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Tech: Nintendo DS Will Finish 2007 as the Year’s Top-Selling Video Game System

December 13, 2007

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   Tech: Nintendo DS Will Finish 2007 as the Year’s Top-Selling Video Game System

     Appeal to Core and Casual Gamers Keeps Portable System Going Strong

    REDMOND, Wash., Dec. 11 /PRNewswire/ — While many eyes are focused on
home video game consoles, Nintendo projects Nintendo DS(TM) to be the
top-selling system of the year. More than 6 million Nintendo DS portable video
game systems have sold in the United States in 2007 through Nov. 30, according
to internal Nintendo of America Inc. sales numbers. That’s a rate of about one
sold every five seconds of 2007, enough to project Nintendo DS will be the
top-selling video game system of any kind for the year. Nintendo DS has
increased its sales in the United States every year since it launched in
November 2004.
    (Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20071211/LATU123-a )
    (Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20071211/LATU123-b )
    “There’s no letup in sight,” says George Harrison, Nintendo of America’s
senior vice president of marketing and corporate communications. “Nintendo DS
appeals strongly to both core and casual gamers, and its momentum is set to
propel us into 2008.”
    Nintendo DS began 2007 strong, but its momentum only increased as the year
progressed. Before 2007, Game Boy(R) Advance held the all-time U.S.
Thanksgiving week sales record, with 600,000 systems sold in 2005. But
Nintendo DS beat that Thanksgiving week record with more than 650,000 sold.
    The huge appeal of Nintendo DS stems from the diversity of software
available for the system. Four Nintendo DS games have sold more than 2 million
in the United States alone, including New Super Mario Bros.(R), Mario Kart(R)
DS, Pokemon(R) Diamond and Super Mario(R) 64 DS. Another eight games have sold
more than 1 million each in the United States, including Brain Age(TM): Train
Your Brain in Minutes a Day, Pokemon(R) Pearl, Animal Crossing(R): Wild World,
Big Brain Academy(TM) and four separate versions of Nintendogs(TM).
    The worldwide innovator in the creation of interactive entertainment,
Nintendo Co., Ltd., of Kyoto, Japan, manufactures and markets hardware and
software for its Wii(TM), Nintendo DS(TM), Game Boy(R) Advance and Nintendo
GameCube(TM) systems. Since 1983, Nintendo has sold nearly 2.5 billion video
games and more than 430 million hardware units globally, and has created
industry icons like Mario(TM), Donkey Kong(R), Metroid(R), Zelda(TM) and
Pokemon(R). A wholly owned subsidiary, Nintendo of America Inc., based in
Redmond, Wash., serves as headquarters for Nintendo’s operations in the
Western Hemisphere. For more information about Nintendo, visit the company’s
Web site at http://www.nintendo.com.

ITUNES BEST SELLING MUSIC and CDS FOR 2007

December 13, 2007

ITUNES BEST SELLING MUSIC and CDS FOR 2007
ITUNES BEST-SELLING ALBUMS OF 2007
1. Maroon 5 It Won’t Be Soon Before Long
2. Amy Winehouse Back To Black
3. Kanye West Graduation
4. Daughtry Daughtry
5. Colbie Caillat Coco
6. Linkin Park Minutes to Midnight
7. Various Artists High School Musical 2 (Original Soundtrack)
8. Timbaland Shock Value
9. John Mayer Continuum
10. Various Artists Hairspray (Soundtrack to the Motion Picture)
ITUNES BEST-SELLING SONGS OF 2007
1. Fergie “Big Girls Don’t Cry (Personal)”
2. Gwen Stefani “The Sweet Escape”
3. Plain White T’s “Hey There Delilah”
4. Avril Lavigne “Girlfriend”
5. Fergie “Glamorous”
6. Kanye West “Stronger”
7. Maroon 5 “Makes Me Wonder”
8. Akon “Don’t Matter”
9. Timbaland “The Way I Are (feat. Keri Hilson & D.O.E.)
10. Shop Boyz “Party Like a Rock Star”


Billy Atwell explains his wants for Xmas in interview

December 13, 2007

Billy Atwell explains his wants for Xmas in interview
 
For the Holidays:
1.
What do you need for Xmas?

New glasses.

2. What are your party plans for News Years Eve? Going anywhere special?

Playing to several thousand people at Seacrets in Ocean City, MD with my cover band Big Bang Baby. We will be shooting a DVD that night, too. Should be a blast!

3. What are your New Years Resolutions?

Increase business and expand my resources for teaching, recording, gigging, composing. The usual stuff. Certainly hope to spend more quality time with my family doing things that helps us remember the little things in the rat race of life.

