music, thoughts, books, dreams, more

Just my world of dreams, music and thoughts. Author of two books, one a novel of Love stories set in Framingham, Mass, Secrets of the Heart the 2nd book an autobiography of growing up in Framingham, Mass. Small Town America, Framingham My generation was the first teenage generation, that was when the word was coined. Ours was the generation that started cruising through town and to the drive in theater and drive in restaurant. In our area, Ernie Kampersal,from Holliston, drove his bucking car through town, picking up girls. It rose in the air, like a stallion! We went to the soda shops and played the juke boxes. It was a different town, a different time, and it belonged to us!

Monday, June 3, 2013

Wow, have I been wondering, but it just shows that we can't make decisions from mathmatical formulas, it is a chaotic unbridled world!

This is copied from the site below, which presents some interesting thinking........
Wagner's original score to Parsifal; listen to: Good Friday Spell or (Prelude to Act 1)



It may be the greatest secret on the spiritual path. Most of today's music is a hindrance not a help. This has been written about from ancient Greece and even more so today but has fallen on deaf ears. Why? Because this very same music makes us feel good, relieves our stress and tensions, releases anger and we're happier listening to it, so it can't be bad.
Before investigating why feeling good may be bad, lets review the evidence published and otherwise documented.
Dr. John Diamond published a book called BK, Behavioral Kinesiology, later changed to Your Body Doesn't Lie. He relates the story of feeling terrible one fine day in New York City. Being a health practitioner set him on a path of deduction. He wanted to know what common elements over two days made him feel ill. The only thing he could come up with was a visit to the record store Sam Goodys each day. But why would that effect him that way? The clue came when he realized the same song was played both days in the store. Voila! the common denominator. He just happened to be an expert in kinesiology and so began his odyssey of muscle testing himself and other people listening to various kinds of rock and roll for that is what he heard in Sam Goodys. The results startled him. The harder the 'rock' the weaker people became. From that harmless side trip to a record store, began a new career for Dr. Diamond. He has gone on to write several books on the positive side of music, discovering that even the consciousness and abilities of a conductor can effect how much 'energy' comes from a performance or recording.
In their 1973 classic, The Secret Life of Plants, Peter Tompkins and Christopher Bird devote a whole chapter on how music affects plants, called 'The Harmonic Life of Plants.' Dr. T.C. Singh, head of the Dept. of Botany at Annamalai University discovered that ragas helped plants grow. He observed this down to the microscopic level as well. They go on to describe several other experiments in Canada and the United States in the 50's and 60's where plants and crops grew faster and healthier when listening to Bach, Gershwin and certain sound frequencies.
The book continues to relate the story of a former organist and mezzo soprano, Mrs. Retallack, who decided to become a biology student. She remembered one of those experiments using music and set out to do some controlled experiments with her Professor, Francis Broman. Two other students intrigued by Mrs. Retallack's lead, conducted their own tests and:
"ran an eight-week experiment on summer squashes, broadcasting music from two Denver radio stations into their chambers, one specializing in heavily accented rock, the other in classical music.
The cucurbits were hardly indifferent to the two musical forms: those exposed to Haydn, Beethoven, Brahms, Schubert, and other eighteenth and nineteenth-century European scores grew toward the transmitter radio, one of them even twining itself lovingly around it. The other squashes grew away from the rock broadcasts and even tried to climb the slippery walls of their cage.
Impressed with her friends' success, Mrs. Retallack ran a series of similar trials early in 1969 with corn, squash, petunias, zinnias and marigolds; she noticed the same effect. The rock music caused some of the plants first to grow either abnormally tall and put out excessively small leaves, or remain stunted. Within a fortnight all the marigolds had died, but only six feet away identical marigolds, enjoying classical strains, were flowering. More interestingly, Mrs. Retallack found that even during the first week the rock-stimulated plants were using much more water than the classically entertained vegetation, but apparently enjoying it less, since examination of the roots on the eighteenth day revealed that soil growth was sparse in the first group, averaging only about an inch, whereas in the second it was thick, tangled, and about four times as long." The Secret Life of Plants, p. 154-155
She went on to address critics by showing that plants indeed did shun rock music. She played rock first on one side of the plants then on the other. Each time the plants turned away, growing in the opposite direction. She went on to test various types of music and percussive sounds with varying results. Her research gained her exposure in newspapers and even on CBS. Some of this notoriety also brought the usual bag of skeptical scientists who immediately dismissed the findings with flippant remarks like, 'plants have no ears.'
In another study, reported by Insight Magazine, April 4, 1988, physicist Dr. Harvey Bird (Fairleigh Dickinson University) and neurobiologist Dr. Gervasia Schreckenberg (Georgian Court College) wanted to see how music affects animals. They used three groups of mice. One group heard voodoo music, another Strauss Waltzes and the third silence. The music was played at low levels so that loud volume would not be a factor. The mice had to run through a maze to find their food. The mice that listened to the voodoo music had a difficult time finding the food until it got so bad they were hopelessly lost. The other two groups had no problem finding the food. In fact, the mice listening to the Waltz music did slightly better. All groups received a break of silence for three weeks. The voodoo music group still got lost but the others had no problem finding their way back to the food. At the end of the experiments the brains were examined and compared. The rock/voodoo group did not fair well. There was excessive branching of the neuronal dentrites and significant increases in mRNA. Dr. Schreckenberg explains:
"We believe that the mice were trying to compensate for this constant bombardment of disharmonic noise," says the neurobiologist. "They were struggling against the chaos. If more connections among the neurons had been made, it would have been a good thing. But instead there were no more connections, just wild growth of the neurons. ... As a result of the exposure to the disharmonic sounds," she says, "we believe there was less capacity for memory in the exposed mice."
A high school student, David Merrell, who had won awards at science fairs conducted a similar type experiment with mice and a maze. The group subjected to the rock music did far worse navigating the course. In David's words, "I had to cut my project short because all the hard-rock mice killed each other. None of the classical mice did that at all." (Nexus Magazine 12\97; Washington Times 7\2\97).
If you trace Rock back to it's roots, Big Band and Jazz, then go back a couple steps further, you'll end up in New Orleans and Haiti and ultimately back to the voodoo beat, the drum beat of Africa. Why is the beat so debilitating? One can point to syncopation or stress on the off or weak beat. For example, the Waltz has three beats with the natural emphasis on the first: One, two, three; One, two, three. Change that emphasis to the last weak beat and you get: da, da, dumb; da, da, dumb. That's a syncopated rock beat. That explains the mechanics but not the effect.
It is almost as though the first beat of the waltz is a space or cosmic interval. God sends the energy and then the soul listening, hears and feels the initial wave of life force within the heart. The interchange takes place as the soul pauses to make atunement with the God above, then responds with the second and third beats. A beat with no emphasis on any beat seems mechanized not attuned to the cosmic cadences. The emphasis on the last beat seems to make a statement that the physical plane is most important in this exchange, that the ego supercedes the Divine intent. The final beat says 'there will be no divine interchange, the energy will stay right here.'
In the beginning, we were spiritual beings, equally created and filled with Light . What we do with that Light is our choice. We have free will. This Light courses through the meridians and chakras as chi, light, fire and energy even filling the spaces in blood molecules. The major energy centers are the chakras as seen below.

