Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Your boring PC can become ALIFE AGAIN

Your boring PC is a great place to watch free streaming movies. Did you know that? No i didn't either until i found out the ways, the tips and the tricks to start watching Hollywood Blockbusters online.
Get watching online and remember that every day more and more streams and websites appear on the internet.
You will also need a selection of media players installed on your computer. They are all free to download. You will need Adobe Flash player, Windows Media Player and Apple Quicktime for example and probably already have them installed.
Most movies are streamed to your computer as you watch. There is also the option of downloading first to watch at your leisure. Most are streamed though and that is why a fast connection is needed.
Now to get watching the streams just visit one of the hundreds of websites around that have links to the movies and tv shows. One such site is worldtvpc.com that has a big choice of free streaming movies.
By looking through the many streaming TV and movie sites online you are able to view latest movies and TV shows as soon as they are released. Please look for different streams if the quality or speed are not good enough.
Today it is so much easier than ever before to see free streaming movies and television shows from your computer.
So is this legal? Well it is a grey area but the websites would be shut down if there was an issue and nobody has ever been jailed for watching online movies.
Everything internet TV related. Satellite, cable, free movies, latest streams. You name it and I'm talking about it. Check out my blog for the latest up to date news and all free. By Steve Sanger

September 7th 2008 mtv awards

The 2008 MTV awards was on September 7th in 2008 and some of the best dressed Celebrities took the stage with some of the most beautiful outfits we've seen in the past decade. One of my favorite Celebrity Pics from the MTV awards was Pink and her stylish black leather outfit she wore. Another very hot Celebrity on stage at the 09 MTV awards was non other then Rihanna who was sporting a very stylish hairstyle that featured v shaped sideburns and spiked hair with blond streaks blending into her dark black hair and a very sexy tube shirt with white laces and headlined with green and black materials, what a gorgeous bunch of pictures taken of Rihanna.
Chris Brown has some nice pics taken of him at the awards sporting a very nice and professional white suit, while Celebrity Lil Wayne kept it gangster styles in his pics. The music and film awards in 2008 were some of the best places to take pics of hollywood celebrities and musicians as they all tried to out fashion each other.
The 2008 American Music Awards saw the Jonas Brothers sporting very stylish grey suits and one of those Jonas Brothers dressing very professionally, which I think helps kids try and become more mature like their favorite Celebrity stars and having celebs give a mature look in attitude and fasion is an easy way for stars to become role models to their fans. Beyonce Knowles hands down had the best dresses we've seen in pictures for 2008 and behind her was Jennifer Love Hewitt, Jessica Simpson and Amy Winehouse. By Brent W

September 7th 2008 mtv awards

The 2008 MTV awards was on September 7th in 2008 and some of the best dressed Celebrities took the stage with some of the most beautiful outfits we've seen in the past decade. One of my favorite Celebrity Pics from the MTV awards was Pink and her stylish black leather outfit she wore. Another very hot Celebrity on stage at the 09 MTV awards was non other then Rihanna who was sporting a very stylish hairstyle that featured v shaped sideburns and spiked hair with blond streaks blending into her dark black hair and a very sexy tube shirt with white laces and headlined with green and black materials, what a gorgeous bunch of pictures taken of Rihanna.
Chris Brown has some nice pics taken of him at the awards sporting a very nice and professional white suit, while Celebrity Lil Wayne kept it gangster styles in his pics. The music and film awards in 2008 were some of the best places to take pics of hollywood celebrities and musicians as they all tried to out fashion each other.
The 2008 American Music Awards saw the Jonas Brothers sporting very stylish grey suits and one of those Jonas Brothers dressing very professionally, which I think helps kids try and become more mature like their favorite Celebrity stars and having celebs give a mature look in attitude and fasion is an easy way for stars to become role models to their fans. Beyonce Knowles hands down had the best dresses we've seen in pictures for 2008 and behind her was Jennifer Love Hewitt, Jessica Simpson and Amy Winehouse. By Brent w