For 2008:
1.
Any new tours or album details we should know about?

Not sure. I’ve been negligent composing my own stuff and focusing more on the role of producer and freelance drummer. I could get on a roll and come up with more stuff without even thinking about it. I threw a track on myspace the other day and referenced a hypothetical release in ‘09 called “Black Insect Jacket”. At least I have a title!

2. How will your band change over the next year? Any different outlook?

I’m going to start learning more about sequencing software and virtual synths to lean heavier on an electronica/abstract direction (pending of course that my clients are into it). Hopefully I’ll get better at managing deposits and things so that if?a project?takes longer than expected I don’t sell myself short or get hung up for weeks with no revenue because someone gets a chest infection and can’t sing. That type of stuff.

3. What do you think illegal music downloaders should know about for 2008? How is it directly affecting you as an artist? If you could do something about it, what would it be?

I’m not the guy to enlighten people who make a game of getting over on people and stealing their work on a daily basis. I can hear a nation of Beavis and Buttheads going, “Heh, heh, heh…I didn’t pay ANYTHING for it! Heh, heh, heh.” I just don’t agree with it. On the other hand there isn’t much to do about it because these aren’t the days of vinyl. Back then kids didn’t have a way to cut vinyl in their bedrooms?or convert it to a format to?carry on like?Johnny Tastemaker and the Nanosecond Attention Span All-Stars. Ah…the days of leaving the arm up on the turntable to listen to side one of Zeppelin’s “Houses Of The Holy”…Aerosmith’s “Rocks”…side two of Cheap Trick’s “Live At Budokan” over and over again…alas.

As far as effecting me it makes less sense to worry about it in terms of what my old friend Steve Taylor calls the “opportunist’s rescue fantasy on a grande scale”. In other words, I don’t really have to sit around and think about working with artists based on selling them to a record company for a five album deal and a big advance. Artists now have creative power unlike many years back and are really grasping at straws for anyone’s attention that’ll pony up and buy SOMETHING from them. I’m aiming at new talent, the unheard, the underdog and little guy…I’m trying to help them find a voice at a fraction of the cost and a minimal amount of paperwork. A modern day Sam Phillips if I may be so bold. The industry is such a crapshoot that all I can really hope to do is work like a paint contractor…?look at the house, talk about how to spruce it up, do it, get paid and offer a firm handshake. If they get a deal, great, maybe I’ll negotiate for a backend percentage for working as inexpensively as I do. However with more and more artists putting out their own stuff (outside of the clutching hands of the pop star/glossy/15-minutes-of-”fame” frying pan) we can get down to the work, create some lasting recordings and let the marketing details work themselves out. Post the tracks on?free streaming audio sites?to encourage gigs and a fanbase? Great. Release it in limited CD form to sell at shows and as digital downloads? Makes sense. Send it to radio stations for airplay? Awesome. License it in a major or independent film? Best option yet because that’s where the money is.

I’m not sure anything can be done about it at this point. The problem was always all the middle-men jacking up the retail price of a CD. Had the industry have taken note of a label like Dischord that made the packaging minimal but functional and touted the option to buy direct postage paid for a modest fee to be determined we probably wouldn’t have the backlash of copyright theft that we have now.?It was also pure folly to drop the ball on reinvesting profits into artist development rather than creating?new personas, cashing in and getting out. Disposable music for disposable palettes. I still buy CD’s. Depending on the artist, the release and my certainty in it’s longevity in my collection I may buy it used. I still like to look at artwork no matter how small it is.

Besides, mp3’s sound like ass most of the time.

4. Out of all the positive things that the Internet can do for you as an artist, what has it been?

It’s a great advertising medium. Direct marketing. Awesome. I don’t use robot hardware to try and sell stuff to people who are into stuff that might sound like my stuff. And I can’t stand artists who do. I’m either too lazy or just can’t be that phony. I’d like to think it’s the latter. It’s really cool to be able to actually compliment someone directly on their work or even have infrequent correspondence with them. I dont’ remember that stuff happening before the Internet save for the first wave of ’80’s American hardcore when DIY was in full swing. That seemed like a really vital underground scene. I’ll go out of my way to buy something new as a gesture to the industry: “Yes! SOMEONE actually likes this crazy s**t enough to pay retail for it! Let’s push it!!!”

