Oldies Hits of the Beatles

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio Articles | Sunday 15 May 2011 11:00 pm

The oldies are 70 classified as music of the era of the '50s, '60s, e. Much like the kinds of music oldies pop, rock and R & under was a lot of progressive movements of music, including Motown, British Invasion, Doo Wop and styles of fashion, the community and a way of life inspired.

A band was never old-fashioned was the Beatles. Your music has inspired the world for many years and has started the campaign with the BritishInvasion. The invasion was a group of British bands from the UK, whose music is popular in the United States. Just recently came Rock Band video game with a Beatles edition. Rock Band allows users to act as if they were in band and play music in game like controls, bass guitar or drums. The Beatles Rock Band version is a collection of all their greatest hits.

The fame of the Beatles lasted a period of ten years until 1960 for1970. The band formed in Liverpool, and composed of members of John Lennon, Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney and George Harrison. They were with the nickname, "The Fab Four from Liverpool." It was not just a success in England, but their fame and fortune reached the United States.

The RIAA, Recording Industry Association of America, said they sold more albums than any other band or solo artist in the United States (http://www.riaa.com). The Beatles product Number OnesHits, the popular and today it can still be part of the traditional radio to Internet radio.

42 of 1962-1976 had hit number one singles. A list of all the number one singles on the website of The Beatles Number One Hits Singles (http://www.bopped.com) can be found. Their first success in 1962 was called, "Love Me Do." This song was first popular in England and not at the top of the charts to number one in the United States until 1964.

In 1963 there were five chart hitsHits. One of the memorable successes this year was "Twist and Shout." It was not just a great song, but it was also fun to accompany the dance movements. They have nearly doubled the amount of number one hit singles in 1964 with nine songs. A memorable song in this year more people know and can hear on Oldies Radio Station "A Hard Day's Night."

They continued to dominate the charts with eight individuals in 1965. Subsequently, the amount of each will be started to rejuvenate.Between 1966 and 1969 she was only four Number One hits a year. Success for the Beatles began to slow down in the 70s, when only two victories in 1970 and one in 1976.

1973 Interview With Paul McCartney Forming Wings

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio | Wednesday 10 March 2010 1:02 am

July 6, 1973 Birmingham England

Steven:
Has it been difficult for you putting together a new band? There would seem to be an extraordinary amount of pressure on you to come up with a group of musicians that could compete with the Beatles.

Paul:
It was a bit touch and go at the beginning because it was a bit difficult for me to just suddenly develop a new band. Because let?s face it, the Beatles played Hamburg for like a year solid, playing eight hours a day before we ever were anything. Then we still came back to Liverpool and played for years at these little places, Litherland Town Hall and the Aintree Institute. So it took a long time but that was the idea. We felt, ?Well, we can?t take quite as long with this band but we?re gonna kinda duck out of the press thing and do little anonymous gigs.? We did our university tour and we did a Europe tour which was a bit more kind of press but we thought we?ve got to swallow our pride and go right ahead.

Steven:
Were those considered breaking-in tours?

Paul:
Definitely, for us. It was to get the band used to playing. Because if you get any five people, it?s pretty hard to get a band out of it unless you?ve been going a year or so. It takes that long for five people to begin to understand each other.

Steven:
After playing with the same three musicians for such a long time, was it difficult to find new players? When you chose the people in Wings, were they your first choices?

Paul:
Yeah, they were all first choices. I didn?t do it like thinking, ?OK, who are the best musicians in the world?? and get it together like that. It was all done very kind of random, really; there was like a great element of randomness in it. I went to New York and we auditioned drummers which everyone said later was about the uncoolest thing you can do because these drummers are like the world?s top. And there?s me, I just got them all down in a basement and said, ?Alright, lads ?? And they?re sitting there and there?s no band, each drummer is just sitting there. But Denny (Seiwell) was the one who kind of appealed to me; I thought he looks good, he sings, and he can drum great. And he?s picking up a lot of compliments now from musicians who think he?s a red hot drummer. Brinsley really digs him, Brinsley?s drummer goes crazy over Denny. That?s Billy (Rankin).

Steven:
Was that your idea to bring Brinsley Schwarz on the tour?

Paul:
We did that special, that TV special, and that was kind of the end of our breaking-in period. We really hadn?t played very well, I don?t think any of us thought we played very well as a band up until the end of that special. And the last night, we did a concert for the special which we didn?t dig too much, it just didn?t get enough on for us. It was a bit of a dead audience.

Linda McCartney:
And the audience was just sitting there all hot.

