 |
 |
 |
| |
Events
| S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
| | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | | | | | | | | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | | | | | | | | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | | | | | | | | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | | | | | | | | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | | | | | | | | | |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
|  |
 |
|
 |
| |
Meet the Band...Kent, John, Suzi, Doug, Doc.
 |
|
 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
| |
Welcome Muffin Head! The Philosophy: Better Value Music is the basic premise of SUZI and the Studmuffins. Although not fixed or overtly thought through and certainly not written in stone, it is something along the lines that: yes indeed the world can suck and love sometimes hurts and somehow it just seems so unjust-But ain't that always the way and isn't it a great day for doing something about it, and ,don't ya just feel like dancing?
Influences & Styles:
The music of SUZI and the Studmuffins is a natural combination of Variety Rock, Motown, with a slight blend of Country influenced by performers like, Bonnie Raitt, Susan Tedeschi, Janis Joplin, ZZ Top, CCR, Aretha Franklin, Sam and Dave, The Rascals,The Temptations, Rick Springfield, Tommy Tutone, Greg Kihn Band, And many, many more. It's all about the performance, the Show, and to get people Dancing. |
|
 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
| |
Musicians: Copyright information
Copyright Your Music
You've spent many hours on the new song, honing the lyrics and polishing the melody; now, how do you copyright it? Any artistic expression is protected by copyright law at the moment of its creation... but how can you prove ownership? The option (for U.S. musicians) is registration with the United States Copyright Office. (For copyright information in non-US countries, see Mechanical Copyright Protection Society (UK), and The Australasian Performing Right Association Limited.)
The copyright law of the United States (title 17 of the United States Code) provides for copyright in "musical works, including any accompanying words," which are fixed in some tangible medium of expression. Musical works include both original compositions and original arrangements or other new versions of earlier compositions to which new copyrightable authorship has been added. The Copyright Office registers claims to copyrights and issues certificates of registration, but does not "grant" or "issue" copyrights. Under the present statute, copyright protection begins at the time a work is created in a fixed form such as a writing or recording. Original musical works may be registered in published or unpublished form. For unpublished works and works published on or after January 1, 1978, registration in the Copyright Office is not a condition of protection; however, there are certain advantages.
The copyright law of the United States (title 17, U.S.C.) provides for copyright protection in sound recordings. Sound recordings are defined in the law as "works that result from the fixation of a series of musical, spoken, or other sounds, but not including the sounds accompanying a motion picture or other audiovisual work." Common examples include recordings of music, drama, or lectures. Copyright in a sound recording protects the particular series of sounds "fixed" (embodied) in the recording against unauthorized reproduction and revision and against the unauthorized distribution of phonorecords containing those sounds. Generally, copyright protection extends to two elements in a sound recording: (1) the contribution of the performer(s) whose performance is captured, and (2) the contribution of the person or persons responsible for capturing and processing the sounds to make the final recording.
Copyright forms in PDF form are available from the United States Copyright Office at the Library of Congress located at http://lcweb.loc.gov/copyright/forms/. The forms require the free Adobe Acrobat Reader to view and print.
If you choose to register a claim in your work by mail, send the following material in the same envelope or package to:
Register of Copyrights
Copyright Office
Library of Congress
Washington, D.C. 20559
1. A properly completed application form;
2. A nonreturnable deposit of the work to be registered; and
3. A nonrefundable filing fee of $30 with each application.
For more information see the Audio Home Recording Act of 1992 for all the legal mumbo jumbo about copyright infringement and more.
Related Links:
ASCAP
BMI.com
SESAC
Copyright Resource Center
Copyright Clearance Center
National Music Publishers' Association, Inc.
Musicians' Intellectual Law & Resources Links
NPSAI Songwriter and Music Copyright Resources
The Copyright Website
|
|
 |
|
 |
| |
Posted by johnzenanko on Thursday, December 04 @ 10:49:41 EST (2 reads)
(comments? | Musicians | Score: 0) |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
 |
| |
Musicians: Ok Finally new stuff to read
THE WEEK IN REVIEW
October 2, 2008
Dinah walks alone … Cream curdles … Madness to the Method
This is the week that was in matters musical …
1944, Dinah Shore’s “I’ll Walk Alone” moves to the top spot on the American singles chart … it is the first-ever #1 U.S. hit for a female artist …
1954, singing “Blue Moon of Kentucky,” Elvis makes his debut at the Grand Ole Opry … he elicits an unenthusiastic response from the hard-core country audience …
1957, Rock-and-roll wild man Jerry Lee Lewis records “Great Balls of Fire” … it reaches #2 on the Billboard pop charts, #3 on the R&B charts, #1 on the country charts, and #1 on the UK pop charts … 32 years later, a motion picture by the same name is released starring Dennis Quaid and Winona Ryder … despite the movie’s chilly reviews, Quaid is acclaimed for his performance …
1960, Tommy Roe & The Satins release “Sheila” on Judd Records … the single will prove a flop … a revised version will be released two years later by Tommy Roe alone on ABC-Paramount and will streak to the top of the chart, the first of over 20 hits for the artist … just a little reminder to stay in the game …
1962, The Beatles release their first single in the U.K., “Love Me Do,” backed by “P.S. I Love You” … according to rumor, in an act of faith manager Brian Epstein orders 10,000 copies for the record store chain he owns … all 10,000 are purchased assuring The Beatles a spot in the British Top 20 … Little Richard and Sam Cooke begin a European tour in Doncaster, England … playing keyboards on the tour is a 16-year-old Billy Preston and the M.C. is Gene Vincent of "Be-Bop-A-Lula" fame, who wasn’t allowed to perform because his work permit had expired … for later concerts it is oddly decided by authorities that Vincent will be allowed to sing, but only in front of the stage, not on it …
1966, The Jimi Hendrix Experience is formed in London … his song “Fire” will become one of the most played songs in rock … despite the song’s sexual overtones, the actual inspiration came while spending a cold December night at the home of bassist Noel Redding’s mother … Jimi asked if he could stand next to her fireplace … though she agreed, apparently her Great Dane did not … hence the spoken line before the solo, “Aw, move over, Rover, and let Jimi take over" …
