Music and Audio Books


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Music and Audio Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Music and Audio
Tonal Harmony Wkbk with Wkbk Audio CD and Finale CD-ROM
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages (2003-08-13)
Author: Stefan Kostka
List price:
New price: $44.05
Used price: $43.73

Average review score:

wow
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-26
It was everything i ever wanted. thanks.
and it came very fast. i appreciate that

tonal harmony workbook
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-17
The book came really fast and I was really pleased with it's condition hope to do more business!!!

Stuff
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-04
The workbook is like the excercises inside the book. Well they are the excercises in the book just on paper so you can write on it.

Tonal Haramony workbook
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-09
A great asset to the Tonal Harmony book. The workbook makes the lessons come alive. Far more experiential than just reading the book.

Perfect supplement to the text!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-15
The tonal harmony workbook contains exemplary exercises to provide efficient practice of the material covered in the text. The audio CD are definitely helpful in supplying aural guidance, and the Final Workbook CD-ROM is perfect for the Theory student (not yet in need of the complete, and extremely costly, version of Finale). Overall, the Tonal Harmony text and workbook are a great asset to any student of Music Theory over the lifetime of his/her musical career.

Music and Audio
What Charlie Heard: The Story of the American Composer Charles Ives
Published in Hardcover by Live Oak Media (2004-03)
Author: Mordicai Gerstein
List price: $25.95
New price: $25.95
Used price: $30.00

Average review score:

A Glorious Noise
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-17
I bought this book four years ago for my new-born granddaughter on the strength of the review of my Amazon friend and Ives scholar, the late Bob Zeidler. Through moves and the intervening few years, My daughter and her husband kept the book. On a recent visit, this grandfather was surprised to learn that it had become a favorite. My graddaughter knows the story. "Who is that", I ask, pointing to a picture. "Charlie", she says. "And what's Charlie's wife's name?" "Harmony" she replies.

The great American composer, Charles Ives (1874 -- 1954) filled the air with what author Mordicai Gerstein calls that "mysterious, invisible, magical stuff -- music." I remember from my own childhood books on Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, and the like. But a children's book on Charles Ives is a welcome rarity. Gerstein makes it succeed.

Ives was the son of a Civil War musician and band leader in Danbury, Connecticut. The precocious child absorbed his father's love for and wayward way with music -- the glorious noise -- as young Charlie used the piano, organ, and trumpet to capture the sounds and ideas that filled his life. Charlie attended Yale, married, and became a successful insurance executive. He kept composing increasingly audacious music, including songs, piano sonatas, violin sonatas,short orchestral pieces,and symphonies. But when his work was played, it was met with bewilderment and mockery. Ives stopped composing in mid-life. In his latter years, he saw his music attain recognition, as he received a Pulitzer Prize in 1947 for his Third Symphony. Gerstein's book recounts Charles Ives's reaction to the premiere of his Second Symphony in 1951, when the composer was 77. Many musicians began to champion other music of Ives, including his difficult "Concord" sonata for piano.

"If only they would open their ears they might open their hearts" Charlie says to Harmony in Gerstein's book. Gerstein captures the bravado and pace of early 20th Century America as well as the spirit of Ives's music, with its combination of American traditionalism and wild iconoclasm. Gerstein makes music a joyful experience. Gerstein captures the influence of revival meetings on young Charlie. "They didn't have beautiful voices, but they made beautiful music", is Gertstein's apt and important for young readers characterization of the influence of the hymn singing Charlie heard.

Gerstein based his book on Jan Swafford's biography of Charles Ives, "Charles Ives: A Life with Music" and on his own listening. A page at the end of the story offers a summary of Ives's work to parents who themselves might be encountering Ives for the first time in reading this book to a child. This book delightfully introduces young children to a great American composer. More importantly, it may help "open their ears and their hearts" to the world of music.

Robin Friedman

Are Your Ears Wide Open?
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-06
BONG! KABLAM! squeak. Tick-Tock. Splash. VROOM! Does this sound like music to you? Maybe your ears aren't wide open like Charlie's were. He was born that way.

