Saturday, July 14, 2012

Windows 7 Ultimate Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) - A Quick Fix

Ultimate Blues
Windows 7 Ultimate Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) - A Quick Fix


By Shane Z

Are you experiencing Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) on Windows 7 Ultimate? This is a common problem reported by Ultimate users. In this situation, computer restarts unexpectedly.

Below are outlined few steps to fix Windows 7 Ultimate Blue Screen of Death.
When there is problem with RAM of your system then it would lead you to BSOD regardless of Windows version. There is tool known as Windows Memory Diagnostic that helps you to detect and fix problems with memory.

1. Click on Start Button on the desktop. 

2. In the search box type "Windows Memory Diagnostic" without quotes. 

3. Find it form the search results. 
4. Now click on "Restart now and check for problems" option. 
5. Follow the instructions.


In many cases Window 7 Ultimate Blue Screen of Death appears on screen when there is problem in the registry of operating system. Information inside registry is stored in the form of keys/entries. When we uninstall any program from our computer then it leaves behind traces in registry. And when we install a new version or application then these invalid traces are overlapped with correct registry entries.

To fix this problem download, install and run a reliable registry cleaner and PC optimizer tool on your computer.

In Windows 7 Ultimate there is tool know as Device Manager which is used to manage the devices connected to your computer. Using that tool you can remove unsupported devices. To do that, below are few simple steps:

1. Click on Start button. 


2. In the search box type "device manager" without quotes. 


3. Expand all the categories and check those devices which have a cross mark before their names. Devices with cross (x) mark are unsupported and may be causing Windows 7 Ultimate BSOD. 

4. Right-Click on the device having cross mark (x) and uninstall it from Windows 7 Ultimate.


Try to unplug the device that you recently attached to your computer, just to make sure if its causing Windows 7 Ultimate BSOD on your computer. You may check whether hardware is compatible with Windows 7 or not. It is printed on hardware's manual normally that "Compatible with Windows 7" or "Designed for Windows 7".

Another tip is to disable antivirus program running on your computer. If BSOD no longer appears then contact the antivirus software manufacturer or start using another antivirus program in your system.
Also restore your system to original state by applying following steps.

1. Click on Start button. 

2. Go to All Programs. 

3. Select Accessories. 
4. Now click on System Tools. 
5. And select System Restore. 
6. Now select the option that allows you to restore system to earlier state. 
7. Follow the instructions. 
8. You are done.


Fixing registry related issues is a must thing to prevent BSOD. If there is problem in registry then you won't be able to permanently fix Windows problems including Window 7 Ultimate BSOD. That's reason you have to use a reliable registry cleaner.
Here is globally recommended Intel Software Partner, RegInOut which has an inbuilt Windows7 Registry Cleaner.

CLICK HERE  Blues Music downloads to download it safely on your computer.

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Hammock Therapy For The Winter Blues

Escaping the Delta: Robert Johnson and the Invention of the Blues

By Lisa Zartman
Do the shortened hours of daylight and the colder days of winter cause you to feel the "winter blues"? If you notice that you feel a bit gloomy some days, there are some fairly simple things that you can do to brighten up your day and your mood! This is not to be confused with a true, clinical depression, that may require medication, although, even if you do require medication for a depression condition, they may still help you. Swaying in a hammock or a hammock chair, is a relaxing, yet uplifting, activity.

 There is no other feeling quite like it! Choosing one will depend on the space allowed in your home, and a bit of creative thinking. A hammock chair can be hung from the ceiling in a corner of your room, or a hammock chair stand can be used. If the space in your home allows, a hammock, hung from the wall, ceiling, or in a stand, in a large room, is equally beneficial. You can spread out and lay down in a hammock, yet, some hammock chairs allow you to completely stretch your feet out, also, so choose wisely. Find a color or print that makes you feel good, and will look nice in your room. It doesn't have to be the same color, just look appealing as an accent piece. Spend some time here reading an uplifting book or listening to music that you enjoy. Be sure to choose music that lifts your spirits, not lonesome or sad music, that makes you want to cry. If you can place it near a fireplace or a sunny window, then all the better. Make it a priority to spend some time in your special spot every day, even if only a short time is available. It will become your haven, and when you sit or lay down there, you will start to feel better.

