Sunday, May 30, 2010

Piano Buying Guide - Two Tips

Over the years of working on pianos (I have been a registered piano technician and a performing pianist for over 25 years) and in talking with my customers I have seen over and over again that buying a quality piano can be a challenging and daunting task. So I finally decided to put together this information together - to share with you the essential keys I have learned over the years to make sure you buy a quality instrument that will bring you pleasure for a lifetime.

Buying a Piano - You Get What You Pay For

Never get a piano simply because it is cheap or free. In the absence of an accurate appraisal, you may succeed at first with an inexpensive front end acquisition that soon after turns into a rear end headache. I have seen too many people under such circumstances giving up on their excitement and enthusiasm towards playing the piano simply because they made a poor buying choice. You should consider the purchase of your next piano to be a major acquisition that requires careful consideration. As with most major purchases, you do get what you pay for. If you want to buy a piano that will work well and last for many years, you should to expect to pay at minimum $3,500 to 5000 for an entry level console/studio piano and $10,000 to 12,000 or so if you are looking for an entry level grand piano. Of course you can expect to pay a lot more if you are looking to get a more precious brand like Steinway, Bosendorfer or Sauter but this gives you a basic range to start with. If you see a new piano for less than this, chances are that it just won't measure up to your needs over time.

A Piano's Design Is the Blueprint for What a Piano Will Be

Pianos are still essentially an old world technology. Bottom line - the sound quality, playability and durability of a piano begins with the following three factors. It's design, materials and the craftsmanship in assembling it. On the outside pianos can look to be very similar. But there are many intricacies that go into constructing a piano that affects how it plays and sounds. Some of these include scaling, action design, and the tension resonant structure (the soundboard, the pin block, plate, and rim or back of the piano).

I know that this area can get kind of technical, so I want to give you some easy guidelines on picking the right design for the kind of use you intend for your piano. Generally speaking, it is always optimal, if you have the resources, to go for a grand piano. Grand pianos just have a superior design over an upright and the action and sound is just better. But if you do not have the space or want to spend the money for a grand piano, then you should look for a larger upright (a studio to a full size upright). Consoles can be ok if you are a beginner or beginning intermediate player. But if you want an instrument with more sound and resonance a full or studio upright is something you should consider. I would generally recommend staying away from spinet style uprights - they just do not have the action or sound that will measure up to any type of players' needs.

Eben Goresko is a Classical, Ragtime and Stride Pianist. Eben studied classical piano at Temple University as a Piano Performance Major and has studied Jazz Piano with several notable Jazz Musicians. He also has extensive experience tuning and servicing pianos and has been qualified for over 25 years as a Registered Piano Technician of The Piano Technicians Guild.

Piano CO
http://www.ACenturyPiano.com/

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Eben_Goresko

Friday, May 28, 2010

The Piano Industry - How Old World Technology Endures in the Twenty First Century

"The Piano Industry" as it exists today consists of numerous segments, sub-businesses and professionals. There are the piano manufactures, such as Yamaha Piano Company, Steinway and Sons Piano Company, Baldwin Piano Company and Kawai and Mason & Hamlin Piano Companies, to name a few. Specialists range from piano engineers who design pianos to piano teachers, tuners, dealers, refinishers, technicians, movers and institutions such as music schools and piano bars. Piano Buyers are always looking for goods and services from these businesses.

The means of manufacturing and servicing pianos has kept pace with the rapid and frequent changes in technology in the 20th and 21st century. Ironically, piano design has hardly changed at all since mid-1880. While there were literally millions of pianos built during the 19th and 20th centuries, the bulk of the global piano industry resulted from U.S. manufacturing prowess during the Industrial Revolution. From the 1880's to the 1930's, the piano was the product that facilitated entertainment, performing arts and supported the joy and sharing of music on a grassroots level from local bars to peoples homes. In the early 20th century, the piano industry was one of the fastest growing and most popular industries in the United States. At present, it is a very tiny but significant industry because at its core, the piano is about making music.

Most recent changes in the U.S. Piano Industry are as follows. Because of globalization trends, more and more companies have moved from the U.S. to Asian countries such as China, Malaysia, etc. Sadly, Yamaha Piano Company, for instance, has moved their American manufacturing plants to these other countries because of cost pressures.

Eben Goresko is a Classical, Ragtime and Stride Pianist. Eben studied classical piano at Temple University as a Piano Performance Major and has studied Jazz Piano with several notable Jazz Musicians. He also has extensive experience tuning and servicing pianos and has been qualified for over 25 years as a Registered Piano Technician of The Piano Technicians Guild.

http://www.Piano-TV.com
Piano Buying Guide

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Eben_Goresko

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Roaring Twenties Bridal Shower

Do you want to throw a bridal shower so unbelievably fun that your friends will be talking about it for years? Design your bridal shower party theme around the 1920s, when flappers were dancing the Charleston and you had to whisper a "password" to get into your favorite speakeasy.

Invite your guests to dress in flapper costumes with lots of fringe, feather boas, and long pearl necklaces, as well as beaded shawls tied around the hips. Headdresses were very important in the Roaring Twenties and women were wearing turbans, rhinestone tiaras, headbands and cloche hats. (A cloche hat has a basic bell contour with a bulbous crown.) And every smart flapper had a flask that was tucked in her garter for emergencies!

Have your bridal shower in the evening where you can serve wine, champagne, or non-alcoholic cocktails. Mint Juleps were very popular at that time. Surprise your guests by staging a "midnight raid." Invite husbands and boyfriends to come to the house near the end of the party posing as prohibition agents.

Decorate your party with old silent movie pictures from that era. Any poster from movies with Theda Bara, Charlie Chaplin, Fatty Arbuckle, and especially, Rudolph Valentino, would reflect what everyone was talking about in 1920-1930. Put on the jazz and ragtime music and have a dance contest with dances like the Charleston, the Shimmy and the Black Bottom. Send your flappers home with candy lipstick and fake tattoos and they'll say it was the best bridal shower ever.

Kathleen Mary is the owner of Beautiful Bridal specializing in discount tiaras, veils, bridal and bridesmaid jewelry. Visit our blog for wedding planning tips, advice and information.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Kathleen_Mary

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Ballroom Dancing - What Are the Jive and the Samba?

Two of my favourite Ballroom Dances would be The Jive and The Samba.

The Samba is a composition of several different South American dances that were practiced by slaves bought into Portugal in the 16th century, like the Catarete, Embolada and the Batuque. These dances were considered vulgar by the Europeans and one of the dances, the Batuque was so popular that it was outlawed. The Batuque was danced in a circle with steps resembling those of a Charleston with a solo dancer in the center of the circle.

Eventually, carnival steps were added and the dance was modified to use the closed ballroom position and considered a proper dance by the Europeans.

The Samba appears to be a combination of all these dances (and probably others) and is danced to a heavy hitting rhythm and its main moves are walking and side steps and incorporates a lot of hip action. For this reason, it is thought that The Samba a perfect party dance.

In the Samba, Ballroom Dancing Judges look for accuracy and passion in the Volta (crossing in front of the body), the Samba Roll (moving the upper body in a circular motion while going through a six step turn) and the Botafogo (traveling walk that includes a direction change). Judges always look for outstretched arms and the distinctive climax of the Samba where the dancers throw their heads back and their arms are splayed out to the side.

The fastest of the Latin Dances, The Jive is believed to have originated in New York's Harlem area although some believe it originates in the southeast United States.

The Jive is a face paced, rhythmical dance which has been influenced by other styles including Boogie, Rock, African American Swing and the Lindyhop. The Jive is also known as the Cake Walk, because in the late 1800's the Negroes in the south held competitions where the prize for the best Jive was a cake.

Although dancers appear to have their legs and feet flying everywhere when performing The Jive, they're feet are directly under the body with the knees always close together. The woman is twirled a lot and there are a lot of kicks.

The Jive is generally performed to music known as Ragtime. The reason the music is called Ragtime may be because the dancers dressed up in their finest clothes ("rags") or because the syncopation of the music giving it a ragged feel.

Both the Jive and The Samba are wonderful dancers that are a joy to watch.

About the Author

Charly Leetham has an abiding interest in Ballroom Dancing with both of her children undertaking Ballroom Dancing classes and performing exceptionally well.

Learn More About Ballroom Dancing

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Charly_Leetham

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

PianoForAll Review - Brings Technology to Piano Lessons

Have you ever wanted to learn to play the piano? No matter what your favorite style of music is, the PianoForAll teaching system will give you the tools you need to be able to sit down at any piano and sound like an expert. This incredible comprehensive piano lesson package uses efficient teaching techniques that will quickly help you become acquainted with the keyboard, learn how to hold your hands correctly, then give you some chord progressions that sound impressive in your first few lessons.

1. How Does PianoForAll Work?

The PianoForAll program is easy to learn from and takes you on a logical progression through different piano playing styles. You will begin with simple chords, which are the backbone of any musical style. If you are interested in learning to accompany yourself while you sing, these chords will accomplish that goal in your first set of lessons. Once you have mastered the chord progressions, you will begin to learn specific styles from several different genres, including blues, ragtime, and classical.

