Who Are the World’s Richest Musicians? [Infographic]

rock_starsThis week we learned that Mariah Carey would replace Jennifer Lopez on American Idol — and would become the highest paid reality show judge of all time. You can just add that to her endorsement deals, Home Shopping Network deal, and, you know, her whole recording career.

2012 is shaping up to be a great year for Forbes-worthy musicians: Dr. Dre’s Beats Electronics acquired MOG, Jay-Z’s Brooklyn Nets completed their billion-dollar stadium, and Bono’s private equity firm saw its investment in Facebook pay off. How do they stack up against other millionaire (and billionaire) musicians? Check out the infographic below.

richest-rockstars

Music From A Tree [Video]

[pb_vidembed title=”” caption=”” url=”http://vimeo.com/5583313″ type=”vem” w=”600″ h=”338″]In the garden of my house there’s a tree with lots of randomly grown twigs. It looks odd and nice at the same time. One day I asked myself if I could create a piece of music with it.

To tune the tree I picked a fundamental note and tuned the twigs by trimming them with a pencil sharpener. I used two Røde NT6 and a NTG-2 as microphones, combined with a customized stethoscope.

I recorded the tracks live on a Pro Tools LE system. I didn’t use any synthesizer or sampler to create or modify the sounds. All the sounds come from playing the tree, by bowing the twigs, shaking the leaves, playing rhythms on the cortex and so on.

At this link you can see some pictures with more detailed descriptions: behance.net/Gallery/Music-from-a-Tree/263872

The history of rock ‘n roll in 100 riffs [video]

[pb_vidembed title=”100 Riffs” caption=”” url=”http://vimeo.com/43426940″ type=”vem” w=”600″ h=”338″]

What better way to look back on the history of rock than to hear the story from the genre’s signature voice, the guitar?

Alex Chadwick of the Chicago Music Exchange goes from Chet Atkins’ “Mr. Sandman” to St. Vincent’s “Cruel” on his 1958 Fender Strat, so sit back and enjoy.

Didn’t think the death of classical would look quite like this

skull violinTired of people sounding the death knell of your favorite musical instrument? Time to get the last laugh with an electric violin the Grim Reaper would be proud to put a bow to, and remind your friendly critics they’ll be lucky if they’re music is featured on a one-hit-wonder show twenty years from now while you’re still rockin’ the classics.

skull violin

Full story at Electric Violin Shop via Incredible Things.

The 25 Most Powerful Songs of the Past 25 Years

25_powerful_songsThey’re not the most beautiful songs, or the most musically important. In fact, a few could literally drive you nuts. But the following tunes—some as old as Mozart, others as current as Beyoncé—have fundamentally altered the world we live in at some point in the last quarter century. They’ve saved lives, brought glory to America, and gotten teenagers to use deodorant. Somehow, they’ve made a difference. So, ladies and gentlemen, put your hands together for the ultimate power playlist. Let the countdown begin!

25. “The Magic Flute” (Mozart)

Music That Makes Sewage Disappear
For all the chatter about how Mozart makes your kids smarter (false!) or how it helps with the SATs (possibly), the one thing that Mozart definitely seems to do is make sludge-eating microbes digest faster. A sewage treatment plant in Treuenbrietzen, Germany, has experimented with different operas, playing them at high volume through loudspeakers set up around the site. “The Magic Flute” seems to work best. Anton Stucki, the plant’s chief operator, believes the reverberations quicken the pace for breaking down refuse. “We think the secret is in the vibrations of the music, which penetrate everything—including the water, the sewage, and the cells,” he says. “It creates a certain resonance that stimulates the microbes and help them work better.” Stucki doesn’t even like opera; he’s a rock ‘n’ roll fan. But he tolerates Mozart because it makes the microbes more efficient, saving the plant up to $1,250 a month.

