Friday, December 6, 2013

Chris Young's Album A.M. Review

 
ALBUM REVIEW A.M.
Chris Young, a country music up and comer, recently came out with a new album entitled A.M. It’s a fantastic country album with eleven songs on it. The songs are; Aw Naw (4/5), Hold You To It (3/5), Lonely Eyes (4/5), Goodbye (3/5), A.M. (4/5), Nothin’ But the Cooler Left (5/5), Who I am With You (5/5), Text Me Texas (3/5), We’re Gonna Find It Tonight (5/5), Forgiveness (3/5) and Lighters In the Air (4/5). Most of the songs on the album are pretty upbeat. The total track is thirty seven minutes long. It’s a great album to listen to in the car. With every song getting between a 3/5 and 5/5 I would give A.M. a 4/5.
            Typically you would find people who like country music would listen to this. Country music is generally accepted by most generations. This particular album would be most popular among 16-30 year olds. The album has great balance because there’s faster and slower songs. There’s a song for every mood. The flow of songs is perfect. It starts moderate then speeds up to some more upbeat songs. After that it begins to slow down into a light romantic tone.
            The title of the album should have been “We’re Gonna Find it Tonight” because it was the best song on the track. It was the most fun to listen to. It is the type of song where you can listen to it anywhere and it will boost your mood. The song can be related to so many situations it could play a role in anyone’s life. With lyrics like “Whatever gets you moving Gets you grooving Gets you fired up” it allows people to think of something relevant to their own life. It brings people to a time they were excited for something and lets them relive that moment. This is something all great songs should have; the ability to be applied to the listener’s life.
            A.M. by Chris Young is a phenomenal album that can be enjoyed by listeners of all ages. The style, flow, and balance all blend perfectly into one fantastic album. I would highly suggest listening to this listener friendly album with the whole family or by yourself. It received 4/5 stars and is expected to have at least three songs in the Country top 40. It is also expected to be nominated for best albums by many people. Chris Young did a fantastic job with his latest album, A.M.
 

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Summer Vacation Is a Must

Hello members of the School committee,
         The current issue we are gathered to talk about is the schedule for the upcoming school year. I do not believe getting rid of summer vacation will be beneficial to our students. Come the end of May the students are already starting to burn out. If we kept them in school all year round they would be so mentally drained their grades would drop. Not to mention the rebellion that would come with this. Students value their summer vacation. It is a time for kids to be kids, "the possibility of fun and freedom and play," said David Von Drehle in "The Case Against Summer Vacation". A time to make new friends, unwind, play sports and go on family vacations with out missing assignments and getting behind.
          Not only is summer the perfect time for kids to unwind and be themselves, its also a great opportunity to explore career opportunities. There are summer camps, internships and jobs available for teens to build their resumes and gain experience in specific fields. David Von Drehle references how summers came to be with ,"long agrarian pasts when kids were needed in the fields during growing season," he explains. Though this is not the case anymore kids have other jobs that they must tend to during the summer. With the economy as bad as it is many families need kids to work to help put food on the table. It is hard for kids to be students and employees. There simply is not enough time in a day to go to school and make a sufficient amount of money. Summer vacation is important to more than the kids.
         Summer vacation is an important part of the American way of life. Changing it now would cause rebellion by students, teachers, and parents. For many people summer is a time to enjoy each others company and the joys of childhood. Without it kids would grow sick of learning and even teachers would become tired of teaching. Summer is the most beneficial break for students, teachers, parents and other school employees changing it would only create problems.

Holiday Spending

Where does Christmas magic come from? It comes from the spirit of being around loved ones, admiring lights and decorations, the wonder of the presents got under the tree and how the stockings got full. It doesn't matter what is under the tree or in the stockings; what matters is somehow they got full while you were sleeping. The spirit of Christmas is being ruined by greed and over spending. Christmas used to be about love, magic and joy. Now it's only about how much debt you're going to be in by the time it's over. That makes it really hard to enjoy. Depression rates sky rocket during the winter. How could they not when you don't have money to pay your bills because you were to busy trying to keep up with the Jones. The Christmas Spirit is being lost in the hustle and bustle of the holidays.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Album Review Samples






     Favorable:                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             


November 12, 2013
After two albums that were as bland as Simon Cowell's wardrobe, Kellie Pickler turned around her career by following the bad-girl path of fellow reality-show alumna Miranda Lambert, which continues on The Woman I Am. On the ebullient breakup song "Ring for Sale," Pickler gets revenge on a cheating fiance by selling her ring. (Lambert would probably shank the jerk.) She also continues to wring vibrant drama from her crazy family; having already sung about the mother who abandoned her and her jailbird father, Pickler cowrote "Selma Drye," country's first great great-grandmother song, about a feisty ancestor who "kept a .38 Special and a can of snuff" in her kitchen apron.
4.5/5 stars