Charlie Ives was a famous music composer. His talent came from his father who played a trumpet out the window just to announce Charlie's birth. Charlie experimented with mixing noises to make a different kind of music. When he was a little boy, he played the piano to make the sounds of a huge thunderstorm. After he grew up, he tried to make his music sound like the noises he heard all around him. He thought his music was wonderful but other people despised it and thought it was weird. We listened to it and found it to be inspiring.

Read this book to learn more about a man who didn't let other people change his mind about his music. Recommended for music lovers of all ages who understand that ruckus can be musical and who would be happy with wide open ears like Charlie's.

"If I had my own son..."
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-23
(sung to the melody of "If I were a rich man...")

Why, I'd be reading him this splendid illustrated children's book!

What on earth is an heirless geezer like me doing, reviewing a children's book? Well, that's a reasonable question. The only sensible answer that I can come up with is that I'm simply somewhere in the middle of my second childhood, "up to my eyeballs in Ives."

Mordicai Gerstein prefaces this enjoyable children's book with the statement "Everything I know about Charles Ives I learned from listening to his music, and from my dear friend, Jan Swafford, whose epic biography, 'Charles Ives: A Life with Music,' was the main source and inspiration for this book." And so it is that Jan Swafford has also been the main source and inspiration for my own second childhood with Charlie Ives. I can actually date my "second childhood" study of the life and music of Charlie to the time I was reading a borrowed copy of his Ives biography while awaiting my own copy.

The narrative text of "What Charlie Heard" (all accurate, and admirably complete, by the way) is quite brief; probably not much more than a few hundred words in total. (While no expert on the matter, I believe that the narrative can be read by a child of 7 or 8. In fact, I provided a copy of this book to a friend's son for his 8th birthday. But I wouldn't consider him "average" by any definition; very precocious would be more like it. Hopefully he didn't find it to be boring.)

Is it possible that a book so brief in its narrative text can actually "tell" the story about Charlie Ives and his life with music, with all of its "ups" and "downs"? Sure it can! All one needs to do is to pay heed to the remarkable illustrations, and to take the time necessary for pulling out all of the clues hidden in these illustrations. And, while it isn't necessarily possible to figure out from the narrative and the illustrations just what Charlie Ives's music sounds like, the youthful reader should certainly come away with the expectation that the music sounds "different," given how it was that pretty much everything in Charlie's life and environment found its way into his music in one form or another. And that may be "half the battle," as they say, toward an early appreciation of America's greatest composer.

I know-rather directly-that Jan Swafford admires Mordicai Gerstein's book on Ives as much as Gerstein admires Swafford's. So I just had to take a look at it. (I never did have an opportunity to see the earlier copy that had been a birthday present; it was a "drop ship.") Now I've got my own copy, I've seen and read it, and I'm impressed. But what next?

Well, given the circumstances, perhaps I'll just read this really neat book to my cat. He's about the right age in "human years": between 7 and 8 as I write this. And he's listened to Charlie's music along with me, without raising a noticeable fuss.

And his name happens to be Charlie. And, no, it's no accident. :-)

Bob Zeidler

A Wonderfull Book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-19
This a great book filled with lot's of noise but if you open your ears lide Charlie did you'll hear not only noise but music.
Charlie Ive's is a boy who hears everything as music wether it's the sirens of a firetruck driving by or the drip drop of rain on the ground. Charlie loved music and so did his father his father was a conducter when he would conduct a band Charlie would make noise. charlie grew up and wrote his own music. When charlie would play it some people got mad and said this is not music this is noise. Charlie would say if you open your ears you will hear what I hear.
I'm not going to spoil the rest of the book for you. But maybe if you open your ears you'll hear what Charlie heard, not noise, but music.