5. Are you more optimistic or pessimistic for 2008 compared to 2007?

Bush getting out of office can only be a good thing. That’s enough and really is all that matters at this point. If we get another Republican president I’m going to have to consider alot of things all over again. Hopefully people are tired of doing without, being lied to and manipulated and being scared by fear mongers with secret agendas. So much of the world’s history and stabilization is hanging on next year’s election that I can’t really tell my what my full resolve will be until the results are in. And hopefully those won’t be manipulated by someone’s family that can shamelessly take care of “their own”.

Billy Atwell
Composer/Producer/Instrumentalist
www.billyatwell.com
www.ampaudio.net
Hoboken, NJ

Alfred Introduces Star Wars: A Musical and Movie Journey

December 13, 2007

Alfred Introduces Star Wars: A Musical and Movie Journey

Alfred Presents a New Voyage

Star Wars: A Musical Journey

(Music from Episodes I-VI)

Piano Solos & Easy Piano

 

LOS ANGELES, CA — December 12, 2007

Alfred is thrilled to release an all-new sheet music anthology featuring the greatest hits from the epic Star Wars series.

 

For the first time, Alfred introduces a piano sheet music collection that encompasses the entire Star Wars saga all in one compelling volume!  Set amid stunning imagery from the films, the piano arrangements bring the magic of Star Wars to life as they masterfully invoke the grand romanticism of John Williams’ epic, award-winning scores. The most definitive and memorable pieces from each of the six Star Wars episodes are included.

 

“Star Wars: A Musical Journey (Music from Episodes I -VI )” is now available in two versions: a Piano Solos edition for advanced players, retailing at $19.95, and an Easy Piano edition for piano students, arranged by Dan Coates, retailing at $16.95.  To get your copies, visit dealer.alfred.com  or call (800) 292-6122. 

 

Titles: 20th Century Fox Fanfare · Star Wars Main Title · Duel of the Fates · Anakin’s Theme · Across the Stars (Love Theme) · Battle of the Heroes · The Imperial March · Jawa Sandcrawler · Binary Sunset · Cantina Band · Princess Leia’s Theme · Ben’s Death / TIE Fighter Attack · Yoda’s Theme · Luke and Leia · Forest Battle · May the Force Be with You · The Throne Room.

ABOUT ALFRED

Since its inception in 1922, Alfred Publishing remains dedicated to helping people experience the joy of making music. With hundreds of expert authors and composers backed by a talented staff in seven offices worldwide, Alfred publishes educational, reference, pop, and performance pieces for teachers, students, hobbyists and performers spanning every musical instrument, style, and difficulty level.

 

Alfred currently has over 45,000 active print, DVD, software, general MIDI, audio CD and enhanced CD titles in circulation throughout the world. Titles represent a full range of musical tastes and styles, including the works of George and Ira Gershwin, Duke Ellington, Henry Mancini, Led Zeppelin, the Eagles, Madonna, Green Day, and hundreds more. In addition to its own titles, Alfred distributes works from the National Guitar Workshop, the Dover Music catalog, and Faber Music.

Rick Derringer music interview

December 13, 2007

Rick Derringer music interview
 
Recently, Living Legends Music had the opportunity to catch up with Legendary
Guitar player, Rick Derringer. Regardless of whether you go back to 1965 when
his band The McCoys bumped the Beatles’ song “Yesterday” out of the number one slot, or you just finished playing Guitar Hero to “Rock N’ Roll Hoochie Coo,”
Rick Derringer’s music has been in your world, forty-two years and counting!
 
Here are Rick’s thoughts…………………………..
 
 
On getting gigs as a fourteen year old starting out in Dayton Ohio.
 
Its funny, my dad helped a little bit, he was kind out a manager or what
would be a road manager today. We just started out gathering a reputation.
Anything we could do to get our name out there we would do.
We would play for a Kiwanis meeting or a used car lot opening, pretty soon people starting saying “hey those kids are pretty good”. We had no real manager or agent.
Pretty soon the McCoys were playing for radio station concerts and opening up for
big groups and that’s how we got the opportunity to record Hang on Sloopy.
 
The events leading up to the first Number One Hit.
 
At the New York World’s Fair in 1964 we met a band called the Coronados who were also record producers. They brought us into the studio to record Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow which we all thought would be a huge hit, it wasn’t.
We went back to Ohio and continued to do what we had been doing previously for about another year. Then a band called the Strangeloves came to Dayton who were also record producers. Bang Records had asked them to go find a band that looked just like the Beatles. They wanted someone to record My girl Sloopy which was number one on the R & B charts. By coincidence, the day we were scheduled to play as their backup band we had all gone out to buy Beatles suits because we liked them and wanted to look just like them, haircuts and all. They said one of the songs they wanted to do was play My Girl Sloopy and we went wild because we loved that song and already knew it real well.
Since they hadn’t found the band they wanted and it was the last show on the tour,
The Strangeloves brought us to New York the very next day to record. After we recorded it, the engineers went wild yelling Number 1, Number 1. Within a few weeks it went all the way to number 1.
 
