happysoundsuk
happysoundsuk
HappySoundsUK
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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These 4 guitar exercises will improve your finger dexterity
1. Lateral spider exercise
Take your playing to new levels with four exercises designed to develop your finger independence, dexterity, and the brain power needed to coordinate tricky fretting moves.
2. Chromatic twister
This lick is designed to get all four fingers moving. The move from second to third finger is particularly fiendish, so take your time building up the speed.
3. String skip legato
This exercise is tough on the fret hand thanks to the string skips and hammer-ons. Aim for a steady, even flow of notes. For more of a challenge, move the lick to lower strings.
Typewriter lick
The idea here is to play the repeating note with each of your fretting fingers, one after the other. The repetition is a great way to check that your thumb is in the best position.
About Happy Sound Productions –
Happy sounds is about positive vibrations regardless of the genre, An endless passion for music,for voices for discovery, for people, for life.
Its warm padded sounds to make you feel alive. Big Phat Funky Bass lines to rumble your tummy. Sounds to trigger happiness and inspire the soul. Emotive music to lift your spirits and boost happy vibes!
Nurture the souls of listeners with emotive and healing vibrations to encourage and boost positive feelings for happiness in life. The selection is UPLIFTING MELODIES RHYTHMS HOOKS & LYRICS that create happiness for positivity for everyone.
Happy sounds is about giving back and giving emotive people a platform that resonates above and gets the attention it deserves. It’s about caring and sharing. It’s about giving the talented a chance to be enjoyed.
Running parallel to Happy sounds is Top singers UK which is the management and care package. Bringing the collective together and putting people in the right place for growth to help raw talent to shine.
Just to give an insight into the sounds check out and scroll through to FEEL GOOD!
Source & Credits – https://www.musicradar.com/news/4-guitar-exercises
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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6 tips for musicians on getting gigs and promoting them
There’s more competition than ever, and in an environment where many grassroots music venues have been forced to close, it can be tough to get your foot in the door, or rather, on to the stage.
To help you along the way, here are 10 tips for sizing-up your local scene, presenting your band to potential bookers, promoting your gigs and packing-out venues…
1. Find out what’s going on near you
Follow local venues and events organisers on social media and sign up to their mailing lists so if they’re on the hunt for acts, you’ll be first to know. Follow other local bands so if they put a shout out for a support act, you’ll be ready to show your interest.
It’s also worth being aware of regular fixtures, such as Independent Venue Week which comes round every year in January. Perhaps a venue near you runs some mixed program festivals or has an all-dayer with a partial line-up confirmed. If you can identify a particular event or season where a local venue is looking to support up-and-coming bands, this can be a good in-road.
2. Try and identify suitable venues
A lot of venues will offer a varied program of music, but some are more specialised. If there’s a venue that particularly suits your genre and style, you’ll be in with a good chance of making a compelling case for playing there.
Similarly, it’s worth taking note of potential venues’ capacities. Naturally, it makes sense to start small and work your way up. If word spreads that your band played a brilliant sold out gig at a small local venue, you may be able to use this as a springboard for playing a bigger one next time.
3. Make it easy for the person considering booking your band
When you’re getting ready to contact a venue, it’s worth bearing in mind that they probably receive a lot of gig applicants every day. If you can show that you’ve considered what you’re sending, made it concise, informative and easy to view, you’ll be in with more of a chance than someone who has written too little, too much, or failed to highlight the things that make their band interesting and potentially saleable.
It’s a good idea to create a pack or ‘EPK’ containing press and live shots, your logo, a short bio (written in third person) and links to your social media pages. Don’t forget the music. Have a couple of your finest tracks prepared, or better still a high quality live performance video. Chances are, a venue or promoter will prefer to receive these as links, rather than whopping files that might break their inbox. Pick the things that show what you do best, including review snippets and previous performances at comparable venues or with notable acts.
4. Find out who the right person to contact is
Social media has a lot of uses when it comes to gig promotion, but if you approach a venue this way to ask for a gig, chances are you won’t be reaching the music programmer. Most venue websites will list their programmer’s name and email (although you might have to do some digging).
Call them by their name and send an email that is tailored to them, or, better still, give them a call or arrange to pop in for a chat. As with lots of other things in life, booking gigs is considerably easier if you can form a rapport with the person in charge.
5. Don’t dwell on the gigs you didn’t get
Sometimes you’ll get a knock-back from a venue, get told there’s no availability, or (sad but true as it can be) receive no response at all. This can be disheartening, but unfortunately it’s part of the process. Some comfort can be taken from the fact that this will have happened to just about every successful band at some stage in their career.
If a venue offers some constructive points to learn from, great. If not, it’s simply a case of moving on, practicing hard and showing them what they missed later down the line.