The Seven Chakras in Man
  1. Crown (yellow)
  2. Third Eye (green)
  3. Throat (blue)
  4. Heart (pink)
  5. Solar Plexus (purple)
  6. Soul (violet)
  7. Base of the Spine (white)
© SummitLighthouse

It is these seven energy centers that get affected by the syncopation. They are intended to be spinning at different frequencies and are supposed to look like the pure colors above. Our desires, wrong behavior, thoughts, emotions and outside forces can alter the color and slow down the spinning, even stopping the wheel of the chakras completely. I hope to show that what is actually happening is that the vibration and beat of discordant music sets up a direction and flow of energy that passes through the chakras, creating friction, simulating the spinning of these chakras and therefore, making us feel good. Our chakras are so sullied by the vagaries of modern day life that we crave relief. Rock music brings those chakras back to life but only for a moment. If we had the chakras above, we would instantly recognize the assault upon our Light.
Science points to this hypothesis as it continues to explore the effects of sound impacting matter. Sound travels through the ethers in waves and patterns. Several scientists have studied how sound creates shapes and patterns. Hans Jenny used clay materials, sands, and liquids. He created the form on the left, below. This particular frequency is setting up a Tai Chi kind of flow. In another experiment (right) at the Univ. of Texas, Scientific American (November 1996) reports on a device called an oscillon. Different frequencies made tiny brass spheres form pillars (additional link).