2. Several Styles.

Ten different e-books take you through all of the different piano playing styles you could hope for. PianoForAll includes a separate book for each different style, including jazz, blues, rock 'n roll, and classical. You will learn how to increase your learning speed so that you can pick up new pieces more easily. You'll also learn what you can do to make those chord progressions from the first book sound complicated and impressive when some of the other lessons are added in.

3. Audio And Video Lessons.

PianoForAll takes advantage of the latest technology to give you lessons that you can watch and listen to. The videos show you exactly what the lessons are supposed to look like so that you can imitate them. The audio lessons will help you train your ear as well as your fingers so that you will be the best pianist you can be. The e-books include links to sound files that will play your lesson so that you know exactly what it should sound like. Video files are also linked in each e-book for convenience.

Is Pianoforall a scam? Visit http://www.millionsreview.com/pianoforall-review.html to read a FREE report and find out the truth about this Piano Keyboard Lessons before you order!

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Thomas_K

Monday, May 24, 2010

How to Plan a Perfect Cocktail Party

Cocktails have seen something of renaissance in recent years, and a cocktail party is one option for entertaining in the early part of the evening. If you want to indulge in the delights of dressing up, a cocktail party provides the perfect excuse for introducing a Twenties or Thirties theme, with the women dressed as flappers and the men in black tie or wearing striped blazers.

Carry the theme through with jazz, swing and ragtime music taped as background for the party. Food should be easy to eat with the fingers and there should be plenty of it to quell the effect of strong cocktails. On the subject of drink, make sure there are plenty of alcohol-free alternatives for those who are driving and for quenching raging thirsts before embarking on a cocktail-sampling session.

Cocktail style

The focal point of a cocktail party is the bar. Although the kitchen is an ideal location for this, it is more fun to locate your bar in the main reception room. Here are a few pointers to bear in mind when hosting a cocktail party.

1) Make sure you have several cocktail shakers. Have a large jug and tall mixing stick for making thirst-quenching cocktails.

2) Lay out different shapes and sizes of glasses on separate trays ready for different strengths of mixes. Offer mineral water, fruit juices and non-alcoholic alternatives on a separate table.

3) Place large bowls of snacks around the room, and make sure there are lots of canapés, or very small sandwiches, and finger food such as mini quiches and rolls pate.

If you are intending to give a morning cocktail party from which your guests may be going on somewhere for lunch or shopping, then your cocktails should be light in flavour and not too alcoholic. Champagne has been a perennial favourite as the ideal morning drink, whether it be served b itself or as part of a delicious concoction.

Essential for your cocktail is ice. If you entertaining on any scale at all then you will have to order ice from a local delivery service. If you are lucky enough to possess a large deep refrigerator then you will be able to store home-made ice in it. Always make sure that you have a good stock of glasses available and that you have at least one person, depending on the size of your party, either to be offering your guests replenishment of their cocktails, clearing away and washing used glasses or serving some form of light refreshment.

At whatever time of the day you are entertaining it is a good idea to serve some form of food. The original idea of the cocktail party was that it was a prelude to a meal and canapés would be served with the cocktails. It is good to offer a smaller selection of well prepared canapés and snacks than to have a mixture of various types. Two or three cold canapés and one hot is usually sufficient for any cocktail party and will probably be quite enough for you to cope with, unless you are fortunate enough to be able to enlist the help of a friend or two to assist you in your efforts. As an alternative to canapés, perhaps you could experiment with some of your own favourite foods. Rolls of smoke salmon stuffed with creamed avocado pear and stilton, broiled scallops en brochette - the list of possibilities is endless and mouth-watering, and many recipes books are available to provide you with ideas.

Visit http://www.allcocktailsrecipes.com to explore more luscious cocktails recipes that you can serve in a cocktail party.

Please click here: http://www.allcocktailsrecipes.com for FREE and mouth-watering cocktails recipes.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Jean_Stewart

Piano Playing Secrets Of The Pros

It's no secret that professional piano players use techniques that amateur piano players don't. So what else is new? Professional golfers use techniques that amateur golfers don't use (at least not very well), and pro ball players use techniques that sandlot and weekend athletes don't use -- or again, not very well.

So it's not surprising that professional piano players have some tricks up their sleeves that the rest of us mortals don't have. But that doesn't mean we can't try to emulate the great pianists. We may not pull it off as well as them, but we sure can have a lot of fun trying, and who knows? Maybe a few of us can actually learn these techniques well enough to win some admiration from our friends, join a group, play for our own enjoyment, or whatever.

Here is a list of just a few of the technique the pros use when they play piano. There are more, of course, but this is a pretty good estimate of the most important skills:

Pro Secret 1: Straddles. Leaving one of more notes out of a chord to create an open feeling.

Pro Secret 2: 2/1 & 3/1 Breakups. Breaking a chord up by playing part of the chord & then the rest of the chord.

Pro Secret 3: Waterfall Chords. Broken chords cascading down from the top of the keyboard similar to a waterfall.

Pro Secret 4: Tremolo-Fired Runs. Rapid-fire runs made of chords, but starting with a tremolo.

Pro Secret 5: Half-Step Slides. Approaching the next chord from 1/2 step above or below.

Pro Secret 6: Suspensions. Using the 4th as a "hangover" instead of the 3rd.

Pro Secret 7: Chord Substitutions. Harmonizing songs using different chords than the traditional ones.

Pro Secret 8: Voicing in 4ths. Stacking chords in intervals of 4ths instead of 3rds.

Pro Secret 9: Turn-Arounds. A chord progression that turns you around, like a cul-de-sac.

Pro Secret 10: Introductions. Creating a front door for the song.

Pro Secret 11: Endings. Creating a back door for the song.

Pro Secret 12: Transposing. Playing a song in a key different than it was written in.

Pro Secret 13: Modulating. Getting from key to key smoothly.

Pro Secret 14: Altering a Melody to Create a New Melody. Using neighboring tones to craft a new tune.

Pro Secret 15: Inversions. Instead of always playing chords in root position, using a variety of "upside down" chords.

Pro Secret 16: Creating Original Chord Progressions. Linking chords together creatively.

Pro Secret 17: Echoes - Rhythmic, Melodic, Harmonic. The easiest way to begin the arranging process.

Pro Secret 18: Touch. The difference between a sledge hammer and a pillow.

Pro Secret 19: II7 to V7 Progression. One of the most common chord progressions.

Pro Secret 20: Latin-American Rhythms. Using various rhythm patterns such as Samba, Bossa Nova, Cha Cha, etc.

Pro Secret 21: Locked Hands Style. Playing the melody in both hands with a chord under the right hand melody.

Pro Secret 22: Jazz Styles. Lush, offset beats, comping, color tones, etc.

Pro Secret 23: Two-Handed Arps. The Flowing River Of Sound. Using broken chords in both hands at the same time.

Pro Secret 24: Parallelisms. Parts moving the same direction (such as 10ths, octaves, etc.)

Pro Secret 25: Ragtime Techniques. Barrel-house and early jazz styles.

Pro Secret 26: Polytonality & Superimposition. Playing in two keys at the same time, and playing two different chords at the same time.

Pro Secret 27: Delay-Catch-Up Technique. Falling behind the beat, then catching up.

Pro Secret 28: Slash Chords. Chords over a left-hand counter melody.

Pro Secret 29: Counter-Melodies. Creating a sub-tune that is complimentary to the main tune.

Pro Secret 30: Western Sounds. Wagon-wheel bass styles, etc.

Pro Secret 31: Gospel Sounds. "Get on that church" and "shouting" styles.

Pro Secret 32: 12 Bar Blues. The basis for thousands of songs in all styles.

Pro Secret 33: Passing Tones. Tones that "pass through" the current chord.

Pro Secret 34: Question-Answer Techniques. Repeating a previous musical phrase but in a new way.

Pro Secret 35: Far-Out Harmonies. Extended chords, altered chords.

Pro Secret 36: Syncopation. Playing between the beats.

There are other techniques the pros use, and new techniques are always being invented. But for a list of worthy goals for an aspiring piano player, this list will keep us busy for a long time.

For more info on piano playing secrets of the pros, please go to "Piano Playing Secrets Of The Pros!" In addition, a series of 101 free email lessons on piano playing is available at "Exciting Piano Lessons On Musical Chords & Sizzling Chord Progressions!"

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Duane_Shinn

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Learn and Master Piano Review - Affordable Adult Piano Lessons From Grammy Winner

Learn And Master Piano by Will Barrow , according to the publisher, is by far the worlds most complete video instruction course for learning recreational piano. It is designed to walk you through from start to finish.

Who Will Benefit Most From This Piano Lesson Course? This dvd video piano lesson program is designed for adults that are rank beginners to intermediate players.

About The Instructor: Will Barrow is a singer, songwriter, performer and Grammy award winner. He has worked with: Vickie Sue Robinson, R&B singer Freda Payne, rockabilly legend Wanda Jackson, gospel great BeBe Winans, and the Gatlin Brothers to name just a few.

The Physical Parts: Learn and Master Piano comes with 14 DVDs, 5 play-along CDs and a 100 page lesson book.

The Music Styles Covered: Rock, Classical, Ragtime, Country, Modern Pop, Boogie-Woogie, Blues, Jazz and Latin.

The Positives:

- The teacher guided play-along practice sessions almost guarantee that you will learn faster with less bad habits to overcome later.

- The convenient video format finally makes it possible to grab a piano lesson at 2:00 am in the morning or whenever it suits your schedule. This makes driving to expensive lessons unnecessary.