Introduction and Explanation
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-03
I once heard an organist describe Charles Ives "America" in this way--a small town on the Fourth of July, where every band wants to perform in the parade, so they all agree to play the one song they know: 'America.' But they all play it differently. Ives's arrangment depicts the infinite complexity of all the bands' variations. This book not only show where he might have gotten an inspiration for this piece, but for all his other music also.
However, I think the most eloquent illustration is what Charlie heard when he got the news that his father had died. The depiction of total silence is a stark and effective contrast to the cacaphony of the rest of the book. This book can be used to introduce Ives' music to those unfamiliar with it, to explain it to those who don't understand it, or to increase the enjoyment of someone who already appreciates it.

Music and Audio
Betty Johnson - In Her Own Words
Published in Audio CD by Bliss Tavern Music (2007-08-01)
Author: Betty Johnson
List price: $34.95
New price: $34.95

Average review score:

Purposeful Reflection On a Vast Continent of Life Experience
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-13
Listening to Betty's eight CDs of observation, narrative, and purposeful reflection on her life, her family, her neighbors and region, her musical associates, and her kaleidoscopically changing music industry is like setting forth beyond the coastline into a whole new continent, just as people like her ancestors had done many years earlier, coming to Appalachia for the first time, and creating community within its valleys and reaches.

We are spiritual travelers with her, seeing her life - and hopes and frustrations - from the inside, as much as any one person can make this happen. And it's clear she worked hard to make this happen. This remarkable book is an oasis, a mountaintop, a cool corner of the forest, a crowded street in a great American artistic center, and a bouncing tune just around the corner of an otherwise quiet country center. She has included all of us in her story by telling it this way.
Betty Johnson - In Her Own Words

Inspiring and Uplifting
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-02
Dear Betty: I just finished listening to your audio book "In Her Own Words" and I wanted to take the opportunity to thank you for writing and recording this. After hearing you tell your life story, I feel as close to you as if you were my own aunt or grandma. And knowing some of what you've been through and risen above, my admiration for you has grown a hundred fold. Your speaking voice is as beautiful as your singing voice; it is a very comforting and reassuring voice. And your reading style - even in the most harrowing passages - is very graceful and dignified. I adore this recording. Your words have inspired and uplifted me. Thank you again for telling your story.

Masterpiece
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-30
What a masterpiece!! It is wonderful. The story of Betty's life is fascinating--and her voice telling the story makes it so authentic. She had bad times and good times--and she succeeded. The story is marvelous.
Her husband and children love and respect her--that comes out. Well, her fans love and respect her. What a great listening experience. Love her life's story and love her music. Not to be missed. "I Dreamed" of a
book worth listening to--and I got it!!

A Real Charmer
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-21
Betty Johnson's voice, her music, and above all her amazing story will keep you mesmerized.

Another 'thumbs up' for Betty Johnson
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-31
For those who remember the long gone era when CBS Radio sprinkled magic dust over it's owned and operated station, WBT in Charlotte, NC, Betty's audio book is a must.
Betty is an icon of that period, when people held certain broadcasting stations and certain of their live performers in a awe. She embodies the style and grace, humility, and sparkling star quality.
Her story is poignent, but so real and so genuine that you can smell it.
From rural roots in North Carolina--in the days when MANY folks didn't have central heat and indoor plumbing--to her comfortable and well desrved life at Bliss Tavern, I enjoyed the audio book to the max. I think you will too.
From her early gospel singing as a youngster with her travelling family...to the New York stage, Las Vegas and national television, her singing is superb. If I've left any doubt, I recommend the book and all of her cd's.
Sid Linton

Music and Audio
Blues Journey
Published in Audio CD by Live Oak Media (2005-08-31)
Author: Walter Dean Myers
List price: $28.95
New price: $28.95
Used price: $25.48

Average review score:

Blues Journey
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-30
Great picture book with a wonderful story! I purchased it to share with high school students to show them how visualization is important when you read.

Great Childrens book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-06
It's a great childress book, but adults will enjoy it also. Soon to be a collectors item.