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/the-woman-i-am-20131112#ixzz2lI87Y8iG 
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Favorable:
November 12, 2013
This was social media in Great Britain in 1963, during the first flash flood of Beatlemania: George Harrison singing "Do You Want to Know a Secret" for Deanne and Jenny in Bedford; Paul McCartney belting "The Hippy Hippy Shake" for a student at the bassist's old grammar school in Liverpool; Ringo Starr stumbling over names on a request card from Yorkshire. That year, the Beatles ran riot over the BBC, even landing a weekly radio series of studio performances, dedications and wisecracks, Pop Go the Beatles – a vigorous innocence and outreach that propels this second culling of the group's Beeb work. The Beatles are enjoying the speed and lunacy of stardom here: tugging their roots forward in Little Richard's"Lucille" and a sparkling cover of Buddy Holly's "Words of Love" a year before they cut it for a record; going deep into their Cavern-era song bag for Chuck Berry's "I'm Talking About You" and Carl Perkins'"Glad All Over." The mounting hysteria of concerts seeps into "Misery," taped at a BBC theater in March 1963; the live audience can barely contain its screams in the middle. You also hear the distance growing: "It's amazing that you can hear us as we're in America now," Lennon cracks in a pretaped chat in early '64. There would be no more dedications to schoolgirls in Liverpool. The Beatles now belonged to the world.
4/5 stars

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/on-air-live-at-the-bbc-volume-2-20131112#ixzz2lI8p9Wzf 
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Middle Of The Road:
November 19, 2013
Seven years after he placed on American Idol, Chris Daughtry and his band are opening up their would-be grunge to more nuance: folk instruments and synths, smoother high notes tempering Daughtry's bellow, "boom-b'boom" vocal-bass hook lightening the gender war in "Battleships." The sound on Baptized somehow links U2 to Rascal Flatts, adding Springsteen stances in "Wild Heart." More unexpectedly, there's also a banjo shuffle where Daughtry chooses Van Halen over Van Hagar, catalogs some of his other heroes and wonders who wrote Hole's songs. "Long Live Rock & Roll," it's called – a defense, perhaps, against anybody claiming guys like him helped kill it.
3.5/5 stars

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/baptized-20131119#ixzz2lI9R09sK 
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MIddle Of The Road:
November 19, 2013
Phil Collins has retired, but his legacy endures in the new Hunger Games soundtrack, which channels his recipe for Eighties melodrama: synth strings, croaked vocals, crashing drums. (Even Lorde's cover of Tears for Fears' "Everybody Wants to Rule the World" sounds like she'd rather be singing "Against All Odds.") Apparent Hunger Games superfan Patti Smith does better with the Katniss-worshipping "Capital Letter," and Santigold contributes a blatant cop of "I Know There's Something Going On," a 1982 hit by Abba's Frida – produced and drummed by Phil Collins. Come back, Phil. District 12 needs you.
3.5/5 stars

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/the-hunger-games-catching-fire-soundtrack-20131119#ixzz2lI9nRKRP 
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Unfavorable:
November 4, 2013
On 2011's The Path of Totality, these California nu-metal lifers threw a Hail Mary and added dubstep wub to their hell-is-all-around thud. Here, the news is guitarist Brian "Head" Welch's return after an eight-year absence, so we're back to clicking bass, Jonathan Davis' serial-killer voice and sheets of guitar. Davis' lyrics can sound, endearingly, as if he's chatting with you at a party ("Passion is sometimes a fucked-up thing for me"). "Never Never" is a power ballad, and "Love & Meth" is not as funny as one might hope, though the brilliantly titled "Paranoid and Aroused" is. How did it take them this long to call a song "Prey for Me"?
2/5 stars

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/the-paradigm-shift-20131104#ixzz2lIATWLoX 
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Unfavorable:
November 1, 2013
Matt White's blandly reassuring soul pop has been featured throughout Hollywood movies and network TV, most recently on The Bachelorette. No surprise: His pose is wholesome (with a dash of danger), his storylines familiar and his problems solvable in four minutes or less. Standouts on his third album – "Around the World in 80 Days," especially – have more life than his strained falsetto might sometimes lead you to believe, but that's not saying much: Mayer Hawthorne still looks heavy metal by comparison. White's struggle is trying to sound sincere in a genre that rewards cliché. "I don't want those silly love songs," he sings. "I don't know what they will prove." Then he writes one.
2/5

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/shirley-20131101#ixzz2lIB160eg 
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Tuesday, November 19, 2013


Woman Sits on Man’s Face to End Altercation

Memphis woman, Harris, sits on landlord, Kellen Carroll’s, face during an argument. When approached about her late rent, the woman became violent with the man. She proceeded to choke the man. She then wrestled the man to the ground. When he tried to call for help Harris, an extremely large woman, sat upon Kellen Carroll’s face.

 

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

How do you feel colors affect your emotions? Do you believe brighter colors make you feel happier and darker colors make you feel gloomier or do you feel otherwise?

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Parent’s limiting children’s screen time to two hours a day is not in their best interest. Parents should tell their children to shut off their screens when they feel it’s appropriate for their child, for all children are different. If a teen feels they are not satisfied with the amount of time they are allowed to use their devices, which they paid a significant amount of money for, they will sneak it. Sneaking will lead to more types of rebellion. As far as sexting and viewing of pornography after dark goes; if you cannot trust your child not to do those things the second they are out of your sight you should not have bought them a cell phone in the first place.