Paul:
And they were all lit (with lights) and it was very. But we did a gig at the Hard Rock Caf? in London which is a real tiny, little thing for kind of charity. And Brinsley Schwarz were on before us and they kind of warmed it all up and they got a standup. Once you?ve heard a band rock a bit you can?t go on and not rock, you?ve got to play better. So we thought,?Great,? and we went on after Brinsley and that was the first night we thought we played at all well. We were all double made up with that night. We rocked a bit that night.

Steven:
What are you going to do for a second encore? You?ll have to have one now.

Paul:
There are a lot of features with the act that are still a bit raw. Our opening is still possibly a bit raw, and the end we could go on a bit longer, but this is all fine tuning. The thing for us, the way we?ve done it is the idea of having places to go still. This is only our third thing really ? university tour, European tour and this.

The aim was just to have a band, pure and simple. Have a good band. As to where we play, we?re easy. We?ll play down a pub if it?s cool, if we feel like it and they like it. But that?s the thing for us, we won?t naturally just play 50,000-seaters. That?s? the interesting thing, we got Denny from New York, we auditioned some drummers there, and I knew Denny (Laine) was a good guitarist and good singer and stuff. So I just rang Denny up. And Henry was a kind of friend of Denny?s and Ian?s and he turned up one day at a rehearsal we were doing.

Henry McCullough:
Drunk!

Paul:
Drunk again. We didn?t really know, we were just thinking about it and stuff and he turned up and he played good stuff and that?s the kind of thing I meant about the element of random. It wasn?t like, ?OK, now let?s audition another fifty guitarists and let?s see who?s who and what?s what.? We just thought, ?Great, let?s see how it goes? and we had a band together then. It worked out good.

Henry McCullough:
Everybody got to know each other; you know me, I know you, and we took each other for what it is. We were a little bit scared of each other. It started off we were a little bit apprehensive and it was ?Who?s this we?ve got in the group?? but we managed to cool out.

Steven:
Did you have plans from the beginning to include Linda?

Paul:
Yeah, Linda was a kind of first inclusion because we?d done Ram together. I worked her so hard in New York because it was all very well having Linda on harmonies but I?m not having her do bum harmonies. So I only worked her like mad. I mean she had never done it before, she?d never done a thing before. If you listen to Ram, all those harmonies on there are just me and Linda. Pretty good, some of them. It was quite hard work as I said. I worked her hard on that album. There was a bit of (mimics Linda), ?What do you mean I?m singing flat?? But in the end it was OK and we did it.

Steven:
You must have noticed tonight that the more rock tunes you did created a bigger response. Will you emphasize those more and more?

Paul:
That?s what we?re thinking, that?s the way we?re going to include a few more of those kinds of numbers. The main thing in performance, an average audience always go for numbers they know. Witness tonight when we did ?C Moon;? as soon as we hit ?C Moon,? which was a hit in Britain but not in the States, how the audience reacted.

Linda McCartney:
On the university tour, we did some numbers twice.

Paul:
But rather than go back, we?d like to do new numbers in the same vein. And on the next album we?ll have another bunch of numbers from which to choose. And by the time that album is done the whole act will be there.

Steven:
How did it feel getting back on stage?

Paul:
It?s now beginning to feel really good. It feels good to have a gig. If you?re just recording it?s very nice but you get a bit sterile. It?s a bit testtube, a bit like being in the laboratory. And if you go out and play, it?s the difference between sex and artificial insemination. Do you get what I mean? That?s what I think ? audiences. It?s true enough, isn?t it?

Steven:
Being on stage, then, must be a natural place for you.

Paul:
You see I?ve always been, I suppose, a bit shy about getting up on stage. I remember the first time I ever got up on stage, I hauled my brother up with me. He had his arm in a cast, he?d broken his arm at scout camp, and I brought him up there with me. I brought my guitar with me and guess what I sang? ?Long Tall Sally.? I was eleven and still doing it.

Steven Rosen is a Rock Journalist. Since 1973 he has accumulated over 1000 hours of audio content and 700 articles and interviews…all now available for licensing or purchase.

Contact Steven Rosen for more information and review more of Steven’s published interviews at classic rock interviews

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More Beatles information here

Reflections

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio | Tuesday 9 March 2010 9:03 am

Some could argue that the downfall of John Lennon came when he met Yoko Ono. After the releases of ?Two Virgins? and ?Life With Lions,? the somewhat controversial and humour enticing albums, (both within a year of each other), the future career of Lennon seemed lacking in all the speciality of The Beatles. Even Lennon was seen to be doubtful in his departure from the band. He married Yoko on the 20th of March 1969 which was then followed by the infamous 8 day peace protest in bed as their honeymoon. The Plastic Ono Band album was released almost immediately after The Beatles split officially in May 1970, yet the final ?Let It Be,? The Beatles swansong wasn?t released until after this date.