- This program makes it possible for the average student to learn from a world-class piano instructor that would otherwise be too expensive and unavailable.

- The online support program allows the student to directly communicate with the instructor and other students.

The Cost Analysis: The Price is normally $259 but, is often found on sale at $199 with payments as low as $49 per month USD and includes all of the items mentioned above. Learn And Master Piano with Will Barrow contains the equivalent of a year of lessons if you were to space them out as if you were taking lessons from a local piano teacher. A local instructor typically will charge anywhere from $20 to $50 per weekly lesson. Your minimum cost, ( not including materials ), at only $20 per lesson for 12 months would be at least $1040.

The choice comes down to the Learn and Master Drums DVD course at $249 or a local instructor at $1040.

Guarantee: If you are not satisfied for any reason, simply return it within sixty (60) days for a full refund of the purchase price.

The Bottom Line: It is no secret that I have great respect for the lessons programs from Legacy Learning Systems Inc. I was an extremely frustrated guitar player that was stuck for about 40 years at a low intermediate level of playing ability. I had almost given up until I ran across the Learn and Master Guitar video lesson program. Today I have quickly progressed to the point of being able to improvise simple solos over my favorite songs and I have never had more fun. It really works and I am thrilled.

Will Barrows video piano lesson course follows the same well thought out recipe that was so effective for me with the guitar program. And the essential ingredient for that recipe is: a professional musician at the pinnacle of the music industry teaching and practicing with the student in full video. So for these reasons I can unhesitatingly recommend Learn and Master Piano.

For more details, free sample lessons, to read testimonials or to buy Learn and Master Piano, just follow this link: http://www.piano-courses.com/Learn-And-Master-Piano-Review.html

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=John_Mackinnon

Chickering and Sons Piano Company - An American Classic

I have serviced numerous Chickering and Sons pianos over the years. As is the case with many older original piano brands that I have seen, some were in a state of disrepair and others were better maintained and produced quite a lovely tone. Chickerings usually have a full tone in the bass register but somewhat less powerful in the tenor and treble as compared to other the brands; i.e. Mason & Hamlin, Steinway. They can be excellent instruments for the beginner, intermediate and advanced players.

One of the visible differences between Chickerings and Steinway or Mason & Hamlin's is the cast metal plate and rim which is of a somewhat lighter design. Lighter tone or structure is not the same as saying that Chickerings were inferior. They weren't. They were just designed and built with a different intention. In the United States, the late 19th Century was the Golden Age of the Music Industry. During the 1890's, the music business was one of the top industries in America. It consisted of at least 2 - 300 piano makers, over 100 reed organ companies, several hundred musical instrument makers, (such as brass instruments) and printed music publishing firms.

The piano industry was because of its size, one of national importance. For example, President Grover Cleveland was the featured speaker at the opening ceremony for the Chickering Piano Company Factory in Boston in 1887. The factory was over 200,000 square feet and called a "marvel" by the President. Other piano manufacturers of that era include Knabe Pianoforte Company, Hazelton Piano, Steck Piano, Decker Brothers Piano Company, Mehlin Piano, Behr Brothers Piano, Strauch, Haines, Schuber, Victor Fletcher Piano, etc. Included in that group were Steinway and Kimball piano companies who were the only two manufacturers to survive to date.

One of the key developments that enabled companies like Chickering Piano Company to flourish during the late 19th century, were manufacturing improvements that had been instituted earlier in the century. The machine tool made it possible to precisely grind and shape metal parts. This led to interchangeable manufacturing parts, which by the 80's all the piano companies embraced. The assembly line came next and by then broader production and output became standard along with lower prices. In 1885, a medium quality upright cost under $500. By the mid 1890's, the price dropped in half.

Of all the piano companies, Chickering & Sons was the most closely connected to the founders of the piano industry in the U.S. The Chickering family business started out with Jonas Chickering who apprenticed with the early piano maker, John Osborn until 1823. Then he set out to build his own pianos. Jonas Chickering partnered with John MacKay. MaKay was a more of a businessman than a piano builder - craftsman. MacKay successfully marketed Chickering pianos until the early 1840's.

Chickering had three sons who he had educated in the business and craft of piano building. Jonas partnered with his sons, Frank, George and Thomas in 1852 which is when they then renamed their business to Chickering and Sons Piano Company. Jonas Chickering improved upon and patented the design of the Full Iron Plate in 1837. His oldest son Thomas Chickering helped lead the firm until 1871 until he died. Frank Chickering helped his father out at the 1851 Worlds Fair in London. Frank Chickering recognized the importance of New York City as a center of commerce and arts and opened facilities there. In addition, he built and opened "Chickering Hall". Chickering Pianos were always awarded top honors, wherever they were exhibited.

George, the youngest brother ran the Chickering Factory until his death at the end of the century. Chickering Piano Company was one of chief rivals of the Steinway Piano Company. By 1895, Steinway had well overshadowed Chickering in sales and reputation. Chickering and Sons was eventually taken over by American Piano Company. A large number of Chickering and Sons pianos remain in people's homes throughout the U.S. to this day, especially in the northeast.

Eben Goresko is a Classical, Ragtime and Stride Pianist. Eben studied classical piano at Temple University as a Piano Performance Major and has studied Jazz Piano with several notable Jazz Musicians. He also has extensive experience tuning and servicing pianos and has been qualified for over 25 years as a Registered Piano Technician of The Piano Technicians Guild.

http://www.ColoradoPianoBuyersGuide.com/
Piano Tuning

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Eben_Goresko

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Why Piano DVD Courses Are Better

There are many piano-learning methods out there to try. For example, there are online lessons, lessons offered at school, private lessons, DVD courses, or even trying to teach yourself. With all these methods offered, how do you know which one will work best for you? I've done a lot of these methods myself, but there is one method I would highly recommend and that's the DVD courses.

The first benefit of learning piano from a DVD course is that some websites offer online support systems that allow you to post a profile, question the instructors, track your progress, even chat with other piano students! Even though you would be learning piano in your own home, the online community makes it feel like you are never alone. If you have a question or comment about something you just learned in a lesson, you can ask other students or you can ask the instructor themself.

With DVD piano lessons, the lessons come in many different styles. You can learn song styles such as blues, jazz, ragtime, classical, Latin, country, even modern pop! If you hear a song on the radio that you love, you will be able to go home and learn that song yourself! This shows that DVD piano lessons are good for everyone, no matter what their style!

Another reason DVD courses are beneficial is that you would be learning piano in the comfort of your own home. You don't have to waste gas going to and from private lessons. You will also be able to work around your own schedule and learn piano when it is most convenient for you. It doesn't have to be the same time every week like you would with private lessons.

Lastly, DVD piano courses offer material for all skill-levels: beginner, intermediate, and advanced players, so there is always something for everyone! DVD piano courses also teach you how to apply what you've learned for future lessons. For example, you can take what you learned as a beginner or intermediate player and use what you know to learn a more advanced skill, like how to play piano by ear.

There are tons of piano-learning methods to choose from, but I feel DVD courses have the most benefits for everyone. Hopefully this helps you in your own piano-learning journey. Have fun with the piano and keep at it!

Ready to learn to play the piano? Don't waste money on private lessons! Invest in Learn and Master Piano to learn from home and save $1,440 a year!

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Stephanie_Shively

Friday, May 21, 2010

Scat Singing - Early Development

Scat singing is used in vocal jazz and is simply done by extemporizing with the voice, using words and syllables which are seemingly nonsense and gibberish. At other times, scat singing is achieved without the use of words at all. With scat singing, singers are able to improvise rhythms, tunes and melodies, producing a sound akin to a musical instrument simply with the use of their voice. Scatting has been employed by many a jazz singer, especially since the turn of the twentieth century, to spruce up and bring zest to a particular song.

Scat singing began to come into prominence in the early part of the twentieth century. Perhaps one of the most famous songs cited for scatting is Louis Armstrong's version of "Heebie Jeebies", recorded in 1926. In fact, many people believe that it was Louis Armstrong who first came about with the first song numbers employing scat. However, according to jazz singer Jelly Roll Morton, whose peak of fame was during the turn of the twentieth century, the credit of being the originator of scat singing should go to Joe Sims, an old funnyman from Vicksburg, Mississippi, who created scat singing in the early part of the twentieth century. Eventually, jazz singers such as Morton himself, Tony Jackson and various others, realizing that scat made for a good song introduction, took on scat singing and made it big in New Orleans, all as early as 1906.

There are several earlier examples of recordings of scat singing. A particular example would be "King of the Bungaloos," which has ragtime scat choruses in it and which was sung by Gene Greene. Gene Green recorded this song as well as many others between 1911 and 1917, all with several bars of scat singing. Even performer Al Jonson did a few bars of scat vocals while singing "That Haunting Melody" in 1911. In 1917, Gene Green scatted part of "From Here to Shanghai" in ersatz Chinese. Furthermore, in 1924, singer Gene Rodemich sang a few scat bars in "Scissor Grinder Joe" as well as "Some of These Days."

Still another example would be the scat interlude of Cliff "Ukelele Ike" Edwards in the middle of "Old Fashioned Love," recorded in 1923. Another citation would be "My Papa Doesn't Two-Time No Time," featuring scat singing by Don Redman and Fletcher Henderson, which came out in 1926 just five months ahead of Armstrong's famous "Heebie Jeebies," with his band called The Hot Five.