A BEAUTIFUL AND HAUNTING BOOK
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-01
If you want to know what the book is about and the feel of it,
take a look at the cover. It says it all - the scariness, the
unutterable sadness, the awfulness of the slavery & then the segregation in the South from which the Blues developed.

Am I blue
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-11
I just read this book and even as I write this review I'm feeling reluctant to continue. This isn't one of those books that you quickly glance through then immediately write your response on. It's that rare kind of book that you read, and stop, and then think about for long periods of time. It's the book you carry with you to quiet places, like park benches or sloping green hills, just to read it to yourself. It's a book that sings without straining, that ropes you in with its words and then traps you with its images. I shouldn't be writing this review now. I should stop and think more about this book, ponder it a while, and when I figure out what to make of it THEN I'd write this review. But I'm afraid that if I wait to puzzle this book through completely, I'll never get around to writing anything at all. And that would be the worst response to something this good, I suppose. So it is with great reluctance that I'm going to try to convey to you what this book feels like to read.

A little background first. Written by young adult book god Walter Dean Myers, the author switches his focus from long prose to picture book form. Accompanied by Christopher Myers (an artist in the sense that what he draws drips into you) the two have concentrated on the blues. There's a fabulous author's note at the beginning explaining what the blues is and how it was born. From the call and response singing form, found on the continent of Africa, this type of music mixed with European English to create the final product, the blues. Myers puts it this way, "When art from two cultures comes together, the result is often an exciting new experience". He goes on to explain a couple terms and how the blues moved from the fields to the cities. Then the book begins.

I don't know enough about the blues personally to be able to tell if all the different lyrics found in this book can be individually assigned to a particular singer or situation, though I assume that this is the case. Likewise, I'm not certain if the illustrations in this book are based on photographs, but again, I assume so. After all, I recognized the reference to "strange fruit" one one page, and on another I remembered seeing the photo of the two boys sitting on the street curb, one turning his head away to sob. The book does something near impossible. It conveys misery without depressing. Reading through these stanzas, it's almost as if the book is one multi-veined blues song itself. The illustrations compliment this perfectly. The book is black and blue, brown and white. But mostly blue, to be honest. My favorite two-page spread features women hanging their sheets to dry on one page, and a woman reaching towards a flying blackbird on another. I could sit and stare at these pages for hours, if I had a mind to.

The books ends with a timeline of significant moments in the blues as well as a glossary of terms. Y'know, there are hundreds of books out there today about jazz and the importance of the jazz musicians. Why have the blues been so ignored? I can only assume because jazz is the easier subject to write about. Writing about blues, you're in danger of only showing the depressing aspects of the genre, and not the art. It takes an artist to convey this particular form well. We are fortunate that not one, but two artists took it upon themselves to do just that. This is the book that took my breath away.

A masterpiece redefines what picturebooks can do
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-21
Father-son, writer-illustrator team Walter Dean Myers and Christopher Myers have produced a masterpiece. W. D. Myers's text is made up of poetic blues lyrics, the "call and response" depicting the African-American experience. The poetry is beautiful, unsettling and evocative; it is perfectly complemented by C. Myers's art. The artwork is done entirely in white paint, warm brown paper bags, and blue ink -- every blue tone from navy-black blue to ice-white blue. It is not at all obvious at first glance that his palette was so limited; C. Myers is astonishingly creative, using a wide variety of artistic techniques and tools, and his spreads are richly textured and diverse. The images are moody, haunting, and tense. Sorrow and pain are the dominant emotions, though hope, joy, tenderness and celebration make appearances as well.

As the title indicates, the book is a journey, and the verses and images progress forward through the timeline of the blues, from the end of slavery through the beginning of the civil rights movement. The pictures also show the gradual movement from country to city, the black migration from South to North. The blues timeline is printed at the end of the book, along with a glossary of symbolic terms used in blues lyrics. This back matter, in addition to the opening author's note giving an explanation of the history and meaning of the blues, provide a necessary key to understanding the layers of meaning in the verses and accompanying illustrations.