Reginald Perrin Life and Ours on BBC

Several years ago, I stood at the foot of a sheer rock face in southern Turkey, looking up, rather dizzily, at hundreds of tombs - small caves - hewn out of its solid stone surface during an ancient era previously unfamiliar to me.
From what I'd gathered, these pockets had been chiselled from the rock by stonemasons - slaves - suspended on ropes controlled by other slaves on the cliff-tops. Heaven only knows what must have happened on days where the rope-bearers had a migraine or a touch of Turkish tummy - or any kind of grudge.
I found these artifacts, if that's what one calls them, singularly disturbing; and ever since have been troubled by an image of unknown persons suspended in the air, fighting the rock, at the mercy of their holders and owners... and by the uncomfortable realisation that all 'advanced' civilisations, including our own, are built, for better or worse, on slave labour.
Now I haven't been working on any rock-faces recently but I spent three months last year in a top West End agency, trading my time for cash. While my own necessity dictated my servitude, and I'm likely to be branded an ingrate even to think it, from day one it was clear I'd surrendered my entire life to a machine involved only with its own survival, to which my safety, well-being, or ideas apart from those relevant to its purposes were utterly irrelevant. All around me, in our trendily appointed, electronically-entered-or-exited cage, people from every part of our planet spent long, long hours sitting before their computer screens or picking at their Blackberries in a desperate competition to become the Company's rope-holders rather than its stonemasons.
All around me, in the bars, restaurants, and clubs of London where the sleek inheritors of Margaret Thatcher's Britain drink themselves senseless each night and all weekend, was evidence that living like this was just normal - the acceptable price of any kind of success... and that other ways of being, or living, or seeing had become virtually inconceivable.
So let's thank the BBC, once again, for having the wit to revive and air, from Friday, 24th April 2009, that most subtle and seditious of comedy characters: Reggie Perrin. For Reggie is not and never was a natural rebel - he's an ordinary middle-class man who wakes up gradually to a truth about his existence that changes everything. It's a most timely revival, and I'm sure that Martin Clunes will do a fine job of rendering Reggie in his own intelligent, discomforted fashion.
Comparisons with the original will no doubt be made, but I won't be making them. Leonard Rossiter's RP was a great creation but production company Objective gives us a Reggie for our times. The BBC has teamed up the series' originator and original writer, David Nobbs, with Simon Nye, who worked with Clunes on Men Behaving Badly, the show which brought them both their first major success - so it promises both edge and lots of pointed laughs.
We live in difficult times, and things just aren't that funny for a lot of people just now. While we may never develop Reggie's brand of crazy courage we should at least be asking whether the world we, daily, acquiesce to is the one we want our children to inherit, and whether the handsomely-toned conformity that contemporary working life demands is worth its price.
So stay in this Friday and watch it, if you can keep your eyes open after your week at work... and if (of course!) you dare. by ALEXANDRA BRUNEL

