Check out Ebay i woulldnt sell it cheap !!!
AnswerAny of the following websites may be able to provide the value of your album:www.neatstuff.net/records/Records.html
www.forevervinyl.com/
www.recordcollectorslc.com
www.vinylalbums4sale.com/index.html
My mother actually got me one of these for my birthday this year, and I believe the sticker said said somewhere around 49.95. But dude, me and my friends are guessing it would take like 2 oz. to fill that paper! That would be so awesome.
actually, the paper is made to fit a quarter pound, or 4 oz. even better!
... actually a quarter pound is 4 1/2 oz.
Kimball Pianos with a serial number of 480000 or lower are pre-World War II instruments. Specifically, this one would have been produced in 1939, less than 4 years before Kimball would put a hold on production until after the War.
Obviously, music that has a faster tempo and louder will generally make a person's heart rate and blood pressure spike, probably because it releases adrenaline, similar to a stressful situation. Or in other words in your heart there is a sensor that receives pulses that dictate how fast the heart beats. Heavy and loud music, especially with a strong beat, can interfere with that sensor, causing the heart to beat in time to the music. No it does not change it stays the same, except if a person gets excited about the song, than your pulse rate increases.
u can download sum grime mixtapes off www.grimepedia.com
also
datpiff.com - mostly American mixtapes - but still a lot of british
skvibemakers.co.UK -- all grime however there isn't millions
grimemixtapes.blogspot.com -- brilliant i would say -- just type in what you want should come up !!
hope these help
PS on youtube check out V Double O he is awesome unsigned UK grime artist amazing and he has a 51 track mixtape !!!!
Also check - www.downloadamixtape.com , loads of stuff on there
What you have to do first is upload the song into a site like http://www.fileden.com or http://www.ripway.com .
After that, you should have a URL that goes with the song. However, the URL is gonna be too long, because the captions for pics only allow 50 characters. What you do then is you go to http://www.metamark.net and they will shorten it for you.
Once you have your shorter URL, put it into this code:
<bgsound src="URL" loop="-1">
Paste the code into any caption on your myspace pics. =)
Note: The song will only play while in Internet Explorer, not Firefox or any other browser.
The vinyl record continues to be a popular format with nearly 2 million vinyl albums sold in the US in 2008 and the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), claim the number of 7 inch vinyl singles sold in the UK rose from 178,831 in 2001 to 1,072,608 in 2006.
If that someone is addicted to music, and like can't stop listining to it....... Then i would descibe them asMusic Crazy, if you dont wanna be rude
you cannot work at the age of 14 only babysitting or doing someones yard
uh no your wrong labor laws say you can work at the age 14 learn you facts before you spread your stupidness around
The Bible has a lot to say about music. The Old Testament is full of such references. In the life of David you see times when instruments were used. There is a book by Herbert Lockyer Jr. about "All the Music of the Bible." You can get it at any large Bible book store or online at www.cbd.com (Christian Book Distributors) I think the book is like thirty dollars or a little more
That would depend. For example, if you had a new, unopened copy of The Barbra Streisand Album (1963), then it likely would be worth more than a used copy of that same album.
The format (vinyl, CD, cassette) also matters; vinyl often is valued more than CDs, and the region where it was sold also matters. Memories was repackaged as Love Songs for the UK, and there were additional tracks on it as well.
The first commercial music CD arrived to usa and UK in 1983.
I assume that by "old records" you mean 78s, the old heavy singles that disappeared from record stores by 1960. The value of 78s is largely determined by three things: rarity, collector interest and condition. The label is usually not a significant factor unless the label itself is rare, and neither the Decca nor Columbia labels are rare. In fact, if you grab a handful of 78s at random, it is likely at least half will be on one of these two labels. Having said that, there is a rough way to determine relatively elevated value based upon the type of Decca or Columbia label on the record. DECCA (began 1934). There are three main categories of Decca label: blue "sunburst", blue "flat" and black. The "sunburst" label has somewhat elevated collector interest; it is called that because the DECCA logo is in block letters with a false perspective that seems to spring from one point, in an art deco style. These were made until about 1937, at which time the logo was changed to a "flat" block letter logo without perspective. These and the later black label Deccas usually have little value. COLUMBIA (began 1901). The history of this label is too long, and there are too many label variations, to provide a comprehensive listing here, but a few permutations are worth mentioning. First of all, most CBS Columbias have little value, especially the red label popular series. Most collectors see that red label and pass right by. But if you find any Columbias that are all blue--both the label and the record itself--then you have what is called a "Blue Wax" Columbia, and these almost always have considerably elevated value, especially if they have popular or jazz content and are in good condition. Another label type with elevated value is the "flag" label, which has two red, white and blue flags on a metallic gold or copper background. This label was only issued for a short time in 1924. And any single-sided Columbia, most of which have plain black labels with white or silver printing, has elevated value. Black Columbias with gold printing, with "Columbia Phonograph Company" and "Viva-Tonal" on the label, may have somewhat elevated value if they are in excellent condition or feature country or "race" songs. But I caution that this is only a very rough guide to relative value. You never know when a 78 is valuable, especially if it is a Robert Johnson 78 (if you do, have it professionally appraised right away!). If you're interested in selling 78s, I recommend signing up for the 78-C list, found at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/78-c/ You can post a message there and see what interest it attracts. It helps if you provide a specific list with at least the following information: Label, catalog number, artist(s) and titles.