Several of the spreads are visually breathtaking, evoking deep feelings of grief and sympathy. A man stands facing away from the viewer, knee-deep in a gorgeously painted blue ocean, holding onto a fishing net. The verse speaks of "casting my love out to the sea;" the illustration speaks powerfully of loneliness. Another spread depicts two young boys sitting on the curb, one with his face buried, turning away from the other child, who is holding his hand in comfort. The very adult look of concern and hopelessness on the boy's face is striking. Coupled with the verse, which says "despair will scrape the bone/ misery loves company, blues can live alone," the illustration speaks of abuse and misery visited upon children helpless to protect themselves; a similar illustration shows two children sleeping on the same mat, head to toe, by a verse that describes their poverty. One of the strongest images in the book is a furious boy at the back of a crowd holding up a sign that says YESTERDAY A MAN WAS LYNCHED, which explicates the accompanying verse ("Strange fruit hanging high in a big oak tree") and summons an image that, while shocking, is an important part of blues history.

"Blues Journey" is neither upbeat, nor easily accessible; it a sophisticated, layered work that expands with every re-reading. Perhaps it is not the sort of book a parent will take home to read to a toddler, but it has a great deal to offer older children; in particular, the book would be an invaluable classroom tool for the study of African-American history and blues music. The Myers have expanded the boundaries of what a picturebook can do. The combined effect of the text and art is to create a visual metaphor for the music of the blues, and a powerful evocation of the black experience.

Music and Audio
The Book of Kids Songs: A Holler-Along Handbook
Published in Audio Cassette by Klutz Press (1986-10)
Authors: Nancy Cassidy and John Cassidy
List price: $11.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $11.95

Average review score:

Dynamite selection to pass on to your kids
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-28
This is a fabulous book and cassette package. I am a teacher in an International Kindergarten in Hong Kong and this is one of my greatest resources! Songs include: You Gotta Sing, Wabash Cannonball, Day-O, Ting-A-Lay-O, Mister Sun, Father's Old Grey Whiskers, Baby Beluga, Willoughby Wallaby Woo, Kumbaya, Shake My Sillies Out, Brush Your Teeth, Down By the Bay, Jamaica Farewell, Apples and Bananas, Chicken Lips and Lizard Hips, Polly Wolly Doodle, This Old Man, The Fox, Twinkle Twinkle Little Star, Puff the Magic Dragon, Morningtown Ride and This Little Light of Mine.

The kids love it!

A must have
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-07
I have two toddlers and have used this tape over and over again. Most of the songs you will recognize and be able to sing or at least hum along to. Nancy Cassidy's voice is lovely to listen to -- and keeps kids as well as their parents' listening. My kids love it -- and I have to admit I even play it in the car when no kids are around. If you play an instrument yourself, the book includes guitar chords and piano music -- so you can try and duplicate it! Buy it you won't regret it.

Come Holler-Along!!!!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-25
This book and cassette are great fun. My children and I have great fun hollering and dancing and just being silly while listening to this. We "Brush your teeth" ch ch ch ch, we "Shake my sillies out," we tease about "Father's old gray whiskers." This is a wonderful fun time for the whole family! All the kids from two to teen love it.

Great for Car Trips
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-30
This is a fun, up-beat, easy-to-sing-along-to tape with a sturdy spiral bound book that contains the music and words to the songs along with funny pictures. The tape has spiced up many long car trips for my 4 kids.

Lots of fun!!!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-10
I had this book and tape growing up. We used to play it in the car and we all sang along! It was SO MUCH FUN!!! All those simple things that are fun and healthy! I'm grown now, but I still like to listen to it and sing along. It is a breath of fresh air in a busy life. Great for young and old!! It is also a great alternative to watching TV or consuming cartoon characters!