24. “867-5309/Jenny” (Tommy Tutone)

The Drunk-Dialing Song
For nearly three decades, this single has been a gift to smashed college kids everywhere. Ever since the song was released in 1982, crank callers have been dialing 867-5309 and asking for “Jenny.” People who are unfortunate enough to be assigned the number can look forward to dozens of prank calls a day, depending on where they live.

A few people have managed to turn the digits to their advantage. In 2004, disc jockey Spencer Potter of Weehawken, N.J., discovered 867-5309 was available in his area code and picked it up, thinking it would be good for business. Almost immediately, Potter was overwhelmed by the volume of calls. So in February 2009, he sold it on eBay to Retro Fitness, a health club that felt the digits fit perfectly with its 1980s-nostalgia theme. In the end, Potter made $186,853.09—a number he could live with.

23. “I Will Always Love You” (Whitney Houston)

The Song That Showed Saddam’s Softer Side

You might think winning elections is easy for dictators—after all, they aren’t running against anyone. But there’s still pageantry involved, which Saddam Hussein took seriously. To win the hearts and minds of Iraqis in 2002, Hussein boldly chose as his campaign anthem an Arabic cover of Whitney Houston’s version of “I Will Always Love You” (written by Dolly Parton). The song was played alongside footage of the dictator kissing babies, shooting guns, and striking heroic poses on Iraq’s three TV stations continuously during the election season. If that’s not proof Hussein tortured his own people, we don’t know what is.

22. “Smells Like Teen Spirit” (Nirvana)

The Tune That Revolutionized the Underarm Industry
Kurt Cobain claimed he didn’t know Teen Spirit was a brand of deodorant when he wrote Nirvana’s 1991 grunge anthem. In fact, the name of the song came from his apartment wall, where a friend had spray-painted “Kurt Smells Like Teen Spirit.” But the song’s impact on the antiperspirant was undeniable. The product’s manufacturer, Mennen, came out with a new tagline: “Do you smell like Teen Spirit?” Sales of the deodorant skyrocketed, and Mennen quickly expanded its line of Teen Spirit products; six months after the song was released, Colgate-Palmolive bought the company for $670 million. Though grunge fans didn’t care so much about how they dressed, apparently they cared how they smelled.

Read the full text here

THE EFFECT OF MUSIC ON LEARNING

Music-Learning

As a lifelong musician and music teacher for over two decades, I have discovered that music impacts us in powerful ways. It can evoke strong emotions, make us want to tap our fingers and feet, and even help with learning and memory.

Pictograms that rock

beatles

Pictogram rock posters provide a visual summary of legendary music acts like The Beatles, Bob Dylan, and David Bowie. Viktor Hertz, the man behind the inventive prints, explains his work:

This is my most ambitious, and maybe also the best, personal work I’ve done so far. I decided to pick a few bands and artists from the rock genre and make pictogram posters for them. Instead of just putting one single pictogram in each poster, like in my previous ‘Pictogram music posters’, I made as many as I could possibly come up with for each artist, and jammed them into one single poster. There is a total of 234 song pictograms in these posters. I started this project Jan 15th 2012, so I’ve been working on this for about five months. I am really happy and proud to be able to present them now.

Full collection at Behance.

Extraordinary Photo Collection Of Unusual Piano Designs

Widely used in classical and jazz music for solo performances, ensemble use, chamber music and accompaniment, piano is one of the most popular instruments in the world. Although not portable and often expensive, the piano’s versatility and ubiquity have made it one of the world’s most familiar musical instruments. The piano has evolved over the last few centuries. Today, one can find customized pianos and piano mods to suit every taste possible right from the aristocratic bureaucrat to the hardened geek. This collection represent you the most creative, stylish and definitely unusual pianos from all the world. These pianos were created by some famous design studios, sometimes in tandem with instrumental manufacturers. Some of them exist on one exemplar. Some of them are available in limited edition and many of them cost more than $100,000. Check them out.

Notice the hockey rink in the middle?

IMAGE SOURCES Copyright @ jungle magazine

Is it the Death of the Concert Ticket?

deathofconcerttickets

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