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Saturday, November 10, 2007|By
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Mobile Music Sharing
By: Kevin Cantera
Sales of portable music players are booming, and phone manufacturers would like to join the frenzy. A large and growing number of people already take their phones along wherever they go and now the era of the music phone is dawning, with phones available today that are able to store and play songs. Known as music-capable phones, they're still primarily devices to carry conversation, but they can store songs in their memories.
Known as music-optimized cell phones, these gadgets are serious music players. Some have miniature hard drives that can hold all kinds of songs as many as the iPod mini. Others have removable storage cards. It just makes sense, after all. No one wants to carry around two devices if they don't have to.
Hard drives, which make possible the storage of thousands of songs, are expensive, as are removable storage cards. But the price of hardware tends to fall quickly. Over time, music-optimized phones could become as common and affordable as today's camera phones.
Optimized music phones have created a whole new category. They're very good music players that also happen to make phone calls. It's the device formerly known as the cell phone. Some people might drop an audio player for a converged device, but most of the opportunity is for new customers, people who have never owned an MP3 player.
The first cell phone, introduced in 1983, was a massive device that weighed 2 pounds and cost nearly four grand! Almost a quarter-century later, most cell phones are smaller than a deck of cards and many are given away for free to encourage consumers to sign up for service plans. And the newest phones do far more than allow people to talk.
Today, about 3 billion people have cell phones worldwide, compared to about 300 million who have computers. The goal for programmers now is to develop applications that are as handy on cell phones as those that have been developed for computers.
At the outset, one factor that slowed the evolution of cell phones was the limited deployment of wireless broadband networks. But carriers now offer high-speed data plans that allow cell phones to access vast quantities of information from the Internet faster than the snail's pace common only a couple of years ago. And traditional Internet service providers are beginning to deploy broadband wireless networks that can accommodate cell phones and easily download music to them.
So the writing is on the wall for the old way of getting music and listening to it. Mobile devices continue to proliferate and become more and more adaptable to the changes in the Internet.
So look for your favorite music – coming soon to a phone near you.
Article Source: http://www.ArticleBiz.com
Sales of portable music players are booming, and phone manufacturers would like to join the frenzy. A large and growing number of people already take their phones along wherever they go and now the era of the music phone is dawning, with phones available today that are able to store and play songs. Known as music-capable phones, they're still primarily devices to carry conversation, but they can store songs in their memories.
Known as music-optimized cell phones, these gadgets are serious music players. Some have miniature hard drives that can hold all kinds of songs as many as the iPod mini. Others have removable storage cards. It just makes sense, after all. No one wants to carry around two devices if they don't have to.
Hard drives, which make possible the storage of thousands of songs, are expensive, as are removable storage cards. But the price of hardware tends to fall quickly. Over time, music-optimized phones could become as common and affordable as today's camera phones.
Optimized music phones have created a whole new category. They're very good music players that also happen to make phone calls. It's the device formerly known as the cell phone. Some people might drop an audio player for a converged device, but most of the opportunity is for new customers, people who have never owned an MP3 player.
The first cell phone, introduced in 1983, was a massive device that weighed 2 pounds and cost nearly four grand! Almost a quarter-century later, most cell phones are smaller than a deck of cards and many are given away for free to encourage consumers to sign up for service plans. And the newest phones do far more than allow people to talk.
Today, about 3 billion people have cell phones worldwide, compared to about 300 million who have computers. The goal for programmers now is to develop applications that are as handy on cell phones as those that have been developed for computers.
At the outset, one factor that slowed the evolution of cell phones was the limited deployment of wireless broadband networks. But carriers now offer high-speed data plans that allow cell phones to access vast quantities of information from the Internet faster than the snail's pace common only a couple of years ago. And traditional Internet service providers are beginning to deploy broadband wireless networks that can accommodate cell phones and easily download music to them.
So the writing is on the wall for the old way of getting music and listening to it. Mobile devices continue to proliferate and become more and more adaptable to the changes in the Internet.
So look for your favorite music – coming soon to a phone near you.
Article Source: http://www.ArticleBiz.com
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Friday, November 9, 2007|By
Speedway
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Eric Clapton A Living Legend
By: Andrew Conway
When you think about music, what do you think of first? Which aspects of music are important, which are essential, and which ones can you take or leave? You be the judge.