Music and Audio
Claudia and Crazy Peaches (Baby-Sitters Club, 78)
Published in Hardcover by Time Warner AudioBooks (1995-11)
Author: Ann M. Martin
List price: $7.98
New price: $11.77
Used price: $11.75
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

one of the best baby sitters club books
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-16
karen's aunt peaches is expecting a baby and is moving back to stoneybrook and stays with claudia's family. Claudia and peaches are the closest and they do all kinds of things like going shopping for baby stuff, watching old movies, cooking delcious dinners and dressing up in funky costumes, you can really see where claudia gets her creativity from. But then claudia and peaches go out for pizza at night, come home late and claudia's mom makes it a big deal that they went out at night, BIG DEAL! And since then peaches and claudia were not speaking to each other but then things work out at the end after peaches lost the baby. On the side, claudia is getting mary anne to teach her how to knit a lavender baby blanket for the new baby, and natalie springer from the little sister series makes appearances in the book too, interesting read.

I liked this book a lot!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-21
This was a very good BSC book. I thought it was funny. I was o happy that Claudia's aunt Peaches was going to have a baby! This book is also sad too. After reading this, I recommend that you read Claudia and the World's Cutest Baby. It's also about Peaches. Also the part about Natalie Springer was good, too.

one of the best baby sitters club books
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-16
claudia's aunt peaches is expecting a baby and is moving back to stoneybrook and stays with claudia's family. Claudia and peaches are the closest and they do all kinds of things like going shopping for baby stuff, watching old movies, cooking delcious dinners and dressing up in funky costumes, you can really see where claudia gets her creativity from. But then claudia and peaches go out for pizza at night, come home late and claudia's mom makes it a big deal that they went out at night, BIG DEAL! And since then peaches and claudia were not speaking to each other but then things work out at the end after peaches lost the baby. On the side, claudia is getting mary anne to teach her how to knit a lavender baby blanket for the new baby, and natalie springer from the little sister series makes appearances in the book too, interesting read.

A must read book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-01
In my opinion, this is one of the best books in the Baby-Sitters Club Series! Great job, Ann!

Claudia can't believe her luck--wacky Aunt Peaches, one of her favorite people on the planet, is moving back to Stoneybrook...and she's going to have a baby! Claudia's sure that life with Peaches around will be nonstop fun. At first, it is. But then one of Peaches' crazy adventures gets Claudia in trouble. Claudia's really mad--so mad that she blows up at Peaches. And before Claudia can apologize, something awful happens. Claudia would give anything to take back her angry words now. Is there any way she can make things right again? Read this book and find out!

Great!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-29
Claudia is happy that Aunt Peaches is back in Stoneybrook. They love to eat junkfood, play pretend. But one day it stops. Aunt Peaches gets Claudia in trouble!

Music and Audio
The Complete Idiot's Guide to Recording with Cubase (Complete Idiot's Guide to)
Published in Paperback by Alpha (2007-01-02)
Author: Michael Miller
List price: $19.95
New price: $11.69
Used price: $10.52

Average review score:

This guy knows how to make it understandable!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-11
Best purchase I ever made in my short recording "career." I have Cubase 4 LE which has little usable instruction/support (from Steinberg, anyway). I really needed this book full of information even more than I thought I did. Thanks to Michael Miller.

The Idiot's Guide to Recording with Cubase
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-10
All new Cubase and especially DAW users should not pass up this guide. It breaks down this complex program into basic steps to successfully get you through your first song and beyond. The straightforward advice on basic mixing and recording techniques is a welcome bonus.

excellent teaching
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-25
This is my first "complete idiot" book, and I'm very impressed. To be honest, for years I've avoided these books simply because of the name. I'm not real thrilled to have a book with such a title on my bookshelf. But anyhow, I'm most of the way through this book, and it's been a tremendous help both as a "read it from beginning to end" type of book, as well as a reference.

What I like best about the book is that unlike some of the other dreadful books and training videos on music packages that I've encountered recently, this one actually focuses on the making of music, not just repetitively going through each and every feature in the pulldowns. The book starts off by going through how to set up your equipment. Then how to do an audio recording in cubase. Then it talks about how to record in MIDI and usual virtual instruments. It also goes into editing in MIDI, mixing, and finally how to do some authoring.

