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MUSIC

The Correlation between Music and Increased IQ

November 4, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Want to get smarter

Research has been done many times to see if there’s a correlation between learning an instrument and intelligence, and it has been found that those who have learned to play an instrument often are better at multi-tasking and are able to problem solve better than those who don’t know how to play music. Children in some of the recent studies have been tested for higher-level thinking, and those who knew how to play an instrument did better in this area than their counterparts who didn’t.

Studies are now being done to eliminate the potential for outside factors to also have an impact on the results, which can help narrow down whether there is an actual causation. Future studies have plans to watch the participants over a significant period of time to see just how learning how to play impacts their intelligence.

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Filed Under: INTELLIGENCE, MUSIC, MUSICIANS, PLAY

How To Get Your First (Or Next) Gig In Half The Time Using These 3 Steps

November 3, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Step 1 – Find Venues

Before you get a gig you obviously need to find the places in town that have live music. Please don’t email every bar you know asking if you can play there. That’s like asking every woman you meet whether she wants to go out with you.

Step 2 – Find Email Addresses

Once you’ve made a list of all the venues you can play at it’s time to find a way to contact them. Find their website and see if they have a specific booking or live music page. If you’re lucky you’ll find an email address. If you’re less lucky you’ll find a contact form. If you’re really unlucky or the venue is terrible at online marketing you’ll only find a Facebook page.

Step 3 – Save Time With Your Emails

Once you have all the emails and/or contact methods it’s time to reach out.

The emails should not be long but they do need to include some important information.

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Filed Under: GIG, MUSIC, MUSICIANS

Leonard Cohen’s New Album, You Want It Darker, Is Streaming Free for a Limited Time

October 24, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Filed Under: LEONARD COHEN, MUSIC, MUSIC LAUNCH

How The Beatles Changed Album Covers

October 21, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Filed Under: MUSIC, MUSIC COVERS, SINGERS, THE BEATLES, VIDEO

Violonist Breaks Up Brilliant Pop Group

October 21, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

neil-milan

It is with great sadness that we must announce that our performances of Tears over the Summer were Neil’s last shows with Clean Bandit. He told us recently that he has decided to leave. We have had a wonderful ride together and we are extremely excited to see what he does next. We are also very much looking forward to our upcoming shows and to sharing our new music with you. Thank you all for your support during this time, and thank you Neil for being part of this amazing journey. We will miss you a lot on this next chapter and we wish you the best of luck for the future. Jack, Grace and Luke – CLEAN BANDIT 

The group, which started out as a classical string quartet at university, has scored #1 hits in several countries.

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Filed Under: CLEAN BANDIT, MUSIC, MUSICIANS, NEIL MILAN, NEWS, VIOLINIST

Daniel Lanois Interview: Advice to the Young

October 20, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Filed Under: DANIEL LANOIS, MUSIC, MUSICIANS

The Night When Charlie Parker Played for Igor Stravinsky (1951)

October 17, 2016 By Respiro E Movimento · Follow us: Facebook · Twitter · Instagram · YouTube

Parker and Stravinsky

The history of 20th-century music offers plenty of stories of luminaries meeting, playing together, and sometimes even entering into long-term collaboration. But it typically only happened within traditions: encounters between rock and rock, jazz and jazz, modernism and modernism. And so it still thrills to hear of the time in 1951 when Charlie Parker added one more story to the most storied jazz club of all by performing for Igor Stravinsky at Birdland. Alfred Appel tells it definitively in his book Jazz Modernism: From Ellington and Armstrong to Matisse and Joyce:

The house was almost full, even before the opening set — Billy Taylor’s piano trio — except for the conspicuous empty table to my right, which bore a RESERVED sign, unusual for Birdland. After the pianist finished his forty-five-minute set, a party of four men and a woman settled in at the table, rather clamorously, three waiters swooping in quickly to take their orders as a ripple of whispers and exclamations ran through Birdland at the sight of one of the men, Igor Stravinsky. He was a celebrity, and an icon to jazz fans because he sanctified modern jazz by composing Ebony Concerto for Woody Herman and his Orchestra (1946) — a Covarrubias “Impossible Interview” come true.

As Parker’s quintet walked onto the bandstand, trumpeter Red Rodney recognized Stravinsky, front and almost center. Rodney leaned over and told Parker, who did not look at Stravinsky. Parker immediately called the first number for his band, and, forgoing the customary greeting to the crowd, was off like a shot. At the sound of the opening notes, played in unison by trumpet and alto, a chill went up and down the back of my neck.

They were playing “KoKo,” which, because of its epochal breakneck tempo — over three hundred beats per minute on the metronome — Parker never assayed before his second set, when he was sufficiently warmed up. Parker’s phrases were flying as fluently as ever on this particular daunting “Koko.” At the beginning of his second chorus he interpolated the opening of Stravinsky’s Firebird Suite as though it had always been there, a perfect fit, and then sailed on with the rest of the number. Stravinsky roared with delight, pounding his glass on the table, the upward arc of the glass sending its liquor and ice cubes onto the people behind him, who threw up their hands or ducked.

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Filed Under: CHARLIE PARKER, IGOR STRAVINSKY, JAZZ, MUSIC

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