Reginald Perrin Life and Ours on BBC

Several years ago, I stood at the foot of a sheer rock face in southern Turkey, looking up, rather dizzily, at hundreds of tombs - small caves - hewn out of its solid stone surface during an ancient era previously unfamiliar to me.
From what I'd gathered, these pockets had been chiselled from the rock by stonemasons - slaves - suspended on ropes controlled by other slaves on the cliff-tops. Heaven only knows what must have happened on days where the rope-bearers had a migraine or a touch of Turkish tummy - or any kind of grudge.
I found these artifacts, if that's what one calls them, singularly disturbing; and ever since have been troubled by an image of unknown persons suspended in the air, fighting the rock, at the mercy of their holders and owners... and by the uncomfortable realisation that all 'advanced' civilisations, including our own, are built, for better or worse, on slave labour.
Now I haven't been working on any rock-faces recently but I spent three months last year in a top West End agency, trading my time for cash. While my own necessity dictated my servitude, and I'm likely to be branded an ingrate even to think it, from day one it was clear I'd surrendered my entire life to a machine involved only with its own survival, to which my safety, well-being, or ideas apart from those relevant to its purposes were utterly irrelevant. All around me, in our trendily appointed, electronically-entered-or-exited cage, people from every part of our planet spent long, long hours sitting before their computer screens or picking at their Blackberries in a desperate competition to become the Company's rope-holders rather than its stonemasons.
All around me, in the bars, restaurants, and clubs of London where the sleek inheritors of Margaret Thatcher's Britain drink themselves senseless each night and all weekend, was evidence that living like this was just normal - the acceptable price of any kind of success... and that other ways of being, or living, or seeing had become virtually inconceivable.
So let's thank the BBC, once again, for having the wit to revive and air, from Friday, 24th April 2009, that most subtle and seditious of comedy characters: Reggie Perrin. For Reggie is not and never was a natural rebel - he's an ordinary middle-class man who wakes up gradually to a truth about his existence that changes everything. It's a most timely revival, and I'm sure that Martin Clunes will do a fine job of rendering Reggie in his own intelligent, discomforted fashion.
Comparisons with the original will no doubt be made, but I won't be making them. Leonard Rossiter's RP was a great creation but production company Objective gives us a Reggie for our times. The BBC has teamed up the series' originator and original writer, David Nobbs, with Simon Nye, who worked with Clunes on Men Behaving Badly, the show which brought them both their first major success - so it promises both edge and lots of pointed laughs.
We live in difficult times, and things just aren't that funny for a lot of people just now. While we may never develop Reggie's brand of crazy courage we should at least be asking whether the world we, daily, acquiesce to is the one we want our children to inherit, and whether the handsomely-toned conformity that contemporary working life demands is worth its price.
So stay in this Friday and watch it, if you can keep your eyes open after your week at work... and if (of course!) you dare. by ALEXANDRA BRUNEL

Reginald Perrin Life and Ours on BBC

Several years ago, I stood at the foot of a sheer rock face in southern Turkey, looking up, rather dizzily, at hundreds of tombs - small caves - hewn out of its solid stone surface during an ancient era previously unfamiliar to me.
From what I'd gathered, these pockets had been chiselled from the rock by stonemasons - slaves - suspended on ropes controlled by other slaves on the cliff-tops. Heaven only knows what must have happened on days where the rope-bearers had a migraine or a touch of Turkish tummy - or any kind of grudge.
I found these artifacts, if that's what one calls them, singularly disturbing; and ever since have been troubled by an image of unknown persons suspended in the air, fighting the rock, at the mercy of their holders and owners... and by the uncomfortable realisation that all 'advanced' civilisations, including our own, are built, for better or worse, on slave labour.
Now I haven't been working on any rock-faces recently but I spent three months last year in a top West End agency, trading my time for cash. While my own necessity dictated my servitude, and I'm likely to be branded an ingrate even to think it, from day one it was clear I'd surrendered my entire life to a machine involved only with its own survival, to which my safety, well-being, or ideas apart from those relevant to its purposes were utterly irrelevant. All around me, in our trendily appointed, electronically-entered-or-exited cage, people from every part of our planet spent long, long hours sitting before their computer screens or picking at their Blackberries in a desperate competition to become the Company's rope-holders rather than its stonemasons.
All around me, in the bars, restaurants, and clubs of London where the sleek inheritors of Margaret Thatcher's Britain drink themselves senseless each night and all weekend, was evidence that living like this was just normal - the acceptable price of any kind of success... and that other ways of being, or living, or seeing had become virtually inconceivable.
So let's thank the BBC, once again, for having the wit to revive and air, from Friday, 24th April 2009, that most subtle and seditious of comedy characters: Reggie Perrin. For Reggie is not and never was a natural rebel - he's an ordinary middle-class man who wakes up gradually to a truth about his existence that changes everything. It's a most timely revival, and I'm sure that Martin Clunes will do a fine job of rendering Reggie in his own intelligent, discomforted fashion.
Comparisons with the original will no doubt be made, but I won't be making them. Leonard Rossiter's RP was a great creation but production company Objective gives us a Reggie for our times. The BBC has teamed up the series' originator and original writer, David Nobbs, with Simon Nye, who worked with Clunes on Men Behaving Badly, the show which brought them both their first major success - so it promises both edge and lots of pointed laughs.
We live in difficult times, and things just aren't that funny for a lot of people just now. While we may never develop Reggie's brand of crazy courage we should at least be asking whether the world we, daily, acquiesce to is the one we want our children to inherit, and whether the handsomely-toned conformity that contemporary working life demands is worth its price.
So stay in this Friday and watch it, if you can keep your eyes open after your week at work... and if (of course!) you dare. By Alexandra Brunel