Excellent, excellent book. I highly recommend it.

Very good coverage of the basics
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-27
This is a very good guide to getting started with Cubase. I bought an Alesis USB 8 came with a copy of Cubase LE but no hard copy manual, just a 587 page PDF document. The PDF manual is good for looking up specifics but not well suited to getttng a quick overview.

The Idiot's Guide is based on the full blown versions of Cubase so a few things are different in LE but it gives me a good idea on where to look in the PDF manual.

This isn't for the 'power user' but covers most everything needed for basic home recording.

excellent book for hobbyists.
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-25
I've recorded on 4 track cassette to hard disc recorders and was intimidated to jump into PC recording. This book is excellent. Cubase (even LE like I own) is so feature rich that one could spend a day just scrolling through the in program user manual (576 pages). This book cuts to the chase telling you about mic and room selection all the way to a final mastered project. If you are new to Cubase, do not hesitate to buy this book.

Music and Audio
Five Little Ladybugs (Karyn Henley Playsongs)
Published in Audio Cassette by Tyndale Kids (1999-06-01)
Author: Karyn Henley
List price: $5.99
New price: $89.40
Used price: $398.78

Average review score:

Great Music for Actions and Singing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-18
We use this CD at a Music and Movement class for preschoolers. They love the songs, and the words are very clear and easy to hear. The repitition, and focus on animals helps too. We also give them away to Moms with new babies...a treat for the big brother or sister.

Perfect for your toddlers and preschoolers and it's so CUTE!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-30
My daughter who is a 18-month-old just loves this book! Whenever I read the book to her with the motions suggested by the author, my daughter would just smile and sometimes laugh out loud. I just enjoy this cute little book and I enjoy my daughter's smile and the time we share together with this book.

Thank you for writing this excellent book and I also highly recommend another book by the same author... "Love, that's why."

My two-year-old loves this music.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-28
I bought this because my two-year-old was coming home from Mother's day out singing songs that I didn't know. I asked the caregiver about the cow song and was told it was from this CD. As soon as my daughter heard this, she was singing right along.

Five Little Ladybugs
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-15
My children absolutely love this book and video. The songs have a great message and are easy to learn for young children. My daughter received this as a Birthday gift and now we give this as a gift to her friends. They all love the music. I highly recommend these books and tapes for any child on your list.

Excellent for toddlers and preschoolers!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-11
We received this tape as a Christmas gift and my 2-year-old daughter loves it. It has fun action songs and easy-to-learn words with simple truths about God and Jesus. My daughter even learned subtraction from one song which counts down from 5 ladybugs to no ladybugs. I'm buying a copy for my niece and for the children's choir at church. Highly recommended.

Music and Audio
Good-Night: Enchanting Stories Visualization With Sleepytime Music/Cassette
Published in Audio Cassette by Greathall Productions (1989-06)
Author: Jim Weiss
List price: $10.95
New price: $10.95
Used price: $26.69

Average review score:

Works like magic
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-16
Our 7-year-old had the toughest time going to sleep every night...he would pop right back out of bed every night, giving us any excuse he could think of. I heard about this tape, so I checked it out at the library. It worked like magic! We do not hear a peep from our son after he is tucked in and this tape is turned on. We had to buy it and the companion "Sweet Dreams." Success, even after several months. He often reports that he has good dreams now too.

From age 6 to 16, I still love this tape
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-10
At age 6, this tape was purchased for me, and I loved it. Now 10 years later, I still listen to, and love it. I suffer from slight insomnia, and the only thing that helps me sleep is not any medication, but this tape. Even at age 16, I love the childish, but safe images that are created in this tape; I give it 5 stars, hands down.

"Lovely little dreams. . ."
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-01
that's what my five year-old daughter says that this tape gives her. She is a veteran non-sleeper and has really enjoyed this tape (and it works like a charm!) She says that it gives her the best dreams and that it's like traveling to other lands in her little bed. Can't beat that! I'll be buying Jim Weiss' "Sweet Dreams" so that I'll have something on hand when/if she wearies of this one.

