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Thursday, October 15, 2015

The Beatlemania born

When the Beatles took the stage on Oct. 13, 1963, to perform on the variety show Sunday Night at the London Palladium, they were four lads armed with the simple tools of their early classics: a bass, two guitars and a drum kit.
The psychedelia, the massive studio productions, the brilliance and adoration, suspicion and disintegration — those were years away. In this moment, cited widely as the birth of Beatlemania, it was simply JohnPaulGeorge and Ringo, setting their homeland on fire.
The Beatles’ first smash single in the U.K., “Please Please Me,” hit No. 1 on the chart in early 1963; a full-length LP of the same name was released in March. “From Me to You” and “She Loves You” came next. When the Fabs appeared on the Palladium telecast, they had already completed three tours of the U.K. that year; a fourth would begin on Nov. 1.
In other words, this was a country primed to explode with mania over these four guys. It was the insanity surrounding this single TV appearance that brought the group fully to the attention of the national media and inspired newspapers to invent the term “Beatlemania” to describe this phenomenon. It was unique at the time, mobs of teenage girls filling the streets and caterwauling on Sunday night television over a pop group. Since then, we’ve seen everyone from Leif Garrett to Justin Bieber inspire similar squeals; it all began in London on this day.
You can find the full performance on YouTube (or at least the audio), and it’s like a strange transmission from another planet. There’s the constant buzz of teenage screams over everything, then what sounds like cavemen beating on rocks to the ear of a modern listener. There’s the brute force of hard-earned experience in their licks and riffs, honed playing multi-hour sets in the rock clubs of Hamburg, Germany.
The Beatles weren’t innovators in 1963, though they soon would be. They were using the same building blocks that birthed Chuck BerryElvis Presley and rock ‘n’ roll pioneers who influenced them. It was the blues, soul, gospel, and a sprinkle of pop showmanship for extra added spice. Still, when the Beatles brought those ingredients together, something new emerged, something primal. It’s the sound of modern pop music being forcefully willed into existence.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Scorpions-You and I

One of the best Rock balands...

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

REM-Losing my Religion


Led Zeppelin-Whole lotta love you


The history of ROCK







The history of rock music isn't cut and dry. Many individuals debate who the first rock singer was and what the first rock song was. However, it is known that the history of rock music comes from the old R&B mixed with some country and western and fused with a little rockabilly.

The exact time period that the history or rock music started in is not known. There were rock and roll elements showing up in blues songs and old country western songs as far back as the 20's and 30's. By the 1950's the history or rock music had begun.
The phrase rock and roll used to have a sexual connotation attached to it. The phrase sometimes contained to two meanings. It appeared to mean dancing but was also associated with sex. It was first used in the title of Trixi Smith's 1920's song, “My baby rocks me with one steady roll.” However, it was Alan Freed a disc jockey from Ohio that first came up with the phrase rock and roll in 1955. With that, the history of rock music was well under way.
As stated before, just who started the history of rock music is under debate. This is because rock and roll music evolved from different genres and some songs that belonged to the blues, jazz, country, and gospel genres offered elements that could be considered rock and roll. However, it was Bill Haley's song, “Rock around the clock” that became popular enough to top the Billboard music charts.

Rolling Stones-Full concert (12/18/1981)


The true story of Nirvana (Documentary)


Sunday, October 4, 2015

BOB MARLEY concert 11/30/1979


                                                      Enjoy the legend of reggae                                                               

Rolling Stones-Paint it black


Nirvana-Smell like teen spirit


Break on through(DOORS)


Saturday, October 3, 2015

Janet Jackson burnitup lyric-video

Listen To Will Smith’s First New Song In 10 Years

We may think of Will Smith primarily as an actor these days, but let’s not forget his accomplished rap career. He has multiple #1 singles, platinum albums and Grammys. But he hasn’t dropped new music since 2005’s Lost and Found album.Or, at least, he hadn’t until Friday (Oct. 2).https://youtu.be/K5c3cxNLwYQ
For his return to music, the 47-year-old linked with the Columbian band Bomba Estéreo for a remix of their track “Fiesta.” He starts rapping at about the 1:05 mark for a quick verse, before coming back in towards the end of the song.A couple notable things here (beyond, obviously, that this exists): He weaves some Spanish into his verse; and he says “hot sh-t,” at one point, which is a bit of a surprise for a dude who historically hasn’t cursed in his raps.If you’re wondering why he made his return to rhyme on this particular song — which, I hope, you are wondering — the answer is actually simple.According to ABC, Will heard the band on a recent trip to Columbia and told them he wanted to work together.“When I was told that Will Smith wanted to collaborate on a remix with Bomba, I couldn’t believe it,” the band’s founder, Simon Mejia, said in a statement. “This opportunity to work with Will was beyond anything we have dreamed of… It’s just magic.”They’ve reportedly already shot a video.Bomba Estereo scored a couple nominations for the upcoming Latin Grammys — including for Record of the Year for the original version of “Fiesta” — and Will congratulated the band on Facebook last week.Could this mean more new music from the Fresh Prince before long?“I went into the studio with Kanye,” he said back in February. “I’m thinking about it. I’m exploring. I’m not sure what I’m going to do yet but I’m exploring. I’m in a creative ceiling.”Yeezy’s not the only one who is encouraging the Grammy winner to get back in the booth. His son Jaden — who is a rapper himself — has been giving his old man some tips.“My son tells me I have to write out the things I don’t like,” Smith said in that same interview. “I can’t write and stop, I have to keep going and going and write them out. I’ve never worked like that before but I think I might give that a shot.”And, while this may be his first new verse in a decade, he’s been rehashing old favorites of late, like when he rapped the theme song to “Fresh Prince” and performed “Summertime” on “The Ellen DeGenerees Show” earlier this year.

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Hello everyone

Hello this is a new blog for music.
Enjoy