vintage
Vintage music and beat content throughout history and the music archives.
Largest Worldwide Concert
A lot of people don't even like this man. Growing up you had two types of individuals. They either said Elvis was a great actor but a terrible singer, or a terrible actor and a great singer. This performance of the American trilogy is terrific. Elvis really slimmed down for this performance. They say It was the first time satellite technology was used to transmit a live concert around the world. In the 2004 deluxe DVD of Aloha, Elvis Presley Enterprises said the special attracted between 1 billion and 1.5 billion viewers.
By Lawrence Edward Hinchee5 years ago in Beat
An alternative guide to the history of pop music (Part 1)
The popular music charts began in 1940 when the popularity of a song was gauged by sales of sheet music. We can all agree there’s plenty of sheet music around these days but it all seems to get in the charts somehow. The music magazine Billboard had the idea of compiling a chart based on sales which was then updated in 1952 when someone decided the best way to listen to music was to get someone else to play it and sing it and put it on a kind of plastic disc so you could listen to it whenever you liked instead of having the band come round and perform the song in your front room.
By Peter Nuttall5 years ago in Beat
In the Canyons of Your Mind
With a career spanning over 50 years The Bonzo Dog Doo-dah Band must be one of the best loved and most influential musical comedy outfits ever. The genesis of the band came about in 1962 when Vivian Stanshall and Rodney Slater bonded over a late-night transatlantic boxing match broadcast. The rest, as they say, is history.
By Lauren M Foster5 years ago in Beat
Time travel would be nice....
Part 1 Before Pandemics. Before Mandatory and self imposed Lock-downs, and before the World had gone into complete and utter madness, there was a time,( I know that seems hard to believe), when life was simpler, easier, and not so connected through Social Media, or the Internet for that matter. Where a home console games graphics were a pathetic 8 bit or lower, but we loved them anyways. And the really good games that had even better graphics (by those times standards), were located in a video arcade or corner convenience store, and required a pocket full of quarters to launch you into a new and flickering world that made you forget about your daily life. That is, until you used up your last “life” and then it was Game Over. This was the Totally Awesome and Unforgettable 80’s of course, and I’d give everything to be able to teleport back to that Age. That was my Childhood.
By Bobby Henley5 years ago in Beat
Seven Songs of Solacement
Seven Songs of Solacement This was a very difficult piece to write because of all the self initiated interruptions. With every song I mentally placed on my good feelings list, I was compelled to find it online and listen to it, which in turn so mellowed me out that it was tempting to just listen to the music and put off writing until later. Even so, I was able to winnow down from hundreds of "possibles" a playlist of seven guaranteed to becalm me and take me to a place of good feelings and good memories.
By Cleve Taylor 5 years ago in Beat
Putting The Record Straight About The Fathers Of All Modern Music
If you trace whatever style of popular modern music you hear or listen to, all the way back to its roots, you will end up at the name of one man. This was a man who lived far too short a life, but a man who left a legacy that reverberated, and continues to do so, throughout the last almost 100 years.
By Liam Ireland5 years ago in Beat
Just Who Were The Castrati?
I originally wrote this article on Article Source: http://EzineArticles.co m/3377280 in 2009 but as I still believe this subject to be quite fascinating. Until then I was quite unaware of the Castrati and their history in the 1600s. This is such a bizarre piece of history it is quite worthy of you knowing.
By a.a.gallagher5 years ago in Beat
You Must be Crazy
You Must be “Crazy!” by L’Tanya Y. Gordon It was a typical Friday night and as I hurried to sit out on the front porch, I always enjoyed seeing all of the familiar people, like yellow, brown and black puzzle pieces, starting to fit into their pre-assigned places on the jigsaw of another start of the weekend evening in Kansas City Missouri.
By L'Tanya Gordon5 years ago in Beat
Minnie Riperton - A Love Story
She said, “I just don’t want to leave my kids. I don’t want to leave my babies” In January 1976, Minnie Riperton went to the doctor, worried there was a problem. The doctor diagnosed her with breast cancer and shortly afterward she underwent a radical mastectomy. At the time of diagnosis, the doctors gave her about six months to live. Her cancer had metastasized. It was in her lymph nodes.
By Gary McBrine5 years ago in Beat