In both experiments, many different patterns resulted. Most of the time, the medium used was lifted up, defying gravity, as if it had a mind of it's own, wanting, yearning to explore beyond it's own physical universe and limitations. While some might say the sound created heat in the liquids causing it to rise, the same cannot be said of the numerous inert substances used, such as the two above. No, it was the sound causing movement. Each frequency has it's own little dance. Imagine the effect on us, not only on our spiritual body but on the 70% of water within us.
Researcher, Masaru Emoto, has done some revolutionary work on how water is affected by sounds, words and music. He subjected water and water crystals to different sounds, even swear words. Pure water looks like a beautifully formed crystal, a unique pattern like a snow flake. Polluted water looks like mud. Normal looking water turned to the intricate crystal pattern when prayed over or when classical music was played. When negative thoughts or even words like 'Hitler' were used, it turned to an amorphous non-descript glob like the one below. This same effect happened when heavy metal rock music was played and can be seen in the picture immediately below and at this link: Miraculous Messages of Water.
Left: The music of Bach impacts a water molecule and crystal.

Right: Heavy Metal music impacting a water molecule
Beautiful thoughts and sounds make beautiful patterns. The energy rises up and out, following defined pathways. Negative words and a syncopated beat prevents the water from this growth and expansion. It's as if the energy drives the water down, flattening the patterns pure water is intended to out picture. What is the beat doing to our light and energy centers? Many enlightened thinkers compare each soul to a crystal. We have unique patterns, colors and frequencies that make up our spiritual body. Is our crystal-like etheric body turning into the glob above?
Go back to the plants. When they died and shriveled up but thrived with classical music, they still had physical light and nutrients in the soil. Other studies have proven that plants also have auric fields, smaller, but there. It is that energy or Light that is being siphoned away from them, causing extreme trauma even death. We have greater Light than plants and animals as God gives it to us to do with what we will, for a short time. We can use it correctly or squander it. When that beat rolls in, it presses the Light out and down, just as it did with the water crystals. It goes down to the lower chakras rather than going back to God.
As it goes down, it's passing through those sluggish chakras. The friction stimulates them. It feels good even giving people the sense of power; but the real power comes from God and is the pure Light of the chakras. The energy drops down to that bottom, base of the spine chakra, creating an over-sexed society but that 'feels good' so it 'can't be that bad.' The light is lost. Light that would have fed the other chakras on the way back to God. The love in the heart could have increased or the mind of Christ could have expanded with the opening of the crown chakra. Sex is good, but all the time? Do we need to be thinking about it as much as we do?
The spiritually inclined of old, east and west, knew these principles. Below is an ancient symbol called a Shri Yantra depicted over the centuries with slight variations but always with the interlaced triangles. It represents the Aum or Om, the unifying sound representing all sounds that come from God. It can place one in contact with God and the God in each one. The figure on the right shows the pattern when the Om is spoken into an electronic device. There are sounds and music that help mankind connect with his divine potential and with God.

Left: Indian Shri Yantra depicting the Aum mantra

Right: Aum mantra spoken into an electronic transmitter (from Ajit Mookerjee collection)
Other individuals in the west also had the grace and intuitive ability to recognize the importance of music, such a one was Plato over 2,000 years ago. He didn't need ocilliscopes and mice frantically running around a maze. He did know mathematics and understood the science of music.