1967, Woody Guthrie dies in Creedmoor State Hospital in Queens, New York, at the age of 55 … the legendary singer-songwriter had been in and out of various New York area hospitals since 1954, receiving treatment for Huntington's disease, a hereditary illness that Guthrie’s mother, Nora, also died of, and son Arlo suffers from … in 1998 and 2000, urban folk troubadour Billy Bragg and Wilco will issue two CDs of songs based on lyrics Guthrie wrote before his death that were given to Bragg by his widow Nora … State narcs execute a raid on the Grateful Dead house in Haight-Ashbury … Ron “Pigpen” McKernan and Bob Weir are arrested along with managers Rock Scully and Danny Rifkin, equipment manager Bob Matthews, and six friends … the cops, though they had no warrant, knocked down the front door, then confiscated money and records belonging to the band as well as the Haight-Ashbury Legal Organization whose office is part of this den of iniquity … after everyone has been bailed out the next morning, the band hosts a press conference in their living room … after Rifkin is asked by a reporter how long it took for the manager to grow his hair long, Rifkin produces a large, frothy bowl of whipped cream which he says has been reserved for the first reporter to ask a stupid question … when the reporter cringes, Rifkin relents …
1968, after rising to the top with three million-seller albums, supergroup Cream begins its farewell tour … Fleetwood Mac are at CBS Studios in central London … the Sunday session begins with a recording of guitarist/leader Peter Green’s instrumental “Albatross” … the tune is reminiscent of Santo and Johnny’s “Sleepwalk” but features twin guitar harmonies by Green and Danny Kirwan over a gently loping bass by John McVie, with Mick Fleetwood playing tom toms with mallets … the recording is a huge international hit and influences John Lennon in writing “Sun King” for The Beatles Abbey Road album … years later, Green still plays the tune in concert …
1970, Janis Joplin is found dead in her room at Hollywood’s Landmark Hotel, the victim of a heroin overdose … she had just finished recording her second solo album, entitled Pearl … at the time of her death, Joplin is only 27 years old …
1980, Bob Marley collapses in New York while preparing for a tour … he is diagnosed with cancer and will die seven months later …
1986, CBS Evening News anchor Dan Rather is attacked while walking down Park Avenue in New York City about 11 PM … he is knocked to the ground and kicked repeatedly by a mentally unstable citizen who asks over and over, "Kenneth, what's the frequency?" … his assailant is William Tager, a diagnosed psychotic who suspected the media of beaming hostile messages to him, and wanted Rather to tell him the frequency being used for the nefarious plot … nearly ten years later R.E.M. will write a song loosely based on the event titled "What's The Frequency, Kenneth?" …
1990, record store owner Charles Freeman of Fort Lauderdale, FL, is convicted of obscenity charges for selling the 2 Live Crew rap album Nasty As They Wanna Be … he is fined $2,000 …
1992, Sinead O’Connor puts a serious crimp in her career when she appears on Saturday Night Live … after singing an acapella version of Bob Marley’s “War” in which she inserts a verse about sexual abuse in the Catholic church, the Irish singer tears up a photo of the Pope and says, “Fight the real enemy” … the following week, guest host Joe Pesci holds up the photo, taped back together … during Madonna's next SNL appearance, she holds up a photo of Joey Buttafuoco saying, "Fight the real enemy” … nowadays, when Comedy Central airs the original episode, the incident is replaced with O’Connor holding up a picture of a black child taken from a rehearsal tape …
1994, respected Washington, DC-based guitar slinger Danny Gatton, depressed over financial worries and being dropped by Elektra Records, commits suicide at his Maryland farm … known as “The World’s Greatest Unknown Guitarist,” Gatton was a Telecaster master, adept in country, blues, and rock …
1996, former Smashing Pumpkin Jimmy Chamberlain pleads guilty to disorderly conduct … the charges are related to fellow band member Johnathon Melvoin’s death from a heroin O.D. …
1997, there’s a madness to the Method Man, who is being sued after he leaps off the stage and lands on a Wu-Tang fan, knocking her unconscious … the suit is against band members Method Man, RZA, and Redman, as well as the student government that sponsored the show … the fan, Juanita L. Evans, says she was distracted by Redman and therefore didn't see the flying Method Man … it’s like the old adage says, “When in doubt, sue everyone” …
2004, five Vote for Change concerts are mounted on the same night in Florida, considered a state up for grabs in the 2004 presidential election … Bruce Springsteen, R.E.M., Tracy Chapman, and John Fogerty perform in Orlando where Chapman sings a stirring rendition of Sam Cooke’s “A Change Is Gonna Come” … the lineup in Gainesville is Dave Matthews, Ben Harper and the Innocent Criminals, and Jurassic 5 … in Kissimmee, Pearl Jam and Death Cab for Cutie do their bit to try and unseat the incumbent … Bonnie Raitt, Keb’ Mo’, and Sheryl Crow perform in Jacksonville, where the three sing a show-closing rendition of the Buffalo Springfield’s “For What It’s Worth” … meanwhile in Clearwater, the Dixie Chicks and James Taylor hit the stage … Taylor describes himself as a “big old yellow-dog Democrat” and reveals that his songs “Line ’Em Up” and “Slap Leather” were composed to celebrate the end of the presidencies of Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan respectively … the following night, John Mellencamp and Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds perform in Chicago in support of the John Kerry candidacy … Howard Stern tells his 12 million listeners that in 2006 he will move over to Sirius Satellite Radio … six stations fired the breast-fixated broadcaster from their rosters after Clear Channel Broadcasting was hit with $495,000 in FCC fines … though Clear Channel president John Hogan admitted that Stern hadn’t committed any recent sins, the company decided to drop him anyway … reportedly the decision was based on Stern’s lifetime fascination with biology … his “lectures” on applied female anatomy in particular … Stern fires back saying, "As soon as I came out against Bush, that’s when my rights to free speech were taken away. It had nothing to do with indecency." …
2005, a recently discovered live recording of the Thelonious Monk Quartet featuring John Coltrane debuts in the #2 spot on the Billboard jazz chart … the tape of the 1957 Carnegie Hall performance was discovered in a dusty Library of Congress archive the previous January by a researcher …
2006, A victim of plummeting record sales, record retailer Tower Records is liquidated … 3,000 employees in 20 states lose their jobs … Jadakiss is busted in Yonkers, NY, when the car he is riding in is searched … pot and a stolen revolver are found … he pleads not guilty and is released on bail … after a 30-year hiatus, proto punk band The Stooges hit a Chicago studio to cut a new record … an arrest warrant is issued for Bobby Brown after he blows off a child-support hearing in Massachusetts … it is charged that he owes a former girlfriend with whom he had two children $11,000 … Elton John is joined by, among others, Elvis Costello, Moby, Liv Tyler, and Neil Young in a fundraiser for his AIDS charity … Young wows the crowd with an acoustic set that includes a duet with John on “Your Song” …