People and LCD Screens

While some television fans might think that bigger is always better, new numbers are showing that television viewers are shelling out less for a plasma screen to watch their favourite programmes on.
And that decline has led to a demand for smaller screens. LCD screens are moving up in the market world, as customers embrace the fact that LCD's can be purchased in a variety of sizes and configurations.
In a report published online, it was noted that sales of plasma screen televisions declined in the last quarter of 2008. They noted that during the all-important Christmas season, more people were choosing to purchase smaller televisions for their homes. Experts have said that this could be because many people are choosing to purchase a second, smaller television for other rooms in their homes - as their main sitting room could already host one of the popular, large screen plasma's.
As well, it has been noted that customers are reporting increased satisfaction with LCD screens in terms of picture and sound quality, which has been evolving to rival plasma status.
To some, plasma and LCD televisions are very similar, meaning many choose based on size and what's available. However, there are some notable differences between the two, including how bright and sharp the images are. One plus is that LCD screens can be used in a high altitude, which is good for customers who may experience altitude changes in their homes.
However, it should be noted that experts believe the popularity of the plasma screen television won't disappear, as many prefer the look of sports and movies on such screens. However, many customers are choosing the LCD as an affordable, low-key option compared to plasma screens. In fact, recently many experts have said that LCD screens are friendlier to the environment. LCD screens use less power and produce less brightness, meaning they use less energy and damage the environment less.
It has also been noted that plasma screen televisions actually use 50 per cent more energy than LCD screens, making the decision to switch televisions easier for some who are concerned about their carbon footprint.
For those concerned about price, consumer groups are reporting that the difference in price between LCD and plasma screens is shrinking, as both technologies adopt similar technologies and practices. So, when it comes to watching your favourite programmes on good quality television, viewers have plenty of options. And with services like Sky+ HD available, you can watch shows in stunning quality on both HD ready LCD and plasma televisions whenever you like.
Andrew Regan writes for a digital marketing agency. This article has been commissioned by a client of said agency. This article is not designed to promote, but should be considered professional content. By Andrew Regan
While some television fans might think that bigger is always better, new numbers are showing that television viewers are shelling out less for a plasma screen to watch their favourite programmes on.
And that decline has led to a demand for smaller screens. LCD screens are moving up in the market world, as customers embrace the fact that LCD's can be purchased in a variety of sizes and configurations.
In a report published online, it was noted that sales of plasma screen televisions declined in the last quarter of 2008. They noted that during the all-important Christmas season, more people were choosing to purchase smaller televisions for their homes. Experts have said that this could be because many people are choosing to purchase a second, smaller television for other rooms in their homes - as their main sitting room could already host one of the popular, large screen plasma's.
As well, it has been noted that customers are reporting increased satisfaction with LCD screens in terms of picture and sound quality, which has been evolving to rival plasma status.
To some, plasma and LCD televisions are very similar, meaning many choose based on size and what's available. However, there are some notable differences between the two, including how bright and sharp the images are. One plus is that LCD screens can be used in a high altitude, which is good for customers who may experience altitude changes in their homes.
However, it should be noted that experts believe the popularity of the plasma screen television won't disappear, as many prefer the look of sports and movies on such screens. However, many customers are choosing the LCD as an affordable, low-key option compared to plasma screens. In fact, recently many experts have said that LCD screens are friendlier to the environment. LCD screens use less power and produce less brightness, meaning they use less energy and damage the environment less.
It has also been noted that plasma screen televisions actually use 50 per cent more energy than LCD screens, making the decision to switch televisions easier for some who are concerned about their carbon footprint.
For those concerned about price, consumer groups are reporting that the difference in price between LCD and plasma screens is shrinking, as both technologies adopt similar technologies and practices. So, when it comes to watching your favourite programmes on good quality television, viewers have plenty of options. And with services like Sky+ HD available, you can watch shows in stunning quality on both HD ready LCD and plasma televisions whenever you like.
Andrew Regan writes for a digital marketing agency. This article has been commissioned by a client of said agency. This article is not designed to promote, but should be considered professional content. By Andrew Regan