Plato
He wrote in the Republic:
"Musical training is a more potent instrument than any other, because rhythm and harmony find their way into the inward places of the soul, on which they mightily fasten, imparting grace, and making the soul of him who is rightly educated, graceful."
Later he writes in the Republic about the negative effects on society:
"The introduction of a new kind of music must be shunned as imperilling the whole State: since styles of music are never disturbed without affecting the most important political institutions."
In Laws he wrote:
"Through foolishness they deceived themselves into thinking that there was no right or wrong in music -- that it was to be judged good or bad by the pleasure it gave. By their work and their theories they infected the masses with the presumption to think themselves adequate judges ... As it was, the criterion was not music, but a reputation for promiscuous cleverness and a spirit of law-breaking."
Another statue of Greek philosophy, standing equally tall in history, Aristotle said:
"emotions of any kind are produced by melody and rhythm; therefore by music a man becomes accustomed to feeling the right emotions; music has thus the power to form character, and the various kinds of music based on the various modes, may be distinguished by their effects on character---one, for example, working in the direction of melancholy, another of effeminacy; one encouraging abandonment, another self-control, another enthusiasm, and so on through the series."
As with many theories and studies of this nature, there is an element of faith. Hopefully more research will come to the fore. Look for it on the internet. It pops up occasionally. To understand why Plato is concerned for our souls, why Aristotle warns of character, why plants turn away from rock, why animals become disoriented and water crystals turn to mud; you can try your own simple experiment.
Pick a morning, the earlier the better. Do some prayers or mantras and meditate for at least 15 minutes or longer. Ask God, Jesus, the Blessed Virgin, or Maitreya to show you the truth. Then play some rock or rap music and meditate on what is happening. I think you'll find that the energies flow downward, not back to God but give rise to feelings of anger, sex or even a false sense of empowerment. Try to analyze that sense of power. Is it true? Does it come from God and/or your true Self or is it ephemeral, an illusory emotion whipped up by a frenetic beat?
Here's another test. Put yourself in a good space again. Wait till you're calm and attuned to the subtle vibrations of the spirit. Then listen to a traditional rendition of the Star Spangled Banner by a famous Opera star like Robert Merrill (he opens the Yankee games--hey, I just had a thought, maybe that's the real reason they've won so often. It's not the money!), or someone else who sustains notes and sings it as it is supposed to be sung. You can feel the power and majesty of the song. It is actually thrilling. The thrill is not just self generated, there is a movement of energy (and light) as demonstrated above. The sustained notes, sung with power and, yes, even love or devotion moves molecules and unseen prana, odic forces, orgone energy, chi, light, whatever you want to call it; into pathways and invisible grids of sound rays that benefit all who hear or feel the radiance emanating.
Now, listen to one of the modern versions sung at a championship game. The singers add all sorts of curlicues and ever changing notes at the end of words. Picture what happens to the clay and sand formation above, or the shri yantra. It's going to be a jangled, chaotic mess, kind of like a nightmarish picture of modern art. There is a correlation. People's emotional bodies are out of whack for various reasons. Their astral bodies may look like a Klee painting or a Picasso. Therefore this type of music and art resonates with them, so much so, they probably think I'm nuts. That's okay, some will know what I'm saying here. The quest to contact the Divine within and above, is a daily occurrence. It takes effort. Music is intended to aid that path.
The world and it's ways loves a yo-yo. The string is let out. We learn advanced spiritual techniques. We strive, do better, climb up the spiritual path of the world's mainstream religions or the feel good philosophies of today's movements. We stay at that plateau for awhile, feeling connected to God, to pure Love and wanting to serve the Christ in others. But these paths are lacking certain spiritual truths. One of these is a secret the vampires of the Spirit do not want you to know. They know how easy it is to steal the Light. The string gets jerked back. They pull on your chain. The Light garnered in the chakras is lost in a fit of anger, a moment of lust, depression, etc. Add the rock\rap beat to those emotions and you have the perfect formula for keeping the populace dumb and happy while sucking their Light and preventing them from becoming their true divine potential.
The world wants you to be a yo-yo, to love that rock and rap beat, because as we all know, it feels sooo good.
William House
Editor, Reverse Spins

Sources and other books on Music:
Amazon.com items:
Non-Amazon.com items:


More on music archived here: Music and Sound
Main Page: Reverse Spins
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Mandelbrot - The Secret Life of Chaos - BBC 4 Preview

