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    Explore the impact of digital technologies on the music industries In recent years, digital technologies have changed dramatically, consequentially having a significant impact on the music industry, who have been forced to alter their methods of production; to counteract the increased fickleness of music audiences, whose tastes are ever-changing and seek instant gratification. The evolution of the music industry has been acutely influenced by the developments in technology. It could be argued

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    This essay will discuss both the positives and negatives of the Internet and how it has impacted on the music industry. Piracy, distribution and networking are just some of the aspects that have drastically changed the music scene since the arrival of the Internet. Has the Internet changed the music industry for the better or worse? In the early 1960s a computer scientist called J. C. R. Licklider proposed “the concept of a Galactic Network”. Investintech (2009) Licklider could see that having

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    MUS 354 exam 2 c

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    MUS 354: The Beatles After the Beatles (Fall B 2013) You are signed in as: Pan Chen Top of Form Sign Out Bottom of Form Home Classroom Exams/Assignments Grades Help Exam #2 Time Limit 50 minutes Starting Time 10:18 pm Arizona time Top of Form 1 In April of 1979, a U.S. court finds the Beatle 's former manager _________ guilty of tax evasion and he is sentenced to serve two months of a two-year sentence in prison.  Brian Epstein  Mal Evans  Allen Klein  George Martin  Pete Best 2 ____________

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    The origins of the Cold War from 1917-1945, the United States was faced with tough times during the 20’s and 30’s. The Great Depression led Americans to question capitalism due to Russia and their communist beliefs doing well, even though Americans had no true context of what was really going on in. This helped enforce the Soviets goal of international prestige. The Soviet sports system introduced the raise the psychological and physical standards of their athletes by socializing social engineering

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    1920/30's Jazz Influence

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    The Jazz Age was a cultural tectonic shift that took place in America during the 1920’s, or "the Roaring Twenties”, from which both jazz music and dance emerged. This movement was coupled with both the equally phenomenal introduction of mainstream radio and the conclusion of World War I. Although the era ended as the Great Depression victimised America in the 1930's, jazz has lived on in American pop culture. The birth of jazz music is often credited to African Americans, though it didn’t take long

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    young people – as they were an important part of socialist society – should no longer be ignored. Therefore, music from the West was allowed to be broadcast on radio stations (most popular was the youth station “DT64”), special editions of famous musicians like Jimi Hendrix, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and so on were released, and local bands were allowed again to perform in newly founded music clubs and discotheques. In 1973, with the establishment of the Committee for Entertainment Music as

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    Radio: A Form of Communication Physics Idoh Gersten Mr. Zambizi Physics March 12, 1995 Radio is a form of communication in which intelligence is transmitted without wires from one point to another by means of electromagnetic waves. Early forms of communication over great distances were the telephone and the telegraph. They required wires between the sender and receiver. Radio, on the other hand, requires no such physical connection. It relies on the radiation

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    can deny that no greater event impacted today's pop culture than "Beatlemania". But not everyone has heard the story behind the Beatles, who were they? How did they become the band and how did they make it big? What's the story of their struggle? Before researching, I already knew a lot about the Beatles. I knew that the band was made up of John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr. They started the famous "British Invasion" of the 1960's on American pop/rock music, and they started

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    Grease Essay

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    rock and roll era in the 50s that influenced the writers of this stage musical turned movie? Also, how did this type of film affect the popular culture of the past and of today? That is the basis of this paper…. Grease began as a five-hour long amateur show presented in a Chicago trolley barn in the summer of 1971 and eventually made Broadway. The film version of "Grease" began almost immediately. It debuted in 1978, becoming the biggest grossing movie musical in film history. Its eight-year

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    “Misfit today, Icon tomorrow” The song Hey Yeah is written and sung by Outkast’s Andre 3000. Anyone who has ever the song knows how incredibly happy the beat sounds and the lyrics appear but it is not until you shut off the music that you truly begin to understand the dark tale being told. The artist himself even says in the song,” Y'all don't want me here you just want to dance.” He is saying you are so distracted listening to the upbeat rhythm and exciting dance theme you never realize that the

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