Nonetheless, it was this particular performance of Armstrong that was the defining moment for scat singing, serving to catapult it to establishment. Interestingly, legend has it that Armstrong did scat while recording "Heebie Jeebies" because he didn't know the lyrics of the song, thinking that that particular portion would get slashed out of the recording in the end. For some reason, however, the entire song was released, and eventually turned out to be a bestselling record nationwide. Indeed, the scat techniques employed by Armstrong in "Heebie Jeebies" turned out to be a template for modern scat singing and influenced many a jazz singer and artist who followed in his footsteps.

Anthony Reyes is also the author of the review at Singorama [http://www.mysingoramareview.com]

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Anthony_Reyes

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Tommy Emmanuel - His Guitar Picking Technique

Tommy Emmanuel was born into a talented family who inspired and encouraged his talent for guitar finger picking. Picking up the guitar when he was just four years old, he was already a seasoned guitar player when he heard a Chet Atkins record on the radio. This was a defining moment in his life but the direction his career as guitarist took him in was hardly compatible with Nashville finger picking.

Tommy Emmanuel's career as a guitar player took him into the world of rock and roll where he won talent quests as a guitar player, played drums in a rock band with his brother Phil on guitar and ended up playing with the big names in Australian pop music. He embarked on his present career in 1990 with his album "Dare To Be Different" being heavily promoted at a time where the likes of Eric Clapton and Mark Knopfler seemed to have the guitar solo niche cornered.

Tommy had to work hard to remain visible to the record buying public while developing the possibilities he had heard as a child in the technique of Chet Atkins. The Chet Atkins guitar style featured the use of the thumb playing bass and three fingers playing the tune. This technique enabled him to play a melody in a similar way to a piano player with the bass and the lead line both clearly defined.

Chet Atkins' style of guitar playing had its origins in ragtime music which was originally played on the piano. During the early years of the development of the blues and jazz idioms guitar players began to be interested in duplicating the bass and melody combination of ragtime. The most memorable of these guitar pickers was Merle Travis. Travis was born in 1917 in Kentucky where there were already many guitarists using the thumb and index finger guitar picking technique.

Chet Atkins was a talented guitarist who, until he latched onto the Travis picking style, lacked a definitive guitar playing style. He expanded Travis picking to include the use of the middle and ring fingers to play chords and single notes while the thumb played bass. This was the guitar playing style that amazed the young Tommy Emmanuel and filled his head with ideas for a new, more complex kind of guitar picking.

Tommy Emmanuel stresses the prominence of the melody played with the fingers while making use of his thumb to back up the lead. He has often spoken of his love of the self contained quality of a guitar melody bass played by the one soloist.

Tommy Emmanuel has taken the Travis/Atkins way of finger picking to new heights with his energetic approach to the guitar and his talent for staying loose under the demands made by recording and presenting concerts. He uses a thumbpick as did his predecessors, playing a custom Maton EBG808, utilizing a pickup and a condenser microphone in the body. One aspect of Tommy Emmanuel's guitar playing that he did not inherit from Travis and Atkins was the heavy use of his guitar as a percussion instrument on stage.

Do you want to learn to play the guitar? Learn How To Play A Guitar For Free is a constantly updated blog which contains all the resources you need for: learning to play solo guitar, how to learn guitar chords, how to learn to read and play easy acoustic guitar tabs, finding a free online guitar tuner, looking for free guitar lessons online, and how to learn guitar scales.

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Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Romance & Roses - Musical Rose Names

The Rose is one of the most intriguing and sought-after flowers adorning gardens and country sides the world over. These beauties, like music, have become standard elixirs of passion, serenading their way into our senses and into our gardens. Romantic hearts love roses and music--and all of their beautiful and fragrant expressions of affection. We even love the idea of love. In this article you will find the duet of music and roses in a bouquet of rose names.

In the 16th century poem Come Live with Me and be My Love, by poet and playwright Christopher Marlowe, he spoke about love's many pleasures including "making beds of roses" and "melodious birds singing madrigals".

Victor Hugo wrote: "How did it happen that their lips came together? How does it happen that birds sing, that snow melts, that the rose unfolds, that the dawn whitens behind the stark shapes of trees on the quivering summit of the hill? A kiss, and all was said."

Here are some of the most delightful and musical rose names of all time:

Musicians & Singers
Mozart, Yellow Mozart, Verdi, Vivaldi, Pavarotti, Bing Crosby, Julie Andrews, Satchmo (for Louis Armstrong), Patsy Cline, Barbara Streisand, Dolly Parton, Judy Garland, Reba McEntire, Barbara Mandrell, Madonna.

In the Mood
Wandering Minstrel, Serenade, Sweet Harmony, Duet, Whistle Stop, Spanish Rhapsody, Concerto, Jazz Club, Lavender Broadway, Chorus, Night Music, Dixieland, Sonatina, Mountain Music, Rose Rhapsody, Jazz, Rockin' Robin, Strange Music, Jazzy Jewel, Mood Music, Chorale, Memphis Music, Fragrant Rhapsody, Musicale.

They're Playing Our Tune
Be-Bop, Rumba, Polka Time, Pops, Fandango, Country Music, Ragtime, Tango Dream, Waltz, Ballet, Foxtrot.

Songs of Love
Song of Paris, English Sonnet, Sunset Song, Singing in the Rain, Earth Song, Country Song, Brook Song, Spring Song, Victoria's Song, Vineyard Song, September Song, Sophia's Song, Swansong, Golden Song, Morning Song, Night Song, Folk Singer, Pippas' Song, Cardinal Song, Danny Boy.

Melodies & Symphonies
Sweet Melody, Pink Symphony, Belle Symhonie, Melody Maker, Bright Melody, Little Melody, Mini Pink Melodies, Smooth Melody, Melody Lane, Melody Parfumee, Gold Symphonie, White Symphony.

Strokes of Musical Genius
Piccolo, Baby Grand, Distant Drums, Drummer Boy, Trumpeter, Saxy Bob, Brass Band.

And the Beat Goes On...
Arpeggio, Prelude, Lyric, Tempo, Maestro, Percussion

"Oh, my love is like a red, red rose, that's newly sprung in June; Oh, my love is like the melody, that's sweetly played in tune." -- Robert Burns

And just when you thought a rose was just a rose...

You may also enjoy reading: Romance & Roses -- Dancing Rose Names

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Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Finding the Best Bluegrass Guitar Lessons

Perhaps you have made a decision that you want to be part of Bluegrass music. Perhaps that has prompted you to look for some Bluegrass guitar lessons. Congratulations, you are joining thousands of people who enjoy Bluegrass. Perhaps it would help to know a little more about the history and development of Bluegrass music.

It is probably no surprise to know that Bluegrass came from the American South and in the Appalachian mountains. Here due to the geography of the region the music developed unaffected by outside influences. The early settlers from Scotland and Ireland had brought with them their musical traditions and instruments. These mixed with the local folk music to start a style.

It wasn't until the 1920s and 1930s that outside factors start to have significant effect on this mountain music. Blues and Jazz music were a major influence on the development of the mountain music. The rhythms of ragtime and soul of Gospel music were added to the mix to produce something a little like what we know today as Bluegrass.

But the name Bluegrass was only applied to this sort of music during the 1950's. Then a man called Bill Munroe named his band "the Blue Grass Boys " due to the fact he came from Kentucky. Kentucky was well known as the Blue Grass State. With his musical popularity the term took hold.

In bluegrass style each instrument plays the melody and does some improvisation around it while the other instruments provide accompaniment. The traditional Bluegrass instruments are predominantly stringed - mandolin, banjo, fiddle, bass and the acoustic guitar. Vocals are optional. When there are vocals is it common for them to be two to four part harmonies. The unique aspect is that usually the highest voice is in a dissonant manner. This gives rise to the descriptive term "High lonesome sound"

It wasn't until the 1960s that acoustic guitars were recognised as a valid solo instrument. Furthering the guitars cause was a Doc Watson, a multi talented player. His ability spawned a craze for playing flat pick guitar.

As is the case with any style of music as it is played by various generations the style evolves slightly. Today a new form is gaining popularity call Newgrass. In Newgrass players bring in more modern influences such as hip-hop to create a newer sound.

The history of Bluegrass is modern but it is based on a lot of tradition. People have enjoyed it for nearly 100 years in its pure form and it doesn't look like that popularity will wane in the near future. Choosing to be part by taking Bluegrass Guitar Lessons is just one way to be part of the story that is Bluegrass.

For a review of the most popular Bluegrass Guitar Lessons be sure to visit: http://www.webreview4u.com/

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Mike_Hirn

Monday, May 17, 2010

The History of a True American Musical Art Form - The Blues

In the history of music there has probably not been one musical style that has influenced "Popular Music" more than Blues. Blues also is unique in that it is truly an "American" musical art form. As we will discover, the roots of the musical styles of Jazz, Rock, Gospel and musical artists from BB King, Elvis Presley, The Beatles and The Rolling Stones to Led Zeppelin, all were heavily influenced by the Blues.

It is important to note that the term "Popular Music" as I have used it above is a bit misleading. Too often we mention Classical Music and Popular Music as too completely different musical expressions. I am not inferring that they are not very different from each other. What I am saying is that the word "Popular" actually only relates to the time period one lives in.