 Here we go.....self similarity....in our body, in nature, in the world we create, and the world we try to create...with ideas, that are then restrained by  rules regulations and taxation....Maybe the whole idea I have is to vague to convey, but when listening to this Guru of the technology world, I agreed and disagreed.  Sometimes I wonder if the beauty of science is so captivating that the thought of Socializing and improving the world becomes grander than the rules of nature, of chaos theory, of the fact that every individual has a different path, a different set of genes, of intelligence, a different way to approach his/her purpose on earth...and we can not do it with algorithms.  Even my author admits, that he is unsure if we can change the world...and even out the flow of money......as he blames the computer for the failure of jobs for the middle class.....WHICH I DO NOT AGREE WITH....I think he has to delve more into chaos theory, and the restrains on companies created by rules and regulations, and the jump to conclusions...Even in Chaos theory, delving deep down, things smooth out and recover.....sooooooo!!!!! More to come, just remember, what do I know...???

Steven Strogatz - Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos: Part 6a


IMHO In My Humble Opinion


Today, I listened to the author of a new book , on the book program on Tv...then I decided to check on Chaos theory, based on what I was hearing from this program.

These two quotes come from the site, above in blue...IMHO

Then I decided to listen to the music created .....and think about the quotes below....

"physics is no longer simply the study of subatomic particles in a billion-dollar particle accelerator, but the study of chaotic systems and how they work".

"Music can be created using fractals as well. Using the Lorenz attractor, Diana S. Dabby, a graduate student in electrical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has created variations of musical themes. ("Bach to Chaos: Chaotic Variations on a Classical Theme", Science News, Dec. 24, 1994) By associating the musical notes of a piece of music like Bach's Prelude in C with the x coordinates of the Lorenz attractor, and running a computer program, she has created variations of the theme of the song. Most musicians who hear the new sounds believe that the variations are very musical and creative".

Stay tuned, maybe you know where I am going.....


Thursday, May 30, 2013

Sarah Vaughan - A Garden In The Rain

This says it all .....what a song, you can't beat the arrangement, the voice .... in high school music was piped into the girls room and this song was one that had me humming it all day...

Patsy Cline - Crazy

The country girl is always in me.  Love her voice and this song...how can we not like it?

Monday, May 27, 2013

Newport Mansions News

Headlines of the Week
From the Desk of Trudy Coxe
This Week's Highlight of the Collection:
Located in a bedroom closet in the 3rd floor servant quarters of The Elms, this enshrined figure of Jesus and the Sacred Heart, c. 1900, is original to The Elms and was purchased with the house in 1962. Housed in a carved wooden frame, the painted statue is surrounded by flowers and a stenciled background.
The homecoming celebration at Rosecliff last Sunday for Heather Abbott, the young Newport woman who was wounded in the Boston Marathon bombing, was an inspirational event. About 300 people attended, including Governor Chafee, Senators Reed and Whitehouse, Congressmen Cicilline and Langevin, and Attorney General Kilmartin. We all were mesmerized by Heather's courage and positive attitude as she recovers from the loss of part of her leg. The PS donated the use of Rosecliff for the party.
Be sure to sign up for the June 6 lecture by International Council member Richard Guy Wilson, Commonwealth Professor and Chair of the Department of Architecture at the University of Virginia. He'll share with us the genius of Richard Upjohn, architect of Kingscote and other Gothic-inspired cottages and churches. The lecture starts at 6 p.m. It will also be a chance for you to meet our new Director of Museum Affairs, Dr. Laurie Ossman. She'll be introducing Dr. Wilson.
You also won't want to miss our June 19 lecture by Caitlin Emery, our Research and Interpretation Coordinator, on some of the lesser-known treasures in the Preservation Society's collections. That's at 11 a.m. at The Elms. You can sign up for both lectures by contacting Brittany Hullinger at ext. 154.
Mark your calendars for the Annual Meeting on June 13. We'll be honoring four people with our annual Laurel Awards: Bob & Wini Galkin for volunteerism, in honor of their outstanding support and advocacy on the PS's behalf; Jeff Daly for artisanship, for his visionary design of our exhibit at the Winter Antiques Show; and Norey Cullen for horticulture, for her impassioned advocacy for Newport's gardens and landscapes. The Annual Meeting will be held at Rosecliff, starting at 6:00.
Alyssa Lozupone, who has just graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with an MS in historic preservation, has accepted the position of Public Policy Fellow for the next year. She'll be joining us in July.
Speaking of the Fellows program, we hope you'll join us for a special luncheon and tour of The Elms Carriage House on June 19, to learn more about the Scholars Center and Fund for Fellows. Supporter Eaddo Kiernan has agreed to make a few remarks about why the Fellows Program is important.
The co-chairs of our Summer Venetian Masked Ball at The Elms on August 3--Barbara Chapman, Monique Coleman, Amanda Fischer, Kate Hamilton and Alice Ross--are doing fantastic work and planning a great, fun evening for us. We are very grateful to all those who are supporting the Ball at the level of $5,000 or more. Those who have purchased benefactor and patron tables recently include: The Berwind Fund Office, Mr. and Mrs. William P. Egan II, Mrs. Alfred S. Wilsey, Mrs. Alexander Cushing, and Mrs. George Edward Ford.
Social media continues growing as an important tool for us to communicate with our various constituents. It's time for you to join the conversation if you haven't done so already! In just the past 7 days, we reached 17,582 people through our 3 Facebook pages.
Congratulations to our friends and colleagues at the International Tennis Hall of Fame, who achieved accreditation from the American Alliance of Museums this week. They join the PS, the Newport Art Museum, RI Historical Society, Slater Mill and the RISD Art Museum as the only accredited museums in Rhode Island. Only about 1,000 of the estimated 17,500 museums in the entire country are accredited.
"I have never been able to think of the day as one of mourning; I have never quite been able to feel that half-masted flags were appropriate on Decoration Day. I have rather felt that the flag should be at the peak, because those whose dying we commemorate rejoiced in seeing it where their valor placed it. We honor them in a joyous, thankful, triumphant commemoration of what they did." - Benjamin Harrison

