Archive for the ‘Music News’ Category

Bangon by Rico Blanco:A song Dedicated For The Victims of Typhoon Ondoy and Pepeng

Friday, October 16th, 2009

Please check out this song! It’s cool! An original Filipino song dedicated to the heroism and strong faith of all Filipino victims and rescuers. A tribute to the “Filipino Soul” with very inspiring messages in it. I hope this inspirational song would help mend the wounded hearts and sorrows of all the victims of the super twin typhoons that hit our poor country Philippines.

The song was composed by one of the famous Filipino alternative Rock singer Rico Blanco and this is what he said about his masterpiece.

“Countless Filipinos have heroically gone out of their way to help our brothers and sisters in this time of need. This is just my humble contribution as a singer and musician. I hope, in my own little way, I can help raise additional funds for our countrymen affected by the typhoons, and perhaps give a little boost to their morale to help them get back on their feet again.”


I am offering a completely new song, ‘Bangon’ as a free download here-.Please feel free to make your own video using the song.

LYRICS:

pinaluhod tayo,

sa isang hagupit

niragasa, sinalanta,

pinaluha

humupa ang unos, isang bahaghari!

dala ng bukang liwayway-

pag-ibig

pagkakaisa

BANGON

pilipinas kong mahal

akay ang pananampalataya sa may kapal

AHON

buhay sa yong dugo

ang tibay na tatak ng tunay na Pilipino

at nagising ang bayanihan

milyon milyon naging isa

walang kami

walang kayo

walang sila

tanging ligaya

ay pag alay ng sarili sa iba

BANGON

pilipinas kong mahal

akay ng pananampalataya sa may kapal

AHON

taglay ng yong dugo

ang tibay na tatak ng tunay na Pilipino

bridge:

hindi ka namin iiwan

hindi tayo susuko!

lulusong tayo’t magtatagumpay

magtatagumpay!

BANGON

pilipinas kong mahal

akay ang pananampalataya sa may kapal

AHON

buhay sa yong dugo

ang tibay na tatak ng tunay na Pilipino

coda:

lahat nitong mga pagsubok

ay ating kayang lagpasan

lahat nitong mga pagsubok

ay ating kayang lagpasan

em-Electronic Musician Magazine Sept. 2009

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

electronic-musician-magazine-september-2009

Electronic Musician Magazine - September 2009

English | PDF | 69 Pages | 11.07 Mb

Electronic Musician is the #1 magazine in the U.S. for musicians who record and produce music at home or for personal studio environment.

Christmas Music is on The Air

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

free-christmas-musicThe Christmas season is fast approaching nowadays. Just few months from now and we will be experiencing the season of giving. It has been a tradition to many of us that the celebration for this important event must be a joyous one. There are lots of ways on how to make the celebration happy. Among the popular ones is to make use or to mix the celebration with music. But the music being used is not just an ordinary music; it is of a very special kind. Aside from giving melody, the music we are referring to is that kind which can give life and color for this once-in-a-year celebration. No matter how slow or fast the melody you like, one thing is for certain, this music will definitely be something that shows praise for the person being symbolized by this event-Jesus.

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So What are the Greatest Songs of the Beatles?

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

greatest-songs-of-the-beatles

Derek Taylor recalls in his book “Fifty Years Adrift” the frenzy that was before when the Beatles swept the world by the storm,: “I have never seen anything like it. Nor heard any noise to approximate the ceaseless, frantic, hysterical scream which met the Beatles when they took the stage after what seemed a hundred years of earlier acts. All very good, all marking time, because no one had come for anything other than the Beatles…”

The Beatles were one of the most commercially successful and critically acclaimed bands in the history of popular music, selling over one billion records internationally. In the United Kingdom, The Beatles released more than 40 different singles, albums, and EPs that reached number one, earning more number one albums (15) than any other group in UK chart history. According to the Recording Industry Association of America, The Beatles have sold more albums in the United States than any other band. In 2004, Rolling Stone magazine ranked The Beatles number one in its list of 100 Greatest Artists of All Time. According to that same magazine, The Beatles’ innovative music and cultural impact helped define the 1960s, and their influence on pop culture is still evident today. In 2008, Billboard magazine released a list of top-selling Hot 100 artists to celebrate the chart’s fiftieth anniversary; The Beatles topped it.

Almost five decades have passed and the songs of the Fab 4 still reverberate in the world of the music scene and continue to exert influence on the works of young artists of today. Their songs are classic—universal and timeless.

