Tag Archives: singing

Musicals: Movies and TV shows

I watch musicals whenever I can.

I just love them.  Do you?

You can learn a lot about singing presentations and what works well by watching how others do it.  And movies and TV shows especially if you own them and can return often. The singers in these can inspire and instruct.

So why not start your own collection of musicals now.

Here are some suggestions:

Jay Beacham,

Are you looking for something in our Musicals and Performing Arts Movies & TV Shows department? If so, you might be interested in these items.

Musicals and Performing Arts Movies & TV Shows
Music Man
Music Man
Robert Preston (Actor), Shirley Jones (Actor), Morton Dacosta(Director) | Format: DVD
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Meredith Willson's The Music Man (TV Film)
Meredith Willson’s The Music Man (TV Film)
Matthew Broderick (Actor), Kristin Chenoweth (Actor), Jeff Bleckner(Director) | Format: DVD
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My Fair Lady
My Fair Lady
Audrey Hepburn (Actor), Rex Harrison (Actor), George Cukor(Director) | Format: DVD
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The Rodgers & Hammerstein Collection (The Sound of Music / The King and I / Oklahoma! / South Pacific / State Fair / Carousel)
The Rodgers & Hammerstein Collection
Julie Andrews (Actor), Christopher Plummer (Actor), Fred Zinnemann (Director), Henry King (Director) | Format: DVD
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Singin in the Rain 60th Anniversary
Singin in the Rain 60th Anniversary
Debbie Reynolds (Actor), Donald O’connor (Actor), Gene Kelly(Director), Stanley Donen (Director) | Format: DVD
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Hello, Dolly! Widescreen Edition
Hello, Dolly! Widescreen Edition
Barbra Streisand (Actor), Walter Matthau (Actor), Gene Kelly(Director) | Format: DVD
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Fiddler on the Roof
Fiddler on the Roof
Topol (Actor), Patience Collier (Actor) | Format: DVD
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Oklahoma! (50th Anniversary Edition)
Oklahoma! (50th Anniversary Edition)
Gordon MacRae (Actor), Gloria Grahame (Actor), Fred Zinnemann(Director) | Format: DVD
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The King And I
The King And I
Yul Brynner (Actor), Deborah Kerr (Actor), Walter Lang (Director) |Format: DVD
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South Pacific (Collector's Edition)
South Pacific (Collector’s Edition)
Rossano Brazzi (Actor), Mitzi Gaynor (Actor), Joshua Logan(Director) | Format: DVD
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TCM Greatest Classic Films Collection: Broadway Musicals (Show Boat / Annie Get Your Gun / Kiss Me Kate / Seven Brides for Seven Brothers)
TCM Greatest Classic Films Collection: Broadway Musicals
Howard Keel (Actor), Kathryn Grayson (Actor) | Format: DVD
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Guys & Dolls
Guys & Dolls
Roddy Mcdowall (Actor), Marlon Brando (Actor), Robert Louis Stevenson (Director), Joseph L. Mankiewicz (Director) | Format:DVD
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< See even more similar items
 Well don’t have anything else to say so catch you next time.

Jay

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Singing is healthy for body and mind and soul

 

Singing is healthy for body and mind and soul.

If singing is important physical health what about mental and emotional health?

Well it is for me.

The air(oxygen) that gets into the body helps the body be healthier and then the mental disposition is elevated.  When i’m depressed or sad, singing lifts my spirits and gives me hope that things will be better and improve. Hard to stay sad when one is singing. Isn’t this what Neil Diamonds song “Song Sung Blue” talks about?

“Song Sung Blue”
(The words in bold type are showing the therapeuticness of singing.)