Monday, April 27, 2009

Since great singing seems such an impossible skill to reach out for, a lot of people who do purchase a career in singing often look for secrets no one knows about. Special habits or products for the voice. Things to do or not to do that turns you into that one unique singer. You might be disappointed as the tips below are very basic and apply to anyone who wants to sing and anyone who can speak CAN pursue a career in singing.
Whether anyone WILL have a career is a whole different story. There is a lot more to it than just opening your mouth and sing. But that's basically the main thing you need to do to sing. Open your mouth and sing. A lot of people think too much about how to sing and how to be a great singer. Just follow the steps below and you'll be nicely on your way.
1.Work the body.
Even though all instruments require a healthy body to perform, no instrument depends so much on a healthy body as the voice. When you have an illness while playing guitar or piano or another instrument the instrument will sound the way it usually sounds while singing is almost impossible to do. Even if you can still sing you won't be able to perform at your best and your voice definitely sounds different.
There for it's not only necessary to keep your body healthy but in order to improve singing to your highest possible skill level you need to optimize your body.
What does it mean to optimize your body? It means to train the parts that are used excessively as you sing. These parts are the same as the ones we use when speaking. Your vocal cords, your lungs and abdominal muscles. Train your vocal cords, train your lungs and train your abdominal muscles. You have to be a bit of an athlete in fact. Rather than focusing on your legs you will focus on your voice but just as an athlete you will have to develop your lungs and muscles.
A.The vocal cords.
Every muscle in the body that is used often needs training to become flexible. Muscles need to be active every day in order to perform well. Muscles that are not active lose volume and grow very weak up to not being able to use them. A person who had a broken leg and had to rest for 6 weeks slowly has to build up using it again from taking slow steps to running. Since the vocal cords are also muscles you will have to use them every day. This will automatically make your voice a lot more flexible. We already use our voice everyday to speak but since singing uses a lot more frequencies we don't use when we speak we need to sing almost daily to get comfortable in our full range.
B.The breathing system this means the lungs and the abdominal muscles.
Exercising is good for your lungs. You need your lungs to sing thus exercising is great for your voice. Do it several times per week. Even better is to sing out while you exercise but that isn't always possible. Many sports train the lungs. Running is the most obvious but swimming is even better as it trains the lungs and abdominal muscles at the same time. Singing while you workout is great if you like belting and want to increase your range. An article about belting will be published in the future.
2.Stay away from cigarette smoke at all times.
It reduces your range and increases the production of mucus. You will be clearing your throat continuously. Coughing is the best way to clear your throat properly.
3.Drink no or little alcohol and avoid drinking alcohol at all before singing.
A lot of singers worry about what they should or should not drink. You always see them with a bottle of water in the hand at auditions. That's because just about every site that gives vocal advice says drink gallons of water. You can never drink enough. I don't believe those people are singers.
I sing for hours without drinking anything. My throat doesn't dry out and I never feel uncomfortable. If you feel like you HAVE to drink constantly you might be doing something wrong. Of course you need to drink a lot everyday to keep a healthy body. It's not so that you have to drink all the time meaning every 3 seconds. Some bottled waters even dry out the throat or give you a very uncomfortable feeling in the throat. I only drink bits of water when I practise the top of my voice. The notes beyond the C3.
Warm drinks are very good. Cook some water and add lemon and honey to it. Avoid cold drinks with ice right before a show. This depends a little on the overall condition of your body. I'm very sensitive to cold, cold air, a nasty breeze and ice can even make me cough in wintertime.
A lot of people say you should not drink milk because it increases the forming of mucus. I drink milk everyday and the mucus from drinking milk is nothing compared to what I get from pollution and inhaling cigarette smoke.
I reduced drinking alcohol to almost nothing. It numbs your voice and over time you will get pitch problems. Never drinking does make you more sensitive to alcohol. Now that I hardly ever drink, if I do drink a couple margaritas I can't sing at all. My voice has absolutely no volume or range left.
4.Eat healthy at all times.
Seems common sense but a whole lot of people are constantly on some special diet. As a singer you're probably aware of your looks and don't want to be overweight. Whatever diet you choose make sure you eat regularly. Your voice needs consistent power and all the vocal exercises will not give as much results without regular meals. A poor diet gives a poor sound and a less powerful voice.
Don't eat heavy meals right before a performance. You will feel tired using your breathing system and instead of digesting the food it might even come back up. Avoid too much spicy food and never eat it right before bedtime. You might want to check your sensitivity to garlic. It produces a gas in the lungs after digestion. My lungs also produce excessive mucus in the days after eating garlic so I avoid eating it at all.
Eat apples. What? Yes! Every day! Apples can perform miracles to your voice. If it happens that you have to sing in a smoky or very dusty environment your voice wears out rapidly. Eating an apple-over drinking water- will instantly boost your voice.
5.Take enough sleep.
You might feel strong but your body wears out more than you think and regular lack of sleep decreases your vocal potential. Too little sleep is also just a matter of time before you get sick.
6.What to do when you have a problem.
You should always feel comfortable before, on and after singing. A sound or feeling you usually don't have are signs that something is not right. Continuing can seriously damage your voice. If you think you can't speak don't replace it with whispering! See a doctor to see there is no physical problem.
7.Be a good person!
No one can get you a beautiful voice. The color of your voice is the image of your soul.
Written by June Moris.