2007, Nicky James, born Mick Nicholls, dies of a brain tumor leaving behind a wife, Martine, children, Sami and Louis, and a legacy of leaving bands just before they made it big … Denny Laine, of Denny and The Diplomats, hired James in the early 1960s after he sang a few songs with the band … James then joined Ronny and The Senators … with Denny, he played in a band called The Moody Blues Five … after James decided to leave, the band shortened their name to The Moody Blues and two months later, signed to Decca Records and had their first #1 hit with "Go Now" … undaunted he formed a new band called the Nicky James Movement … once again he left, the band shortened their name to The Move, and two months later had their first hit with "Night Of Fear" … James worked with artists including Denny Laine, Roy Wood, Bev Bevan, Carl Wayne, Mike Pinder, Scott Walker, Tom Jones, and Graham Nash … he wrote songs on the Ray Thomas albums From Mighty Oaks and Hopes, Wishes and Dreams … in the first lawsuit filed by the Recording Industry Association of America against illegal downloaders to go to trial, the RIAA is awarded a $220,000 judgment against Jammie Thomas of Brainerd, MN, who was charged with downloading 24 copyright-protected songs … the RIAA had originally offered to settle with Thomas in 2005 for $4,750, which was refused by the defendant who argued that she hadn’t downloaded the tunes … more than 26,000 suits have been filed against alleged song pirates by the RIAA to date … it later became known that the RIAA withheld roughly $400 million from artists for years … the RIAA gained the money through lawsuits claiming to defend the rights of artists, although none of the artists whose music was “illegally” downloaded have received any of the settlement money … the RIAA has also lobbied for a decrease in artist royalty payments … an odd way to protect artist’s rights, to say the least … Nine Inch Nails’ Trent Reznor announces that he is no longer under contract with Interscope Records, allowing him to be able to distribute any future Nine Inch Nails and solo work in whatever form he desires … he also expressed his belief that being free from contract would enable him to have more direct contact with his fanbase and get his material to them in a more efficient and cost-effective manner … this is bad news for the record industry coming on the heels of Radiohead going indie with its web-only distribution of In Rainbows and Madonna’s split with Warner to cut a deal with Live Nation that covers both concert and record business
… and that was the week that was in matters musical.
[Compiled by the Musician’s Friend copywriting staff]
Arrivals:
October 2: Ron Griffiths of Badfinger (1942), singer-songwriter Don McLean (1945), Michael Rutherford of Genesis (1950), Sting, born Gordon Matthew Thomas Sumner (1951), The Diamonds’ David Somerville (1953), Phillip Oakey of Human League (1955), soul singer Freddie Jackson (1956), singer-songwriter Robbie Nevil (1960), Siggi Baldursson of The Sugarcubes (1962), Claude McKnight of Take 6 (1962), Sean McDonald, singer and guitarist with Surgery (1965), Bud Graugh of Sublime (1967), teen pop singer Tiffany (1971), LaTocha Scott of R&B girl group Xscape (1973)
October 3: R&B pianist and saxophonist Monk Higgins, born Milton Bland (1930), influential American rock-and-roller Eddie Cochran, who co-wrote “Summertime Blues” (1938), former Mountain bass player and Cream producer Felix Pappalardi (1938), Chubby Checker, born Ernest Evans, who popularized the dance The Twist (1941) Lindsey Buckingham of Fleetwood Mac (1948), Stevie Ray Vaughan (1954), Mötley Crüe’s Tommy Lee (1961), Gwen Stefani (1969), Kevin Richardson of Backstreet Boys (1971), soul and R&B singer India.Arie (1975)
October 4: Leon Thomas, jazz vocalist who worked with Pharoah Sanders and Santana (1937), Marlena Easley of The Orlons (1944), bassist Jim Fielder of Blood, Sweat & Tears, The Mothers of Invention, and Buffalo Stringfield (1947), blues singer, guitarist, and songwriter Keb' Mo', born Kevin Moore (1951), Barbara K. MacDonald of Timbuk 3 (1958), Chris Lowe of Pet Shop Boys (1959), singer-songwriter Jon Secada (1961), Lena Katina of tATu (1984), Ashlee Simpson (1984)
October 5: blues musician George “Little Hat” Jones (1899), Delta singer and guitarist Jessie Mae Hemphill (1934), guitarist, singer, and dancer Abi Ofarim (1939), Richard Street of The Temptations (1942), Steve Miller (1943), Richard Kermode, keyboardist who worked with Janis Joplin and Santana (1946), Brian Johnson of AC/DC (1947), seminal country rocker B.W. Stevenson (1949), Bob Geldof (1954), Paul Thomas of Good Charlotte (1980)
October 6: Cliff White, session guitarist with Sam Cooke (1921), Walter Kimble, sax player with Fats Domino (1946), Millie Small of "My Boy Lollipop" fame (1948), Kevin Cronin of REO Speedwagon (1951) David Hidalgo of Los Lobos (1954), singer-songwriter Matthew Sweet (1964), Tommy Stinson of The Replacements (1966)
October 7: banjo player, singer, songwriter, comedian "Uncle" Dave Macon (1870), Martin Murray of The Honeycombs (1941), Dino Valenti of Quicksilver Messenger Service (1943), Kevin Godley of 10cc (1945), David Hope of Kansas (1949), John Mellencamp (1951), Tico Torres of Bon Jovi (1953), singer-songwriter Toni Braxton (1968), Radiohead's Thom Yorke (1968), Leeroy Thornhill of Prodigy (1969)
October 8: composer Toru Takemitsu (1930), Doc Green, baritone with The Drifters (1934), Ray Royer of Procol Harum (1945), Toni Wilson of Hot Chocolate (1947), Johnny Ramone (1948), Hamish Stewart of Average White Band (1949), Robert "Kool" Bell of Kool & The Gang (1950), Cliff Adams of Kool & The Gang (1952), roots blues revivalist Lonnie Pirchford (1955), Steve Perry of Cherry Poppin' Daddies (1963), C.J. Ramone, aka Christopher James Ward of the Ramones (1965)
Departures:
October 2: “The Singing Cowboy” Gene Autry (1998), Evelyn Young, Memphis sax player who appeared on early B.B. King records (1990), New Orleans R&B and jazz pianist Pleasant “Cousin Joe” Joseph (1989)
October 3: Darryl DeLoach, original lead vocalist with Iron Butterfly (2002), Cars bassist Benjamin Orr (2000), blues singer Victoria Spivey (1976), blues master Skip James, whose blues classics were covered by rockers including Cream and Canned Heat (1969), American folk icon Woody Guthrie (1967)
October 4: bebop trumpeter Art Farmer (1998), country fiddler Jerry River (1996), guitarist Danny Gatton (1994), 1950s R&B singer Varetta Dillard (1993), J.Frank Wilson, lead vocalist of J.Frank Williams and the Cavaliers (1991), Ray Stephens, singer with The Village People (1990), Atlanta DJ Zenas “Daddy” Sears (1988), Jimmy Springs, drummer and singer for The Red Caps (1987), Janis Joplin (1970)
October 5: The Temptations' Eddie Kendricks (1992)
October 6: Portuguese fado singer Amalia Rodriguez (1999), raspy-voiced Texas rockabilly singer “Groovey” Joe Poovey (1998), arranger, composer, and orchestra leader Nelson Riddle (1985), Johnny O’Keefe, Australia’s first rock star (1978)
October 7: British rocker Johnny Kidd (1966), blues singer Overton Amos Lemons aka Smiley Lewis (1966), American tenor and movie star Mario Lanza (1959)
October 8: Oscar Moore, guitarist with the R&B band The Three Blazers and the Nat "King" Cole Trio (1991), country singer Harold Dorman (1988), Cliff Gallup of Gene Vincent and The Blue Caps (1988), Dr. Demento favorite Jimmy Cross (1978)
Entire contents Copyright @ 2008 Musician's Friend Inc.