Let me explain. If we were living in Europe in 1786 when Mozart was 30 years old and in the height of his career (he died at age 36) his music would have been considered Popular, would it not? If there had been recording studios, radio stations, Mp3's and iPods in 1786 would it be too naive and simplistic to conclude that one of his symphonies or piano concertos would have been a "Top-Ten Release?" And if so, would it not be considered "Popular Music?" I think you will admit that this is certainly an unconventional but truthful perspective.

Since Blues has been such a powerful influence, it is important to understand why. Following is a brief history.

The Blues were born in the North Mississippi Delta following the Civil War. Its heartfelt and passionate performances are deeply rooted in slavery and the African American culture. Early compositions were Field Hollers, Ballads, Church Spirituals and Rhythmic Dance tunes called Jump-Ups that showcased a singer who would engage in a call-and-response with his guitar. He would sing a line, and the guitar would answer. For many years, due to the lack of music education, multitudes of songs were recorded and passed on only by memory. Because of this fact, it is very possible that many a great song was "lost in translation."

The Blues became the essence and hope of the African American laborer, whose spirit is wed to these songs, reflecting his inner soul to all who will listen. Rhythm and Blues is the cornerstone of all forms of African American music. The Blues, with it's 12-bar, dissonant 7th chord progression and its bent-note melodies were the early anthems of an oppressed race, bonding themselves together through their soulful cries for freedom and equality. From its origins at the crossroads of Highways 61 and 49, and the platform of the Clarksdale Railway Station, the blues eventually began to expand and headed north to Beale Street in Memphis.

The term "The Blues" refers to the "The Blue Devils", meaning melancholy and sadness. An early use of the term in this sense is found in George Colman's one-act farce Blue Devils (1798). Though the use of the phrase in African American music may be older, it has been attested to since 1912, when Hart Wand's "Dallas Blues" became the first copyrighted blues composition.

The Blues form was first mainstreamed about 1911-14 by the black composer W.C. Handy (1873-1958). However, the poetic and musical form of the blues first crystallized around 1910 and gained popularity through the publication of Handy's "Memphis Blues" (1912) and "St. Louis Blues" (1914). Instrumental blues had been recorded as early as 1913. During the twenties, the blues became a national craze.

Mamie Smith recorded the first vocal blues song, 'Crazy Blues' in 1920. The Blues influence on jazz brought it into the mainstream and made possible the records of blues singers like Bessie Smith and later, in the thirties, Billie Holiday.

In northern cities like Chicago and Detroit, during the later forties and early fifties, Muddy Waters, Willie Dixon, John Lee Hooker, Howlin' Wolf, and Elmore James among others, played what was basically Mississippi Delta blues, backed by bass, drums, piano and occasionally harmonica, and began scoring national hits with blues songs. At about the same time, T-Bone Walker in Houston and B.B. King in Memphis were pioneering a style of guitar playing that combined jazz technique with the blues tonality and repertoire. It is also important to mention that the roots of Jazz began with the Blues. So, if there were no Blues, there would be no Jazz!

In the early nineteen-sixties, the urban bluesmen were "discovered" by young white American and European musicians. Many of these blues-based bands like the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, the Rolling Stones, the Yardbirds, John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, Cream, Led Zeppelin, Canned Heat, and Fleetwood Mac, brought the blues to young white audiences, something the black blues artists had been unable to do in America except through the purloined white cross-over covers of black rhythm and blues songs. Since the sixties, rock has undergone several blues revivals. Some rock guitarists, such as Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, Jimi Hendrix, and Eddie Van Halen have used the blues as a foundation for offshoot styles. While the originators like John Lee Hooker, Albert Collins and B.B. King--and their heirs Buddy Guy, Otis Rush, and later Eric Clapton and the late Roy Buchanan, among many others, continued to make fantastic music in the blues tradition. The latest generation of blues players would be Robert Cray and the late Stevie Ray.

Today there are many different shades of the blues. Forms include:

Traditional county blues - A general term that describes the rural blues of the Mississippi Delta, the Piedmont and other rural locales.

Jump blues - A danceable amalgam of swing and blues and a precursor to R&B. Jump blues was pioneered by Louis Jordan.

Boogie-Woogie - A piano-based blues popularized by Meade Lux Lewis, Albert Ammons and Pete Johnson, and derived from barrelhouse and ragtime.

Chicago blues - Delta blues electrified.

Cool blues - A sophisticated piano-based form that owes much to jazz.

West Coast blues - Popularized mainly by Texas musicians who moved to California. West Coast blues is heavily influenced by the swing beat. âEUR¨

The public's affection for the Blues only seems to be increasing. In Dana Point California, the city next to mine, Doheny Beach now has a yearly Blues Festival that keeps getting bigger and bigger. Others can be found in Portland, New York, Chicago, San Francisco, and the list goes on.

As for me personally, Blues has always been a regular part of my life. When I play guitar and sing with other musicians, it is the easiest and most enjoyable form of popular music to "jamb" with. When I was growing up and my parents owned a music store and rock club called The Four Muses in San Clemente California from 1965 to 1975, we always had Blues groups performing. Most notable was the famous Blues Duo of Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee.

My only personal problem with listening to a lot of Blues is that it can become very repetitious and not "fresh" sounding due to the consistent use of the standard 12 bar Blues Chord Progression. That said, I highly recommend that everyone make an attempt to listen to some live Blues this summer. The music and the crowd it attracts normally guarantee an enjoyable experience.

Thank you for reading!

Jonathan Morgan Jenkins

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Sunday, May 16, 2010

African American Music

What do the Rap, Hip Hop, Funk, Soul, Jazz, Rhythm and Blues and Gospel all have in common?

They are all popular genres of music considered to be included under the general African American music umbrella having been influenced by the culture of African Americans. Historically, African American genres of music have been very significant in their affect across a broad range of socio-economic groups within the United States and overseas.

From the early influences on mainstream American music in the 19th century to the popularity today of Hip Hop, Rap and RnB, the influence of African Americans on the American music industry continues with a plethora of successful solo artists and groups maintaining a strong presence in the charts.

Although in earlier years of it's history, not all African American musicians achieved mainstream success. During the 1950's Little Richard (Rev. Richard Wayne Penniman) who became an important identity in the transition from rythm and blues to rock and roll received his first accolade and has continued to achieve extraordinary success and acknowledgement throughout his musical career. In 2007 his original hit "Tutti Frutti" took out first place in Mojo magazine's poll of "The Top 100 Records That Changed The World."

Sly and the Family Stone, Michael Jackson, Whitney Houston, Prince, Marvin Gaye, India Arie, Erykah Badu and in particular Destiny's Child who some years ago became known as the highest selling female vocal group of all time are to name a few of the highly successful African American singers and song-writers. In more recent times Alicia Keys was the first woman to log three weeks at number one with her "As I am" hit and she is the first African American woman to remain at number one for has long as she did since 2002 when Ashanti hit the charts with her debut album.

Expressing themselves and celebrating their culture creatively, spiritually, politically and socially, these and many more talented artists have enhanced the reputation and popularity of the myriad of genres of music that claim their roots in African American music.

Ragtime to Rap, Scott Joplin to Curtis James Jackson 111, aka 50 Cent, the genres of Blues, Jazz, Motown, disco, Funk, Rock and Roll, Hip Hop, Techno and Electric Jazz all increased in popularity for their time and during the 1950's and more so during the 1970's African American music was appealing to wider more mainstream audiences including crossover audiences.

Along with the evolution of African American music came the evolution of dance and the introduction of dance, block and rave parties where the Mc's and the DJ's themselves have become celebrities in their own rights.

Over decades if not centuries the rising popularity of African American music has bought more attention to African American culture including the landmark signing of legislation in 2003 for the creation and development of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture.

John Thomson is webmaster at http://www.africanamericancheck.com where African American Personal Checks are on display for all to see.

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Saturday, May 15, 2010

What is the Educational Purpose of Music?

Music is The Solution, Not the Problem - Part 1

How often do we hear about music programs being cut back or eliminated from school programs K-12, public and private? They say we need more math and writing skills. So, the outcome is the same over and over again. As parents, policy makers and the schools themselves urge this trend forward, what are they missing? What are we overlooking? To answer this question we need to think about why music is of any importance at all.

We hear music every day, so frequently and in so many ways. We hear it on television commercials, movies, radio clips, online, everywhere and anywhere. So many of us listen to and hear music daily, that we all sort of take it for granted. Well, we shouldn't. Music is not just a CD, a download or thing that some of us do on our spare time just to have fun, to pass the time (which is not to say that there is anything wrong or inappropriate with having fun or recreation with music.)

By viewing music as a purely recreational activity and a commodity, we continue to downgrade it as an essential and necessary part of primary education. As we continue down that slippery slope, more of us are buying into that kind of perspective.

In turn, our politicians and educational bureaucrats continually purge music education, performance and appreciation from our schools as a superfluous unessential and way to successfully trim budgets. This policy and mindset is having a profoundly negative affect on our kids, our culture and our society.

Please consider the following facts.

1. Music, which must have begun as an attempt by our ancestors to answer their most fundamental questions about the meaning and purpose of their very existence, predates "civilization" by some accounts up to 50,000 years.