Peace on Memorial Day,
TC


 

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Amazon.com: Soundtrack of my life: Books

Amazon.com: soundtrack of my life: Books   this is a great gift for Dad, or someone who loves music.  Here was someone who did not know anything about music, except he was a teen that liked music, and he became a big part of the music business as we knew it.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Have you found Quora?

I wish they had a button to send this to blogspot, or pinterest...maybe they will soon.  some really great natural phenomena here and other interesting questions and answers...


Your Quora Weekly Digest
Top Content For You This Week
Here are some of the best natural phenomena that occur on Earth.

Gippsland Lakes... Read More »
David Fry, CTO, Fry Communications, entrepreneur...
Herbert Dow founded Dow Chemical in Midland, Michigan when he invented a way to produce bromine cheaply. He sold the chemical for industrial purposes all over the US for 36... Read More »
Andrei Kolodovski, Entrepreneur, Hedge Fund Manager
It's not printing money per se that causes inflation
it's printing it in excess of the real value created by economy.

One way of looking at Money is that it's a certifica... Read More »
Ryan Lackey, Mostly harmless.
Absolutely not.  This is probably the most fundamental misunderstanding of economics, technology, and reality, and is fairly widely held.

When a new technology is develope... Read More »
Mira Zaslove, travel, photography, sales and sweets...
TL;DR: Before running out for botox or for a fancy photographer, following are 10 things you can do to improve how you look in photos:

Have a lot of shots taken of you, on... Read More »
Anonymous
It's simple. Because people with 'creativity' or at least, who think themselves creative, have this idea subconsciously drilled into them from a young age that only a selec... Read More »
Bill Lee, Author
I was just eight years old when I got into the gang life. It was around  the time I witnessed my first shooting, which occurred during a rumble  between Chinese and black g... Read More »
David Cole, product designer at Quora.
I've been fascinated with this premise for years now, and this week I saw this popular graphic pop up yet again:


I'd seen this graphic debunked, but it wasn't particularl... Read More »
I wanted to quit my job. I hated my boss. He always yelled at me. I hated my co-workers. They always yelled at me.

 I was addicted to playing chess online. One time my gi...
 Read More »
Michael Forrest Jones, Beechmont Hotels Corporation
We expect guests to either use or to take consumable items - soap, shampoo, stationery, etc. You're welcome.