6. Manage your financial expectations (but not too much)
Bands should absolutely receive money to perform, so it’s a gargantuan red flag if you are actually asked to pay to play somewhere, as can happen – particularly in larger cities. When it comes to money, there are a few different arrangements you might encounter, which have differing levels of risk and reward.
Bookings with guaranteed fees are ideal because you know exactly what you’ll be getting. Due to the level of risk this may bring to the venue (who will also have to take into account overheads and staffing costs) these gigs can be hard to come by, especially if you’re not an established name just yet.
Therefore, it can be a smart idea to ask for a co-promotion with a ticket split rather than a guarantee. This will show the venue that you’re willing to work to promote the event because the amount of tickets sold directly impacts the amount of money you’ll earn. In many cases, a co-pro will actually work out better for both parties than a booking with a guarantee, which is likely to be on the conservative side to reduce the venue’s risk.
You may be offered the option of hiring the venue. This can be a good route if you are confident about filling the space, but an arrangement like this shifts all risk on to the band, and it’s possible to make a loss if you don’t sell enough tickets.
About Happy Sound Productions –
Happy sounds is about positive vibrations regardless of the genre, An endless passion for music,for voices for discovery, for people, for life.
Its warm padded sounds to make you feel alive. Big Phat Funky Bass lines to rumble your tummy. Sounds to trigger happiness and inspire the soul. Emotive music to lift your spirits and boost happy vibes!
Nurture the souls of listeners with emotive and healing vibrations to encourage and boost positive feelings for happiness in life. The selection is UPLIFTING MELODIES RHYTHMS HOOKS & LYRICS that create happiness for positivity for everyone.
Happy sounds is about giving back and giving emotive people a platform that resonates above and gets the attention it deserves. It’s about caring and sharing. It’s about giving the talented a chance to be enjoyed.
Running parallel to Happy sounds is Top singers UK which is the management and care package. Bringing the collective together and putting people in the right place for growth to help raw talent to shine.
Just to give an insight into the sounds check out and scroll through to FEEL GOOD!
Source & Credits  – https://www.musicradar.com/news/getting-gigs-musicians
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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4 ways to play guitar like George Harrison
George Harrison was the archetypal lead guitarist. Like all great players, his style was the result of an eclectic mix of influences. Big Bill Broonzy, Django Reinhardt, Slim Whitman, Chet Atkins, Carl Perkins and Lonnie Donegan were all inspiration for the young Harrison.
By listening to a wide range of styles – blues, jazz, country, rockabilly and skiffle – he was able to develop his own individual sound and identity. Learning his craft by copying the playing he heard on records, George demonstrated a fluent soloing style from the start of The Beatles’ career. His role in the band was clearly defined as that of the ‘lead’ guitarist, adding memorable riffs, licks and solos that defined the band’s sound.
1. Outline the changes
This example illustrates George Harrison’s country influences and, in particular, how a mixture of open-string lines, partial chords and single-note lines can all be used to outline a chord progression.
2. Transposing pentatonic ideas
By working out the licks of American blues guitarists, George realised that the minor pentatonic scale could be transposed to ‘fit’ each chord in a 12-bar sequence.
The opening E minor pentatonic lick in this example is transposed down a 4th so that it can be repeated over the B chord in bar 3.
3. Carl Perkins and rockabilly influences
George’s rockabilly influences are outlined here in this Carl Perkins-style lick. Use alternate down-up style eighth-note picking throughout for best results, keeping your fretting hand in 2nd position (ie, with your first finger at the 2nd fret).
4. 12-string electric style
George Harrison is well known for using a Rickenbacker 12-string electric guitar. The rich sound of the 12-string guitar allowed him to outline simple melodic ideas without any dropout in the fullness of the sound.
About Happy Sound Productions –
Happy sounds is about positive vibrations regardless of the genre, An endless passion for music,for voices for discovery, for people, for life.
Its warm padded sounds to make you feel alive. Big Phat Funky Bass lines to rumble your tummy. Sounds to trigger happiness and inspire the soul. Emotive music to lift your spirits and boost happy vibes!
Nurture the souls of listeners with emotive and healing vibrations to encourage and boost positive feelings for happiness in life. The selection is UPLIFTING MELODIES RHYTHMS HOOKS & LYRICS that create happiness for positivity for everyone.
Happy sounds is about giving back and giving emotive people a platform that resonates above and gets the attention it deserves. It’s about caring and sharing. It’s about giving the talented a chance to be enjoyed.
Running parallel to Happy sounds is Top singers UK which is the management and care package. Bringing the collective together and putting people in the right place for growth to help raw talent to shine.
Just to give an insight into the sounds check out and scroll through to FEEL GOOD!
Source & Credits – https://www.musicradar.com/news/george-harrison-guitar-lesson
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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happysoundsuk · 4 years ago
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3rd June
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