Thursday, August 14, 2008

Rosetta Stone V3: Spanish (Latin America), Level 2

Spanish (Latin America) Level 2 teaches you to navigate through your surroundings as you build on the vocabulary and essential structure in Level 1. Learn to talk about your environment such as giving and getting directions, using transportation, telling time, dining out, enjoying basic social interactions and more.
Customer Review: a software note
This product is sold as licensed software. Users will NOT be able to load it onto more than one computer. This aspect of the product is not clear from the blurbing on the Rosetta Stone website. It is a "single-user" product. Don't think that you can share this with friends, or that it is appropriate for a lending collection.
Customer Review: Wonderful Learning Tool
I gave this as a gift to someone with a minimal background in Spanish, but a great desire to learn. He loves it. It has inspired him to keep to the instruction modules and is now peppering all of his speech with the words and phrases he's learned.


Big Band Swing music really developed during the roaring 20's from New Orleans Dixieland and Ragtime. Trumpet and coronet player King Oliver had one of the hot bands playing in New Orleans and later New York. The young Louis Armstrong was in this band in the early 20's just before joining Fletcher Henderson. Louis Armstrong was an innovator besides working with bands and bandleaders that were innovators themselves.

Fletcher Henderson: The first important innovator of Big Band Swing

By 1924 Armstrong had joined up with Fletcher Henderson's band. This is were a lot of the real ground work for what came to be big band swing music
took place. Henderson is credited for standardizing the use of trumpets, trombones and saxophones in the big band. Before this the bands were smaller. Many copied his arrangements and later Benny Goodman hired him as an arranger for his own band.

King Oliver's sound was a much smaller band with the instruments going off on their own direction as soloists; one trumpet, one clarinet, and one trombone.

Henderson expanded greatly on that sound and had the different sections of trumpets, trombones, and reeds playing independently from each other but playing together
as fully harmonized sections. He was getting further away from the New Orleans sound and closer to the big band swing sound we usually identify with... and saxophones
instead of clarinets... Yaayyy!

Harlem, New York was the hub
The hot stop in Harlem was the Savoy Ballroom were everyone wanted to play and everyone wanted to dance. The Cotton Club had Duke Ellington as the house band from the late 20's and he was crafting his own big band there writing and arranging and stretching this new musical landscape.

At this time the Cotton Club was different from the Savoy because it was a show room for whites being entertained primarily by black
musicians and dancers. The Savoy was primarily for blacks.

Chick Webb: The Drummers Drummer
Chick Webb was the first drummer to lead a big band and by doing so paved the way for Gene Krupa, Buddy Rich, and Louie Bellson, all of whom were blown away by Webb during the "battle of the bands" that were regular events at the Savoy Ballroom.

The Chick Webb Orchestra became the house band at the Savoy around 1931 and became real favorites with the lindy hop dancers who called him "king of the savoy". He and his band were killers at the band battles. Sadly, Webb only lived for 30 years due to tuberculosis of the spine.

Every band that was working at this time and happened to be in New York would stop in at the Savoy either to take part in the battle of
the bands, or just have a drink and check out the "King". Through the 30's the list of musicians that frequented the club is a who's who of the swing era; Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Cab Calloway, Benny Goodman, Buddy Rich, Gene Krupa.... just imagine being there!

The standards and templates had been set right there at the Savoy; Fletcher Henderson with the musical arrangements and Chick Webb with the musical talent that set the performance level.

It seems that history regards the swing era to have started immediately after Benny Goodman's famous performance at the Palomar Ballroom in 1935. This may have been when the rest of America and the world heard about it from the media but big bands had been swingin' since the mid 20's.

There seems to be a similar comparison in the way rock and roll came about to the masses in the mid 50's even though it was alive and well since the late 40's... big band swing, created primarily by blacks in the 20's then a decade later Benny Goodman is called king of swing. Rock and roll is created primarily by blacks in the 40's then a decade later Elvis Presley is calledking of rock and roll... funny how that worked out.

Both Presley and Goodman played a very important role in bringing the most popular music of their time to the masses; Goodman was a hard working band leader and one of the best clarinetist of his day and Elvis had a great voice and stage presence but neither were musical innovators.

The Big Band Swing era ended many years ago but you can still hear it today... tribute bands, neo big band swing groups, college big bands, modern swing bands, Brian Setzer Orchestra etc.

The big band swing sound is here to stay because it's too cool!
Johnny Ferreira

Johnny Ferreira is an award winning saxophonist, international touring and recording artist. Advocator of saxophone music that rocks, jumps, and swings! For more music, videos, and articles including audio samples visit http://JohnnyFerreira.com

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