Just recently a prehistoric flute was found in Germany and identified as being the oldest musical instrument ever discovered. If this is correct (as we have every reason to believe that it is), our predecessors started to make music approximately the same time they began drawing and painting cave art.

What were they making music about? Perhaps we can draw comparison to prehistoric wall art in order to improve our ability to contemplate on what they may have been thinking or "playing." After all, we do not have any remains of their music intact as we have of their instruments but there is one thing we can know for sure. Our predecessors had plenty of time to listen to and reflect upon their world, in between hunting parties, staying warm and just surviving. And this is key: the experience of timelessness and of the eternal just happen to be one of the core elements, qualities and benefits of making music.

Running brooks, the wind, rustling leaves, growling wolves, roaring lions and singing birds were the perpetual backdrop of our predecessors existence. Seen in this perspective, music represents one of the very most profound practices of humanity. Music and cave drawing and painting represents mans first attempt to conceptualize, represent and understand the world.

2. Do writing, reading and mathematics all come from the same part of our brains? That would be a good question to ask a brain researcher. Perhaps what is more important is that writing, reading and mathematics are an outgrowth of music. We know that in ancient Greece, music was a science - a realm of exploration comparable to and as important as astronomy, mathematics and philosophy.

3. We listen to and play music because there are thoughts, feelings and emotions that simply can NOT be put into words or translated into a mathematical formula. The fact that we can comprehend certain realms only through hearing or playing music demonstrates and proves our profound need through music, to answer our most burning questions about our existence.

This is why we have to reconsider the importance and role of music as being a key component to our children' primary education. I will elaborate further in - "Music is The Solution, Not the Problem - Part 2." Suffice to say, if we continue down our current path, our children and their children will suffer an incalculable lose to their ability to think, to be whole and to being human.

Eben Goresko is a Classical, Ragtime and Stride Pianist. Eben studied classical piano at Temple University as a Piano Performance Major and has studied Jazz Piano with several notable Jazz Musicians. He also has extensive experience tuning and servicing pianos and has been qualified for over 29 years as a Registered Piano Technician of The Piano Technicians Guild.

Eben is also the webmaster of several informational websites which include educational and thought provoking articles such as - what is the education purpose of music and piano buying information to help consumers make better choices when shopping for a piano colorado.

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Friday, May 14, 2010

New Orleans Jazz - News and Views - Kid Thomas

Kid Thomas Valentine - Trumpet - Vocals and a bag of tricks! Born Reserve Louisiana 3rd February 1896. Died 16th June 1987 In New Orleans.

Let's get the history out of the way: Kid Thomas was a band leader from 1922 onward and led bands all over Louisiana, but always remained based in New Orleans.

I want to quote from "The Penguin Guide to Jazz on CD" by Richard Cook and Brian Morton. Their brilliant words on the subject cannot be bettered. "He approached this awesome career with a Zen-like simplicity, reducing the New Orleans sound to its essentials and creating a lifetime's work from them. A fascinating lead trumpeter - his method, including a strict observance of the melody, a blunt jabbing attack and a vibrato that sounds like an angry trill, managed to create high drama and lyrical depth alike. He seldom took solos, he was such a strong lead voice he tended to dominate every band he played with."

Kid Thomas made the most amazing number of recordings, and many of them are available to you on CD right now! But first a warning: the music and these musicians produce a sound that is like fine wine or great coffee - you may take some time to acquire the taste: but when you do you, like me, will become addicted for life.

Try from 1961 "Kid Thomas - George Lewis Ragtime Stompers" on GHB bcd-5. a true classic. Try "The December Band" from 1965 on GHB BCD - 197 and BCD - 198. Then try "New Orleans, The Living Legends" Kid Thomas and his Algiers Stompers on Riverside OCJCCD - 1833 -2 from 1961.

This is one of the rare occasions when I had the great good fortune to be personally acquainted with Kid Thomas and to count Albert Burbank and Emmanuel Paul as very dear friends. In 1963- 4 I toured with Kid Thomas and Emmanuel Paul all over the U.K. on their tour with the Kid Martyn Ragtime Band. My payment for using my band bus and driving for many miles was the pleasure and yes, honour of playing a session at Studio 51 the Ken Colyer Club with my Gothic Jazz Band and Kid Thomas andn Emmanuel Paul. Much later, back in Australia it was a great joy to renew my friendship with them when they toured in a package show - sharing the stage with Dizzy Gillespie. I always remember one of these non-jazz press reporters at Sydney Airport asking Art Blakey how he felt about playing a concert with these "primitive musicians". Art said "It's a great honour for us to play on the same stage as these gentlemen. Let's face it - without them we would not exist! They are the creators."

Kid Thomas Valentine was an enigma, although I spent many hours with him his conversation was like his trumpet playing: staccato, brief and to the point. Just the melody line sparsely stated. Only one night in an hotel room in Melbourne, Australia with most of his band and some star- struck executives of the Sydney Jazz Club, including me, did he let himself go. He told us wonderful stories of his earliest days as a band leader in New Orleans and of the amazing eccentricities of those long gone musicians on the gigs. I wish that I had had a tape recorder but again thankfully we do have plenty of his music on record.

My first purchase was the Riverside Kid Thomas and his Algiers Stompers I recommended earlier. Apart from the missing Emmanuel Paul, this was a band with a long history of playing together. Put on Panama Rag, it's hotter than a fiery furnace! Gulley House Blues can bring tears to the eyes! Sammy Penn is the true master drummer and I hope to write about him in a future article.

When the band broke into " Smile Darn You Smile" at the St Pancras Town Hall it was ecstasy, just like the record and although Alonzo Stewart was no Sammy Penn the overall effect was electric and we knew we were in the presence of the living legends.

Kid Thomas Valentine was an entertainer, his bag of tricks was with him at all times; slap sticks, maracas, tambourines, bonnets for "Milk Cow Blues" and always the biggest New Orleans grin!

Quotes: The Penguin Guide to Jazz on CD by Richard Cook Brian Morton (Penguin Press)

New Orleans Jazz specialist Geoff Gilbert, banjo player writer and broadcaster lives in the French Quarter. Born in England in 1932. he formed and led the Gothic Jazz Band in 1962. After moving to Sydney, Australia in 1964, he formed the Harbour City Jazz Band and began his jazz radio show on 2MBS-FM which ran for 30 years. In 2001, Geoff relocated to New Orleans to continue his love affair with the birthplace of jazz.

Want to hear some more? Listen to Geoff's podcast, Video of the Month, record reviews and local news at http://www.geoffgilbertsneworleansjazz.com

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Thursday, May 13, 2010

Smashing Ideas For Hosting A Fancy Dress Party

The possibilities are endless if you are hosting a fancy dress party and you are only limited by your imagination. Fancy dress parties can be held to celebrate any occasion or no occasion at all and they promise to be great fun for the guests as well as the host.

Once you've decided to throw a fancy dress party, the first thing you need to think about is whether the party will have a specific theme or will it be a dress-as-you-please fancy dress party.

Come-as-you-please Fancy Dress party

If you are calling a large group of people, a general fancy dress party may be a better idea. Trying to organize a themed party to suit so many different tastes may prove to be too challenging for you and may not sound as exciting to everybody. You can be sure not everyone will be doing cartwheels when they receive your Aliens v/s Predators party invite. Better to give your guests the creative license to dress up or dress down as they please and watch the excitement unfold as you try and guess who is behind each mask.

Themed Fancy Dress Party

Themed fancy dress parties are great if you are inviting a group of people who share an enthusiasm for a particular subject or film. You could choose to throw a Star Wars party, Harry Potter party, Cowboys & Indians party, Speakeasy party or an Arabian Nights party. Themed parties will require a considerably higher level of preparation, but it is well worth the effort.

Arabian Nights Party

Expect your guests to come dressed as Cleopatra, Lawrence of Arabia, snake charmers, Arabian guards or harem girls.

To decorate the room, remove all furniture and replace it with colorful rugs, pillows and low seating arrangements. Drape white fabric all over to make the room look like the inside of a tent. Mood lighting, large pitchers sprayed with gold paint, rubber snakes in baskets and sand and gold glitter sprinkled on the table would give your venue the right atmosphere. Play Middle Eastern music, serve Arabic food and hire a couple of belly dancers to get your Arabian Nights revelers in the right mood.

Speakeasy Fancy Dress Party

Expect a lot of gangsters and molls at this one!

Turn the lights down low, set up a bar area, a music area and a dance floor and see your room get slowly converted into a cocktail lounge. Get a smoke machine for some extra effect. You could hire a jazz band or else just play some cool jazz or ragtime music in the background. Serve beautifully garnished old-fashioned cocktails and finger foods in silver platters. If there is no smoking at this party, offer guests chocolate cigars and candy cigarettes in large well-arranged trays.

Whichever kind of party you choose to have, remember to keep a camera on hand with lots of film. There are sure to be a lot of priceless moments at this party!

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Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Styles of Piano Music

If you are studying the piano, you'll find that there are many different styles of piano music out there today. Usually it is a great idea to learn as many styles as you can if you want to master the piano, and learning all of them is a great idea. When you are knowledgeably about various styles of music for the piano, you are able to play in a variety of styles yourself and it also helps you learn to improvise. Let's take a look at some of the most popular styles out there that you'll want to study and learn to play.