Becoming a great singer can be possible again

Since great singing seems such an impossible skill to reach out for, a lot of people who do purchase a career in singing often look for secrets no one knows about. Special habits or products for the voice. Things to do or not to do that turns you into that one unique singer. You might be disappointed as the tips below are very basic and apply to anyone who wants to sing and anyone who can speak CAN pursue a career in singing.
Whether anyone WILL have a career is a whole different story. There is a lot more to it than just opening your mouth and sing. But that's basically the main thing you need to do to sing. Open your mouth and sing. A lot of people think too much about how to sing and how to be a great singer. Just follow the steps below and you'll be nicely on your way.
1.Work the body.
Even though all instruments require a healthy body to perform, no instrument depends so much on a healthy body as the voice. When you have an illness while playing guitar or piano or another instrument the instrument will sound the way it usually sounds while singing is almost impossible to do. Even if you can still sing you won't be able to perform at your best and your voice definitely sounds different.
There for it's not only necessary to keep your body healthy but in order to improve singing to your highest possible skill level you need to optimize your body.
What does it mean to optimize your body? It means to train the parts that are used excessively as you sing. These parts are the same as the ones we use when speaking. Your vocal cords, your lungs and abdominal muscles. Train your vocal cords, train your lungs and train your abdominal muscles. You have to be a bit of an athlete in fact. Rather than focusing on your legs you will focus on your voice but just as an athlete you will have to develop your lungs and muscles.
A.The vocal cords.
Every muscle in the body that is used often needs training to become flexible. Muscles need to be active every day in order to perform well. Muscles that are not active lose volume and grow very weak up to not being able to use them. A person who had a broken leg and had to rest for 6 weeks slowly has to build up using it again from taking slow steps to running. Since the vocal cords are also muscles you will have to use them every day. This will automatically make your voice a lot more flexible. We already use our voice everyday to speak but since singing uses a lot more frequencies we don't use when we speak we need to sing almost daily to get comfortable in our full range.
B.The breathing system this means the lungs and the abdominal muscles.
Exercising is good for your lungs. You need your lungs to sing thus exercising is great for your voice. Do it several times per week. Even better is to sing out while you exercise but that isn't always possible. Many sports train the lungs. Running is the most obvious but swimming is even better as it trains the lungs and abdominal muscles at the same time. Singing while you workout is great if you like belting and want to increase your range. An article about belting will be published in the future.
2.Stay away from cigarette smoke at all times.
It reduces your range and increases the production of mucus. You will be clearing your throat continuously. Coughing is the best way to clear your throat properly.
3.Drink no or little alcohol and avoid drinking alcohol at all before singing.
A lot of singers worry about what they should or should not drink. You always see them with a bottle of water in the hand at auditions. That's because just about every site that gives vocal advice says drink gallons of water. You can never drink enough. I don't believe those people are singers.
I sing for hours without drinking anything. My throat doesn't dry out and I never feel uncomfortable. If you feel like you HAVE to drink constantly you might be doing something wrong. Of course you need to drink a lot everyday to keep a healthy body. It's not so that you have to drink all the time meaning every 3 seconds. Some bottled waters even dry out the throat or give you a very uncomfortable feeling in the throat. I only drink bits of water when I practise the top of my voice. The notes beyond the C3.
