BELIEVE
BELIEVE
BELIEVE
that Jesus is NOW bringing YOU
LIFE
in fabulous
ABUNDANCE
No need to worry!
Eternal life and joy starts now! Drink up!
Enjoy God's love boat!
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No musical group or third party bears any responsibility for content.
Q. What's the difference between a bluegrass band and a rock band?Daryl, guitar; Mikyl, fiddle; and Randyl, banjo and dobro.
A. A rock band plays all night and never tunes. A bluegrass band tunes all night and never plays.
Until the 1920s, the music business was dominated not by major record labels, but by song publishers and big vaudeville and theater concerns. In those days, sheet music consistently outsold records of the same hit songs, proving that most of the music heard in homes and in public back then was played by people, not record players. A hit song’s sheet music often sold in the millions between 1910 and 1920. Recorded versions of these songs were at first just seen as a way to promote the sheet music, and were usually released only after sheet music sales began falling.In 1920, an 18-year-old Kansan, Ralph Peer, was hired as recording director for OKeh Records in New York after a stint in Kansas City working for Columbia Records. Two years earlier, OKeh had been founded by Otto K.E. Heinemann in New York. Heinemann wished to go beyond the standard fare of the era -- popular songs, dance numbers and vaudeville skits -- and record music that would appeal to the great waves of European immigrants across America.
Records grew steadily in popularity throughout that time, though, with sales going from 4 million units per year in 1900 to 30 million in 1909, and to over 100 million per year by 1920. But in relative terms, records were still a small part of the entertainment pie, and recording them in the years before 1910 was no more exciting for musicians than acting in early films was for stage actors. Both film and records were considered novelties. Live shows remained the main income source for musicians, and songwriters lived off of sheet music and performance royalties.
The toughest songs in the world to write are love songs. "I love you and I will forever, blah blah blah." I prefer a song about a relationship that’s a little bit shaky or even tragic. That represents country music and the drama of the man-woman thing. That’s the most fun to write. [7]Of course adherents of the Nashville Sound might on occasion cross the line and do a Bluegrass standard like "Rolling in My Sweet Baby's Arms," as Jones and Wynette did for a TV show.
From left, Emmett Franz, dobro; Karen Petersen, bass, and her offspring: Ellen Haygood, banjo; Julianne, mandolin; Matt, guitar; and Katie, fiddle.
chek out dat rock mando