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~ * josie * ~

Does Music Affect Your Heartbeat? - 0 views

  • There are a lot of different kinds of music. Some of the most popular kinds of music today are rock, techno, hip-hop, and rap. All of those kinds of music affect you in different ways. Other kinds of music are instrumental music, opera, etc. Those kinds of music also affect you. The music that affects you the most is calm music like instrumental or fast music like rock or techno. Rock and techno make you speed up, and instrumental or calm music makes you slow down and feel more calm.
    • ~ * josie * ~
       
      oooooooooooooooooohhh i didnt know this its kind of off topic but i like it it does have music involved
  • Music can also slow down and equalize brain waves. A brain has 4 kinds of waves. It has beta waves, alpha waves, theta waves, and delta waves. When we do daily activities and experience emotions that’s when we use beta waves. Calmness is when we use alpha waves ,when your sleeping you use theta waves , and lastly when you are in deep sleep or in meditation that is when delta waves are used. When your brain waves are slow that is when you are very calm. Different types of music cause different waves. If you listen to calm music then the waves will drop to delta and theta. If you listen to fast or loud music your brain waves will most likely be alpha or beta.
~ * josie * ~

Music Therapy - How and Why Music Therapy Is Effective - 0 views

  • Research has shown that music has a profound effect on your body and psyche. In fact, there’s a growing field of health care known as Music Therapy, which uses music to heal. Those who practice music therapy are finding a benefit in using music to help cancer patients, children with ADD, and others, and even hospitals are beginning to use music and music therapy to help with pain management, to help ward off depression, to promote movement, to calm patients, to ease muscle tension, and for many other benefits that music and music therapy can bring. This is not surprising, as music affects the body and mind in many powerful ways. The following are some of effects of music, which help to explain the effectivene
Jilliane Velazco

The Music Industry's Last Stand Will Be A Music Tax - 0 views

  • They haven’t yet given up on trying to charge for their music, but it’s becoming more and more clear that as long as there is a free alternative (file sharing), the price of music will have to fall towards free.
  • Music Taxes Will Kill Music Innovation
  • Music industry revenues will be a set size, regardless of the quality or type of music they release.
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  • Soon labels will complain that revenues aren’t high enough to sustain their businesses, and demand a higher tax. It will go up, but it will never go down.
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    info about music taxes and prices
Jilliane Velazco

Top music seller's store has no door - Los Angeles Times - 0 views

  • Apple Inc. has surpassed Wal-Mart to become America’s No. 1 music store, the first time that a seller of digital downloads has ever beaten the big CD retailers.
  • Video game companies and other software makers are selling more of their products as downloads rather than CDs.
  • Songs could be downloaded faster than movies or TV shows, both legally and illegally.
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  • devices such as Apple’s iPod made songs easy to listen to anywhere.
  • It said it counted every 12 singles sold as one album, and that Apple probably received a boost during the two months by people cashing in iTunes gift cards – which Wal-Mart and other retailers also sell – received during the holiday season.
  • Apple launched iTunes in 2003, creating an online business model for a music industry that was struggling with plummeting CD sales and online piracy. In addition to selling albums, iTunes offered hundreds of thousands of individual songs for 99 cents each. That was ideal for customers who wanted to buy hot singles or old favorites without buying the whole album.
  • it reported $808 million in revenue for a category that includes iTunes store sales, a 27% jump from the same quarter the previous year.
  • Although Apple has given the music industry a new way to sell songs, it has become so powerful that music companies have sought to help create and fortify potential iTunes rivals.
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    apple is the top seller of music; on and off the computer! =] apple overtakes wal-mart as the biggest US music seller
Jilliane Velazco

Digital Sales Not Enough to Save Music Industry, says JupiterResearch | Tekrati Researc... - 0 views

  • Digital music was a $1.3 billion business in 2007, but it still only comprised 10 percent of consumer music spending
  • compete with Apple and the future of music CD sales.
  • “The challenge remains for the industry to find new ways to compete with Apple, who remains the dominant player for portable media devices,”
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  • it will become even more critical to find new devices paradigms to capture consumer attention and new business models to sell content and services on those devices
  • iTunes and other online music retailers are also changing the way music is purchased. Hot and popular are now giving way to Independent artists who are just as likely and able to make their material available on iTunes and other internet resources.
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    apple is the most popular device/music player and it is hard for other companies to compete with apple and itunes
Jilliane Velazco