Moving to New York in September 1971, he released the album, ?Imagine? only a month later after his departure from England. It wasn?t long until immigration almost successfully got him packing his bags and heading home. Splitting from Yoko for about a year later, he went out on several heavy drinking sessions with old friend and known alcoholic, Harry Nilsoon. Together they recorded the album, ?Pussy Cats?, sadly I can?t find a listing for this anywhere as a chart entry here or over there. Eventually allowed his green card after Sean was born, he retreated from the music industry to be alone with his new family. Putting the lid down on his piano and closing the guitar case, he seemed to have found his perfect home. On the brink of a come back with the signing of a music contract, the future seemed bright for the Lennon family until the fatal meeting with Mark Chapman where he shot Lennon out side his home on the 8th of December 1980.

We take a look at one of the compilations that has graced our record shops since his death. It would appear that on every anniversary of birth or death, an album has followed featuring his best known music from his solo career. This is one of them?

?Imagine there?s no Heaven, its easy if you try..? First released in November 1975, it went straight to number one. Again issued in December 1988 and then again in December 1999, in total, it sold over a million copies, but still, the simplicity of this track was always destined to be one of the great anthems in human history whether he was still with us or not. The hands make very little movement across the keys and with a video piece in just the same vein, they are as uniquely powerful as each other. The essentialism is within the opening piano chords. Lennon was not the greatest singer, in fact, straining his poor voice in early Beatle recordings was not unusual. (The song, ?Twist And Shout,? always had to be left until the end of a show due to the anxiety it would have on his vocal chords.) He was primarily a poet, a collector or words, creating images for the heart and for the soul of his listeners. As Dylan as his constant musical guide in his head, Lennon was, it could be said, imitating the legendary folk singer, but naturally what shone through and essentially what we connected to was the person who enlightened us from within John. Love or loathe The Beatles, one cane listen to ?Imagine? and feel something. Whether it is thoughts for our own families and children or the world as a whole, this song is very much affective and will remain so for generations to come. The tragedy of this heart dominating piece of humanitarism, is that the song is forever remembered, but the words have long been forgotten?

?Instant Karma? is the second track on this compilation album. It has to be said that one is struck by the extent of the love that John shared with Yoko, not just for each other but for their dedication to the projects that they had together. Flicking through the sleeve, we notice that the simple black and white photography is relaxed and we feel welcomed into their world. The twenty tracks are performed by John but mostly by The Plastic Ono Band which on many occasions incorporated some well respected musicians including Klaus Voorman (the German friend from the days of Hamburg who designed the Revolver album for The Beatles) and Eric Clapton. One is also struck by not just the political strengths of this man but his diversity within his music. We shift from grief stricken soul to folk, pop and rock and roll, Lennon?s first being the latter. It was released February 1970, reaching number 5.

This track, I wonder is probably more autobiographical than a political statement. The extent of this track musically throws out to its audience the same crowd-filling-a -room feeling as ?Give Peace A Chance.? A lot of hand clapping and a cast of thousands fill our ears. These tracks are primitive in their recordings in following the Ono/Lennon theme of musicians jamming a song rather than playing it in a studio situation. A mumbled counting in at the intro gives the full feeling of a song almost made up as they went along. I felt, lyrically, it was a personal dig at his shallowed emotion from being the star of The Beatles. One gets the impression that Lennon, after leaving the band, spent the rest of his life reflecting and analysing his former existence.

?Mother,? is very definitely a self therapy track that was actually spawned by some sessions with a certain Dr Janov. It is crucially a very personal track and once the words have been digested by the listener, it feels as thought we are encroaching on something so intensely intimate that its is like extreme intrusion. The opening line may bring a lump to the throat; ?..mother, you had me, but I never had you? I wanted you but you didn?t want me?? is an incredibly disturbing statement for a child to make to its mother. Another line is???father you left me, but I never left you?? If we knew a small fraction of Lennon?s upbringing, we would know that he was abandoned by his father, whom in twenty years of John?s life, he only saw him twice. Also brought up by his mother?s sister, Mimi, so with this information in hand, it is a painful ballad about one?s parents to bear, even from the voice of a grown man. Released in December 1970, it failed to enter a chart.

Another self analysis mark of Lennon?s life is portrayed in the beautifully gentle, ?Jealous Guy.? Whilst hitting the bottle in a suicidal fashion at the temporary break from Ono, this simply tuned song offers a touching and affectionate plea for his lost one. For a man to open up his inner most feelings surely is a mark of dignity and strength. We see the sensitive side of Lennon, a side not seen whilst a foul mouthed, bad tempered Beatle. In this violin complemented ballad, we can surely be thankful for the presence of Yoko in his life. If not, he would never have penned such poetry. Released in November 1985, but failed to get any higher than number 65..