Sometimes the most important aspects of a subject are not immediately obvious. Keep reading to get the complete picture.
Eric Clapton was born March 30th, 1945 in Ripley England, U.K.
He was the illegitimate son of Patricia Molly Clapton and Edward Fryer, a Canadian soldier stationed in England. Patricia left Eric in the custody of his grandparents, Rose and Jack Clapp. Patricia moved to Germany where she eventually married another Canadian soldier named Frank McDonald.
Eric was raised believing that his grandparents were his parents and his mother was his sister. At the tender age of nine the truth was reveled to him by his grandmother.
His formal education consisted of being expelled from the Kingston College of art at the ripe old age of seventeen for playing guitar in class. He then took a job as a manual laborer and spent most of his free time playing the electric guitar.
Clapton eventually joined a number of British blues bands, including the Roosters and Casey Jones, and rose to prominence as a member of the Yardbirds
Eric withdrew from the spotlight in the early seventies, Trying to overcome an addition he took the advice of PeterTownsend and underwent an effective electro- acupuncture treat-ment. He was fully rehabilitated and then landed a role in the rock opera-Tommy
Unfortunately the 1980's brought Eric sliding deeper and deeper into a serious drinking problem even thou this period of his lifebrought some of his most successful albums--Another Ticket (1981), Money and Cigarettes (1983), Behind the Sun (1985), August (1986), Journeyman[1989]
In the following decade he again suffered another personal tragedy when guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan and Clapton road crew members Colin Smythe and Nigel Browne--all close friends of Clapton's--were killed in a helicopter crash. A few months after this tragedy, fate was going to deal him another blow when his own son,Conner,fell forty-nine stories from Del Santo's Manhattan high-rise apartment to his death.Clapton channeled his shattering grief into writing the 1992 Grammy-winning tribute to his son, "Tears in Heaven."
Another album, "From The Cradle", came out in 1994 and marked his return to the raw blue standards. In 1997 he was honored with the Record of the year and best male pop vocal performance grammys for "Change the world".
And in the next coming years,success just seemed to follow him no matter where he went.The only triple inductee into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. He is often described as an authentic musical genius,but at what a personal price?
There's no doubt that the topic of music can be fascinating. If you still have unanswered questions about music, you may find what you're looking for in the next article.
Article Source: http://www.ArticleBiz.com
When you think about music, what do you think of first? Which aspects of music are important, which are essential, and which ones can you take or leave? You be the judge.
Sometimes the most important aspects of a subject are not immediately obvious. Keep reading to get the complete picture.
Eric Clapton was born March 30th, 1945 in Ripley England, U.K.
He was the illegitimate son of Patricia Molly Clapton and Edward Fryer, a Canadian soldier stationed in England. Patricia left Eric in the custody of his grandparents, Rose and Jack Clapp. Patricia moved to Germany where she eventually married another Canadian soldier named Frank McDonald.
Eric was raised believing that his grandparents were his parents and his mother was his sister. At the tender age of nine the truth was reveled to him by his grandmother.
His formal education consisted of being expelled from the Kingston College of art at the ripe old age of seventeen for playing guitar in class. He then took a job as a manual laborer and spent most of his free time playing the electric guitar.
Clapton eventually joined a number of British blues bands, including the Roosters and Casey Jones, and rose to prominence as a member of the Yardbirds
Eric withdrew from the spotlight in the early seventies, Trying to overcome an addition he took the advice of PeterTownsend and underwent an effective electro- acupuncture treat-ment. He was fully rehabilitated and then landed a role in the rock opera-Tommy
Unfortunately the 1980's brought Eric sliding deeper and deeper into a serious drinking problem even thou this period of his lifebrought some of his most successful albums--Another Ticket (1981), Money and Cigarettes (1983), Behind the Sun (1985), August (1986), Journeyman[1989]
In the following decade he again suffered another personal tragedy when guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan and Clapton road crew members Colin Smythe and Nigel Browne--all close friends of Clapton's--were killed in a helicopter crash. A few months after this tragedy, fate was going to deal him another blow when his own son,Conner,fell forty-nine stories from Del Santo's Manhattan high-rise apartment to his death.Clapton channeled his shattering grief into writing the 1992 Grammy-winning tribute to his son, "Tears in Heaven."