Song sung blue, everybody knows one
Song sung blue, every garden grows oneMe and you are subject to
The blues now and then
But when you take the blues
And make a song
You sing ’em out again
You sing ’em out againSong sung blue, weeping like a willow
Song sung blue, sleeping on my pillow
Funny thing,
But you can sing it with a cry in your voice
And before you know it get to feeling good
You simply got no choiceMe and you are subject to
The blues now and then
But when you take the blues
And make a song
You sing ’em out again

Song sung blue, weeping like a willow
Song sung blue, sleeping on my pillow
Funny thing,
But you can sing it with a cry in your voice
And before you know it start to feeling good
You simply got no choice

Song sung blue
Song sung blue
Funny thing,
But you can sing it with a cry in your voice

 

When my wife died young, I threw myself into singing in choirs, groups, musicals and the like. I didn’t have time to feel sorry for myself. I didn’t really cry which is very important to emotional healing. Several year later while driving home from work I was singing a happy song and started crying about her death. It Had to come and it did because of singing a song.  Later I watched a musical on TV and the singing brought tears again. Part of an important healing process after the loss of a loved one.

Scientists don’t call this evidence so here are somethings that can add proof to my personal experiences.

Many studies have shown that music listening can enhance the emotional and cognitive functioning of patients affected by various neurological conditions.  http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2996848/

  • Listening to preferred music stimulates the release of dopamine (the brain neurochemical responsible for pleasure and reward), reducing the use of opiate drugs in postoperative pain
  • Singing can increase levels of Immunoglobulin A and decrease levels of stress
  • Singing increases levels of oxytocin promoting social affiliation
  • Music is shown to modify and regulate automatic systems such as: heart rate, respiration rate, perspiration and other automatic systems                                                   http://singfit.com/2013/clinical-research-on-the-benefits-of-singing/

Therapeutic effects of music and singing for older people:  Two reviews and 16 research reports were identified, the majority of which were intervention studies. All the studies reported benefits from music or singing for older people. Positive findings related to dementia, specific disorders (osteoarthritis pain, post-operative delirium, sleep difficulties, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), and older people living at home. Recommendations for nursing were made, although there is a need for clarification on how nursing interventions should be implemented.

Read More: http://rcnpublishing.com/doi/abs/10.7748/ns2010.01.24.19.35.c7446?journalCode=ns

Here are two more resources that help verify my statement about emotional and mental health benefits derived from singing.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_therapy

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23259231

Okay so it’s healthy.

Now How does your health effect your singing?

Steve Lowell makes some good points about good health being needed for good singing in the following excerpt from this article:

“Why “living healthy matters no matter what”

This is the type of truth that so many respond with, “Yeah, I know that.”, and still it deserves a reminder. Perhaps I was lucky enough to learn this lesson at  a  young age while in school for musical theater.

A friend of mine who had the lead in a musical that required a strong singing voice, got drunk after an opening night celebration and contracted mononucleosis. He lost his voice for two months, and it took over a year before his voice/throat fully recovered. It was the perfect “teaching story” that professors loved to throw at us when they feared we were about to do something unhealthy before a show or audition. The fact is every single thing that we do to our bodies, in forms of exercise, food, drink, and sleep, affects the way our voice sounds. If you sound perfect for an audition one day, and the next day sound like a different person due to the way you treat your body, you no longer sound like “what they need” and in essence you did not do your job as a voice actor.

I mention this because many getting into the business make the mistake of treating it as “paid to talk”, which is a trivial way to look at it. You have to take care of your health in order to make sure your voice is strong enough to audition everyday. Maybe this is more relevant for voice actors who deal with cold winters during the holiday season, but even during warmer months it should still be remembered that the “way you sound” may be a reflection of “how well you are taking care of yourself.”

This quote always sticks out in my mind:

“You have to keep fit being a singer. That’s part of the job. You can’t do it unless you have incredible stamina.”

– Roger Daltry, The Who

Granted he is a singer, but doing 20 – 40 auditions a day requires stamina. Losing your voice means losing money. Your voice is extremely sensitive and needs to be protected.” http://www.bodalgo.com/blog/two-truths-online-voice-casting/#comment-6170

Thanks, Steve

Are you sad or discouraged? Start singing!

Angry, upset, frustrated? Solution? Singing!

I heard of two men who were to blows all the time.  They went to a mutual church leader who listened to their concerns about each other and then asked the two to sing hymns together and their anger vanished.

This works with children, married couples, any group that have ill feelings.