?Power to The People,? is back to the chanting, peace seeking days of the strong Lennon/Ono union. Again, a marching demonstration song easily shouted from the roof tops in great chorus. Yet with its anti war themes of such poignancy, I can only think of Citizen Smith shouting from outside Tooting tube station?Unlike Smith, Lennon found himself on many occasions being labelled as part of America?s radical left. Released as a single in March 1971, it managed a fairly decent number 7.

?Cold Turkey,? may have had all the signs of a drug addiction track but it was actually directed at the governments from both side of the pond. At the release of this track, it was at the same time as Lennon handing back his M.B.E to the Queen. Naturally, the timing for Lennon was appalling and the single flopped. A fairly mediocre rock track by John?s standards, it does not help with the cries and wails of his voice towards the end. Deeply analytical and self opposed, it denotes a less than happy time in his life. Released in November 1969, it reached a weak number 14, despite its surrounding situations.

?Love,? is again a personal reflection on the love in his life and the love lost from his parents. He describes ?love is wanting o be loved..? I feel with these tracks that it is Lennon?s attempt to quite openly bare his soul. We, the majority, only accept the musical quality of the sturdy piano and ever so soft acoustic guitar. Perhaps it is because we don?t know how to deal with someone else?s instantly personal feelings? Released November 1982, it reached only number 41.

?Mind Games,? is a whining track that may get on one?s nerves after too many listens. I do believe that John took his music too far sometimes in the respect of his introverted perspective view on the world. Being so disillusioned with the leading heads of state from both sides, he became withdrawn in his ideas, far beyond anyone?s comprehension, these were strange, avant garde pieces for his own personal benefit. Lennon totally looses himself in the immensely droning and brain washing theme of this song. I do believe he forgets, that there are people, in the future, out there who will be listening to this?A fairly awful song, it was surprisingly released as a single in November 1973 and got an average number 26.

?Whatever Gets You Through The Night,? is a jolly, happy clappy song that takes on a sudden change of theme from the rest of the album. It says, ?hey, forget everything I just said, its okay, whatever you fancy, gets you going, floats your boat, just do it..? Gone briefly are the overly emotional, 3-in-the-morning analysis of the plight of the world. We are awoken to this disco/party track to jump up and down and forget about life?s troubles?.. I?m all for that? Released in October 1974, only to struggle to number 36.

?#9 Dream? is what the title suggests. A dream state created by the distorted, drifting vocals of Lennon with slight Sgt. Pepper instruments. Floating violins, whispers and taps on tambourines have us swimming down a slow moving stream in the afternoon sun. Again, a track that probably held a deeper meaning for Lennon and Ono rather than the listener, who thought, ?hey, this is cool..? Its tracks like these that were wasted on us public.. Released in February 1975, it managed number 23.

?Stand By Me..? id the only track on this extensive album that is not written by Lennon. A classic track written for Ben. E. King by the ever legendary songwriters, King, Leiber and Stoller; the men who were responsible for some of the greatest rock and roll songs ever recorded. Lennon?s love for rock and roll was widely known. He later blamed Elvis for seducing him into creating his own band.. This was not a well liked cover but it still stands well with Lennon?s own backing track and vocal range. Although not his song, he had the ability to take such a song and create it as his own. Adding a croaky vocal and heavier guitars allowed him to do this.. Released May 1975, it failed to get any higher than number 30.

?(Just Like) Starting Over? was the ironic record which shot to number one a month after his death in 1980. A quivering rock and roll moment and somewhat retro aiming at the Teddy Bear re run moving through the younger set of the day. It?s popularity stemmed from Lennon?s untimely death. The ?starting over? theme personally related to his life re born with Yoko and Sean, their son. It was some what a macabre anthem in the feeling of life after death and the strengths his record selling abilities after his passing.

?Woman,? finds us soothing over with the gentleness and humbly inspiring themes of his obvious relationship with Yoko and some may say, the respect he had for his mother whom he had loved with equal tenderness. It is a sensitive tribute to any woman from a man feeling failed in his adoration for her. An emotional piece with just as much feeling musically as in the lyrics? Released January 1981, shot to number one.

?Beautiful Boy,? has the same tenderness as the previous track but now, more focused on the birth of Sean. Much a piece picked on by the media, they highlighted the pushed-aside Julian who had been almost rejected in his earlier life by his father, Lennon, and had been the subject of ?Hey Jude,? by McCartney. This had been written several years before as an arm around the shoulder comforter to Julian after the break up of Lennon?s first marriage to his mother, Sylvia. ?Beautiful Boy,? features the lyric, ? life is what happens to you while you busy making other plans..? A sweet song completed with the tinkling tune denoting a children?s music box in this swaying nursery lullaby. Never released as a single.