If I were to be asked the top ten songs of Beatles which appeal to me most, they are the following:

1. “Hey Jude” is a song written by Paul McCartney, credited to Lennon/McCartney, and released as a single by The Beatles in 1968. Originally titled “Hey Jules”, McCartney wrote the ballad to comfort John Lennon’s son Julian during his parents’ divorce. “Hey Jude” was the first single from The Beatles’ record label Apple Records. Over seven minutes in length, “Hey Jude” was at the time the longest single ever to top the British charts. It also spent nine weeks as number one in the United States—the longest run at the top of the American charts for a Beatles single. The single has sold approximately eight million copies and is frequently included on professional lists of the all-time best songs.

2. Let It Be, the twelfth and final studio album, was released on 8 May 1970 by the band’s Apple Records label shortly after the group’s announced breakup. Despite receiving a largely negative review from Rolling Stone magazine at the time of its release, this determination was later retracted with the album being ranked number 86 in the magazine’s list of the 500 greatest albums of all time in 2003.

3. Yesterday. According to the Guinness Book of Records, “Yesterday” has the most cover versions of any song ever written. The song remains popular today with more than 3,000 recorded cover versions, the first hitting the United Kingdom top 10 three months after the release of Help!. Broadcast Music Incorporated (BMI) asserts that it was performed over seven million times in the 20th century alone. The song was not released as a single in the UK at the time of the US release, and thus never gained number 1 single status in that country. However, “Yesterday” was voted the best song of the 20th century in a 1999 BBC Radio 2 poll of music experts and listeners.

“Yesterday” takes the form of a melancholic acoustic ballad about a break-up. It was the first official recording by The Beatles that relied upon a performance by a single member of the band: Paul McCartney was accompanied solely by a string quartet. The final recording differed so greatly from other works by The Beatles that the other three members of the band vetoed the release of the song as a single in the United Kingdom. Although credited to “Lennon/McCartney”, the song was written solely by McCartney.

4. Strawberry Fields Forever. Recorded at the end of 1966, the song was written by John Lennon during the filming of How I Won The War and is formally credited to the Lennon/McCartney songwriting team. It is named after a Salvation Army house in Beaconsfield Road, Woolton, Liverpool where Lennon played as a child.”Strawberry Fields Forever” was originally recorded for the album Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967), but was instead released in February 1967 as a double A-side single backed with Paul McCartney’s “Penny Lane”. “Strawberry Fields Forever” reached number eight in the US, with numerous critics describing it as one of the group’s best recordings.[1][2] It is one of the defining works of the psychedelic rock genre and has been covered by many other artists.

5. And I Love Her. It was released 20 July 1964 with “If I Fell” as a single by Capitol Records in the United States, reaching #12 in Billboard. The Beatles performed “And I Love Her” just once outside of Abbey Road Studios. This song was one of the first ballads with a title that starts in mid-sentence. Paul McCartney was pleased with himself that he came up with this clever idea.

6. “If I Fell” is a song by The Beatles which first appeared on the 1964 UK album A Hard Day’s Night and the US compilation album Something New. It was written primarily by John Lennon, with help from Paul McCartney. “If I Fell” was a part of The Beatles repertoire during The Beatles’ US and Canadian tour in 1964. The group typically performed the song faster than the studio version, and Lennon and McCartney often sang it with barely suppressed laughter. On more than one occasion it was introduced as “If I Fell Over”

7.Yellow Submarine. Although it had previously been released on the Revolver album, it became the title song for the 1968 animated United Artists film, also called Yellow Submarine. It is also the title for the soundtrack album to the film, released as part of The Beatles’ music catalogue. The song was better received in Britain than in the United States. The single went to #1 on every major British chart, remained at #1 for four weeks and charted for 13 weeks. It won an Ivor Novello Award for the highest certified sales of any single issued in the UK in 1966. However, it failed to reach #1 on the American charts. A contributing factor may have been the “Bigger than Jesus” controversy.

8. Here Comes the Sun” is a song by George Harrison from The Beatles’ 1969 album Abbey Road. The song, one of Harrison’s best-known Beatles contributions alongside “Something”, originated from a songwriting collaboration between Harrison and close friend Eric Clapton called “Badge,” recorded by Clapton’s group Cream, and featuring an arpeggiated guitar riff that is similar to the one that forms the bridge of “Here Comes the Sun”. 1969 was a difficult year for Harrison: he was arrested for marijuana possession, he had his tonsils removed, and he had temporarily quit the band. The song was written while Harrison was away from all of these troubles.

9. All My Loving. Written by Paul McCartney (credited to Lennon/McCartney), from the 1963 album With the Beatles. The song was released in the United States in 1964, on the album Meet The Beatles!. It was the first of only a few occasions where McCartney wrote the lyrics before the music, as it was apparently conceived as a poem while he was shaving. McCartney originally envisioned it as a country & western song, and the music was written on a piano backstage during The Beatles’ Roy Orbison tour, with George Harrison adding his Nashville style guitar solo on the recording. Similarly employing the “letter” song model as used on “P.S. I Love You”, “All My Loving” promptly drew much critical acclaim, and also attracted large amounts of radio air-play.