Warm drinks are very good. Cook some water and add lemon and honey to it. Avoid cold drinks with ice right before a show. This depends a little on the overall condition of your body. I'm very sensitive to cold, cold air, a nasty breeze and ice can even make me cough in wintertime.
A lot of people say you should not drink milk because it increases the forming of mucus. I drink milk everyday and the mucus from drinking milk is nothing compared to what I get from pollution and inhaling cigarette smoke.
I reduced drinking alcohol to almost nothing. It numbs your voice and over time you will get pitch problems. Never drinking does make you more sensitive to alcohol. Now that I hardly ever drink, if I do drink a couple margaritas I can't sing at all. My voice has absolutely no volume or range left.
4.Eat healthy at all times.
Seems common sense but a whole lot of people are constantly on some special diet. As a singer you're probably aware of your looks and don't want to be overweight. Whatever diet you choose make sure you eat regularly. Your voice needs consistent power and all the vocal exercises will not give as much results without regular meals. A poor diet gives a poor sound and a less powerful voice.
Don't eat heavy meals right before a performance. You will feel tired using your breathing system and instead of digesting the food it might even come back up. Avoid too much spicy food and never eat it right before bedtime. You might want to check your sensitivity to garlic. It produces a gas in the lungs after digestion. My lungs also produce excessive mucus in the days after eating garlic so I avoid eating it at all.
Eat apples. What? Yes! Every day! Apples can perform miracles to your voice. If it happens that you have to sing in a smoky or very dusty environment your voice wears out rapidly. Eating an apple-over drinking water- will instantly boost your voice.
5.Take enough sleep.
You might feel strong but your body wears out more than you think and regular lack of sleep decreases your vocal potential. Too little sleep is also just a matter of time before you get sick.
6.What to do when you have a problem.
You should always feel comfortable before, on and after singing. A sound or feeling you usually don't have are signs that something is not right. Continuing can seriously damage your voice. If you think you can't speak don't replace it with whispering! See a doctor to see there is no physical problem.
7.Be a good person!
No one can get you a beautiful voice. The color of your voice is the image of your soul.
Written by June Moris. Visit http://www.music.junemoris.com/category/vocals/ for tips on "How not to over sing" and "How to speak with your natural voice"
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=June_Moris

Very Easy Learn how to play guitar online

Because of the internet and generous people who like to share there advice and tips the world wide web is a great place to learn to play the guitar online using free lessons. No matter if you're interested in rock, pop, blues or if you want to play acoustic or electric there are tons of resources online to help you.
Learning guitar TABS are always a good place to start when learning guitar for the first time. It seems to take some of the frustration out of not being to play right away. If you don't know what TABS are they basically show you where to hold your fingers so you don't have to memorize all the notes of the guitar.
So, what can free guitar lessons online do for a beginner? The main purpose is to keep you from feeling overwhelmed at all the information and guide you into playing your first song as fast as possible. Learning guitar usually takes about a year to get to playing how you've dreamed of being able to do. So it does require quite the commitment to see results, but if you make sure you're having fun each time you pick up your guitar instead of: "Oh great! It's time to practice guitar again" That time will fly by and you'll be looking back from when you first started so proud of the accomplishment you've made.
It can be hard to keep up the momentum to practice when you should as a beginner but keep in mind that even the greatest guitar players started without the knowledge of what frets and tabulatures were or how to read notes.
The best way to learn is to get started! check out this review of an online guitar course for more information.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Denise_Heeren