Computers and Music
Found a
free online voice lesson that is interesting to try.
Also I found a recently released
free program that can play many variants of chess.
Enjoy!
Another SEO competition! A SEO competition is a race to the top of the search result rankings for a particular, nonsensical search term. This time it's a Canadian competition called
Xoduszero. It ends just in a few days, so I will see if my little bit of help makes any difference.
Found a website which does a very good job of
making me feel nervous about Microsoft, through a detailed analysis of Microsoft's business strategies. After reading that, boy do I want to switch to Linux! Once I find replacements for all my Windows apps, I will make the switch right away!
I don't know much about Haitian Music, but I just found a web site called "
Serge Bellegarde Reviews Haitian Music" which definitely looks like a good place to start discovering more about a wide variety of Haitian Music. Now, the challenge would be to find these CD's somewhere!
Found an
article in the Daily Star of Beirut, Lebanon, which describes a performance of a Japanese jazz trio, the Satoru Shionoya Unit, celebrating 50 years of diplomatic relationships between Lebanon and Japan. From the article:
Satoru Shionoya looks much younger than the 38 years he claims to have lived, and the red tint in his hair ensures that he carries off the Japanese-exchange-student look very well. He may not be a gray beard, but as soon as he places his hands on the keys of his instrument you know there's more to this musician than his hair dye. Shionoya is a classically trained musician and composer who claims Jaco Pastorious and Charles Mingus as influences. As his trio rolls through his Motown-inflected composition "Mingle Jingle," however, it's quite obvious that he's working with a palette that includes plenty of pop music hues as well.
After receiving some "fan mail" from a girl in Japan, I decided to make an update to my Piano Practice page, where I post
recordings of my piano practices.
Listening to some of them, I came across a "killer" practice (well, as practices go anyways), where I developed many cool ideas and worked on lots of originals. Listen to it by
clicking here (file in Midi format). I suggest you use
Winamp to listen to it rather than Windows Media Player because the Synth in Winamp sounds much better.
I should emphasize that it is a practice after all, and how "killer" can a practice really be? While there are some good ideas in the practice recording, by no means is it representative of how I play when I am performing!