Classical Piano

The oldest style of piano is the classical style and it is very varied as well. This style of piano has been around for hundreds of years and for many, it is the proper style of music to learn when playing the music. Various other styles of piano music actually come from the classical style as well. This style of piano music takes training that is intense and a lot of practice as well.

Rock Piano

Another style of piano music is rock piano. This style of piano actually came right out of blues piano music, although later it would begin to get a new style of it's own. Some great pianists, such as Billy Joel, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Elton John would go on to make rock piano the popular and beautiful style that it is today.

Jazz Piano

Another great style of piano music that is well worth studying and learning is jazz piano. It includes a variety of different styles within it and it difficult to describe. A variety of piano styles today actually borrow jazz ideas like certain chords and even improvisation as well. You'll also find that the emphasis on various forms of chords comes from jazz too.

Gospel Piano

You'll find that the gospel piano style of music is very similar to various other styles, such as R&B, blues, and even jazz. There are some extended chords which gospel piano tends to emphasize, but it has that lilting or swinging feel that you often see in both R&B as well as in jazz. While gospel songs may appear to be quite simple, the musicality of them is usually quite complex. You'll notice that syncopation is often used and provides a very spiritual style overtone to the gospel piano music.

Of course these are just a few of the different styles of piano music that are out there today. You'll find that there are many other styles to listen to, learn, and play. Some of them include new age piano, ragtime piano, rhythm and blues piano, boogie woogie piano, and even cocktail piano.

Kevin Sinclair is the publisher and editor of MusicianHome.com - an information site for beginning through to advanced musicians. He has a growing number of learn piano reviews available.

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Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Instrumental Duets For Guitar

The guitar makes a great accompaniment instrument for instrumental duets with a melody instrument. If you are interested in playing with other musicians like this the collections below will give you a great repertoire for playing with flute, violin, or harmonica. Build your accompaniment skills and repertoire and you will always be in demand by instrumental players.

The guitar and the flute have been musical companions for a long time and in many parts of the world. They make excellent sounding duets that can be played in numerous styles.

* Celtic Music for Flute and Guitar, Allan Alexander and Jessica Walsh, ADG Productions

This is a collection of twenty folk pieces originating mainly from Scotland and Ireland. The songs span 400 years of folk music as well as five original pieces written by Allan and Jessica. The learning process is eased by an accompanying CD showing how the pieces should be played.

* World Music for Flute and Guitar, Allan Alexander and Jessica Walsh, ADG Productions

This musical journey takes you to the four corners of the globe. There is standard notation and tab for guitar and a separate pull-out performance part for the flute melodies. You can listen to examples of the pieces on the CD that accompanies the book.

* Flute and Guitar Duets for Any Occasion, Mark Hanson, Accent On Music

This is a varied collection of duets in classical, folk, Celtic and jazz styles. The music ranges from easy to challenging playing levels in standard and tab notation. The accompanying CD provides stereo recording with flute and guitar on separate channels so you can practice even when your partner isn't around.

The fiddle is another instrument that works well with the guitar. It has been widely used in many styles of folk music. The song books below give you several styles to try.

* The Latin American Fiddler, Edward Huws Jones, Boosey & Hawkes

The exotic blend of Latin-American music with its Spanish, African and indigenous influences is great fun to play. This intermediate level collection of violin songs includes chords that can be played by guitar or piano.

* Jazz, Blues and Ragtime (Violin Edition), Edward Huws Jones, Boosey & Hawkes

This collection of favourite jazz and blues songs is suitable for all playing levels. It includes easy violin parts and guitar chords, as well as more sophisticated string arrangements for more advanced players. Songs include ever popular hits such as The Entertainer, Take Five, Makin' Whoopee, House Of The Rising Sun.

* The Christmas Fiddler, Edward Huws Jones, Boosey & Hawkes

It's always a good idea to have a few Christmas songs to play. This collection includes seven hundred years of songs from the medieval Song of the Ass, through traditional carols such as Away In A Manger and O Little Town Of Bethlehem through to the modern Sleigh Ride.

The harmonica is an ever popular instrument that has often been associated with the guitar in folk, rock and blues. Give your rock guitar skills a workout with these titles.

* Pop Rock Favourites For Harmonica, Bobby Joe Holman, Hal Leonard

Seventeen pop rock hits arranged for harmonica with guitar chords and tab. Pretty Woman, Blueberry Hill, Yakety Yak and Runaway are among the titles in this collection.

* Beatles Greatest Hits Harmonica Songbook, Hal Leonard

27 Beatles songs arranged with melody line, harmonica notation, guitar chords and lyrics. Performance notes are given for each song. Favourite hits include Eleanor Rigby, Get Back, Help, Let It Be, Michelle.

* Blues Harmonica Collection, Hal Leonard

Practice the classic sound of blues guitar and harmonica with forty classic blues tunes from the likes of Little Walter, Sonny Boy Williamson and Howlin' Wolf.

Instrumentalists with melody instruments will be delighted to have an accompaniment to play to. If you want to make yourself a useful and popular guitarist who's always in demand spend some time to learn an accompaniment repertoire. You'll have far more people wanting to play with you than the guy playing flashy guitar leads.

Ismail Mohd is the creator of http://www.virtualrockband.com where musicians can meet bassists, drummers, guitarists and vocalists living near them. They can also upload or download instrumental tracks to jam along to.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Ismail_I_M_Mohd

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Playing Blues Guitar - The Father of the Blues

Memphis blues band, Fried Glass Onions - Memphis Meets the Beatles has recorded three Beatles tribute albums. The first was released in 2005. Actually, Fried Glass Onions is not a real group, but a cute packaging idea; the album contains all Beatles songs, but is recorded by individual artists - not one band. What is interesting is that blues musicians had a tremendous influence on the Beatles as well as other British rock composers. Elvis, in particular, was a great influence on Lennon, who idolized him. After numerous attempts to meet Elvis in person, the Beatles finally got their chance on August 27, 1965 during their second USA tour. The meeting took place at Elvis' Bel-Air, California estate, where the magical event took place - they spent approximately four delirious hours as they described it with the King.

But, before Elvis or the Beatles burst onto the American music scene, there was W. C. Handy - the Father of the Blues. Music historians state that the man they crowned Father of the Blues, W. C. Handy, technically did not invent the blues. Rather, the blues were played before Handy even learned how to play a musical instrument, but it was he who first wrote down and published the first blues piece of music. In his own words, he describes his introduction to first hearing the blues as "the weirdest music I had ever heard" (Handy, 74). Indeed, as a youngster, Handy was formally trained in the traditional manner, where he studied classical music, music theory, and composition.

Handy was born in 1873, in Alabama, and began his entertainment career in the 1890s. His first gigs were touring with all black musical troupes. After serving as bandleader of the Mahara's Minstrels for four years, in 1903 Handy moved to Clarksdale, Mississippi where he heard the Blues for the first time. It was from then that Handy began his ascent from being a classically trained coronet musician into a beginner blues guitar player. In 1914, Handy composed "St. Louis Blues," considered one of the most popular blues songs ever recorded.

By the turn of the century, Handy was about to establish himself and his Memphis blues band as an institution in history of music. His genius came when he began to experiment in integrating ragtime with the blues - blues as it was interpreted in the late part of the nineteenth century. Listening to early versions of "Memphis Blues," or rather "Mr. Crump," a political song, which would eventually be reworked into "Memphis Blues," is stylistically more like ragtime than blues. "Mr. Crump," was actually published three years prior to "Memphis Blues" in 1909. Early recorded versions of each are available of Handy playing the guitar and as well as accompanying himself in traditional blues style vocals. Later piano renditions in ragtime, followed by jazz and big band versions, offer the listener a unique experience of musical history in the making. Over the decades, Handy's music has been performed and arranged by hundreds of musicians and performers, and happily continues to grab at the musical heartstrings of new generations, whether they are playing blues guitar, piano, or even coronet.

Decades later, the tide has turned and Memphis bands, especially the mega Memphis blues band, Fried Glass Onions: Memphis Meets the Beatles, find themselves gaining insight and inspiration from the Beatles. To date, Fried Glass Onions: Memphis Meets the Beatles has been so successful that within a year of the first album, an additional two volumes have been released. Indeed, not only was W. C. Handy the father of the blues, but very much a man who unknowingly fathered a melting pot of musical geniuses.

Written by, Brenne Meirowitz, B.A., M.S., M.A. This article, Playing Blues Guitar - The Father of the Blues Fathers Inspires Memphis Blues Band, Fried Glass Onions - Memphis Meets the Beatles, was written while researching information for Rooftop Beatles Concert.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Brenne_Meirowitz

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Musical Baby Names

Music has become an important part in our daily life. Music will inspires and touches daily lives in any culture. Eventually, many parents will turn to music in finding the perfect baby names.

Musical baby names are more common on female baby names. The more common examples are Aria, Carol, Grace, Harmony, Jazz, Melody, Lyric, Rhapsody, Serenade, Sonata, Song, and Viola.

Aria is a solo opera performance. The single performer sings solo that is accompanied by an elaborate melody. The shorter version of Aria is Arietta which is also a pretty good musical baby name.