Another album, "From The Cradle", came out in 1994 and marked his return to the raw blue standards. In 1997 he was honored with the Record of the year and best male pop vocal performance grammys for "Change the world".
And in the next coming years,success just seemed to follow him no matter where he went.The only triple inductee into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. He is often described as an authentic musical genius,but at what a personal price?
There's no doubt that the topic of music can be fascinating. If you still have unanswered questions about music, you may find what you're looking for in the next article.
Article Source: http://www.ArticleBiz.com
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Monday, November 5, 2007|By
Speedway
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East of Angel Town: Coming Soon to Lull Your Musical Soul
By Jacob Marshal
Young American rock/pop singer, Peter Cincotti is going to release his next album “East of Angel” very soon. Slated for a releasing date on February 12, 2008, the album is expected to draw Cincotti's fans more intoxicatedly than ever. “East of Angel Town” is said to feature punchy, dynamic, and more edgy sound, simultaneously classic and modern. Peter Cincotti, who is 24 years of age, has already won much laurels and accolades for his exciting musical stuff. Cincotti is not only a singer, he is also a songwriter, affluent pianist, and a good actor. Born on July 11, 1983 in New York, Cincotti laid his hand on the piano at the tender age of three. Since then there is no looking back for this musical prodigy.
Ornamented with good acting capabilities, Cincotti appeared in a small role in the 2004 Bobby Darin biopic “Beyond the Sea” and contributed to the film's soundtrack. He also grabbed a small role as piano player in planetarium in the blockbuster “Spider-Man 2”. His song "December Boys" is featured in the 2007 film “December Boys”, starring Daniel Radcliffe.
“Peter Cincotti”, the debut album of Cincotti, is a compilation of traditional and popular jazz favourites. His second album, “On the Moon” featured some of the artist's own songs.The soon-to-be-released “East of Angel Town” features all his original works. This new work began when Cincotti teamed up with noted producer and fourteen-time Grammy winner David Foster, producer Humberto Gatica, and producer/sound designer Jochem van der Saag.
Now all eyes are on “East of Angel Town”, which will tell stories woven into melodies that are both individual and universal.“This album is very much about the old and the new. Not only within the songs themselves, but also in the way we recorded them. I wanted to combine the classic way of live recording with the many elements of modern production” - says the singer himself.
Source: http://www.Free-Articles-Zone.com
Young American rock/pop singer, Peter Cincotti is going to release his next album “East of Angel” very soon. Slated for a releasing date on February 12, 2008, the album is expected to draw Cincotti's fans more intoxicatedly than ever. “East of Angel Town” is said to feature punchy, dynamic, and more edgy sound, simultaneously classic and modern. Peter Cincotti, who is 24 years of age, has already won much laurels and accolades for his exciting musical stuff. Cincotti is not only a singer, he is also a songwriter, affluent pianist, and a good actor. Born on July 11, 1983 in New York, Cincotti laid his hand on the piano at the tender age of three. Since then there is no looking back for this musical prodigy.
Ornamented with good acting capabilities, Cincotti appeared in a small role in the 2004 Bobby Darin biopic “Beyond the Sea” and contributed to the film's soundtrack. He also grabbed a small role as piano player in planetarium in the blockbuster “Spider-Man 2”. His song "December Boys" is featured in the 2007 film “December Boys”, starring Daniel Radcliffe.
“Peter Cincotti”, the debut album of Cincotti, is a compilation of traditional and popular jazz favourites. His second album, “On the Moon” featured some of the artist's own songs.The soon-to-be-released “East of Angel Town” features all his original works. This new work began when Cincotti teamed up with noted producer and fourteen-time Grammy winner David Foster, producer Humberto Gatica, and producer/sound designer Jochem van der Saag.
Now all eyes are on “East of Angel Town”, which will tell stories woven into melodies that are both individual and universal.“This album is very much about the old and the new. Not only within the songs themselves, but also in the way we recorded them. I wanted to combine the classic way of live recording with the many elements of modern production” - says the singer himself.
Source: http://www.Free-Articles-Zone.com
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Sunday, November 4, 2007|By
Speedway
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