?Watching The Wheels,? follows and the nest four tracks take the tempo up a little. This song is particular lifting musically, but yet, still very middle of the road by today? standards. Even though the subject remains with its element of struggle in life and the man coming to terms with his own complicated mind, his mood seems more optimistic and on an even keel. His mood always was heavily reflected in his music. Like many of us waking up knowing we?re going to have a bad day, I guess Lennon felt much the same thing musically? Released April 1981, reaching number 30.

?Nobody Told Me,? is one of my favourite Lennon tracks from his solo career. Yet again, it is a stab at the human race but somehow tongue n cheek. A song for a day that isn?t going so well, a song that I have in my head most days! There is a great deal of electric guitar playing a looped riff on a melodic theme and percussion that lifts the track to a foot tapping, skipping down the road effect from a happier Lennon. Released January 1984, to a fairly impressive number 6.

?Borrowed Time,? is a little on the new wave, Ziggy theme with its abstract Level 42 riff and its fading in and out lyrics. I wonder if this may have been the way forward for him, if he had still been alive. Its fundamental basis is a calypso style for a summer?s day on a Jamaican beach. Lennon delights us in his won vocal percussion. An unusual turn for the rock and roll head strong artist and a refreshing approach for the listener. It prides us into an understanding that Lennon could lift our spirits with open and future forward thinking themes as well as the gut wrenching ballads that have us reaching for razor blades. Lennon enjoyed all music and could adjust his uniqueness to even such foreign and unravelled paths of sounds such as calypso? I just wish I could roll my ?R?s? like he could? Released March 1984, only to number 32.

?Working Class Hero,? will have us throwing away our bongos and reaching for that bathroom cabinet door. This was the titled that labelled Lennon from his death and beyond. In this track, he reaches out to another hero of his, Bob Dylan. With acoustic guitar and minus a harmonica, he extends his talents to hard minded folk music. He falls to the very depths of personal humanity lyrically and the very struggle faced by millions just to go and earn a crust. A cold, truthful legacy to the working class, which is all of us?It was the B side to ?Imagine? in 1975.

?Happy Xmas (War Is Over,) was admittedly, his greatest anti war, anti government chant which only became famously known after his death. Unfortunately, it took seven shots in his chest to make us sit up and listen. The one disadvantage of this track is that we can hear Yoko singing, of course, she couldn?t sing a note, so for this, it is amusing. The other down side is a personal one and it reminds me of Christmases of years ago with the family. With all the spangle and droopy tinsel of all that is festive, it will always be tinged with the tragedy of Lennon?s death. It is a song that will may the listener feel humble and sorrowful for perhaps not appreciating the man when he was still alive. On any account, I do find this song very depressing. Released in December 1972 to number 2 then again in December 2003 but only reaching number 33.

Our last track is ?Give Peace A Chance? and we have gone full circle in his career within this album. Released as a single in July 1969 and recorded at the famous ?bed in? with all sorts of hangers on, musicians, drop outs, press and intellectuals, one can almost smell the mustiness of the unwashed bedclothes and the sweatiness of the enormous crowd huddled into the small hotel room. Don a bed sheet and a guitar and invite a few hundred of your closest acquaintances round for a chanting session. You?ll find this track enlightening, spirit lifting, soul soaring and it will make you want to sway with arms and legs and sing to the top of your voice. The words are simple and effortless and very much Lennon?s finest moment. In my mind, he could have started and finished his career with the very release of this record and this one only. The rest of the songs could all have been recorded but perhaps left to one side for his own personal therapy and reflection. I believe the real tragedy was not the fatal introduction of Mark Chapman, but his career, his music and his thoughtful words, wasted on the shallow human race?

Violent and troubled in his youth, he found self assurance and peace in age. His power was sometimes immeasurable. During the 8 day bed in, he and Ono had boards erected across the world in 12 cities campaigning against the Vietnam war.

On the 28th of November 1974, he made his final public appearance in concert at Madison Square Garden.

All songs written by John Lennon (except Stand By Me by Leiber/Stoller/King. EMI Records Abbey Road. Bought in HMV for nine pounds.