Carol is English and French baby name which is derive from Latin word Choraula or Greek word Choraules. In Latin, it means choral song, or accompanist. In Greek, it means chorus. Thus, the Choral and Chorale was derived. The common variants of Carol are Carola, Carolan, Carolina, Carolann, Carolanne, Caroline, Carole, Carolyn, Carolyne, and Carolynn.

Grace is a one of the virtuous baby names which made it thru the baby names. Grace is also derived from a Latin word Gratia. It means effortless beauty. We often attach Grace after an excellent performance from singers, bands, orchestras, choirs, or groups. The common variants of Grace are Gracelyn, Graciela, Gracious, Grata, Gracielle, Gracina, and Gracie.

Harmony means the notes, instruments, and lyrics that work in perfect coordination and timing. Originally, Harmony came from Latin. The common variants of Harmony are Harmonia, Harmonica, Harmonee, Harmonie, Harmoney, Harmoni, and Harmonita. In Greek Mythology, Harmonia is also a Greek goddess of order and daughter of Aphrodite.

The song consists of lyric, and melody. Eventually, Lyric and Melody has become a baby name. Lyrics are the actual words spoken on a song, while Melody is the sweet succession of sounds from a song.

The musical instruments play a big role on baby names. Like Viola, the baby name may have come from violin. Chime is another baby name meaning the edge of a drum. And, Rebec is a three string instrument that the body is pear-shaped and neck is slender.

The different rhythmic music pattern and sound also became baby names like Cadence (rhythmic flow of sounds in language), Carillon (sound of tuned bells), Euphony (sweet acoustic sound of words), Jazz (ragtime and blues music), Rhapsody (musical recitation of poems), Sonata (three to four movements in contrasting forms), Tala (traditional South Asian rhythmic pattern), and Madrigal (complex polyphonic sound of a voice in secular text).

The terms and notes on music inspire for cool and unique baby names. For example, Fermata is a musical baby name which means prolonged musical note.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Dennis_Estrada

Friday, May 7, 2010

Planning a Retro-Theme Party, 1920s - 1940s

If you're thinking of throwing a party with a "retro" theme (pre-1950s), then you're probably looking for ideas to get you off to a great start! Each decade is so distinct that it can be hard to know where to begin, so here are a few ways to get started:

1. Choose the decade for your theme


1920s - Think flappers, chin-length bob hairdos, headbands with feathers, cigarette holders, and low waisted, knee-length dresses for women; flannel trousers, tweed jackets, baggy knickers, and pipes for men. Your room theme could be a good ol' prohibition-style speakeasy. Jazz and ragtime music will complete the theme.

1930s - Think close-fitting, below the knee dresses, matching tweed jackets and skirts, shirt-waist style dresses in linens and florals, and hats and gloves for daytime; long dresses in silk crepe, chiffon, taffeta or velvet, along with hats and gloves for evening. Short, finger-waved hair. For men: Suits, ties, and hats for daytime; full dress with a tail coat or dinner jacket and hat for evening. For music, from jazz-age dance bands to the early sound of swing.

1940s - During wartime: Suits consisting of a jacket, blouse, and below-the-knee skirt; wide-legged slacks (think Katharine Hepburn and Rosie the Riveter); and lower-heeled, comfortable shoes. Hair worn curled high on the head in front and worn to the shoulders in the back. After wartime: Feminine dresses with long, full skirts, tight waists, and high heels. Zoot suits were all the rage for men. Big band swing music from names like Jimmy Dorsey, Glenn Miller, and Arte Shaw, just to name a few, was the popular music of the day.

2. Make a guest list, then choose a location based on the number of guests

If you have a small budget, consider inviting fewer people and hosting it in your home (if this is appropriate). You can create a great "retro" atmosphere in your own home just by playing the music of the decade and having everyone wear the fashion of the day.
If you have a larger budget, consider spots such as hotels and museums, historic venues, or restaurants that reflect your chosen era. You can most often hire a band or DJ to play the music of the time, and many places have dance floors to enhance the fun.

3. Choose the perfect invitation

The invitation you send to your guests is the first impression they will have of your party. Make it a great one!
Be sure that the style and quality of the invitation is appropriate for your event - "flyer-type" paper invitations may be fine for a very informal gathering, but the classier your party, the classier your invitation should be. Keep the level of formality in mind when deciding on paper stock, fonts, and embellishments. All of these elements are important factors in the party-planning process as the invitation sets the stage for the entire party.
Visit your local card and/or stationery stores. Depending on the store, they will have boxed invitations to choose from, books to search through and order from (usually for quantities of 25-50 and up),and/or theme laser paper (for a more informal look). You can format and print most store-bought invitations on your home computer in any word processing program, but many stores also offer in-store printing services for a reasonable cost. If you are not so computer-savvy, this service will save you time and potential frustration in formatting and printing.
If you don't find a suitable invitation for your chosen theme (this may be difficult, depending on your decade of choice), then consider going online for an array of excellent choices. There are many websites that offer custom printing services, and you are sure to find an invitation that will wow your party-goers. If you don't see just what you want from a website you like, email the company and ask if they will create something custom for your event - They just might be willing to create the perfect invitation for you (for a fee, of course). It never hurts to ask...

For an array of retro invitations, visit http://retrocoolcards.com

To view fashion ideas for your retro party theme, visit http://www.fashion-era.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Stacey_Aaronson

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Where Have All the Flappers Gone?

Back in the 1920's the word "Flapper" was coined to describe to women who danced the latest craze; the Charleston. The term was derived from the movements associated with the dance steps that required that the woman would flap their arms and walk like birds - hence Flappers as in flapping wings of the birds.

Although the dance was popularized during the 1920's, the earliest Charleston is believed to have been part of several Harlem (USA) stage shows being recorded as early as 1913.

The coming of the Ragtime jazz era of the 1920's which saw a boom in the popularity of the swinging jazz rhythms which underlie the Charleston cemented the dance into the then popular culture.

This freedom of expression and the freedom of style that went hand in hand with the spread of the dance craze is typical of the social response to the return of the good times following the ending of the First World War. The jazz time era itself was part of this manifestation and the Charleston was a very visible part of this collective feeling of returning well being.

Not everyone appreciated this open flaunting of youth and vitality and many saw the Charleston and the Flappers in particular as being evidence of the downfall of moral standards and moral fortitude and directly responsible for many of the moral issues of the day. Certainly the Flappers tended to wear shorter skirts and took to a style of having their hair bobbed but it is true that they also tended towards heavier and more openly visible drinking and smoking habits.

Worse was to follow for the Flappers and for the Charleston dance craze; In 1925, Variety Magazine reported that the vibrations of Charleston dancers were so strong that the dancers caused the "Pickwick Club" a favoured Boston dance hall, to collapse, killing fifty of its patrons.

If you want to see what all the fuss is about why not adopt a Charleston or Flapper theme for your next fancy dress party. For added spice you can team the Flappers and Gangsters themes together as they are both from the same era of the history of the States. The range of costumes for these themes is huge and most costume retailers will have both a wide selection of costumes as well as the necessary costume accessories.

And lastly, those who want to throw themselves into the Flapper theme wholeheartedly, why not learn to dance the Charleston. Oscar Duryea, American authority on modern dances, describes here how the dance is actually performed:

The position at the start is as follows: Man's left foot behind the right, left toe at the heel of the right, both toes turned out-his partner's right foot in front of her left, her right heel at the toe of her left foot, both toes turned out. The man raises the left foot and at the same time raises on the toe of the right, turn both toes in, twisting on the ball of the right foot. With the feet in this position, both toes are twisted out, with the man's left heel in front of his right toe-his partner's right heel in front at her left toe.

The man raises his left foot, at the same time rising on the ball of the right foot, and twists both toes in, then puts his left foot behind the right one, and on the balls of both feet twists both toes out-his left toe behind at the right heel. His partner raises her right foot, at the same time rising on the ball of her left foot and twists both toes in, then puts her right foot in front and on the balls of both feet turns both toes out-her right toe in front at her left heel.

A toddle movement is taken through-out all the "Charleston" steps, on whichever foot on which the weight happens to be.

Now to me the next line would appear to be; And man and woman both arrive at hospital! And now you know where all the Flappers went!

Karnival Costumes stocks a huge selection of fancy dress costumes and accessories for both Flappers and Gangsters, simply click on the following link; http://karnival-house.co.uk/acatalog/Gangsters_and_Molls.html Flappers and Gangsters are just two of the many costume themes that you can choose your party theme from.

We have a huge range of Gangster and Charleston Flapper accessories including toy weapons, violin case handbags and many more unusual costume accessories on display simply by clicking in the link: http://www.karnival-house.co.uk/acatalog/fancy-dress-costume-accessories-gangsters.html Feel free to browse our website and purchase your costumes and accessories with confidence from one of the leading costume suppliers in the UK.

We also have a large selection of articles on a wide range of party themed topics. Why not join our newsletter for up to date information on the latest trends in costumes, news and notification of our special offers.

Article submitted by: KV Sinclair. Keith Sinclair has over 35 years of business experience and in addition to being a part time University Lecturer on Business Studies, he is CEO of Cavalcade; a group of companies operating in the party sector. Cavalcade operates Karnival Costumes at karnival-house.co.uk one of the UK's leading internet Fancy Dress Retailers. With massive stocks for immediate dispatch and an ever expanding range, Karnival-House continues to strive simply to offer outstanding service combined with outstanding value.

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