10. The Long and Winding Road” is a ballad written by Paul McCartney (credited to Lennon/McCartney) that originally appeared on The Beatles’ album Let It Be. It became The Beatles’ last #1 song in the United States on 23 May 1970[1], and was the last single released by the quartet. “The Long and Winding Road” was listed with “For You Blue” as a double-sided hit when the single hit number one on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 in 1970. While the released version of the song was very successful, the post-production modifications to the song by producer Phil Spector angered McCartney to the point that when he made his case in court for breaking up The Beatles as a legal entity, McCartney cited the treatment of “The Long and Winding Road” as one of six reasons for doing so.

Music Download Industry Debate

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

music-download-industry-debateThe music download industry keeps evolving, as more players enter the game and alliances are formed within a blink of an eye. We’re all aware of AT&T partnering with giant Apple Inc. to promote the iPhone, which of course uses iTunes for its ringtone capabilities. As more mobile phones encompass multimedia functions, the music and telecommunications industries are realizing their unfolding opportunities to meld together.

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The Final Set; A Tribute To A Great Man

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

Last March 08, 2009, the grounds of the SM Mall of Asia was filled with the loud cheers of no less than 100,000 people as the The Final Set of the Eraserheads- the Beatles of the Philippines finally kicks off.

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Myguitargeek’s Music is Magic

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

What really is an audiophile? Wikipedia defines an audiophile (from the Latin audire “to hear” and Greek philos “loving”) as “a person dedicated to achieving high fidelity in the recording and playback of music.” There are those who disparage audiophiles as “a snooty-elitist bunch.” An audiophile-basher describes them as “persevering, misguided nerds who qualify for those silly hats with little propellers on top.”

I am an audiophile and proud of it, not because I am a more savvy music listener, or because my system is better than everyone else’s. I became an audiophile for the love of music. Let me give way to blue-blooded audiophile and Rizal Congressman Michael John Duavit (Jack to his audio brothers) who puts forth in an e-mail his own definition:

“Audiophiles are often misunderstood. Oftentimes we are looked upon as eccentrics who never seem to be satisfied with what we have; people who always seem to be on some upgrade path or relentless pursuit of vinyl records and silver discs. At the extreme, audiophiles may indeed seem utterly warped and obsessive of details an ordinary person would probably not detect. It would be arrogant to say that audiophiles have better acuity or that “true initiates” have a deeper connection to music in general. This would fail to justify the time and resources expended by audiophiles in their quest for better systems and more diverse libraries. It would be far more accurate to say that audiophiles simply give music more import.

“So what gets an audiophile’s juices flowing? Some say it’s the equipment; others say the music comes first. To me, it is something more universal. Most of us are born with five senses. For our basest of instincts, four of these senses — sight, touch, smell and taste — often combine for the most intense of pleasures: our first kiss, sipping fine wine, savoring a gourmet meal … But what about our sense of hearing? More likely, what we hear is filed away in our memory bank as no more than background music, thus relegating the sense of hearing to a lower tier in the hierarchy of senses. But wait! This is the soundtrack of our lives we’re talking about here. We must ask ourselves if this is really JUST background music or a treasure trove waiting to be unlocked.

“The sound around us never ceases, even while we sleep. We ABSORB it. It stimulates every part of our physical being. The effect of sound is primal. The effect of sound gets to the very core of our being, unfiltered and uncensored. As such, sound and music reach deeper into our humanity than any other art form through sheer sensual power that, for brief moments, even allows us to transcend temporal time and space. From the drums of tribesmen to the works of the great masters, music has always been central in celebrating the divine: the rhythms that can have thousands of people in one venue, on one dance floor, moving in unison. No other art form can affect us singularly or collectively as deeply as music does.

“For those who recognize this, sound and music take on a much higher significance. For those who appreciate their personal soundtracks, the music marks the waypoints while the equipment serves as the mode of transportation. Personally, I believe that one does not need to be an audiophile to experience any of this. In fact, it may be something that billions of people experience every day. I do recommend, however, listening to a really good system at least once in your lifetime. I have participated in three audio shows, and nothing excites me more than watching non-audiophiles’ eyes pop out of their heads when they realize the pleasure to be had through the sense of hearing. Therein lies true audiophile magic!

“So, think of your life as a movie, and ask yourself what you want your soundtrack to be. It is by no means complicated. Make it up as you go along. Share the music with your loved ones by playing something lively while everyone gets ready for work or school. Try dancing as well. It’s great for your circulation. When you get home, play something peaceful and mellow. Enjoy the sound and the silence. Go create your own soundtrack. Trust me; your life will be richer for it.”