?michelle duffy 2006. Ciao and dooyoo (sam1942) 2006

Michelle is a freelance writer in the South of England and owner of the websites, http://www.generationsounds.co.uk, http://nevermindthebloggers.bravehost.com and their successful sister, ?Never Mind The Bloggers? at http://paperback-writer29.tripod.com She has been writing over the last year, for five major consumer websites across the world and is one of the only two music category advisors for one website in the U.K. Her websites promote young, amateur and professional bands/artists and their fan clubs whilst also reviewing them for local and world wide promotion. She has also recently launched the blogs; ‘The Ramblings Of An Old Rocker,’ ‘Bohemian Waffle,’ ?The Rhythm Rock And Blues Machine? and ?The Moped?s Musings? and ?Generation Sound Suite.? She is currently working on two shops selling her music styled artwork and now sells on Ebay.

Rock Music And Drugs

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio | Friday 26 February 2010 8:59 pm

Pink Floyd was probably the most influential band throughout the 1970s. Pink Floyd combined the sound of classic rock with developing technology in music distortion to give a new sound that had never been heard before. This particular group was comprised of four men from England that were a late generation of the Beatles. However, Pink Floyd can be seen as quite the opposite regarding drugs use. While touring for their album, The Wall, lead singer Roger Walters had a near death experience with an overdose of heroin. Other members of the band had also had encounters with the law from use of drugs.

One of Roger Walter?s songs, ?Comfortably Numb?, gives the audience his interpretation of his life while he was on heroin. In his song Roger Walters is most certainly relating to the listeners how he feels when he is on heroin. He describes how he is feeling no more pain, whether that pain be physical or mental. He describes how disoriented the drug has made him and how people who are not on the drug would not understand how he feels. He also talks about a ?pin prick.? This is a hint that he is talking about heroin because heroin is usually injected into the body through a syringe. Roger Walters shows how great heroin is in his song, a song that was on one of the greatest selling albums ever.

Cypress Hill is frequently listed to rap group whose songs deal mostly with smoking marijuana and legalizing marijuana. Cypress Hill is a group that revolves around the topic of marijuana, which makes them a popular band to many experimental marijuana users. Cypress Hill sends the message of how rich they are, how well they have done for themselves, and how marijuana has not slowed them down at all. Their song, ?I Wanna Get High?, shows this attitude towards a need and want for marijuana. This band comes out and confesses their love an appreciation of marijuana to legions of young listeners on almost all of their albums and their songs.

Eric Clapton may not be a associated with drug use as much as Pink Floyd or Cypress Hill could, but he has defiantly promoted the use of cocaine in his songs before. Clapton defiantly went through some hardships in his life. He was kicked out of college, divorced, his son died and his music career has many up and down times. The basic message we get from Eric Clapton in this song is that cocaine seems to be the answer to almost all of his, and the listener?s, problems. Bad news, lost wife, death of a son, all seemed to have the same cure, cocaine.

The 2 groups and 1 artist mentioned are all very influential bands with a very large gathering of fans. Fans usually tend to admire the icon that they are a fan of, and then in turn want to be just like them. If these songs deal with how great drug use is, how it heals our pains, and won?t affect us in society or accomplishments, they are sending those exact message to all of the impressionable listeners. Many young people who face the question of trying a drug in their young age, or walking away may rely on the role set by their favorite artist or group.

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Learning How To Play The Guitar Is Pretty Darn Easy!

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio | Friday 24 July 2009 6:00 pm

Why learn to play the guitar? Well, as a youngster, I wanted fame fortune and lots of woman throwing themselves at my feet. I had this idea that if I could become a famous lead guitarist, then the world would be my oyster. Then I grew up and the fantasy looked as though it was going to remain just that. A fantasy! However, although I?m no musical guru, I did learn to play the guitar and it was probably the finest recreational activity I have ever undertaken.

The guitar, like most instruments, is best mastered if the learner starts young. It can be quite an easy instrument if the budding musician just wants to learn a few songs to entertain friends and family, but it can also be mastered as a professional instrument, and a good guitarist can really make those strings talk. In fact, for a talented and dedicated player the guitar becomes and extension to their arms.

I?ve been teaching the guitar for many years now and one of my more recent students was a 57 year old coal minor with fingers like bananas. He told me that he and a few of his buddies wanted to form a band called the Coal Minors (what else!). I just cannot believe his progress. In just 6 month starting from scratch, he has mastered bar chords, scales, and even written a couple of impressive songs with the chords G, C, D, DM, and E. It just goes to show that if you are committed, anything is possible at any age. Reg, and the Coal Minors are due to perform at their next work?s function and I can?t wait to see them.

It?s also important to note that you do not need to be able to read music to play the guitar well. If I?ve read my music history right neither the Beatles, nor Jimmy Hendrix could read a note, yet their guitar playing did them proud.

Learning the guitar is like anything we achieve in life, and that is you will only succeed with patience and persistence. Out of 100 students, I would guess that only a very small percentage continues playing this wonderful instrument throughout their life.

