Music And Song essay topics

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  • Cole Porter Songs
    2,802 words
    (1891-1964) American composer & lyricist Biography Cole's family Cole Porter's name derives from the surnames of his parents, Kate Cole and Sam Porter. Kate's father, James Omar (known as J.O. ), was an influential man both in the community and in Cole's early life. J.O. started from humble beginnings as son of a shoemaker, but his business savvy and strong work ethic made him the richest man in Indiana. Despite J.O.'s obsessive drive for making money, he took time off to marry Rachel Hent on, w...
  • Use Of Cocaine In His Songs
    1,019 words
    Music is a very prominent social voice in contemporary times. Many Americans obtain a great deal on many current social and political views through music itself, or music bands, radio stations, television stations, and organizations. The use of drugs as a recreational pastime is one of these issues. Throughout the history of modern music, many bands have spoken out on the legalization of drugs as well as the justification of the recreational use of drugs. Although there are many warnings and cen...
  • Music 23 Confucius
    1,481 words
    ... 's in the conduct of others, and finding pleasure in having many wise friends, these are advantageous. But finding pleasure in profligate enjoyments, finding pleasure in idle gadding about, and finding pleasure in feasting, these are injurious. 22 Ritual, was an important subject of study. It has been illustrate by the poetry and music from the study of Confucius. It is also the Way of teaching people to the Gentleman level. 'If a man is not humane, what has he to do with ritual? If a man is...
  • Artist For Their Songs
    1,150 words
    NAPSTER: BREAKING THE CONSTITUTION The Napster software, which launched in 1999, allows people to share digital music files (MP 3) between each other. This Internet program has sparked a historical debate about copyright law and the Internet. Copyright owners strongly believe that "sharing" these files via Napster is "stealing" (TIME). Downloading music against the wishes of an artist or producer is breaking the law. Some believe that it is not stealing or illegal. They are just making a copy of...
  • Nirvana And Their Music
    1,070 words
    Kurt Cobain look Into the Life and Career of a Legend; A Proposal Kurt Donald Cobain was the lead singer / songwriter of the band Nirvana, until April 5 1994 when he committed suicide. Troubled by depression, chronic stomach problems, and an addiction to heroin, his ailments in his personal life showed through in his music. His music evolved from the hard 'punk's sound of their first album, to the intelligent 'tell all' tales of his fourth and final album In Utero. Through his music he changed a...
  • Singer Pianist Diana Krall
    525 words
    Singer / pianist Diana Krall got her musical education when she was growing up in Nanaimo, British Columbia, from the classical piano lesson she began at age four and in her high-school jazz band, but mostly from her father, a stride piano player with an extensive record collection. "I think Dad has every recording Fats Waller ever made", she said, "and I tried to learn them all". In 1981 Krall won a Vancouver Jazz scholarship to study at the Berklee College of Music in Boston. After a year and ...
  • Woody Guthrie
    782 words
    Woody Guthrie Woody Guthrie, born Woodrow Wilson Guthrie, was born in O kemah, Oklahoma in 1912. When he was 16 he began to travel around the United States (Feather 428). He had a great love for music and soon began writing his own songs about the Great Depression and the treatment of the migrant workers, who were forced to move west because of the Dust Bowl. His music greatly influenced many people across the country. However, Woody never let the fame go to his head. "When Woody Guthrie was sin...
  • Stephen Sondheim Biography Stephen Sondheim
    671 words
    Stephen Sondheim - Biography Stephen Sondheim was born on 22 March 1930, the son of a wealthy New York dress manufacturer. But, when his parents divorced, his mother moved to Bucks County, Pennsylvania and young Stephen found himself in the right place at the right time. A neighbour of his mother's, Oscar Hammerstein II, was working on a new musical called Oklahoma! and it didn't take long for the adolescent boy to realise that he, too, was intrigued by musical theatre. Although he subsequently ...
  • Musical Theatre
    2,229 words
    Presentation The eminence of the musical has been the most significant theatre phenomenon in the world over the last twenty years. It has not only given British theatres a greatly needed financial boost but has changed 'popular' theatre indefinitely. Before this, they never throbbed with subtlety because someone was always bursting into song about how every thing 'was looking just swell'. The musical not only wanted to sing away your troubles, but your thoughts as well. The 'old style' musical t...
  • Traditional Portuguese Music
    1,940 words
    Portugal has a rich musical culture, with roots that go back to Provencal troubadours, followed by ballads and the fado, and as of late, incorporating the rhythms of Portugal's former West African colonies. Each of these elements are still alive in current Portuguese music like the French Provencal influence in the folk music played at festivals in the northern part of the country, as well as the rock and jazz most prevalent in the larger cities. An additional element is added by a wealth of sin...