Musician's Friend is a registered trademark of Musician's Friend Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Publisher does not accept liability for incorrect spelling, printing errors (including prices), incorrect manufacturer's specifications or changes, or grammatical inaccuracies in any product included in the Musician's Friend catalog or website. Prices subject to change without notice.
|
|
 |
|
 |
| |
Posted by johnzenanko on Thursday, December 04 @ 10:35:42 EST (1 reads)
(comments? | Musicians | Score: 0) |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
 |
| |
Musicians: Week in Revue
This is the week that was in matters musical …
1896, blueswoman Ida Cox is born in Toccoa, Georgia … her song from 1927 " ’Fore Day Creep" was recorded in 1972 by Humble Pie …
1951, Dan Randall of Fender comes up with a new name for their solidbody guitar: "Telecaster" … the original name "Broadcaster" is dropped after Gretsch complains they have a line of drums using that name … the name "Telecaster" is chosen because TV is becoming popular …
1956, Bill Haley & The Comets receive a $250,000 guarantee for 21 shows—an unprecedented amount in those days …
1963, The Beatles form Northern Music Publishing which eventually will fall into the hands of Michael Jackson …
1967, The Doors, Buffalo Springfield, and The Byrds join forces in an L.A. all-star concert to protest cops roughing up hippies on the Sunset Strip …
1968, Johnny Cash and June Carter marry at the First United Methodist Church in Franklin, Kentucky … a motorcade of Cadillacs carry Johnny, June, and the families to the small, private ceremony … Johnny’s best man is Merle Kilgore, who shares co-writing credits with June on "Ring of Fire," the tune generally credited as a musical documentation of Johnny and June’s love affair … this same week, Frankie Lymon dies of a heroin overdose at the age of 26 … Lymon is often regarded as the first black teenage star … his 1956 hit "Why Do Fools Fall in Love" marked the apex of a career that promptly headed downhill …
1969, The Eagles’ Greatest Hits album became the first album in the U.S. to be certified platinum by the RIAA …
1970, The Jefferson Airplane is fined $1,000 for using profanity during a show in Oklahoma City …
1977, country blues guitarist Bukka White dies … born Booker T. Washington White, his main inspiration was Charley Patton … .Bukka left music in the 1930s to play semi-pro baseball and box … in 1937, he was imprisoned on an assault charge … he then escaped, cut some powerful sides for the Vocalion label, and was eventually recaptured … rediscovered by blues researchers in 1963, he made appearances at folk and blues festivals during the latter stages of his eventful life …
1978, The Eagles win Grammys for the Hotel California album and "New Kid In Town" single …
1983, Michael Jackson’s Thriller reaches #1 and stays there 37 weeks, selling over 40 million copies … it is the number-one album in all Western nations …
1987, Sly Stone goes down for letting illicit substances take him higher … two outstanding warrants on drug charges land him in the pokey in LA … by the end of the year he'll be doing hard time on cocaine charges …
1989, Hard Rock/Metal is a Grammy category for the first time … in a class that includes heavyweight nominees Metallica, Jane’s Addiction, and Iggy Pop, the winner is (drum roll, please): Jethro Tull … a chorus of boos rains down from the public balconies and even some of the artists on the main floor join in … critics nearly unanimously lambast the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences voters who selected Tull, whose mix of classic English prog rock and jazz flute is the farthest thing from hard rock or metal …
1991, James Brown is released from a South Carolina prison after serving two years of a six-year sentence …
1992, Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love wed in Waikiki, Hawaii …
1995, for the first time in seven years, Bruce Springsteen performs live with the E Street Band in a New York City nightclub … the show is taped for a promotional video for Jonathan Demme’s film Murder Incorporated … former Led Zeppelin duo Jimmy Page and Robert Plant kick off a year-long world tour in Pensacola, Florida, supporting their No Quarter album …
1998, Elton John is knighted by Queen Elizabeth II … even though he is announced as "Sir John Elton," the singer is still enthusiastic about the honor, proclaiming "They don’t come any bigger than this." …
1999, The Bluebells—Patricia Holt, Sarah Dash, Nona Hendryx, and Cindy Birdsong of Patti LaBelle & the Bluebells—sing together for the first time in 31 years at The Rhythm & Blues Foundation Pioneer Awards in L.A. at which the group is honored …
2000, it is announced that pop princess Britney Spears will be releasing her own brand of bubble gum creatively named "Britney Spears CD Bubble Gum" … the product is a promotion for her upcoming tour … the manufacturer, Famous Fixins, will give part of the proceeds to The Giving Back Fund, a nonprofit that encourages celebrities to raise money for charities …
2003, Othar Turner, one of the last remaining and most well-known African-American fife-and-drum musicians, dies at the age of 93 in Gravel Springs, Mississippi … fife-and-drum bands were a significant influence of early blues …
2004, shock jock Howard Stern is suspended indefinitely from Clear Channel radio station broadcasts following listeners objections to Stern’s frequently explicit subject matter he uses on his show and the R-rated language … these complaints culminate in Clear Channel prez John Hogan publicly demanding Stern drop the questionable content from his show … Stern demurs and is suspended …
2005, the legendary Muscle Shoals studio closes in Muscle Shoals, Alabama … artists such as the Rolling Stones, Aretha Franklin, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, Lynyrd Skynyrd, and Bob Seger recorded some of their biggest hits at the facility … the studio, owned since 1985 by indie blues label Malaco Records, is a victim of the computer recording boom …
2006, Alex Ostroksky has just returned from a Coldplay concert and is downloading the band’s latest album when he receives a 12:45 a.m. call from Apple informing him that his download marked the one-billionth song served up from the Apple iTunes website and that he has won an iMac, ten iPods, and an iTunes gift certificate worth $10,000 … the lucky 16-year-old recalls, "The guy on the phone started talking about Coldplay and I thought I was in trouble because I didn’t ask my mom for permission" … The National Museum of American History mounts an exhibit titled "Hip-Hop Won’t Stop: The Beat, The Rhymes, The Life" … on display are memorabilia such as Grandmaster Flash’s turntables …
