Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts

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The Memory Writer records vinyl or cassette directly to CDs! Or easily connect via USB to your Windows equipped Mac™ or PC and use the software suite to edit your music and then load your tunes onto your Ipod®. Use the new "Memory Writer" to transfer music from vinyl or cassette onto CDs and even upload music to your computer. Available Colors BlackPaprika Click here for more details

All That Is Bitter & Sweet: A Memoir

Book Review
All That Is Bitter & Sweet: A Memoir, by Ashley Judd. Ashley Judd is an award-winning film and stage actor known for her roles in both box-office hits and art-house gems, and the daughter and sister of country-music royalty. In 2002, drawing on a deep well of empathy, she found her true calling: as a humanitarian and advocate for those suffering in neglected parts of the world.

Asked why she was opting out of a successful career, walking away while she was one of the highest-paid women in Hollywood, Ashley herself could not provide an answer. She simply knew that after her first trip to the notorious brothels, slums, and hospices of southeast Asia, her own life depended on advocating on behalf of the vulnerable. Promising each new sister, “I will never forget you,” Ashley began writing extraordinary diaries—on which this memoir is based—expanding her capacity to relate to, and to share with a global audience, stories of survival and resilience.

Along the way, Ashley realized that the coping strategies she had developed to deal with her own emotional pain, stemming from childhood abandonment, were no longer working. Seeking in-patient treatment in 2006 for the grief that had nearly killed her, Ashley found not only her own recovery and an enriched faith but an expanded kit of spiritual tools that energized and advanced her feminist social justice work.

Now, in this deeply moving and unforgettable memoir, Ashley Judd describes her odyssey, as a left-behind lost child attains international prominence as a fiercely dedicated advocate. Her story ranges from anger to forgiveness, isolation to interdependence, depression to activism. In telling it, she resoundingly answers the ineffable question about the relationship between healing oneself and service to others. Click here for more information or to order.



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Why Johnny Doesn't Read Music

By Ian Hodge
Education
Kids quit all the time. But why do so many kids quit music early?

Over 50 years ago Rudolph Flesch pointed out that the loss of phonics in the schoolroom meant Johnny couldn't read. Since then smart parents and teachers have insisted on a comprehensive program that teaches children the sounds of the letters first, then how to blend those sounds into words.

There is more than that, because an integrated phonics program not only uses the sight and auditory senses to teach reading, but will use kinetic activity such as writing to reinforce what the students see and hear.

The result has been outstanding success for students who have been taught to read and write using a simple phonics methodology.

That same student who responded positively to the multi-sensory reading program, however, will quite often quit music in his teens -- or earlier. Why? For the same reason that kids used to give up on the three Rs: One or more of the 'Rs' are missing. And in the case of music, two of the 'Rs' are missing: Reading and 'Riting - especially the 'Riting part.

In the music environment slow learning results in bored students, And bored students don't progress rapidly, not because they are incapacitated in some form, but because they don't know how to do something. And the something in this case, is read music - fluently.

Why can't they do this? Because their reading skills are not developed in a systematic fashion when the student first learns music. Students go to piano lessons, are given a few pieces to learn each year and expected to play them to perfection. They memorize the piece in the first week, then repeat it over and over, week after week, aiming for perfection.

Instead of perfection, though, comes boredom. Because even though they memorized the piece in the first week, the remaining five weeks they were on that program meant they never had to read another new note. This is much the same way a child will memorize a story and pretend he is reading. But pretending to read is not how you develop reading fluency.

What I am suggesting is that fluent reading skills are the missing element in the teaching of music that causes many students to quit. They quit in their teens because at that age students are seeking peer recognition. But they certainly won't get recognition for their music skills while they are still playing elementary pieces of music. And they are at this level because they are intimidated by the number of notes on the page in the more advanced compositions. If they cannot get recognition for their violin or trombone skills, they'll drop that for something else - a football, a basketball, or maybe nothing, and simply hang out with their friends. Idle time.

And parents begin to say to themselves, "Why on earth did I spend that money on music lessons? It was just a total waste."

Prodigy musicians, such as Mozart, certainly had a special aptitude. But they also had something else when they were young: they were taught how to write music. Not when they were 18-years old, but when they were five or six. And that's what enabled them to become extraordinarily successful.

It is now recognized that "talent" is the outcome of diligent work, at least 10,000 hours of practice at something - anything. If it is piano, it means 10,000 hours at the keyboard. If it's golfing, it's 10,000 hours on the course and range, day in and day out, with clubs and putter. In other words, you take aptitude and apply constant practice, and you end up with "talent." The prolific composer J.S. Bach, when asked the secret of his genius, replied, "I was made to work; if you are equally industrious you will be equally successful." It took 46 years to collect his output into 60 volumes. That's talent.

The sooner students get those 10,000 hours under their belt, the sooner their "talent" displays itself, because now they are well-honed, well-developed thinking students who have the mental and physiological disciplines for their instrument, sport or occupation.

Just as in literature children are taught first to write letters then words, joining words to make sentences, combining multiple sentences into paragraphs, then on to short stories, so too they need to be taught the musical alphabet which, unlike language, has only seven letters spread out across five lines and four spaces. Add to the letters the range of octaves, the use of measures (units of rhythm), blend in the grammar rules of good melodic writing, of which there about eight, develop first the short phrase, the 8-bar then 16-bar melody, then move on to form which allows longer compositions in a structured environment.

To write music requires the ability to read. Many music students quit in their teens because they cannot read accurately, quickly translating a mass of notes on the written page into productive music. And they can't read because they can't write. Reading and writing go together like love and marriage.

So they hand in their notice: "I'm out of here." Because Johnny or Mary or Sally or Peter cannot read very well at all.

The home school or classroom music student can overcome this problem with the right tools of learning. And it's time parents and teachers demanded not only phonics for literature, but music programs that teach kids how to read and write - fluently and early.

Then it will no longer be said, Johnny can't read music. And if he can read fluently, perhaps it will never be asked, "Why did Johnny quit music?" -- because he's still hard at work, heading towards that 10,000 hour goal when he, too, will be recognized as "talented".

Ian Hodge, Ph.D. is the creator of "Ian Hodge's Read, Wite & Play Music, a self-teaching program than enhances student learning. Click here for details.

Elton John Interview on Gnomeo and Juliet

Entertainment
Elton John & Lady GagaThe animated feature Gnomeo and Juliet features classic songs by music legend Elton John, along with new songs written with his longtime collaborator Bernie Taupin and featuring special guest performances. His first project as executive producer, the film tells the familiar story of two teenagers in love, only this time they are ceramic gnomes (voiced by James McAvoy and Emily Blunt) who have many obstacles to overcome, as a result of being caught up in a feud between their rival families, each in charge of their own garden.

At the press day for the film, the singer/songwriter/musician/humanitarian talked about the 11-year process of making Gnomeo and Juliet, revisiting his old music, his process for writing the new songs, why he loves listening to music from new artists, and how he’d love to do a feature film of his life story. He also talked about his collaboration with Lady Gaga...... Click here to read the interview.