Yes in my opinion, singing is good for mental and emotional as well as physical health and all these areas of our lives work together anyway.

Well, I’m done for today.

Catch you next time.

Jay

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Breathing when singing

Breathing when singing.

How do you breath when singing or talking for that matter?

Here is a short video presenting some ideas about it.

 

 

Lena Horne used her nostrils and just opening her mouth to let the air in.

check her out singing: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Omb2kItC-JY

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Others don’t but gasp for air.

Here’s an example of an air sucker behind a recording I did:

http://www.singsnap.com/karaoke/r/b9af327c8

Using air sucking for dramatic effect is a proper use in singing.

Here’s an example from the Pirates of Penzance, where the Major General sings:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zSGWoXDFM64

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Which do you prefer?

For a pleasant listen it is best to learn breath control for microphones pick up every little sound even our breathing.

Do you breath with ease?

Andrea Bocelli sings almost effortlessly:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ekU7fHgjsGs

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With your diaphragm?

Here is a link to a good article about it:

 

Correct Breathing and ‘Support’ for Singing

And two video lessons by Chip Jenkins, where she shows how to use the diaphragm and gives exercises to do:

photo    default

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CXoHdl_eitA

and by Sue Govali , where she goes through exercises:

photo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wGx9Cr6jPHU

 

With your chest?

This comment is applicable:

on 01 Apr 2017 at 10:39 am Dedicated server

 

Exploring the physiological reasons for good posture and effective breathing is introduced when the student is old enough to begin understanding the science behind what we aim to do as singers. As a voice teacher, I feel it is important for each student to understand how his or her instrument works and why.

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Singing update from 4/2009

 Today on my main page, JayBeacham.com, there was a visitor from the Czech Republic who went to a post I’d done back in April of 2009 on the old MySpace. I’m glad that I reposted it in it’s entirety, as My Space deleted everyone’s accounts earlier this year.

It was about singing and so I want to repost it and let you readers think about the points I raised then.

“Last year in July, I started on the karaoke available here on My Space.

I did the ten free songs. One I re-did.  I’ve gotten some nice compliments and some more critical too. But as I wrote on July 11, 08, this is for fun not to try to impress anyone. I’ll probably pay for a year when I can afford to and try some more.
And singing can be fun.
The computer I now have actually plays the recordings so I can listen to other great singers and even some not so great. But like I said then if you’ve got the guts to try, that says a lot.
I hate auditions. Let me explain. Once I did an audition for a college group. I passed the first one and then for the second one I changed songs. A mistake I’m sure. I didn’t really like the rules of the group.  And even though the group represented the university, students were the judges. They were kind but the audience, mostly the girls would have stoned me I’m sure had rocks been available. I didn’t get in but lost no tears over it.
Still I dislike auditions as generally the director of, say a play, picks who he or she wants or thinks will fit the part. I know this having been a director myself..
At another college audition, a non-singer got a singing part because the director had promised him a part. The funny thing about that was that at the performance time many of the fine singers had the flu and sounded worse than the non-singer did. But the play’s several showings went well anyway inspite of some less than perfect warbling.
Fast forward to 2009, I was very impressed with Susan Boyle and Paul Potts on Britains’s Got Talent. They both proved what I’ve always said: “Many of the best singers, male and female, and actors and actresses will never get the chance to be known by the world.” Its great that they got their chance.
Also on that series, a trio of young girls (Soul something or other) started but were stopped by the judges who exclaimed that they were very bad. And they did this in a less than kind fashion. The one girl admitted that they were perhaps bad but that their rude handling by the judges was not right. I agree. I think that it would take a lot of courage to go onto a TV broadcast and before an audience of 4000.  This should have at least brought an acknowledgement of their bravery if nothing else.
The girl had another good point, Wouldn’t it be great if the judges there or in any such thing, performed something to show that they had a right to judge?
I’ve been to karaoke nights where when things are slow or not very good, the DJ will do a song or two to demonstrate how it can be done. They are always very good but of course they do have an advantage having heard the arrangement and practiced before showing up that night, where the audience members have no clue what is even available before that evening.
A member of the Master Singers, a male chorus I belong to, and his wife stopped me at the Boy Scout Expo this morning to ask why I was missing practices. I’ve been busy with Lincoln Shows and my own storytelling-singing shows. Sunday we are to sing in a Church service. Not having practiced, I’ll not go.
I have been invited to join the Southern Utah Heritage Choir by two of its members. That’s twice in a week. They go to Singapore in October to sing. It would be fun. But what with dues, travel costs and lost wages,etc.(I can sing in the church choir for free). Etc. being that planes and I don’t get along to well. Which brings me to my close. I leave you today with my poem to airsickness.
To Airsickness
When I was but a little lad,
I used to think I’d be quite glad
To be above the clouds, you see,
My parents would be proud of me.
But since I’ve grown a little bit,
I’ve several times been forced to sit
Aboard those airplanes, both big and small,
And pleasure from the flying feat
Was all lost there in my seat.
You think it funny, what I say?
I used the bag again today,
And rued the day as little lad
I’d thought that flying would make me glad.