Music Industry Proposes a Piracy Surcharge on ISPs - 0 views

  • the music industry is for the first time seriously considering a file sharing surcharge that internet service providers would collect from users.
  • seek an extra fee on broadband connections and to use the money to compensate rights holders for music that's shared online.
  • Griffin's idea is to collect a fee from internet service providers -- something like $5 per user per month -- and put it into a pool that would be used to compensate songwriters, performers, publishers and music labels.
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  • U.S. music sales, which peaked in 1999 at nearly $15 billion, dropped to $11.5 billion in 2006.
  • nearly 20 percent of U.S. internet users downloaded music illegally last year
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    they are thinking about collecting a fee from internet service providers, about $5 per month each user and that money would be used to "compensate songwriters, performers, publishers and music labels".
Jilliane Velazco

Digital Music Sales Grow, but at Slower Rate - New York Times - 0 views

  • worldwide digital music sales rose to $2.9 billion last year, from $2.1 billion a year earlier. That was about 15 percent of overall sales, up from 11 percent a year earlier and less than 1 percent in 2003.
  • yet to make up for the shortfall in sales of compact discs
  • sales of recorded music fell about 10 percent last year, to $17.6 billion
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  • In China, where piracy is rampant, the music industry is considering a lawsuit against Baidu.com, the largest Internet provider
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    music sales are going down; china is considering a lawsuit against Baidu.com
Jilliane Velazco

Online Music Alters Industry Sales Tempo - Los Angeles Times - 0 views

  • A year after Apple Computer Inc. launched its iTunes Music Service, the online music industry is selling songs by the millions
  • Customers at three of the leading online services – iTunes, Musicmatch Inc.’s Musicmatch Downloads and RealNetworks Inc.’s Rhapsody – buy about 10 times as many singles as they do albums. Offline, people buy 50 times more CDs than singles.
  • music lovers buying a few 99-cent singles instead of $15 CDs.
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  • “There’s no money to be made from singles,”
  • Dozens of free networks emerged to let people copy songs from one another’s computers, drawing an estimated 63 million users in the U.S. alone by mid-2003.
  • Apple said the service sold its 50 millionth song March 15.
  • Some online music companies continue to struggle, but the sector is growing fast and steadily.
  • Analysts estimate that the services’ revenue will grow from about $65 million last year to $250 million in 2004, with $120 million or more from downloadable singles
  • CD sales totaled $11.2 billion in the U.S. last year
  • online customers are buying a much broader range of music than is being sold in stores.
  • about 75% of the paid downloads weren’t in Billboard’s Top 200 and about 60% were “catalog,” or older, tracks.
  • more than 63% of the CDs sold in stores last week were new releases.
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    more people have been using piracy instead of buying real cd's from stores
Jilliane Velazco

Music industry: Piracy is choking sales - CNET News - 0 views

  • Worldwide sales of music CDs, records and cassettes fell for the third year in a row
  • rising Internet piracy in the United States,
  • 7 percent drop in global music sales
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  • less willing to buy music on the one hand, and others saying they use downloading to make better-informed purchases on the other hand.
  • Internet services such as Napster and Kazaa contend that record labels are simply not releasing enough good music, and consumers see DVDs as a better value than CDs.
  • piracy has made it easy for many people to get music for free, allowing consumers to download songs and spend their money on DVDs instead.
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    some people say that DVD's are worth better value than CD's, because people use piracy to get the music they want and use their money to buy DVD's.
Jilliane Velazco

CD Sales Fall Faster Than Digital Music Sales Rise. Or Do They? - 0 views

  • “In 2007… Physical sales of CDs and DVDs fell 13 percent to $15.9 billion. Sales of downloaded songs and mobile-phone ringtones rose 34 percent to $2.9 billion.“
  • “piracy is killing the record industry”
  • “physical and digital piracy cost the U.S. music industry alone $5.3 billion“
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  • “30 billion illegal downloads in 2007“
  • “Even the most innovative business models are totally undermined by free music”
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    music sales are going down because of illegal downloads and free music; there were 30 billion illegal downloads in 2007;
Jilliane Velazco

world music --  Encyclopædia Britannica Online School Edition - 0 views

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    world music; foreign music, african music
Jilliane Velazco