Some other actions you can take, that are great for lifting spirits, are adding some bright colors, scattered here and there, throughout your home. A bright, pretty vase on your kitchen or dining room table, with a fresh flower bouquet, will make you smile every time you look at it! Just add that to your grocery list each week! The grocery store flowers are just fine, and you will never miss the money. In fact, they will bring you so much more in enjoyment. Aroma therapy is a wonderful way to lift spirits, by way of candles or essential oils, in a diffuser. There is much study on this, so oneSo, picture this: it is a gloomy, winter's day, and you are feeling down. You recognize this, so you grab your book, put on some uplifting music, light a candle, and head for your haven, your beautiful new hammock chair, in your favorite color! You stretch your feet out, take a few deep breaths, open your book, and realize, you are already feeling brighter!
Author: Lisa Zartman
Great selection of hammocks, hammock chairs, and stands. Beat the winter blues here: http://bluesmusicshop.blogspot.com/

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Electric Blues Guitar Lessons

                                        Electric Blues

                                                        Electric Blues 



By Paul Gian
At a fundamental level all guitars are the same - whether acoustic or electric. Generally both have six strings and are played in exactly the same way. However, when you talk about subtleties they can be very different. As the complexity of musical elements increases in a song, the appropriateness of one or the other usually becomes clear. Electric guitars are by nature rather sensitive; it can be a positive or a negative factor depending upon the situation. The electric blues guitar lessons can teach you how to gain maximum mileage from your electric instrument.

Regardless of the guitar type the basics of the blues music remain the same. Hence, your lessons will be generally focused on open and moveable blues chords, chord progressions, 12 bar blues format, common blues scales and picking techniques, common blues strumming patterns, etc. The advanced lessons should focus on improvising solos. Good lessons make use of quality videos, slow speed demonstrations, and jams tracks for practice.

When it comes to playing lead techniques, electric guitars are better than their acoustic counterparts. While acoustic guitars can handle chords very well, the sound is not quite rich and the notes don't hold longer. The electric guitars can provide much color to the solos with the notes that can sustain for longer periods of time.

Subtle techniques such as harmonics, different types of bendings, vibratos, etc are more cleanly played on the electric guitar. But on the flip side, you have to exercise proper muting and control to maintain the sound quality. You can't ignore the effects of the amplifier and the electronic circuitry on the final sound reaching the audience. So, it is better to familiarize yourself with the electronic paraphernalia that is as important as the guitar itself.

Professionally designed electric blues guitar lessons will try to make best use of the plus points of the electric guitar and caution you about things that can adversely affect the final sound. DVD lessons are now very commonly available. When recorded at higher resolutions and with proper camera angles and close-ups, the videos are highly effective in explaining subtle techniques.

No doubt, an electric guitar is a wonderful instrument and using it effectively is the aim of your blues lessons. But don't ignore the other instrument accompanying it - that's you! You are not playing the guitar only by fingers; your ears also have to get good training with your practice. Only trained ears of a guitarist can guide the fingers to make pleasing music.

Find Out More About Electric Blues Guitar Lessons? Get Your Professional Blues Guitar Book Here.

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Saturday, July 7, 2012

Playing Acoustic Blues Guitarguitar, acoustic guitar, blues guitar

Playing Acoustic Blues Guitar

Cleaning House





By Ricky Sharples
Well, it is around the hundred year mark since the world first started noticing blues guitar players. Of course they were all acoustic guitar pickers then because they had very few places to plug their electric guitars in, but they made the best of what they had. Just as a basic first impression, I would say that blues guitar players kind of favor acoustic guitar every bit as much as electric guitar. A glaring example is the success Eric Clapton had with his Unplugged album, but there are plenty of other electric blues players who are on record playing acoustic guitar. Even Jimi Hendrix appeared on TV playing some acoustic blues songs.