Jay”

I made several points and this was basically just telling about what I’d been doing in the area of singing but the points about rude judges and rude audiences in singing, rodeo or whatever are worth your consideration. Those judges and audiences ought to be chastised and should be made to try the feat themselves before being critical of those who do try. Those who try should be applauded for their courage and willingness to try difficult tasks before an audience.

What do you think?

Catch you next time.

Jay Beacham

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Singing’s Popularity/It Changes The Brain

I’m tired and don’t want to write a post like I didn’t last week.

But while Facebooking tonight, I came across this Update by Brodie Perry and recommend you all read it

https://www.facebook.com/brodie.perry/posts/10151780828334347?notif_t=close_friend_activity

And follow the link to “Singing Changes Your Brain”

It’s well worth it.

Just like this site purports, Singing is fun and healthy.

http://singingasong.net/

Catch you later.

Jay

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Is singing healthy?

Is singing healthy? You bet it is.

A friend, Ginny, needed oxygen and was very unhealthy in her early 60s. After her husband died, she started doing Karaoke singing on line and threw away the oxygen bottle and became healthy and a good singer. Now in her 70s, she is happily re-married and happy with a healthy life that singing enhanced.

My Mother died last year in June at 96 years. One of her last activities was singing to the nurses and all her guests one day.

One of my all time favorite female vocalists is Deanna (Edna May) Durbin.     She died just last month on April 20th. Though she gave up professional singing in 1949, she told a reporter that she still sang an hour a day.       Learn more about this great singer at:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deanna_Durbin                                        (Wikipedia has some fine reports.)

Last year in 2012, two great male vocalist went on to join the Heavenly Choirs.   Tony Martin and Andy Williams.

Tony Martin (December 25, 1913 – July 27, 2012), born Alvin Morris, was an American actor/singer, was married to performer Cyd Charisse for 60 years. He was 99.  Learn more at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Martin_(American_singer)

Andy Williams died at 85.  Get the scoop on his life at: http://www.biography.com/people/andy-williams-162966

Country legend Kitty Wells 92 and Andy Griffin 86.

We all have to die and some earlier than others but singing can contribute to a happy and healthy life.                                                                            Good breathing, getting emotions out, and just the joy of it.  All that and more helps us be healthier.

Keep singing and be healthy.

 

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Singing – How to Start Learning to Sing

An article about singing the I want to share as it has some good points. But I’ll put my thoughts in brackets where I think they fit. Okay? Let’s start.

“Singing is one of life’s real joys and can be the source of immense pleasure and satisfaction for singer and listener alike. With the popularity of shows such as X Factor around, more and more people are giving it a shot. However, it seems to me that the vast majority don’t consider for one minute that singing incorrectly can in fact cause long term damage to your voice.”(no, I’d say perfect practice makes perfect and bad practice makes bad.)    “So if you want to sing, where should you start?”