How The Music Industry Garnered Record Profits in 2008 | Medialoper - 0 views

  • Chinese Democracy topping 1.5 million in CD sales and downloads
  • after a half-century of people being able to purchase pop music and doing whatever they wished with those purchases, massive restrictions on computer files didn’t make sense to people.
  • “People don’t realize it,” said Stamphammer in a recent interview, “but we started planning for this back during the teen-pop era. In fact, remember when that N’Sync album sold 1.1 million copies in its first week? 50,000 of those were digital files.”
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  • the American Music Industry has never been healthier.
  • they saw it as a marketing opportunity: fans of an artist were marketing that artist to other fans. Using the most powerful tool of all: the artist’s music.
  • What people don’t remember was that the original pricing was 99 cents per song, and $9.99 per album. After about a year, research showed that while people valued their downloads, they didn’t value them in the same way they valued physical media.
  • After all, one of the ongoing complaints about .mp3 files has always been sound quality, and with bandwidth increasing, storage getting cheaper, and portable devices supporting lossless formats, it only makes sense.
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    they noticed a lot of online downloading and illegally downloading, so they lowered prices of music and sales "quadrupled". [iTunes]
~ * josie * ~

Universal, world's largest music company, refuses to renew iTunes contract - Engadget - 0 views

    • ~ * josie * ~
       
      this problem is very serios and i have heard some things about i-tunes and universal and it didnt sound pretty
  • Looks like a pillar of iTunes content might be on the brink of collapse -- Universal Music, the world's largest music business, has officially opted not to renew its contract with Apple for vending music on the iTunes Music Store. We don't know specifically what caused Universal to turn away -- perhaps it's the weight of the rising anti-DRM movement among consumers, or perhaps it's because of Stevie J.'s brash negotiating tactics, continual refusal to hand over iPod cash, or oceanic persistence in keeping tracks locked in at $0.99. Whatever the reason, we can't say we're all that surprised; Universal's been a pain in Apple's ass for years now. So what's the end result? Well, Universal music will still be sold through iTunes at will, so that means consumers can keep buying tracks for the time being, but Apple runs the risk of losing Universal's content on very short notice if the companies don't make happy with one another and put pen to paper once more.
Jilliane Velazco

PowerSearch  Document - 0 views

  • 51 per cent of its earnings over the past year came from digital sales.
  • falling CD sales and illegal downloading.
  • "Some fans only want to buy the physical disc, some only want to buy a ringtone and a T-shirt, others just want a concert ticket, others want to buy a digital album.
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  • worldwide sales of digital music grew by 40 per cent last year
  • CDs would continue to narrow.
  • "Record labels are continually diversifying and moving away from CDs because they know that fans have completely changed the way they are buying music.''
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    fans buy different things of music: physical discs, ringtones and a t-shirt, a concert ticket, or a digital album; worldwide sales of digital music grew by 40% last year
Jilliane Velazco

iTunes Boasts Second Place For Music Sales, Hits Milestones; Legal music downloads now ... - 0 views

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    iTunes music sales are doing great; they have had over 50 million customers
kathleen mcclung

People listen to music for different reasons and at different times. Why is music imp -... - 0 views

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    tells how music is a must for people around the world
Jilliane Velazco

Digital sales boost music industry - Entertainment News, Music News, Media - Variety - 0 views

  • Album sales dropped for a seventh consecutive year, but a dramatic increase in the sale of digital tracks helped keep the music industry afloat in 2006.
  • "High School Musical" is the first soundtrack to become the No. 1 album since "Titanic" sold 9.3 million copies in 2002, a feat that should have Disney -- an indie in the recorded music field -- smiling.
  • aimed at tweens
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  • the number of albums sold as downloads doubled from 2005
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    album sales drop again; high school musical was the 1st soundtrack to become the #1 album since Titanic; "no major label act could beat a TV soundtrack aimed at tweens".
Jilliane Velazco

iTunes Boasts Second Place For Music Sales, Hits Milestones; Legal music downloads now ... - 0 views

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    iTunes music sales are doing great; they have had over 50 million customers.
Jilliane Velazco

Music industry's got the blues: Global sales fell 3% in 2006 - USATODAY.com - 0 views

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    there have been more online music sales than regular cd's from stores
Jilliane Velazco

The music industry | From major to minor | The Economist - 0 views

  • the results from 2007 confirm what EMI's focus group showed: that the record industry's main product, the CD, which in 2006 accounted for over 80% of total global sales, is rapidly fading away.
  • the volume of physical albums sold dropped by 19% in 2007
  • For the first half of 2007, sales of music on CD and other physical formats fell by 6% in Britain, by 9% in Japan, France and Spain, by 12% in Italy, 14% in Australia and 21% in Canada.
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  • “In 2007 it became clear that the recorded-music industry is contracting and that it will be a very different beast from what it was in the 20th century,”
  • Warner Music's share price has fallen to $4.75, 72% lower than its IPO price in 2005
  • They now want to move beyond Apple's iTunes and its paid-for downloads.
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    info about music industries; record labels; cd sales and how they have gone down
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