Acoustic blues guitar was brought to the world by the likes of by Robert Johnson, Bill Broonzy, and Rev. Gary Davis. Fingerpicking acoustic blues uses your thumb to play the bass notes while the first and second fingers play the melody. Bear in mind that the thumb is responsible for keeping time, so it will take some time getting your fingers to work independently but it will be worth it. Rev. Gary Davis was an acoustic blues player who used his thumb to strum the chords and only his index finger to play the melody.

Lightnin' Hopkins was another acoustic blues player whose style was out of step with fashion when he was trying to make his way as a guitar player in his youth. Hopkins grew up listening to music played by bands but he learnt to play the guitar in isolation from other musicians. So he developed a guitar style that imitated a band playing lead, rhythm and bass. He even provided his own percussion by slapping the body of the guitar.

The secret to playing lots of acoustic blues songs is in learning a basic chord sequence. A one, four, five progression - for example C, F and G or G, C and D usually make an acoustic blues guitar chord sequence. Listening to the music of Mississippi John Hurt is a good way to get started on acoustic blues. His early career as a blues performer was hampered by his guitar and vocals being too subtle and expressive than was fashionable at the time.

You can do a web search for lessons on how to play acoustic blues guitar like the great bluesmen of the past, but as a general introduction to playing acoustic fingerstyle guitar, you cannot go wrong with the guitar technique known as "Travis Picking". The basis of this style is to use the thumb, first, second and third fingers of the right hand to pick the strings in a predetermined sequence while the left hand plays chords. This is the basic idea of the style, but once you can perform this kind of picking with ease, you will find that you will begin to develop your own musical ideas that allow you to depart from rigidly playing standard chords and the same right hand picking patterns. "Travis Picking" was made popular by Country guitarist Merle Travis and popularized further by Chet Atkins.

So we have covered the names and techniques of great acoustic blues guitar players and found a basic way of playing the guitar that will set you on the road to being a blues guitarist.

Do you want to learn to play the guitar? Learn How To Play A Guitar For Free is a constantly updated blog which contains all the resources you need for: learning to play solo guitar, how to learn guitar chords, how to learn to read and play easy acoustic guitar tabs, finding a free online guitar tuner, looking for free guitar lessons online, and how to learn guitar scales.
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The Acoustic Blues Guitar - An Unfair Struggle

Little Girl Blue


By Kurt Naulaerts

One day many years ago Bob Dylan walked on stage and played an electric guitar for the first time ever live to an audience. It made the front page of all of the big papers and it wound up being quite a story. So what was the big deal? Bob Dylan used to play an acoustic guitar and many folk music fans felt that the electric guitar was a tool of loud and obnoxious rock music. But Dylan didn't care and went on to revolutionize the world of music by simply plugging in and playing an electric guitar.

blues music is a little different. Blues music got started with acoustic blues guitar but once the old blues musicians got a listen to that electric guitar the acoustic blues guitar was left in the dust. I think it's a sad story because the acoustic blues guitar produced some great blues music.

Way back in Chicago in the Thirties there were enthusiasts forming a growing community. Many of the blues musicians that had played their time in the Mississippi delta area were now bringing their brand of acoustic blues guitar music to Chicago and it was met with enthusiasm. Muddy Waters and Son House were huge stars in Chicago and they would play that acoustic blues guitar until people were just going wild.

The acoustic blues guitar became unpopular when people like Howling Wolf came along and replaced their acoustic guitar by an electric guitar. Wolf and others still played the original blues hits but instead used electric guitars and that was the music people heard. Soon Son House and the others were relics and Robert Johnson and that famous picture of him and his acoustic blues guitar became treasured pieces of the past.

Jimi Brought It Back For A Little While
For many years the electric guitar ruled the blues world and then Jimi Hendrix decided to record a short movie of himself playing an acoustic blues guitar and for just a little while we got to hear as close to the modern equivalent of those old classics that we will hear. As Jimi fired through Here My Train A Comin' it was just like being on the delta near the turn of the century when Robert Johnson would travel from small bar to small bar just to make a living playing his guitar. It was a great time that is lost forever.