“Well, first of all, you must understand that the voice is a natural, acoustic instrument. There is a correct, natural and safe way to sing, but unfortunately many many ways you should not sing. If you are trying to teach yourself to sing, the likelihood is that you will experiment with a number of these incorrect and potentially harmful methods. You can in fact cause damage to your voice by singing incorrectly over long periods of time.”

(Singing is just sustained speaking so my video about singing and speaking better, use of the diaphragm, exercises to do for increased lung capacity and articulation that I used are explained in a video. Check it out now.           https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VMA2TGrq2_E  )

“For many people, learning to sing can be incredibly frustrating. It is rare to find somebody who naturally knows how to sing correctly. It is therefore paramount that you obtain quality, proven teaching materials when you begin so that you set off in the right direction. Undoing bad habits later is difficult to do.”

(for a great course in paperback ‘Set Your Voice Free: How to get the Singing of Speaking voice You Want’   http://lnkd.in/rkfvjE )

“If you have a little more money at your disposal, finding a good singing teacher is invaluable. Unfortunately there are many people that say they teach singing but really aren’t qualified to do so. When choosing a teacher, find out as much about them as you can and try and get recommendations from other singers. Does your teacher have a proven history of singing performance? Do they teach not just by lecturing you and showing you diagrams, but by demonstration and a highly hands-on approach?”

“As a guide, when you start singing you should start by understanding the human anatomy in relation to the singing voice, learn correct breathing techniques and exercises using your diaphragm and the correct production of the vowel sounds. If you don’t understand and practice these elements fully and be totally relaxed and confident whilst doing so, it is not a good idea to try and progress any further. You will simply introduce tension into your muscles, start shallow breathing and push and squeeze your voice out. Falling into these traps is not healthy and will not make you a good singer.”

“Singing is all about a harmonious balance of a number of elements of your body; correct stance, relaxation, correct breathing,
tone production, tone placement and resonance. The best way to obtain this balance is to learn the elements step-by-step and in the correct manner. It might seem laborious. You probably want to jump straight in and start singing your favorite songs. But seriously, the methodical approach is the quickest and safest way to learn to sing. With good training materials and a good teacher, it can also be a very enjoyable and rewarding journey.”

This was by a voice couch named Dave.  Well, thanks Dave.

My advise just join a choir* and start. Sing around the house and yard,  in the car, bath, while doing chores, whatever, just be happy and start.

*(David Foster used to sing in boys Choirs and has since boyhood admired the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.  And that lead to this performance by Andrea Bocelli.   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TAFj2-u2cGQ          )

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Songs about the joy of singing

hoveneIn the Movie “It started with Eve” Deanna Durbin sings  happy lyrics to a classic piece of music.  It tells how singing effects her.

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pf5FTANUyV4

I shared a link  to her “Can’t Help Singing” in the post titled:

Singing – Practice the Fun Way

I get revitalized when I’m tired; happy when I’m sad, and just feel better.

How about you?

It’s kind of hard to stay sad when you are singing. I guess that’s what the Neil Diamond song “Song Sung Blue” tells about, what song can do for a person.  Can’t get him here so I recorded a version of the song.

http://www.singsnap.com/karaoke/r/be9ad1dcc

4 women and 1 man commented on my rendition. Now you have a chance but if you can’t say it’s good, don’t say anything please.

What songs can you suggest about the joy of singing?

_____________________________________________________________

I first wrote this post on May 8.2013. But no one has commented so I will. Most comments coming to sites like this are just automated advertising. You must know I won’t approve those.

Singing is joyous!  Just look at those in this street concert audience.

Flashmob Flash Mob – Ode an die Freude ( Ode to Joy ) Beethoven Symphony No.9           http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kbJcQYVtZMo

(performance From May 19, 2012)

 

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Have Fun With Barbershop Singing

Some of the most singing fun I have ever had has been with barbershop quartet singing.  The organized group is the Barbershop Harmony Society, legally and historically named the Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America, Inc.(SPEBSQSA).  Their practice sessions are really fun.  Ladies have their own group the  Sweet Adelines International (SAI).