I know that the regular tour programs are about 50.00 - 80.00 and Carnagie hall and other individual programs around 150.00 so I would think if in good condition at least 150.00. Because red Rocks is the only show the Beatles didn't sell out, its probably worth more :)
Here are some answers from our community:
Here's what I've found for certain.
1. The chemical released is Dopamine (as I saw written by an educated gentlemen above me. He is right.) This chemical does two things. Triggers the memory center of the brain to help encode memories, and it makes us feel pleasure. Studies on this show that the chemical is released on the ending beat. like the end of a measure of music specifically.
2. There are two parts of modern music. The lyrics ,and the actual musical components. Both of which are important. Scientists don't yet know why musical notes can portray emotion sadly, but Lyrics, however, play a crucial role in the success of music. Meaning and emotion can be easily understood through familiar language. Moving on to the musical components. Music does hold a pattern and these patterns within the beats and the notes do hold emotion. When you first hear a song you may not always like it. but in time you will learn to enjoy it. This is because your brain has not yet picked up on the patterns when it first listened to it. It does not see any reason for why it should be listening to it. As time goes on your brain starts to put together memories about the song and eventually and gradually learns the patterns. I believe the patterns are received via sub-conscious, But we do not know this for certain.
3. I have even looked down into the depths of music ranging from looking for patterns withing beats and when certain notes strike to find patterns, all the way to measuring the differences in sound waves of individual notes in a sequence. Both of these areas showed consistencies. Like when measuring the differences of wavelength between two notes I found that a pattern emerges. A constant and consistent alternation between a wide change in wave length to short change. when I graphed these changes from a large change to a small change what I came up with where patterns that must be picked up by the sub-conscious because we do not consciously here these patterns. There was also specific ways the patterns changed when we looked at minor scales and major scales. Part of what I believe to be how music holds emotion.
4. My last and final point is to inform that music can be made up of a few parts. Lyrics,Music, and drums. Lyrics are to inform, music to back up the information, and drums to help the lyrics also. They all help each other in some way.
Well, assuming you had an entire Beatles CD collection, the value would be: $170.67
What a mixing console or "desk" does is allow several audio sources to be "mixed" into one. It's called a "summing" circuit. Let's say you were trying to record your friend playing a guitar and singing. You've got a cable coming out of her microphone and another coming out of her guitar. If you were to just cut the ends off the two cables, twist them together, solder a plug on the end and hook them to your tape deck, the sound would be all distorted and nasty. But if you use a mixing console aka mixer it will sound better.
The device described above is a mixing "console" which is a mixer with other things in it, like reverb, limiters, equalizers, delay lines...a mixer is part of a console. The person called a sound mixer runs the mixing console.
In a live concert setting, the person known as the sound mixer, also called the Front Of House Sound Engineer, is the person who combines all of the microphones on stage into a balanced mix for the listening audience.
In a recording studio, the sound mixer is responsible for recording the music onto digital or analog media and then remixing the music into a final mix for release to the listening public.
In film and television production, the sound mixer, also called a sound recordist, is the person on set who records the dialog and sound effects that will be used in the movie or television show.
you can usually find it on the bell and the barrel, sometimes even the ligature that came with it, of your clarinet.
I think it was formed back when blacks were slaves and had to pick cotton from the cotton fields they sang to distract them from the horrible life and job they had. I hate to disappoint the previous poster, but music existed CENTURIES before slavery days. How it was formed I don't know, but I would imagine that man noticed that hitting certain things makes different noises, and it grew from there, as well as of course the songs of birds making man want to figure out a way to make music. But yes, slaves DID sing for the reasons mentioned by the previous poster.
A copy of the first pressing from 1968 can be worth from 150 USD on up, depending on the unique stamped serial number. Low numbers are worth more. It came with a poster and four individual color prints, the condition of which might also affect the value. One site I have seen says a low number like 0000010 can be worth £5,000, which is about 7,600 USD. Here is a link to that site. It has the most information I have ever seen in one site about the Beatles album "The Beatles", which incidentally is the real name of the so called "White Album". Subsecquent pressings are probably not worth much.
i know tons with tie but these are my faves!! Tie My Hands- Lil Wayne and Robin Thicke Tie Your Mother Down- Queen Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round The Ole Oak Tree- Tony Orlando and Dawn Lemon Meringue Tie- Dance Gavin Dance Tie The Rope-The Format Tie Her Down-Senses Fail Tie me Kangaroo Down, Sport- Jim Springer those my faves hoped that helped