Many years ago the acoustic guitar ruled blues records but nowadays only once in a while it is the main instrument. The sound produced by the  Acoustic Blues guitar is unique and came right from the heart. Unfortunately these days will never return.

Did you know you can easily learn to play the guitar yourself? A 5 part free online guitar lessons for beginners is available at http://sosouvendmusicdownload.blogspot.com

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Friday, June 29, 2012

The Best Blues Songs Ever

  The Best Blues Songs Ever




By Kevin Charles Scott

It is entirely a matter of taste as to which are the best Blues songs. However it is possible to speculate as to the most influential songs.

It can be argued that Blues music bought about a greater awareness of the plight of African Americans, as new audiences became interested in its origins and originators.

I clearly remember as an adoring fan of Muddy Waters; Howlin Wolf and Sister Rosetta Tharpe, feeling outrage at the early 60's news reports that a whole people were subjected to such terrible discrimination. The anti establishment feelings so typical of my generation, and empathy with subjugated Black Americans, would manifest itself in the aggressive British interpretation of their Blues music.

The adoption of Blues music by young British musicians, and their successful introduction of that music to white America, inspired a whole generation of white American musicians to rediscover the music and popularize it. This brought recognition to the Black musicians that had created it.
It is the ten songs that had the greatest influence on the "discovery" of Blues that I am presenting here.

Blues music was introduced into Britain after the war. Records came in through the sea ports, and well informed successful Jazz band leaders financed visiting Black artists to visit and play on their shows. Inevitably, their performance influenced the young British musicians who, were looking for something different from the pre war dance band scene.
Smokestack Lightening

Written and recorded by Howling Wolf.
Smokestack Lightening is based on a driving riff and has no chord changes. Released in Britain in 1964 by Pye Records, it reached the Top 50. In 1999, the song was given a Grammy Hall of Fame Award

Boom Boom

Written and recorded by John Lee Hooker, the first American blues artist to do a club tour of Britain. Boom Boom was released as a single in 1961.

Boom Boom is a classic example of Hookers unique timing and chord structure.

The Animals recorded "Boom Boom" for their 1964 UK debut album "The Animals". Their rendition generally follows John Lee Hooker's version, except it conforms to a 12 bar sequence.
Worried Life Blues

The first song written and recorded by Maceo Merriweather in 1941
Inspired by "Someday Baby Blues," recorded by Sleepy John Estes in 1935, however "Worried Life Blues" has gone on to become a Blues "standard" and has reputedly been covered by more artists than any other blues song.

I Got My Mojo Working
Written by Preston Foster and popularized by Muddy Waters. Possibly the most influential of the Blues artists to visit the UK. Covers of this were made by many artists but of special importance were Alexis Korner, a pioneer and possibly the first British Blues band with Blues Incorporated, & Manfred Mann, a highly successful commercial band. Both versions were released in 1964, in itself a testament to the impact of Waters original.

Baby Please Don't Go
By Big Joe Williams, and covered by "Them" becoming the first "hit" record by Van Morrison in 1964. It became the weekly signature tune for the hugely influential television show "Ready Steady Go". The "B" side of the single featured the now-legendary "Gloria". It became a top ten hit in the UK, and launched "Them" and Van Morrisson to world fame.

Hoochie Coochie Man
Written by Willie Dixon and recorded by Muddy Waters in 1957 but covered by almost every blues artist since! The verse and intro are played over "stops" that were to become a feature of many blues recordings. The first cover version was released in 1962 by Alexis Korner on his album "R&B from the Marquee"

Crossroads Blues
Written and recorded by Robert Johnson in 1937 and largely unnoticed until Cream released their version in 1968. The song ranked #10 in the worlds greatest solo's, contributed greatly to the world wide fame of the band and to Eric Clapton in particular.