MyguitarGeek Music News:Yahoo! Music’s Top 10 Videos of 2008

Wednesday, December 24th, 2008

Yahoo! Music tallied up all of its music video plays this year and compiled the Top 10. It’s interesting to note that half of Yahoo! Music’s list of videos comes from new artists including Leona Lewis, Colbie Caillat and OneRepublic. Of course, favorite established artists—Mariah, Alicia Keys, Rihanna alsosecured spots on the list.

1) Alicia Keys “No One”

This Grammy Award winning song spent five weeks at Number One on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart. Because this single was so successful, her album As I Am entered the charts at Number One, selling more than 700,000—the second highest selling debut of 2007, and the highest for a female artist. The video performance features Alicia in some of her more glamorous looks as she plays the piano in various settings.

2) Mariah Carey “Touch My Body”

Mariah Carey scored her 18th Number One hit with this song from her album, E=MC2. Her video should be considered most entertaining on this Top 10 list, if not most comedic, as Mariah playfully created her own version—and in music video form—of the nerd romance.

3) Leona Lewis “Bleeding Love”

This new artist broke into the US scene last year after winning the reality show X Factor, the British version of American Idol. While the song was first released in the UK, her label felt the need to make a different video for her US fan base. So they taped her singing in the middle of New York’s Time Square about a guy who has repeatedly broken her heart. The record was the biggest single in her home country in 2007, not to mention, it topped the charts of 30 other countries.

4) Rihanna “Don’t Stop The Music”

For the “Don’t Stop The Music” video, the Barbados beauty adds viewers to the party’s guest list, taking them with her to the hottest club in the city.

5) Jordin Sparks & Chris Brown “No Air”

“No Air” came on the heels of talk of Idols failing to achieve the success of their predecessor Kelly Clarkson; namely, Taylor Hicks, Katherine McPhee and Ruben Studdard who reportedly lost their record deals. With her second single “No Air,” she came strong, especially as she got paired with young pop superstar Chris Brown. “No Air” led to a remake by a country singer.

6) Lil Wayne f/Static Major “Lollipop”

“Lollipop” is the lead single from Lil’ Wayne’s Tha Carter III album, the year’s highest selling debut that entered the charts with platinum sales. What made this video extra interesting was that the New Orleans rapper was already in celebratory mode, as if knowing the success it was going to bring.

7) Colbie Caillat “Bubbly”

The romantic video finds the singer-songwriter Colbie Caillat at a beach house with her male companion, gazing at him dreamily while playing her guitar at a bonfire. “Bubbly” at times felt like the lone true love song in a sea on records about heartache. Caillat’s following picked up its most momentum online and eventually lead to her record deal with Universal. She is also blessed to have the support of her father, Ken Caillat, who co-produced two Fleetwood Mac albums and Colbie’s featured hit.

8) One Republic “Apologize”

Everything happens for a reason. Before linking with super power Timbaland, OneRepublic was already signed to Columbia Records. But two months before their album was scheduled to be released in 2006, they were dropped from the label. Fortunately for the Colorado band, they had already began creating a buzz online and interest from other labels intensified, culminating with Timbaland’s Interscope distributed Mosley Music successfully signing the group. OneRepublic became the first rock band on the label roster. Their song “Apologize” first gained exposure on Timbaland’s Shock Value album and also appears on their 2007 debut Dreaming Out Loud. The video tracks a love triangle, adding additional layers to the song that tells a remorseful girlfriend that “it’s too late to apologize” for her wrongdoing.

9) Sara Bareilles “Love Song”

Singers don’t come much cuter than Eureka, California hometown girl Sara Bareilles, one of 2007’s most refreshing breakout artists. For this Number One hit, the UCLA alum delivers a video to match. Bareilles’ brings life to a vaudeville bar as she plays the piano while singing about her refusal to write some guy a love song on demand.

10) Rihanna “Take A Bow”

If the candid camera show Cheaters ever started an award special, Rihanna’s “Take A Bow” could be the theme song. On the track Rihanna digs her claws in deep on the male subject who has apologized for being unfaithful. She tells him not to pretend that he’s sorry, but to instead “take a bow” for his performance at convincing her that he was committed. If Beyonce’s “Irreplaceable” was 2007’s female breakup anthem of the year, this track was 2008’s equivalent. It is befitting that both power ballads benefited from the song writing talents of Ne-Yo. “Take A Bow” reached Number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and drew attention for its video that captures striking shots of Rihanna dressed in simply a black tank top, jeans and hills. Even a guy can’t help but laugh at the scene of the boyfriend running alongside Rihanna car, begging for another chance.

Source: http://philstar.com