I play guitar because it gives me great pleasure. You can never stop learning new skills and improving your playing techniques no matter who you are. It?s also a great instrument to take traveling with you. Anyone with a guitar slung over their back will have instant friends wherever they go. And finally, a beautiful guitar is very ornamental. Sit a guitar on an upright stand and place it strategically in any room, and it will do wonders for the d?cor.

Lee Kiley is a proficient writer and webmaster for InstructHow dot com where he writes on such issues as How to Talk to Girls in the 21 st Century! and How To Make Money Fast. He also has many other ?How to? related pieces on the site.

Using Music To Better Your Life

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio | Friday 17 July 2009 6:01 am

After several years of studying the art of music and being involved in the music business/marketing I have learned a lot of important lessons that apply to all business and even people?s lives.

Most of my study has been in the field of music marketing, but as the wheels of my mind have been turning and with the experience I?ve had with Direct Sales, I want to encourage you to explore this as a way to expand your business…and provide a new outlet of fun for yourself too!

Why in the world do you want to spend time listening to music?

If you?re like me, you?re business life is already too consuming and you need to spend less time on non-related activities, not more!

First, it?s FUN! Here?s your chance to let your true being come to be fulfilled in a way that is unique and visceral. Everyone has a need to hear music, and everyone seeks out new music as well as the classics. Your business might already employ music in one way or another. It would, without a doubt, benefit your business if you yourself were more content in your day to day life, and music that has real soul and conveys real feelings helps you concentrate on all the things you must concentrate on the function as a professional.

At my newest job which is A&R with Wichita Falls Records I am feeling gratified and fulfilled because we release only what is considered to be non-commercial, real music by artists that uplift the human spirit. I was watching a cable news program the other day and a very well known figure in the business world Stuart Varney was talking about sales in the music business. He made a remark about how the music used to ?mean something? and was referring to his favorite band the Beatles. I sent him an email describing how new artists can release music in the same vein as the Beatles releases in that they contain real melodies, chords, lyrics, etc.

I think that in the flood of releases nowadays you can get lost in the plastic style of music that is out there and unfortunately lose faith in the music industry. There have been numerous reports on the declining sales and the fact that digital downloads are now outselling CD?s due to the fact that people can choose which songs off of an album to buy instead of buying the whole LP with ?filler? songs.

I would encourage everyone who reads this to check out new LP?s which are available everywhere. I think new music can better your life. Seek out whatever music makes you happy and make that part of your life because music will better your life in my opinion.

You?ll see… it will stretch your mind and increase your own productivity.

Second, it?s profitable. As you will clear your mind and accomplish what you set out to do.

Third, it sets you apart. Everyone has their own taste in music.

So much information is available online for maximizing this avenue of marketing. Take advantage of it … and watch your business grow!

About The Author: Lee Holley of http://www.wichitafallsrecords.com is a 20 year veteran of Direct Sales in Music. Take your life to the next level and check out http://www.wichitafallsrecords.com and http://www.frankleesprague.com

1973 Interview With Paul McCartney Forming Wings

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio | Thursday 20 November 2008 4:27 pm

July 6, 1973 Birmingham England

Steven:
Has it been difficult for you putting together a new band? There would seem to be an extraordinary amount of pressure on you to come up with a group of musicians that could compete with the Beatles.

Paul:
It was a bit touch and go at the beginning because it was a bit difficult for me to just suddenly develop a new band. Because lets face it, the Beatles played Hamburg for like a year solid, playing eight hours a day before we ever were anything. Then we still came back to Liverpool and played for years at these little places, Litherland Town Hall and the Aintree Institute. So it took a long time but that was the idea. We felt, Well, we cant take quite as long with this band but were gonna kinda duck out of the press thing and do little anonymous gigs. We did our university tour and we did a Europe tour which was a bit more kind of press but we thought weve got to swallow our pride and go right ahead.

Steven:
Were those considered breaking-in tours?

Paul:
Definitely, for us. It was to get the band used to playing. Because if you get any five people, its pretty hard to get a band out of it unless youve been going a year or so. It takes that long for five people to begin to understand each other.

Steven:
After playing with the same three musicians for such a long time, was it difficult to find new players? When you chose the people in Wings, were they your first choices?

