‘Guitar Hero 5′ (ALL) nline Scavenger Hunt Gets You Free Tickets

The News Review:

- ‘Guitar Hero 5′ (ALL) nline Scavenger Hunt Gets You Free Tickets
- 311 Frontman Nick Hexum: ‘The ES-137 Is The Best Gibson There Is’
- Singer/Songwriter Bryan Clark pens His Home To INSIDE MUSIC RW
- Dynamic Music: Pioneering a Genre
- Jon Lajoie: ne comedian’s scourge on pop music

‘Guitar Hero 5′ (ALL) nline Scavenger Hunt Gets You Free Tickets
WorthPlaying.com
For the first time ever players can customize the make-up of their band by rocking with any combination of instruments in-game: whether it be two guitars and two drums or three guitars and a microphone any combination is possible allowing players to experience music their own way. Brand new innovative easy-to-use gameplay modes like Party Play and RockFest put fun competition and control at center stage as fans tailor the Guitar Hero experience to match their personal style and interests. For extended hours of entertainment downloadable content from Guitar Hero® World Tour will be compatible with the game and will automatically be updated to include all of the upgrades and enhancements of Guitar Hero 5. Guitar Hero launches a unique online scavenger hunt today that invites fans to scour websites TV shows blogs and online media sites to uncover the full list of artists that will appear on Guitar Hero 5 the next version of the most popular music game in the world.

311 Frontman Nick Hexum: ‘The ES-137 Is The Best Gibson There Is’
Gibson
I think that’s what happened to a lot of the other rap rock bands who we probably paved the way for in the mid-’90s. They got bigger than us and then they fell apart because they didn’t have enough focus on their musicianship. I’m 38-years-old and I still take guitar lessons; people need to understand that music is a never-ending journey and you never stop being teachable. Like you just said 311 paved your way for a lot of rap rock bands but it seems like you’ve transcended that scene. Where do you feel like 311 fit in these days? I think we fall under the umbrella of modern rock music but we don’t put it squarely into any kind of scene because we started our own unique way and just stuck to it. If you look at any innovative band that’s what they did: When R.

Singer/Songwriter Bryan Clark pens His Home To INSIDE MUSIC RW
CDInsight
For Clark a world-class guitarist award-winning songwriter and college professor (he teaches at Nashville’s Belmont University School of Music) the taping was a unique experience. “It’s kind of cool to have a TV crew in your living room – not quite what we’re used to at the Clark household” he says with a laugh as he moves his son’s train set to the side. Clark’s new CD is among the Top 5 most-added on the Americana Music chart and recent media coverage includes Country Weekly Flatpicking Guitar and Guitarist Magazine (France). INSIDE MUSIC RW airs in approximately 80 markets including WBK in Bowling Green KY WKAG Hopkinsville KY KLAS-TV ne Las Vegas KXXV Waco TX KCTU-TV 5 in Wichita KS WRDW in Augusta GA WFFT Fox in Fort Wayne IN WHNT-CBS in Huntsville AL WWCI TV10 in Vero Beach FL and on the AMG-TV network. To learn more about Bryan Clark click on www.
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Dynamic Music: Pioneering a Genre
Kombo.com
ur character now has two scenarios: one he charges in guns blazing or two he stealthily avoids conflict by sneaking around the enemies. Given solution one our character hefts a hulking assault rifle and opens fire on the enemies killing one and a ferocious firefight ensues. The music reacts again the beats per minute spike and the music is no longer driven by a lazy guitar but by the pounding pulse of the Latin percussion. The fierce pounding on the skin of the drums nearly coincides with the soft squelch of bullets ripping through flesh. In the opposite situation our character uses shadow and underbrush much more artfully than bullets. The music is quiet but tenuous as if at any moment it could explode into alarm. Percussion is almost non-existent save for the occasional and startling slap from a steel drum.

Jon Lajoie: ne comedian’s scourge on pop music
Punchline Magazine
Can you talk a little bit about how that came about?I started posting stuff earlier but it was mostly short sketches commercials and stuff. The first thing that got popular was the ?High as Fuck? song which was the first time I ever did musical comedy. And I wasn?t really sure about it; I never wanted to be a comedian with an acoustic guitar. But that started getting popular and I thought ?K? and kept going in that direction. And you became an Internet celebrity pretty quickly. At what point did you realize that your videos had really become sort of a phenomenon?When ?Everyday Normal Guy? came along that?s when things really started blowing up. I noticed it when in Montreal where I lived at the time I started getting recognized more for the videos than for the TV show.

Written by admin on May 26th, 2009 with no comments.
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