2007, pop star Britney Spears spends a wacky week getting her head shaved and a new tattoo applied, then shows up in a cheesy blond wig before checking into an undisclosed rehab facility to deal with an undisclosed condition … the shaving incident occurs when Brit grabs an electric clipper at Esther’s Haircutting Studio and gives herself the Sinead O’Connor treatment … in a matter of hours the salon’s proprietors have set up a website to sell off the hair together with the clipper, a can of Red Bull the popster drank from, and her cigarette lighter … sniffing a big payday, J.T. Tognozzi, co-owner of the salon says he expects to net a cool million … more than two months after his death, James Brown remains unburied while family members squabble over burial details … meanwhile an undisclosed agreement is reached on how DNA samples should be collected from the corpse … they are needed to resolve several paternity claims including the parentage of a child that his companion Tomi Rae Hynie says Brown fathered … though Hynie says she married Brown, the Godfather’s lawyers dispute that saying she was still married to another man when the alleged marriage took place …
And that was the week that was.
[Compiled by the Musician’s Friend copywriting staff]
Arrivals:
February 21: Andres Segovia (1893), Guy Mitchell aka Al Cernik (1927), Nina Simone (1933), Bobby Charles (1938), David Geffen (1943), Talking Head Jerry Harrison (1949), Mary Chapin Carpenter (1958), Ranking Roger aka Roger Charlery of The English Beat (1961), Sublime’s Eric Wilson (1970), Charlotte Church (1986)
February 22: Frederic-Francois Chopin (1810), "Big Al" Sears (1910), Spade Cooley (1910), Ernie K-Doe aka Ernest Kador Jr. (1936), Bobby Hendricks of The Drifters (1937), Bradley Nowell of Sublime (1968)
February 23: George Frederic Handel (1685), Johnny Winter (1944), Poco’s Rusty Young (1946), Brad Whitford of Aerosmith (1952), Howard Jones (1955), Japan’s David Sylvian (1958), Michael Wilton of Queensryche (1962), keyboardist Robert Collins (1963), Nicki Tedesco (1971), Jeff Beres of Sister Hazel (1971), Lasse Johansson of The Cardigans (1973)
February 24: Enrico Caruso (1873), singer-songwriter Wandra Merrell (1923), George Harrison (1943 - until he was in his 40s he believed it was Feb. 25th), Paul Jones of Manfred Mann (1942), keyboard session man Nicky Hopkins (1944), drummer Butch McDade (1946), Lonnie Turner of the Steve Miller Band (1947), Michelle Shocked (1962)
February 25: blueswoman Ida Cox (1896), Sam Goody (1904), Faron Young (1932), Frank "Poncho" Sampedro of Crazy Horse (1949), Stewart "Woody" Wood of The Bay City Rollers (1957), Dennis Diken of The Smithereens (1957), The Alarm’s Mike Peters (1959)
February 26: Fats Domino (1928), Norman P. Rich of Billy Stewart’s band (1930), Johnny Cash (1932), Paul Cotton of Poco (1943), Bob "The Bear" Hite of Canned Heat (1943), Mitch Ryder (1945), Jonathan Cain of Journey (1950), Michael Bolton (1953), Bronski Beat’s John Jon (1961), Erykah Badu (1971)
February 27: Eddie Gray of Tommy James & The Shondells (1948), Neil Schon of Journey (1954), Adrian Smith of Iron Maiden (1957), Chili of TLC (1971), Jeremy Dean of Nine Days (1972), Josh Groban (1981)
Departures:
February 21: jazz guitarist Al Viola (2007), Mud singer Les Gray (2004), rockabilly singer Malcolm Yelvington (2001), English vocalist Ronnie Hilton (2001), Musical Youth bassist Patrick Waite (1993), DJ Murray "The K" Kaufman (1982), reggae singer Jacob Miller (1980), Janet Vogel, singer with The Skyliners (1980), Nolan Strong of The Diablos (1977)
February 22: guitarist John Fahey (2001), "Papa" John Creach (1994), Kermit Chandler of The Sheppards (1981), Florence Ballard of The Supremes (1976)
February 23: singer Donnie Brooks (2007), guitarist-keyboardist Bob Mayo (2004), Howie Epstein of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers (2003), jazz critic Stanley Dance (1999), Melvin Franklin of The Temptations (1995)
February 24: Stax Records co-founder Estelle Axton (2004), Johnnie Ray (1990), blues pianist Memphis Slim aka John Len "Peter" Chatman (1988), vocalist Ty Hunter (1981)
February 25: folk singer Mark Spoelstra (2007), blues saxophonist A. C. Reed (2004), DJ William "Hoss" Allen (1997), guitarist and songwriter for the Marshall Tucker Band Toy Caldwell (1993)
February 26: lyricist Ben Raleigh (1997), Frank O’Keefe of The Outlaws (1995), Cornell Gunter of The Coasters (1990), bluesman Bukka White (1977), Sherman Garnes of Frankie Lymon & The Teenagers (1977), blues pianist Big Maceo (1953)
February 27: drummer Bobby Rosengarden (2007), Othar Turner (2003), Marlena Easley of The Orlons (1993)
|
|
 |
|
 |
| |
Posted by johnzenanko on Saturday, February 23 @ 12:31:31 EST (119 reads)
(comments? | Musicians | Score: 0) |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
 |
| |
Musicians: History
Connick is the Chronic … Busta busted … Elvis’ water breaks on eBay …
This is the week that was in matters musical …
1960, Johnny Cash plays the first of many free shows he will perform at San Quentin Prison … in the audience is a convict by the name of Merle Haggard … Merle credits the concert with helping him turn his life around … upon his release from prison, Haggard dedicates his life to music instead of crime …
1961, what’s in a name? … at a New Year’s Eve memorial concert for Ritchie Valens in Long Beach, California, a band previously known as Kenny and the Cadets, The Pendletons, and Carl and the Passions, settles on the name The Beach Boys … apparently the name sticks … Janis Joplin makes her first public singing engagement at the Halfway House in Beaumont, Texas …
1962, Dick Rowe of Decca records turns down a group of four unknowns from Liverpool, explaining to their manager, Brian Epstein, "Groups of guitars are on the way out. You should really stick to selling records in Liverpool." … fate is kind to the maker of what could have been rock’s greatest blunder … still smarting from not signing The Beatles, Rowe signs The Rolling Stones … according to Andrew Loog Oldham, who is credited with their discovery and pairing Richards and Jagger as The Stones’ principal writing team, "You just had to go to the person who turned down The Beatles. It was logical. Dick Rowe should be remembered not as the man who turned down The Beatles, but the man who signed The Rolling Stones." … narrowly escaping death, Brenda Lee dashes into her burning Nashville home in an attempt to rescue her poodle Cee Cee … Lee is slightly injured, but sadly Cee Cee dies from smoke inhalation and the home is destroyed …