Paul:
Yeah, they were all first choices. I didnt do it like thinking, OK, who are the best musicians in the world? and get it together like that. It was all done very kind of random, really; there was like a great element of randomness in it. I went to New York and we auditioned drummers which everyone said later was about the uncoolest thing you can do because these drummers are like the worlds top. And theres me, I just got them all down in a basement and said, Alright, lads And theyre sitting there and theres no band, each drummer is just sitting there. But Denny (Seiwell) was the one who kind of appealed to me; I thought he looks good, he sings, and he can drum great. And hes picking up a lot of compliments now from musicians who think hes a red hot drummer. Brinsley really digs him, Brinsleys drummer goes crazy over Denny. Thats Billy (Rankin).

Steven:
Was that your idea to bring Brinsley Schwarz on the tour?

Paul:
We did that special, that TV special, and that was kind of the end of our breaking-in period. We really hadnt played very well, I dont think any of us thought we played very well as a band up until the end of that special. And the last night, we did a concert for the special which we didnt dig too much, it just didnt get enough on for us. It was a bit of a dead audience.

Linda McCartney:
And the audience was just sitting there all hot.

Paul:
And they were all lit (with lights) and it was very. But we did a gig at the Hard Rock Caf in London which is a real tiny, little thing for kind of charity. And Brinsley Schwarz were on before us and they kind of warmed it all up and they got a standup. Once youve heard a band rock a bit you cant go on and not rock, youve got to play better. So we thought,Great, and we went on after Brinsley and that was the first night we thought we played at all well. We were all double made up with that night. We rocked a bit that night.

Steven:
What are you going to do for a second encore? Youll have to have one now.

Paul:
There are a lot of features with the act that are still a bit raw. Our opening is still possibly a bit raw, and the end we could go on a bit longer, but this is all fine tuning. The thing for us, the way weve done it is the idea of having places to go still. This is only our third thing really university tour, European tour and this.

The aim was just to have a band, pure and simple. Have a good band. As to where we play, were easy. Well play down a pub if its cool, if we feel like it and they like it. But thats the thing for us, we wont naturally just play 50,000-seaters. Thats the interesting thing, we got Denny from New York, we auditioned some drummers there, and I knew Denny (Laine) was a good guitarist and good singer and stuff. So I just rang Denny up. And Henry was a kind of friend of Dennys and Ians and he turned up one day at a rehearsal we were doing.

Henry McCullough:
Drunk!

Paul:
Drunk again. We didnt really know, we were just thinking about it and stuff and he turned up and he played good stuff and thats the kind of thing I meant about the element of random. It wasnt like, OK, now lets audition another fifty guitarists and lets see whos who and whats what. We just thought, Great, lets see how it goes and we had a band together then. It worked out good.

Henry McCullough:
Everybody got to know each other; you know me, I know you, and we took each other for what it is. We were a little bit scared of each other. It started off we were a little bit apprehensive and it was Whos this weve got in the group? but we managed to cool out.

Steven:
Did you have plans from the beginning to include Linda?

Paul:
Yeah, Linda was a kind of first inclusion because wed done Ram together. I worked her so hard in New York because it was all very well having Linda on harmonies but Im not having her do bum harmonies. So I only worked her like mad. I mean she had never done it before, shed never done a thing before. If you listen to Ram, all those harmonies on there are just me and Linda. Pretty good, some of them. It was quite hard work as I said. I worked her hard on that album. There was a bit of (mimics Linda), What do you mean Im singing flat? But in the end it was OK and we did it.

Steven:
You must have noticed tonight that the more rock tunes you did created a bigger response. Will you emphasize those more and more?

Paul:
Thats what were thinking, thats the way were going to include a few more of those kinds of numbers. The main thing in performance, an average audience always go for numbers they know. Witness tonight when we did C Moon; as soon as we hit C Moon, which was a hit in Britain but not in the States, how the audience reacted.

Linda McCartney:
On the university tour, we did some numbers twice.

Paul:
But rather than go back, wed like to do new numbers in the same vein. And on the next album well have another bunch of numbers from which to choose. And by the time that album is done the whole act will be there.

Steven:
How did it feel getting back on stage?

Paul:
Its now beginning to feel really good. It feels good to have a gig. If youre just recording its very nice but you get a bit sterile. Its a bit testtube, a bit like being in the laboratory. And if you go out and play, its the difference between sex and artificial insemination. Do you get what I mean? Thats what I think audiences. Its true enough, isnt it?

Steven:
Being on stage, then, must be a natural place for you.

Paul:
You see Ive always been, I suppose, a bit shy about getting up on stage. I remember the first time I ever got up on stage, I hauled my brother up with me. He had his arm in a cast, hed broken his arm at scout camp, and I brought him up there with me. I brought my guitar with me and guess what I sang? Long Tall Sally. I was eleven and still doing it.

Steven Rosen is a Rock Journalist. Since 1973 he has accumulated over 1000 hours of audio content and 700 articles and interviews…all now available for licensing or purchase.

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