This success bought Robert Johnson's small but remarkable catalogue of songs to the attention of the music world and has earn't him the acclaim he so richly deserves.

Sweet home Chicago
Robert Johnson 1937. This song has become the Blues "anthem".

The list of artists who have covered the song is immense, including Magic Sam, Buddy Guy, Freddie King, Status Quo, Fleetwood Mac, Eric Clapton, Stevie Ray Vaughan, The Blues Band, and the 1980 Blues Brothers movie.

Everybody Needs Somebody to Love
Written and recorded by Solomon Burke in 1964, For many years it was the opener for the Rolling Stones live shows. 

They released a live version of the song on their 1965 E.P. "Got Live if you want it". The Rolling Stones were to become the most successful Rock band of all time, and they have been fundamental to the wider awareness and appreciation of the early Blues artists. 

They took there name from a Muddy Waters song "Rolling Stone". The songs riff was "borrowed" for the first "Small Faces" hit single "What You Gonna Do About It" also in 1965. The successful "soul" artist, Wilson Pickett covered the song and it entered the US charts in 1967. This song also features in the 1980 "Blues Brothers movie" The song, as are several of those mentioned, is ranked on the Rolling Stone magazine's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

Hound Dog
A twelve-bar blues written by Jerry Leiber and originally recorded by Willie Mae "Big Mama" Thornton in 1952. In 1965 she toured Europe as a part of the American Folk and Blues festival that had become an annual event and had become so influential to the emergence of British Blues. The 1956 remake by Elvis was his second #1 hit and is possibly the first blues song to become a #1 hit record.

Whether you agree or not with my selection of "the best Blues songs ever" I am sure we can agree that theses songs have helped to popularize the Blues genre.

If you like Blues Music then you may like to check out Dr Charlie. He is highly influenced by traditional Blues but with a very different interpretation that you may like.

Click here [http://www.dr-charlie.com/Freemusic.html] and obtain a free copy of "I'd Rather Be Blind" off the latest "Prodigal Son" album. Voted "Male Vocalist of The Year" in the 2011 Australian Blues Music Awards.


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Click to>>>>>>Bestsellers in Blues

Driving Towards Perfection

 

By N. H. Foster

Thirteen studio albums in and Joe Bonammassa's insatiable appetite for producing sublime albums show no signs of abating. In my opinion all 13 albums are terrific but JB hit a real rich vein of form with the release of the Sloe Gin album and Driving Towards the Daylight is right up there.

There can be little argument that Bonamassa is one of the best guitar players on the planet but what is great to see is the continuing vocal maturity and the way in which Bonamassa now has the confidence to know that sometimes less is more.

Driving Towards the Daylight is an eccelctic combination of original numbers and covers of some of Bonamassa's luminaries. This is one aspect that seems to contunually draw criticism, the lack of total original material on his albums. Personally I don't get it, when the music is as good as this and it is clear how much the guy reveres his heroes why not just revel in the opportunity to hear some classics reworked by a modern day genius. This album sees a return to a slightly rootsier, rougher sound than last year's Dustbowl, a mere obsevation, not a criticism.

Of some of the original work here Driving Towards the Daylight is destined to become a live classic, it is a haunting and beautiful song that drifts out of the speakers. Opener Dislocated Boy has a low down groove to it, whilst Heavenly Soul is simply stunning. Three songs that begin to encompass Bonamassa's talents.

Of the covers for me all are true gems in their own way; Robert Johnson's Stones In My Passway is Zeppelinesque in its sound and delivery, Howlin' Wolf's Who's Been Talking is delightful and the choice of Too Much Ain't Enough Love with Jimmy Barnes reprising his unique roadhouse vocal is a masterstroke. The two JBs compliment each other perfectly. However, the standout in my opinion is the truly awesome Place In My Heart, originally written by guitar maestro Bernie Marsden. Bonamassa excels on the solos and delivers the vocal with real feel.

The whole package fits together perfectly and makes for around an hour of real bliss.
Forget the rubbish about not being all original songs just listen and enjoy musicianship of the very highest order!