Things like towels, hair dryers, lamps, TVs, TV remotes (I thi... Read More »

Eres Tu

just another favorite

Monday, May 20, 2013

Chis Connor

Chris Connor was one of my faves, she did not record enough to suit me, but just listen to that velvet voice...

Barry White and Pavrotti

I love Barry White's voice, so I could not resist, I must have posted this before....and again a thanks to Pavrotti for his genorosity of spirit, making music like this ties the generations and more.  Maybe Barry White would have been a great opera singer?  Who knows ?

The magic of music!

Who would have thought, James Brown, the big orchestra and Pavrotti!  A  thank you Pavrotti for your contribution to the wonders of music, joining with our pop singers to prove it!

Moanin low with Billy Holiday

This is so thirties....I couldn't help but share it ...again.  Favorites always pop up..on my site...I wonder if someone put out a record with the thirties sound before the vocalist like this, would it be a hit today....my guess...it might if music lovers could find out about it...on YOUTUBE  before it hit the markets??  What do you think...??

Sunday, May 19, 2013

interesting mash up of dance and music...


Follow up on the Carioca fromt he other day...can't beat Fred and Ginger


'Moanin', if you like jazz, you have to know this


BB KING AND ERIC CLAPTON

MOANIN..the blues!

A tribulte to JAZZ/BLUES

A testament to Jazz, now recognized in the concert halls of the world and sung by Opera singers, making it even more beautiful!

Tom Waits

I wonder if he would consider singing some of the classic old songs?  His voice might fit some of them very well.  ??

Sea of Love..movie and song, Al Pacino

Watched this movie this weekend, and loved the song presented by Tom Waits....love his growly voice.  Great interpretation !

The movie is an oldie I had seen before, but easy to watch again, I even forgot who the murderer was, until ....

Friday, May 17, 2013

Marie Elena, by my favorites

the playing is distinct, you can savor it coming from almost the first note...

Paco de Lucia , Tico Tico


and now....Jerry Vale

A great song, and a wonderful voice....loved Jerry Vale

something new to ponder

Playing great songs can get you everywhere

Chopin, like you never heard it before


Los Indios, something different

Just something different this morning...to start your day

Bach to the blues, our emotions match music to colors

Bach to the blues, our emotions match music to colors  Here is a scientific explanation of the sounds of music and how they affect us in the hologram of life.  Which type of music do you think will be more receptive to your audience, which will sell better and make people happier...??  What sounds do you want to work on after reading this?

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Interesting reading

something interesting to read...
Posted: 14 May 2013 11:21 PM PDT
Not a trace of Cody or Adams was ever found. The L-8 blimp mystery remained a secret to the end.
The post The L-8 Blimp Mystery appeared first on Historic Mysteries.

Count Every Star...Dick Haymes and Artie Shaw

Dick Haymes did not get the attention he should have received.  He married Rita Hayworth, which was an attention getter, but he did not qualify for the draft, and people wondered why...he was never a United States citizen, so he was not eligible for the draft.... the rumors really hurt him.

Carioca, with Jose

 Which Disney movie was this from?  I have been trying to capture it, but it slips my mind.   This is how we learned about the music of South America...when I was young.

Carioca, Flying down to Rio

Would you believe, they actually did stunts like this on early airplanes.

Artie Shaw Carioca and Mercedes Special.....

Can you imagine the times!
Beautiful cars, customized to your desire...flappers, and spectacular music....

Artie Shaw

Well it was only going to be a few moments before I broke down and brought you to my favorite version... I love Artie Shaw...!
This arrangment is soooooo good... how about it?  What do you think?

Art Pepper, What's New

Adifferent interpretation, that I prefer because of his little toot toot toot in between , they are like little tasty jelly beans that tie the tastes of the different sounds together...red, green yellow, they all taste different....and the sound melts into them...

Whats New Dexter Gordon

Maybe this is another way to say it.....music fits ...sounds, voice, atmosphere, etc....this is the right song for this instrument...it requires a song that has the tone that fits the instrument, just as your voice should fit the song you choose...it is hard to put your finger on it....you need to develop an ear for the sounds, and the mood.  This instrument for example is not a good choice for solo on many songs...in my opinion...but as I always say.....what do I know...