1964, British singer Cleo Sylvestre covers the 1958 Teddy Bears’ hit "To Know Him is to Love Him" penned by Phil Spector … though the record sinks without a trace at the time, it has come to be highly collectible in recent years … the backing band is an unruly outfit called The Rolling Stones …
1966, while goofing around in the studio The Beach Boys cut a raucous, practically a cappella version of "Barbara Ann," a minor hit for the Regents in 1961 … oddly enough, the lead is sung by Dean Torrance of Jan and Dean …
1970, possibly inspired by his passion for Indian food, George Harrison hits the post-Beatles' chart with his song, "All Things Must Pass" … perhaps the real inspiration for Harrison’s aforementioned song, the worst-kept secret in rock and roll is finally revealed … The Beatles officially announce their breakup … Paul McCartney files in the London High Court for dissolution of The Beatles Co. partnership …
1973, Pink Floyd finishes recording Dark Side of the Moon at Abbey Road Studios in London … the influential album began as a musical piece "Eclipse: A Piece for Assorted Lunatics" with its first live performance nearly a year earlier in Brighton, U.K. …
1975, Elvis Presley gives a rare New Year’s Eve performance at the Silverdome in Pontiac, Michigan … the show earns him the largest one-night gross ever received by a solo artist, $800,000 … after the gig, he flies home to Memphis to ring in the new year watching Monty Python episodes in his bedroom with his entourage … a whacked-out fan levels a loaded .44 at super-hunter Ted Nugent, but is brought down without incident by a combined force of security guards and fans …
1977, the Roxy opens on this first day of the year in London’s Covent Garden with The Clash as headliners, going against a general club ban on punk music … it will soon be the place for punk …
1978, Bruce Springsteen plays Cleveland on New Year’s Eve and gets his cheek torn open when someone, obviously not a big fan, throws a firecracker at the stage …
1982, Steve Van Zandt marries Maureen Santora in Asbury Park, NJ … Bruce Springsteen is the best man and Percy Sledge and Little Richard sing a duet of "When a Man Loves a Woman" at the reception …
1983, in a tragic case of life imitating art, Walter Scott, lead vocalist for Bob Kuban and the In Men, whose big hit was "The Cheater," mysteriously disappears … his car is found abandoned at a local airport … four years later his remains are discovered in a neighbor’s concrete cistern … an investigation revealed that Scott’s wife had been involved in an affair with the neighbor, James H. Williams Sr. (whom she married in 1986), and that Williams had murdered Scott along with his own wife Sharon Williams … Beach Boy Dennis Wilson, the only real surfer in the group, drowns while swimming off his boat moored in Marina Del Rey, California …
1984, Rick Allen takes a knocking and keeps on rocking … in an auto accident in England, the indomitable drummer for Def Leppard loses his left arm … his admirable and loyal bandmates refuse to replace their fallen comrade … upon recovery, in an inspiring display of determination and will, Allen adapts his kit and later rejoins the band …
1985, rock music suffers another loss at the hands of aviation, when a plane crash takes the lives of former teen idol Rick Nelson and the members of his Stone Canyon Band … Andy Chapin, bassist with a later incarnation of Steppenwolf is also lost in the crash …
1989, Marion Keisker passes away … while her name is not well known in the annals of rock and pop, as an assistant at Sun Records, she played a pivotal role in the very course of rock itself … after a young truck driver cut a vanity record at Sun’s studio, it was Marion who urged Sam Philips to record the future star Elvis Presley … a former cook in the restaurant owned by Chuck Berry takes her erstwhile boss to court for allegedly placing a camera in the ladies' room …
1992, high-caliber crooner Harry Connick Jr. is arrested at New York’s JFK Airport for carrying a 9mm pistol in his carry-on bag … with the 9mm being the gun of choice for so many talented rap artists, speculation has surfaced that Connick is pioneering a new style of music called "gangsta swing" … perhaps we can look forward to an album entitled, Connick is the Chronic or The Wrath of Con …
1994, after turning up the heat for her boyfriend, Atlanta Falcon Andre Rison, hot-tempered Lisa "Left-Eye" Lopes pleads guilty to an arson charge for having set fire to and destroying Rison’s million-dollar Atlanta mansion … Lopes is sentenced to five years probation and a $10,000 fine … she and Rison will get back together several times following the incident … apparently their hot- and cold-running relationship passed the test of fire …
1997, while vacationing at his mother’s home at Molokai, Hawaii, rock guitarist Randy Wolfe, better known as Randy California, is lost in the ocean after heroically rescuing his son … according to witnesses, California was swimming with his 12-year-old son, Quinn, when they were caught in a riptide … California shoved his son into a wave that propelled the boy safely to shore before being dragged in himself … moving to New York at age 15 from California, the talented guitarist found himself a gig in a band called Jimmy James and the Blue Flames … the Jimmy James in question was none other than Jimi Hendrix, who gave California his stage name as means of differentiating him from another Randy in the band (dubbed Randy Texas by Hendrix) … his parents, unwilling to let him travel to England with Hendrix and Chas Chandler, caused Randy to miss out on being part of the Jimi Hendrix Experience … together with his stepfather, jazz drummer Ed "Cass" Cassidy, he founded the influential band Spirit in 1967 and wrote their two biggest hits, "I Got a Line on You" and "Nature’s Way" …
1998, after cops spot rapper Busta Rhymes making three successive lane changes without signaling, they pull him over and discover a loaded, unregistered handgun leading to his arrest … like the man said, "don’t do the crime if you wanna get paid to rhyme" … or something like that …