  • Radio Stations Across The Country Ban John
    2,833 words
    MUSIC CENSORSHIP, 1950 till now 1952 The Weavers are blacklisted due to the leftist political beliefs and associations of several members. In 1953 six counties in South Carolina pass legislation outlawing jukebox operation anytime when within hearing distance of a church. During 1954 Stephen Foster songs are edited for radio to remove words such as 'massa' and 'darky. ' For radio airplay the perceived drug reference 'I get no kick from cocaine,' is changed to 'I get perfume from Spain. ' in Cole...
  • H An Mp 3 Player If
    3,681 words
    What is an MP 3 An MP 3 is a recorded high-quality audio (voice and music) file which can be distributed over the Internet, and played on any multimedia computer with the right sound card and speakers. MP 3 is simply a file format that compresses a song into a smaller size so it is easier to move around on the Internet and store. MPEG is the acronym for Moving Picture Experts Group. This group has developed compression systems used for video data. For example, DVD movies, HDTV broadcasts and DSS...
  • American Pie By Don McLean
    839 words
    'American Pie' by Don McLean, is a very interesting song. After listening to the lyrics and the song itself, there is a meaning to this song. Each line of the lyrics has a special meaning to what Don McLean wanted to say, but in his own special way. If one was to look at each lyrics one by one, they will be able to find out the big picture of the whole song. It tells a story of Mclean's favorite performers, Buddy HOlly. American Pie was rumoured to be the name of the plane that BUddy Holly died ...
  • Web's Nightingale Lata Mangeshkar
    2,074 words
    Lata Mangeshkar- The Pride of India India, one of the highest movie producing countries, has many great singers. One such singer, who has been singing for the past 60 years is non other then my favourite singer Lata Mangeshkar. Lata Mangeshkar is and has been the most heard voice in all of India for some time now. Lata has been active in all Indian popular and classical music, sung film songs, ghazal's, and pop (N agma, 2004). Lata's mesmerizing melodious voice has won fans all over the Indian s...
  • Jim Morrisons Music
    2,404 words
    Poet William Blake once said "If The Doors of perception were cleansed, everything would appear to man as it is, infinite" (Gilmore 34). From this quote arose a band that even over 20 years after its disbanding still is played and remembered. The Doors started as a little garage band in California back in the early sixties. They were extremely popular due to their lead singer, Jim Morrison. Morrison himself was a real character. Morrison is considered by many critics a modern day poet. Others vi...
  • Songs Off Napster
    539 words
    Napster What is the big deal with the whole napster controversy All it is is a network, which allows millions of people to share files, which are already available on the Internet. People say things like, it's a form of stealing, because you are taking something from an artist that cost time and money to create. But honestly, if napster wasn t there people would have gotten these songs from another source. I personally use napster all the time for about a year and a half now, but before napster,...
  • Messiaen
    316 words
    In 1967, when Olivier Messiaen agreed to collaborate on a book of conversations, the composer of the evocative and grandly scaled Turangalila-symphonie was already considered one of the masters of twentieth-century music. Yet outside professional circles and a small but enthusiastic public, his works remained little known; he was perhaps most famous as the influential teacher of avant-garde composers Pierre Boulez, Karl heinz Stockhausen, and I annis Xenakis. Nearly three decades later, the dist...
  • Musical And Social Vision Of Ruben Blades
    2,058 words
    During the 1950's a man who revolutionized salsa with his incredible political conscious lyrics was born. To be more specific he was born on the 16th of July in 1948. He was born into a working family who lived in an old neighborhood in Panama. A mere boy at just four and he knew how to read and write because of his grandmother. His grandmother always stayed in his heart and was the subject to one of his future songs. Ruben Blades grandmother was an early feminist who sent only her daughters to ...
  • Dixie Chicks
    1,541 words
    Country music has been typecast. Maybe it's America's fault. Maybe it's the musicians fault. Nonetheless, it has been typecast. Tragic? Maybe. There are of course, the artists that have tried to escape the confines of the red-necked, inbred, "howdy folks" generalization country musicians have been known to fall under. Most of these musicians have been unable to achieve their goals: either they are accepted by the American pop-culture, and become lorn by the country world; or they are unable to "...
  • Hymn In A Folk Song
    3,110 words
    Amazing Grace: The Journey of an Unforgettable Hymn? Henry Braithwaite Music 205 3/27/0 How does a hymn become so universal? Where does it gain its ability to be transformed into almost every style of music known to man? The hymn? Amazing Grace? is such a hymn. Its existence has been marked by evolutions upon evolution in its use, but has always remained the same in its meaning and effect. To trace the path of this hymn's existence, one must begin in England. From there it has blossomed and spre...

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