(SPEBSQSA), is the first of several organizations to promote and preserve barbershop music as an art form. Founded by Owen C. Cash and Rupert I. Hall in Tulsa, Oklahoma in 1938, the organization quickly grew, promoting barbershop harmony among men of all ages. As of 2012, just under 25,000 men in the United States and Canada are members of this organization whose focus is on a cappella music. The international headquarters was in Kenosha, Wisconsin for fifty years before moving to Nashville, Tennessee in 2007. http://barbershop.org/

The Ringmasters quartet out of Sweden. One member says he like’s all good music. Watch the following video  at the link above.

Ringmasters on NBC’s Today Show
Thursday, April 11, 2013
The Barbershop Harmony Society is celebrating its 75th Anniversary in high style. Its current champ Ringmasters appeared on NBC’s Today Show on Thursday morning, April 11, singing I Can’t Give You Anything But Love for Today hosts andEight Days A Week for Hoda and Kathy Lee.

Remember the quartet in Music Man?  See the Buffalo Bills  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbhnRuJBHLs

 (SAI) was founded in 1945. A second women’s barbershop harmony organization, Harmony, Inc., broke from SAI in 1959 over an issue of racial exclusion, with SAI (like SPEBSQSA) being a white-only organization at that time. Several international affiliate organizations, in countries around the world, add their own flavor to the signature sound of barbershop harmony.   http://www.sweetadelineintl.org/

Watch  some fine new ladies groups performances at: http://www.sweetadelineintl.org/index.cfm?id=4

Like Mitch Miller (remember his sing-a-long show?) said, “Let’s keep America singing.”

Let’s do!

Get a hold of your local group and start having fun.

 

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Singing With Karaoke-What is Karaoke?

Karaoke is prerecorded music or canned music. You can sing to this music.

 

Karaoke is singing to recorded song music that has the solo vocal track removed; where the singer sings the solo part.  Originating in 1985-1990 meaning in Japanese, = kara empty + oke orchestra.

Here is an online explanation of Karaoke and singing.

“Singing is a pastime that many people love to do and since the implementation of the karaoke machines, many like to practice their singing talents.”  “There are many different styles of karaoke machines available on the market to give participants some alternatives. An all-in-one machine will have the ability to use the player to play regular compact discs and karaoke discs. They have a brightly colored display that shows the words and they are a lightweight unit that is light enough to take the player to another’s house. They have at least one microphone input, but some of them have two. The features may differ between the units, but some other options one may find are, a reverb button, a multiplex button and a pitch changer. These units are great for at home for the kids who want to sing.

A karaoke player looks similar to a DVD player. These units are a little pricier on some, but offer better quality to most of the all-in-one home units. The pitch control, which singers appreciate this amazing item, allows the user to take the song up in pitch, until they can comfortably hum that piece. The low notes will be easier to hit.

There are updated versions being released all the time and for individual users the karaoke player connects to a TV in a brief time, which makes it simple to connect and unplug as one uses it. The price ranges great depending on the quality and the trait found on a unit. Some karaoke disc companies make the CDs and each company releases their own soundtrack of songs per disc. They average in price of around twenty dollars and the number of songs varies between companies. Some of the discs offer the singers two versions of a song. One version is to hear and learn the song with an artist, and the other version has background music only, with home singers providing the vocals.”

I have cassette with radio option machines that are battery and electricity operated machines. I have one with a CD player too and I have one that uses 8 track tapes that sound fantastic. If it works and has a microphone, you don’t need a video display to show you the bouncing ball in order to have fun singing.  You can even find musicians who perform at care centers and assisted living centers and join them and then you’ll have live music and don’t have to rely on a machine.

There are many online Karaoke sites with free to paid memberships, you just need a cell phone, lap top, or desk top computer and you are in the business of having fun with Karaoke sing along. Everything the article writer talks about is online and at a lower cost.

There are three fine sites with links on the home page. Check into it.

http://singingasong.net/

There are contests too in Karaoke. This one is a big deal each year in Las Vegas:

THE WORLD SERIES OF KARAOKE

Check them out: http://theworldseriesofkaraoke.com/

‘Til next time, this is Jay Beacham signing off.

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