You've Changed

here is the female version for a soft voice, like KD. Lang

You've Changed

 A song waiting to be revived, is your voice in this category?  Perfect song for you..find the songs that fit your voice.  The melodies of old will always sell, even to the young group, there is hardly any competition today for great songs...

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Louis Prima - I Wan'na Be Like You

 got a grampa....?  This would be a great gift from one of the grandkids....

Billy Eckstine - I Apologise

Dad love music, can you find this in an old record store for him?  This is a fab album...the old style record players are still around, and it would be a great gift to give him...

Don McLean- American Pie (with Lyrics)

An incredible song, full of history, the past and the future?  Think about the pauses, just as you pause to write a new chapter, a way to swing from one melody to another...a difficult song to put together, a story , a book, in a song...

The Eagles - Take It Easy (Remastered)

one of my favorites, featuring dissonance...

All Those Years Ago - John Lennon & George Harrison

Isnt this just wonderful~

George Harrison and Eric Clapton - While my guitar gently weeps (HQ)

One of my favorites...

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Beyond the Sea (La Mer) - Carmen Cavallaro

/Some songs never leave, and thus you get them again from me, my favorite  Beyond the Sea...and the gorgeous tones of Carmen Cavallaro

I'll Take Romance Carmen Cavallaro

And.....just listen to the music of Carmen Cavallero....heavenly......today we have Beegie Adair

Les Paul & Mary Ford - Just One More Chance (original 78 rpm)


this is why we rushed to the music store...the music, the ideas, the sounds, they grew better each day!  I can't find Billy Ecstine version, of You're Mine You.... I know I have it on his album tucked away,   Maybe it will turn up on here someday.

J.J. Johnson - You're Mine You

 I'll bet this would be a great song by Chris Botti...what do you think?

SARAH VAUGHAN YOU'RE MINE YOU.wmv



what an artist.....her long notes reached into our hearts, our radios played Sarah , our record players, sounded off with Sarah, at the beach, at the park, in the car.....we took our record players everwhere we went.

Crystal Gayle - don't it make my brown eyes blue

This was a spectacular hit, we loved and danced to this into forever and still love it when we hear it..

Where The Boys Are

This is the music my generation grew up with, not protest songs, not ghetto music, it was music to dream by....the future is still here if the music business would only wake up....and realize that they help shape the culure,

"The Power Of Love" (Live) - Huey Lewis & The News - Santa Rosa, Chris B...

Lets do some music, time for a change.....did you read where the music business is suffering,...and its from the selection of todays music, everyone prefers to listen to the music that we still enjoy....like this..
It was a rollicking song that stuck with us day after day....the right riff!

Thoughts on our holistic world

http://booksmadlynfafard.blogspot.com      This morning, I decided to post my observations on the link here, because it involves books and thinking and my hometown college, among many thoughts.  If interested take a peek.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

English May Have Retained Words From an Ice Age Language - ScienceNOW

English May Have Retained Words From an Ice Age Language - ScienceNOW  this is a great site, and the information is always interesting.

LARGEST CRYSTAL DISCOVERED IN THE BERMUDA TRIANGLE

http://youtu.be/Jnap_Thtem0    Interesting....have you ever been in the Bermuda Triangle?....Usually people lose their way because the compass does not hold steady North....and the current pushes you North while you are heading into the East....so you need to constantly correct course, and plan for the current....but who knows maybe there are some magnetic properties in the soil below the sea, that cause the compass to go whacky!  Did you ever read about that happening in a good thriller...it could happen you know...

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Mantovani - Adios

Mantovani mesmerized us with  beautiful arrangments of wonderful songs....so ...hope you enjoyed my selections tonight.  Adios

johnny mathis - light my fire


what a nice arrangement...

Julie London (playlist)

What a yummy version of this song....

Jose Feliciano My Sweet Lord

I think he likes the same music I like, hats off to George Harrison with this song...and to Jose, he does perform it great...

Light My Fire - Jose Feliciano (Doors)

My favorite....