can get it for free without being penalized for it, what would most rational people do? P2P networks have made finding music off the Internet ridiculously easy, and most of us tend to ?forget? our social responsibility when it comes to such ?trivial? matters. To contribute to this, copy-protection techniques used on CDs by major production houses are always a step behind the latest cracking algorithms, and steps taken to prevent ?ripping? of CDs and DVDs have proven fruitless so far.

Enter music downloads of the legal kind. Disregarding the small number of ?free? legal music available for promotional purposes, more and more artists and labels have begun to provide a pay-per-download music service. In essence, you can purchase individual tracks or complete albums through a secure online transaction and then download your ?purchase? and, with variable limits to personal use, pretty much do whatever you want to do with it (Several providers digitally encode the files to prevent them from being played on other computers, or to be burned onto CD-Rs) This is both a move to encourage free-riders such as me to start acquiring ?legal? music and an economic adjustment to the digital music revolution. Developing technologies are changing the way people perceive and use music. The advent of iPod and other mp3 players has meant that more and more people are becoming accustomed to carrying around their complete music collections with the latest players offering space for around 10,000 songs. This holds frightening possibilities for record companies. There is a very real concern within the industry that the CD format is fast going out of style, and as technology evolves, consumer demands for the best ?medium? will change as well. Till a few years ago audio CDs offered unparalleled music quality, a factor record companies used to encourage people to ?buy instead of steal (download)?. However, today?s high-quality digital formats mean that audio quality is comparable, and in some cases equal to, CDs. Some experts are even starting to predict that within a decade CDs will become history as digital music will evolve to a point where we will be have access to our entire music collection (hopefully paid for) wherever we want it: in our car, at work, anywhere in the house, even on the beach. Matched with promises (and the reality) of audio quality, this is a serious threat to traditional business.

Thus, providing legal music online is a means of the industry trying to position itself to take advantage of the rising trend of portable music collections. A quick glance across major online music stores tells us exactly so. While offering free-riders affordable music (allowing them to purchase only the tracks they like instead of forcing them to buy the complete album) to ensure that they do not turn to music piracy, sites like eMusic and Apple?s iTunes are backing the new trend. iTunes, Apple?s online music store, has the added distinction of being supported by perhaps the best mp3 player in the business, the iPod. In this combination, Apple has found a very secure marketing brand and ensured that it takes full advantage of this cross between technology and music.

Legal music downloads appear to be the perfect answer to stopping music piracy, at least the downloading kind. Therefore there is no surprise when one sees major record labels pushing to expand such services. However, recent developments tend to make us question what the overall agenda really is. After a period of consolidation of the digital music market in the last two years, albums available for download online are being priced higher than they would normally be in retail stores. It used to be that you could download a song for $0.99 and a complete album for $9.99, but now stores are setting higher prices, with tracks going for $1.50 or even $2.49 and $11.50 albums being sold for $12.50 and $13.00 online. What is going on? In positioning themselves to take advantage of changing market forces, the music industry has also hit upon another major factor in determining sales: consumer behavior. Legal music downloads offer people like me the comfort of never having to waste time in retail stores looking for my favorite track from high-school days or wondering when the latest album of Nickelback would hit the shelves. Instead, all the hassles are removed with everything easily searchable, previewable and downloadable from the comfort of my computer chair (and this baby is very, very, comfortable). Consumers may not be usually rational, but they are always looking to save the effort when it comes to making any sort of purchases. Online stores (or is it the major recording labels? Who knows?) are now cashing into this very aspect of human psychology and are beginning to charge extra for a service they are portraying now as a privilege. Having already consolidated their core target market, the time has now come to increase revenues.

Would this drive people back towards music piracy? Highly unlikely. People are not evil, or criminal, by nature. Appeals to their better nature usually work, and that is the strategy adopted by agencies like the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) who are actively involved in putting a stop to illegal music sharing. Media campaigns encouraging music lovers to pay a dollar or two for tracks instead of ?committing a crime? by downloading them for free are actually working as slowly but surely, more and more people flock to online music stores. And with existing customers sticking to this more ?comfortable? way of buying music, the industry is finally starting to win back ground it lost due to music piracy.