1999, "dressed to the nines" took on new meaning for rap mogul-turned-fashionista, Sean "Puffy" Combs … after leaving a nightclub where three people have just been shot, he is arrested and charged with possession of a 9mm pistol that was found in the front of his car and another stolen 9mm that was reportedly thrown from the vehicle … Combs will later be cleared of all charges … George Harrison and wife Olivia manage to subdue an intruder who has invaded their home … Harrison is stabbed several times in the process but will be released from the hospital two days later …
2000, country music legend Kitty Wells, along with her husband Johnny Wright, perform a farewell show before a capacity crowd at the Nashville Night Life Club … Wells is 81, Wright 86 … in the house are such Nashville notables as Ricky Skaggs, Connie Smith, and Marty Stuart …
2004, alleged Elvis water is sold on eBay … Wade Jones of North Carolina says he snared a plastic cup from which Elvis Presley drank at a concert in 1977 and kept the cup and the water for 27 years before selling the remaining few tablespoons of water on eBay … the winning bid for the water is $455, but Jones says he won't sell the cup … according to the 40-year-old resident of Belmont, North Carolina, he was 13 when he attended a Presley concert at the Charlotte Coliseum in February 1977, six months before the death of the rock 'n' roll icon … after the concert, Jones went to the stage looking for a souvenir … a policeman gave him the plastic foam cup, from which he had seen Elvis drinking earlier, he said … Jones said he kept the cup and water in his freezer until 1985, when he transferred the water to a vial and sealed it … over the years, he said, he acquired a photograph of Elvis holding the cup at that concert as authentication for his claim … proving that the '80s are gone but definitely not forgotten, Pollstar reports that Prince is the top concert draw in 2004 with $87.4 million in ticket sales … when ya’ got it, ya’ got it …
2005, reissue labels have a field day when European copyrights expire on a number of classic pop and rock-and-roll songs recorded in 1954 and earlier, titles include Bill Haley's "Rock Around the Clock" and "Only You" by The Platters … the body of former family-band member Barry Cowsill is found on a wharf in New Orleans … it is believed that he died in the wake of Hurricane Katrina … singer Tom Jones is knighted and thus joins the ranks of Sir Paul McCartney, Sir Elton John, and Sir Mick Jagger …
2006, R&B singer Brandy is involved in a four-vehicle freeway crash in L.A. when her 2007 Land Rover plows into a Honda at an estimated 65 mph … one of the drivers involved is killed while Brandy emerges unscathed … the California Highway Patrol says alcohol and drugs are not involved and is continuing an investigation … the following month she is sued for wrongful death by the family of the deceased and the CHP recommends that she be charged with vehicular manslaughter … Kid Rock gets to play DJ at Jet in Las Vegas on New Year’s Eve … commenting on the gig, he chortles, "It was $200,000 to act crazy and go out of my f***ing mind." …
And that was the week that was.
[Compiled by the Musician’s Friend copywriting staff]
Arrivals:
December 27: actress, singer, and entertainer, Marlene Dietrich (1901), pianist-composer Oscar Levant (1906), John "Buddy" Bailey of The Clovers (1931), guitarist Scotty Moore (1931), Leslie McGuire of Gerry and the Pacemakers (1941), Mike Pinder of The Moody Blues (1941), The Animals' Dave Rowberry (1943), Mick Jones of Foreigner (1944), vocalist Tracy Nelson of Mother Earth (1947), Larry Byrom of Steppenwolf (1948), drummer Terry Bozzio of Missing Persons (1950), David Knopfler of Dire Straits (1952), singer-songwriter Karla Bonoff (1952)
December 28: jazz pianist Earl "Fatha" Hines (1903), Leonard "Chick" Carbo, leader of the ’50s New Orleans doo-wop group The Spiders (1927), R&B bandleader Johnny Otis (1928), rockabilly bass player Dorsey Burnette (1932), Charles Neville of The Neville Brothers (1938), Edgar Winter (1946)
December 29: Ray Thomas of the Moody Blues (1942), singer and ex-Jagger girlfriend Marianne Faithfull (1946), metal drummer Cozy Powell (1947), singer Yvonne Elliman ("If I Can't Have You"') (1951)
December 30: Bo Diddley (1928), session guitarist Red Rhodes (1930), country crossover artist Skeeter Davis, born Mary Francis Pennick (1931), singer-songwriter John Hartford (1937), Paul Stookey of Peter, Paul and Mary (1937), Del Shannon born Charles Weedon Westover (1939), Felix Pappalardi, bassist with Mountain and producer of Cream (1939), Bon Jovi producer Bruce Fairbairn (1949), Michael Nesmith of the Monkees (1942), Davy Jones of the Monkees (1945), Jeff Lynne of ELO and The Traveling Wilburys (1947), Alex Chilton of The Box Tops and Big Star (1950), Jay Kay of Jamiroquai (1969), Tyrese (1978)
December 31: composer Jule Styne (1905), folk singer Odetta Holmes (1930), Andy Summers of The Police (1942), John Denver (1943), Pete Quaife of The Kinks (1943), Patti Smith (1946), Burton Cummings of The Guess Who (1947), disco queen Donna Summer, born LaDonna Gaines (1948), Tom Hamilton of Aerosmith (1951), George Thorogood (1952), innovative guitarist Michael Hedges (1953), Scott Ian of Anthrax (1963), Joe McIntyre of New Kids on the Block (1972)
January 1: Xavier Cugat (1900), Al McKibbon, bassist with Dizzy Gillespie, George Shearing, Monk, and Miles (1919), Country Joe McDonald of Country Joe and the Fish (1942), Grandmaster Flash (1956)
January 2: baritone jazz and R&B crooner Arthur Prysock (1929), country singer Roger Miller, whose "King of the Road" was a big crossover hit (1936), Chick Churchill of Ten Years After (1949), Glenn Goins, guitarist and vocalist with George Clinton (1954), Douglas Robb of Hoobastank (1975), Little Drummer Boy of Immature (1981)
Departures:
December 27: legendary country, rock, and jazz guitarist Hank Garland (2004), music mogul and founder of Chance Records, Ewart G. Abner (1997), Walter Scott, vocalist for Bob Kuban and the In Men (1983), Hoagy Carmichael (1981), 1950s rockabilly artist Bob Luman (1978)
December 28: Barry Cowsill (2005), Beach Boy drummer Dennis Wilson (1983), Chris Bell of The Box Tops (1978), Texas blues guitarist Freddy King (1976)
December 29: conductor Takashi Asahina (2001), French singer-songwriter Mireille (1996), Marion Keisker (1989), Steve Torbert, bassist for New Riders of the Purple Sage (1982), folk singer-songwriter Tim Hardin (1980)
