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Notes_Norton

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Everything posted by Notes_Norton

  1. I quit advertising in the music magazines years ago. When I started in the 1980s there was a lively, multi-page classified ad section. By the time I quit running ads, it had shrunk to a half page, and most of them display ads. I also used to enjoy the articles more. It seems like more and more the articles have become advertisements in disguise. And it's not just music magazines, computer magazines and newspapers are doing the same thing. I suspect all but mass-market pop culture magazines like the ones in the grocery store checkout counters are going digital. I guess the demand for print media is down. It's costly to print paper and the postage isn't cheap either. It's much thriftier to use the Internet. It's just the way it is now.
  2. Research has shown it's healthier to sleep in the dark. I put my router in another room. My bedroom has a digital alarm with red LEDs (red is better). Those are the only things that stay on when I'm not using them. Everything else plugs into a AC power strip that I can shut off by rocking the power switch. Besides for making it dark, all those instant-on devices use electricity when you aren't using them. I know it isn't much, but if a few thousand people turn them off when not in use, it amounts to a lot. No, I don't think you are being over-sensitive.
  3. Gallows Pole - Led Zeppelin it's a classic
  4. The Replacements - Hangin' Downtown Because life is too short to enjoy only one kind of music...
  5. My Pleasure!!! ------ That made me think of this one... The Andrews Sisters - The Strip Polka They are dated, but the sisters were very good at what they did.
  6. If you haven't heard PMJ, you need to. This 'group' is ust too much fun. They feature different soloists and front people on different songs. All About That Bass - Postmodern Jukebox
  7. The music magazines that I used to advertise my Band-in-a-Box aftermarket products in have all gone either belly-up or digital. And it's not just music mags, plenty of others are gone or gone digital as well. I miss the print media a bit, and enjoy others in digital format for the multi-media aspects. Notes
  8. "People Gotta Move" - Gino Vannelli I love brother Joe's synth work on this. Gino's singing ain't bad either.
  9. We don't play for free. It's our business. Well actually there are a couple of exceptions: For a charity event IF nobody else is getting paid and IF it isn't a profit making gig disguised as a chairty The VA. Once every couple of years we go to the nursing home at the VA hospital about 50 miles away and give the vets in the wheelchair nursing home area a free afternoon of music.
  10. The oldest guy at the nudist camp is in his mid 90s. Definitely in his Shar Pei years. Actually, it's a fun gig with young and old, and after the initial orientation, it seems quite normal. I still think that I look better with my clothes on though.
  11. Leoš Janáček - Sinfonietta
  12. Bicycle Song - Orbit The colors of the covers match too!!!
  13. For the nudist camps all you need is your birthday suit (actually we wear minimal clothing for that). For the yacht& country clubs, sometimes a tuxedo, sometimes suit and tie, sometimes Hawaiian shirt. Same for the retirement developments. Here in South Florida it's a big market. Many more of these hiring bands than night clubs. Of course they are one-nighters so we get to move gear a lot. But then I get to lift heavy things without paying for a gym membership ;) With setup and tear-down every gig they make for longer jobs but if I can bag 2 a week I can make as much as I can 5 or 6 nights in a club. I the winter we do 3-5 a week, in the summer we're lucky to get 1 or 2 a week. But that gives me time to write aftermarket software plug-ins for Band-in-a-Box. Plus I'm doing this with my wife/lover/best-friend. I met her when we were in different bands, both broke up at the same time so we did a trio and a 5 piece band together. Then due to personnel problems in 1985 I bought my first MIDI sequencer, started making my own backing tracks, and we've never looked back. We did cruise ships and night clubs for the first few years. Then we got a house-gig band for a year at a Yacht club, and that spoiled us. We also just learned Springsteen's "Dancing In The Dark", played it last weekend, and it went over really well. I like singing and playing the sax on that one so it's good for us too. Next? Perhaps Katrina and the Waves' "Walking On Sunshine". Thinking about it anyway. Notes
  14. Waiting for Waits - Richie Cole w/ Eddie Jefferson on vocals & Manhattan Transfer on backing vocals A nice tribute to the great Tom Waits.
  15. We just learned that song. Making the backing track was a bit of a challenge but it turned out well. I know, it's about time we learned that one. When you gig for the yacht club, country club, retirement development audience, the requests are a little behind the times. When we started playing that crowd in the mid 1980s, it was Big-Band Jazz, Frank Sinatra and you couldn't even sneak in an Elvis Presley song. But those folks are gone now, new people enter the "over 55 year old" group, and so we are still learning 20-40 year old songs for the incoming group along with a few pop crossovers to that market. It seems that the over 55 group wants to hear songs of their youth. Nothing wrong with that, there are good songs written in every era (and bad ones to, but the good ones are mostly the ones that last through the decades) It's a good gig. With the night clubs going to karaoke, open mic nights, sports on TV, and DJs, I'm glad I moved into this market when we did. We're established and still gigging steadily. It's a fun way to make a living.
  16. Which is my favorite Tchaikovsky symphony? Either 4, 5 or 6 and Masur does it better than most.
  17. Space Is The Place - Sun Ra and his Arkestra Definitely someone who wasn't afraid to be different
  18. My older sister was a big Elvis fan. She bought this LP and as a very young sax player, I heard the sax solo and it was like lightning struck. I didn't know it was the blues, but I knew I wanted to play that kind of music. I later heard the original Lowell Fulson cut, and it was nice, but IMO the Elvis Presley cover was much better. Notes
  19. One of my all-time favorite classic blues singers. Especially his early stuff on the "Duke" record label. Cry, Cry, Cry - Bobby "Blue" Bland
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