For more information about this topic please visit www.Every.ca admin@every.ca

Mike Ber is the owner of the Canadian Domain Name Portal called http://www.Every.ca. He is also a contributing author to Canadian Computer Magazine and http://www.Developer.ca website.

Smash Hits Rest In Peace

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio | Sunday 7 March 2010 1:02 am

Smash Hits RIP

In 1978 former NME writer Nick Logan birthed Smash Hits on his kitchen table. The first issues cover star was Plastic Bertrand, and Logan so unsure of the magazine he edited it under the pseudonym Chris Hall. He shouldn?t have worried as the Magazine went on to both mirror and shape the pop music of the 1980?s. Its colour posters became wallpaper for teenagers bedrooms. The real revolution was securing the rights to print the lyrics to ?Smash Hit?of the day. These lyrical crib sheets rested between the pages of school textbooks. Scanning the words to Nik Kershaws ?The Riddle? held a greater appeal to me than studying my French verbs.

Smash Hits was my first introduction to the wonderful world of the music press. Interviews and record reviews showed a wonderfully na?ve and witty take on the world of pop. What they may have lacked in terms of critical analysis they more than made up for with humour, pathos and the ability to show no respect for reputation. My distrust of Paul Weller stems from the amount of abuse he suffered at the hands of Smash Hits. He was ridiculed for his angst-ridden approach to music. He came across as Rik from the Young Ones, the people poet with a guitar. Although I admire Jam I don?t love them as I feel maybe I should and Weller?s post Jam music leaves me cold.

Posh, Ginger, Scary, Sporty and Baby owe a great deal of their brand image to Smash Hits. The nicknames came from the pen of a writer at Smash Hits, plain Mel, Mel, Emma, Victoria and Geri doesn?t have the same ring to it does it.

So why has it died on its feet? Well the landscape of pop has been rapidly changing. The rise of the Internet has provided a free source of lyrics. Britpop crossed over into the mainstream media and much of what was special about the music press started to wither. Oasis and Blur where everywhere so there was no need to seek out something like Smash Hits for coverage.

The irreverent style that had won Smash Hits so many fans. Typical question; what colour is Thursday? Is sadly misplaced in this media trained era. Stars can?t stray from the script that the PR people had given them, they parrot out the same answers across a wide range of publications. Why did you need Smash Hits if the same points are made in Heat or The Daily Mail. In stripping bands of any semblance of personality record companies have not only diluted the colour in the charts but murdered the cut and thrust of the pop music press.

In the past Morrissey would drop quotes about Oscar Wilde or colour of his underwear. It was via Smash Hits that I first came across, Jesus and Mary Chain, New Order, The Cure, The Mission and a cast of 1000?s. The publication did have bite. On an assignment to interview New Order, the bands surly reaction and unfriendly nature resulted in a piece that allegedly cost Barney Sumner his marriage. Bizarre Love Triangle made flesh.

It seems odd with Arctic Monkeys defining a tipping point where organic pop seems to be replacing the manufactured variety that Smash Hits has gone now. I guess the NME has stolen the ground that Smash Hits once owned. If they printed song lyrics then the NME would be Smash Hits in indie clothing.

I doubt Smash Hits will be missed as music has been replaced by a general idea of celebrity at the centre of youth culture. The shifting of Top of The Pops to a Sunday is another sign of this. Heat covers this new ground well and should be praised for its stance on weight issues. Not a week goes by without them attacking celeb?s for being too skinny or praising women who are not afraid to be curvy.

It always sad when any form of printed media folds. It means less voices, less opinion and less choice. I hope someone sat at a desk at the NME is dream of a new pop magazine??..

Tony Heywood

Come see my musical musing at

http://highwayfive.blogspot.com/