December 30: bandleader Artie Shaw (2004), Hong Kong pop singer Anna Mui (2003), singer with The Drifters, Johnny Moore (1998), Clarence G. Satchell, horn player for The Ohio Players (1995), lyricist Mack David, older brother of Hal David who also collaborated with Burt Bacharach (1993), lead singer of The Dubs, Richard Blandon (1991), Broadway composer Richard Rodgers (1979), Delta bluesman Willie Brown, who traveled with Robert Johnson and is named in Johnson’s "Crossroad Blues" (1952)
December 31: manager of Crosby, Stills & Nash, Gerry Tolman (2005), guitarist Eddie Shaver (2000), Nashville pianist Floyd Cramer (1997), teen pop star Rick Nelson (1985), Patrick Woodward, Rick Intveld, and Bobby Neal of Rick Nelson’s Stone Canyon Band (1985), bassist Andy Chapin (1985), bluesman Robert Pete Williams (1980), R&B writer-producer Bert Berns (1967)
January 1: House of Freaks guitarist Bryan Harvey (2006), singer-songwriter Townes Van Zandt (1997), singer-songwriter Ted Hawkins (1995), Buck Ram, R&B manager, composer, and producer who worked with The Platters (1991), Brit blues pioneer Alexis Korner (1984), honky-tonk piano player Moon Mullican (1967), country music legend Hank Williams (1953)
January 2: Juan Garcia Esquivel, creator of space-age bachelor-pad music (2002), jazz trumpeter Nat Adderly, who worked in the shadow of his older brother alto saxophonist Julian "Cannonball" Adderley (2000), Capitol Records producer Nik Venet (1998), Randy California (1997), David Lynch of The Platters (1981), ’50s R&B singer Larry Williams (1980), Tex Ritter (1974)
|
|
 |
|
 |
| |
Posted by johnzenanko on Tuesday, January 01 @ 12:54:00 EST (219 reads)
(comments? | Musicians | Score: 0) |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
 |
| |
Education: QUESTIONS
This Q & A comes from the "Ask the Teacher" section of rockhousemethod.com. It’s loaded with great advice for developing guitarists. From the fundamentals of playing to sophisticated solos and modal techniques, there are priceless tips to take your skills to a higher plane. Read our entire library of Rock House articles.
August 23, 2007 - Rock House Tech Tips
Amps - Combo or Stack
Montana Prekker; Atlanta, GA
Q: Is a guitar amp head the same as an amp … only smaller or is there a bigger difference? I’ve heard the terms combo and stack but I don’t know what these are. I really want to get a new amp but I want to make sure I make the right choice. Thanks!
A: An amp that comes in an all-in-one unit that has one or more speakers as well as an amplifier section is usually referred to as combo amp. With this type of amp, you can just plug in, turn it on, and start ripping it up.
An amp head is just the electronics section with no speaker. You need to plug the head into a speaker cabinet to make the sound come from your guitar. This type of amp is called a "stack" because you stack the head on top of the speaker cabinet.
Learning Scales in Multiple Keys
Don Hemmer; Salt Lake City, UT
Q: First off I love your DVDs, they rock my socks, and they are a wonderful source of learning; I have referred your DVDs to many of my friends. I have a couple of questions that I hope you can help me with:
You play the natural minor scale in the key of E in your DVD. I have memorized that scale and all 5 positions as well as mixing the positions together and connecting them like Legos, but when I go to play in another key I get so confused and lost that I don’t know where I’m at in the scale when I’m improvising.
Do you have any tips that will help me flow through the scales in any key without getting confused? I always choke and get stuck when it comes to different keys playing the natural minor scale. Please help me.
Do you have any practice suggestions or any suggestions at all on how I can play better leads and feel the solos? I know the natural minor scale in the key of E, but yet I can’t feel the leads and "speak" my solos.
A: Once you know the scales they are the same patterns no matter what key you choose, you just play them on different frets. I suggest that you now focus on the key of A and memorize all five positions in this key, since the two most popular keys are E & A. Here are the frets to play all five scales in A:
1st position - 5th fret
2nd position - 7th fret
3rd position - 10th fret
4th position - 12th fret
5th position - 15th or 3rd fret
Once you have the A and E scales memorized you should be able to get the other keys fairly easy by relation as follows:
B would be just two frets up from A
G would be just two frets down from A
D would be two frets down from E
F is just one fret up from E
As far as "speaking" with the scales, this will take some time and practice. Try playing the scales over progressions and start to use them as creative tools instead of thinking of them as scales. This will get you on your way to making that guitar talk!
Writing Songs 101, What Chords Go Together?
Derek Kreider; Austin, TX
Q: I would like to attempt writing my own songs but I need a little help getting started in the right direction. This may sound like a dumb question but could you please give me a list of the chords that would work together in the key of A Major? Your help is greatly appreciated.
A: First, asking questions is not dumb—this is how we learn new information to help us grow!
The chords in the key of A Major are as follows:
A Major - B Minor - C# Minor - D Major - E 7th - F# Minor - G# Diminished
There is a chord scale that corresponds with any major scale that goes as follows:
I - Major 7th, ii - Minor 7th, iii - Minor 7th , IV - Major 7th, V - Major 7th, vi - Minor 7th, vii - Minor 7th b5
The three principle chords are the I, IV & V. You can take this formula and apply it to any major scale to find all the chords that will be in that key. This does not mean that you can’t use other chords to create songs and progressions (most rules have some exceptions) they are just the chords that will fit best.
Have some fun and create a masterpiece!
Hope this helps,
John McCarthy
Rock House
|
|
 |
|
 |
| |
Posted by johnzenanko on Saturday, December 01 @ 09:22:35 EST (101 reads)
(comments? | Education | Score: 0) |
|
 |
 |
 |
|  |
 |
 |
 |
| |
Login
Don't have an account yet? You can create one. As a registered user you have some advantages like theme manager, comments configuration and post comments with your name. |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |
Languages
Select Interface Language:
|
|
 |
 |
 |
|