 
The recording process for Hang on Sloopy
 
We did a four track recording, same as you do today we put down the tracks without the vocals and they recorded an acetate copy and they gave us a portable player which was battery powered and very rare in 1965. We rehearsed the vocals over and over again in Central Park to get ready to do the vocals the following week. With four tracks in those days they were able to bounce tracks around a little but if you bounced too many times you would lose the fidelity. We ended up with a stereo Hang on Sloopy Track and then two tracks of vocals. By the time it became a hit, technology was moving so quickly that they ended up remastering it and simulating stereo.
 
 
 
 
 
Early defining moment of success.
 
It became a hit very quickly but very soon we were traveling through Washington DC and listening to the Huntley Brinkley report which was the big evening news program of the day in 1965. The report was that today, the Russians have decided to play Rock & Roll for the first time. They said today in Red Square, the Communists have broadcast
Rock & Roll. The camera panned to an antique outdoor loudspeaker and out of it was blasting Hang on Sloopy so that really blew us away.
 
On new ventures
 
 
We do all kinds of recordings together as a family. We have a Christian CD out as
a family called Aiming for Heaven which has covers songs and originals, plus a Christmas album. My wife Jenda is a great writer and comes from a family of writers.
Both of us have teamed up and we use our talents together.
 
On my recent jazz album called Free Ride my wife wrote the song Hot and cool.
It was in the top twenty for five months on the Billboard charts. The CD was top forty
for the year and that was the first time we venture into a jazz project.
 
On Changes in the music business
 
When I was a kid the big thing was that the era of the Big Bands is over and it was.
Today, the music business as we knew it is dead. Rolling Stone had an article about
new bands and a full page of photos. They asked how easy it was to recognize faces
And it was almost impossible to tell. The music business that I knew created big stars,
You could look at a picture and say, look, that’s Jimmy Hendrix, or there’s a shot of Robert Plant. Now there is music and it liked by people but the way it use to function
is over. However it has opened the doors for someone like me to do whatever they want.
I can go into the studio and record whatever I want. We record Christian, jazz, rock,
The sky’s the limit. My wife and I just recorded a country song and now it’s easier than ever to release a record. You don’t even have to worry about a record company. We
Send it to a company like IODA and they distribute to all the outlets on the internet.
So you can send it to one company and they take care of distribution and you have just released a song. You really don’t have to worry about getting a record deal. What you
Are going to get back is not going to be the same thing. It may not big a big album hit
But you do get the opportunity to get your music out to people and they can buy if they
Want to or not. So from that point of view it is freer and more open than it has ever been and that’s cool!
 
In 2008
 
I am currently touring with my new band, and playing the Rock & Pop Masters tour
with Larry Hoppen of Orleans and David Pack from Ambrosia. Next year I have
a reunion with my band Derringer and we open up in Sweden and we just released
a DVD from a show we did in Germany. We will also play Europe with both Edgar Winter and Johnny Winter.
 
Look for the entire Rick Derringer interview with video clips coming to
Living Legends Music early in 2008.
 
Peter Blackshaw
www.livinglegendsmusic.com
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Funny Brian Posehn movies on Karl Rove and Jo Koy

December 13, 2007

Funny Brian Posehn music videos on Karl Rove and Jo Koy

Just wanted to give you a quick heads up about two exclusive, embeddable stand-up videos recently posted over at Comedy Central’s Indecision 2008 site. Click on the links below to check out Brian Posehn on Karl Rove and Jo Koy on the importance of political awareness: 

BEATLES DVD- DESTINATION HAMBURG

December 13, 2007

BEATLES - DESTINATION HAMBURG
From the formation of the Quarrymen in 1957, and The Beatles early years in Hamburg, this 60 minute music documentary uses contemporary film, and recently rediscovered and restored footage to tell the definitive story of The Beatles, their rise to international stardom and their crowning as one of the most successful bands of all time. Containing rare and exclusive interviews from those who knew them best and featuring the musical recordings of Tony Sheridan, an early collaborator of The Beatles, Destination Hamburg is the ultimate Beatles DVD!

Bonus Materials:

  • Kenny Everett Radio Interviews with Paul McCartney, John Lennon and Ringo Starr
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