Wonderful for the entire family
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-17
I used this tape (and others) to help my sons become comfortable going to sleep alone. This very soothing, quieting tape is by far their favorite, and they never tire of it. My husband and I also like to listen to the tape, although I have never been able to stay awake to hear a complete story.

Like a Good Night lullaby story
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-13
I ordered this cassette for my 4 year-old son in an attempt to end the "I can't go to sleep" syndrome. Almost every night,even though I had read several books to him, he never seemed ready to go to sleep. This magical tape has three 10-minute stories on each side with soft,relaxing music between stories, so you can listen to one story and turn off the tape if you like. Weiss' performance does a great job of letting child use his imagination while also remaining entertaining for an adult. CAUTION:I cannot count the number of times, while listening with our son, my husband or I have fallen asleep listening to this tape only to wake abruptly to the sound of the tape player shutting off at the end of the tape! When you tire of this tape, Jim Weiss has another "Sweet Dreams" which is almost as good! Enjoy!

Music and Audio
The Gum on the Drum - level 1 (Ages 4-7)
Published in Paperback by Schhol Zone Publishing (1984-02-01)
Author: Barbara Gregorich
List price:
New price: $1.42
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Fun to read. Hilarious
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-24
This book is funny! Few words per page. Kids will reread it again and again (they can retell this after you've read it to them once). They may read it to everyone they know. Suitable for English Language Learners of all ages. See if you can get this little gem in a hard cover. The pages fell out of my soft cover copy. The pages themselves are durable, it was just the binding.

Fantastic early reader book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-03
I bought this for my son when he was 18 months along with a lot of other popular first readers. This book and most of the books in the same line are very entertaining compared to the other first readers. The illustrations are detailed enough to discuss and the stories are really funny. It is so much fun to read these books to my son because he can join in with the words and discuss the pictures. He also reads them to his teddy bears. 9 months later I find myself buying second copies of books in the series because they are so worn from me reading them several times a day. :-)

A Very, Very Easy Reader
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-11
This is one of the first books my daughter could read by herself (not counting theBob Books Set 1-Beginning Readers, of course). She is reading harder books now but still goes back to it for a confidence boost (and for a good laugh). The book has very few words, so most 4 or 5 year olds will partially memorize it after the first few readings.

This book will probably not interest kids over age 5 because it is more of a picture book. Also, if you have a very tiny child, you might want to "save" this book so that it is new when they are first learning to read!

The pictures are fascinating and funny. The details continue to start discussions (even after the 30th or so reading). Also, the book is short so early readers can finish the book without getting restless.

Have fun! P. Gould, co-author of Feeding the Kids: The Flexible, No-Battles, Healthy Eating System for the Whole Family

The Gum on the Drum is un-bear-ably funny!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-10
It's about a Bear's sticky situation as a result of trying to chew gum and bang a drum at the same time.

Not only is it a funny story, but the artwork is great, too. The all-animal band & their friends have a down-homey, folksie kind of feel to them-I was sort of reminded of an informal music jam among friends. For example, the Bear and his buddies are wearing rolled-up-sleeve flannel shirts, over-alls, and work boots, like Jerry & the band sittin' around and pickin' at home...

The other animals are a hoot, too, especially the little scurrying critters in the background. Your child will have a fun time picking out the little guys as they react to the main events up on stage. This is one of my faves!

18 Years Ago, this was my Daughter's favorite!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-20


It's been 18 years since I read this book to my daughter. Of all the books I used to read her, this one is the one I remember best. The story is funny, and the pictures are interesting for a small child at bedtime. I've often wondered if it were still in publication, and I'm glad to see it is. Try it out on your child, and perhaps it'll create a similar memory for you!


Books-Under-Review-->Computers-->Multimedia-->Music and Audio-->10
Related Subjects: Tutorials and Information Audio Formats MIDI Software
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