Archive for December, 2008

Will Christopher Nolan Be Interested In Directing The Next Batman Movie?

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRI47J6is9Q

In a new three-part interview over at the LA Times, writer-director Christopher Nolan has returned from his Batman vacation and finally opens up a bit about The Dark Knight’s ridiculous box office take, Heath Ledger’s performance and whether or not he’d be interested in directing a third Batman film. Sure, on paper he’d appear stupid not to take a gig helming the next Bat-flick, but Nolan has always been a man who takes one thing at a time — and notes in this interview how much he dislikes the whole act of “setting up the sequel,” even though he kinda does it himself at the end of Batman Begins when Gordon shows Batman the Joker card. Regarding that scene, however, Nolan adds: “But for me that was just about the excitement of people leaving the theater with the sense that now we have the character up and running. I wanted people to walk away with that sense in their head. You know, that he’s become the Batman in the movie.”

Later on in the interview — which covers Knight’s box office, Ledger’s performance and the inevitable sequel — Nolan, who says he’d next want to take on a “very intimate, small story that happens to be photographed on a ridiculously large scale,” questions whether he’d even want to make a third Batman film. He says, “There are two things to be said. One is the emphasis on story. What’s the story? Is there a story that’s going to keep me emotionally invested for the couple of years that it will take to make another one? That’s the overriding question. On a more superficial level, I have to ask the question: How many good third movies in a franchise can people name? [Laughs.] At the same time, in taking on the second one, we had the challenge of trying to make a great second movie, and there haven’t been too many of those either. It’s all about the story really. If the story is there, everything is possible. I hope that was a suitably slippery answer.”

If you love watching this movie,

Click Here To Download Full Movie!

Or you could buy DVDs below and watch them on your TV:

Violin Playing Tips For Better Sound

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t4gWpxI8ffo

I know you’re chomping at the bit to pick up that violin or fiddle and start playing like Yasha Heifetz, but before you go jumping the gun, you might want to take down some of these violin playing tips to get a better sound out of your instrument.

One of the biggest mistakes violinists make is how they hold their instrument. Make sure that when you hold the neck of the violin or fiddle, that your wrist is curved and you’re sitting straight up. Your posture has to be absolutely perfect or you won’t get a good sound.

You want to support your fiddle with your neck and shoulder. While doing this, you want to make sure that your left wrist does not collapse. It has to hold the fiddle firmly but also be free to move. It takes a while to get this grip just right.

It is critical that you keep your fingernails cut down to the bone. The reason is because if your fingernails are too long, they will bump into the other strings that you’re NOT trying to hold down. Guitarists have this same problem. So keep the nails trimmed at all times.

The bow has to move perpendicular to the strings. You want to lead the bow with your right wrist and not with the fingers. This will produce a much smoother and mellower tone. Don’t grip the bow too tightly. Let it almost glide over the strings.

If you want to play more quietly, play closer to the bridge. If you want to play louder, play closer to the fingerboard. In order to change dynamics while you’re playing, you should alternate between playing closer to the bridge and fingerboard. This will make the performance much more interesting and less wooden.

These are just a few tips to improve your violin playing. If you want to get a hold of a great online course, read my review of a terrific one below. I think you will find it most helpful.

And keep practicing!

Click Here To Play Violin!

Regards,

Joseph Park

Learn The Violin Online…Honest!

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AncJMy8qjPM

The Internet is an amazing place. There is just about nothing that you can’t do online these days. You can shop, read books, play games, do your banking, and yes, even learn to play a musical instrument. Sometimes I wonder how we ever got along without the Internet. Well, if we’re lucky, we won’t have to get along without it ever again. But that’s not the point of this article. This is. YOU want to learn to play the violin online from the comfort of your home. Well, it CAN be done…honest.

The number of places that one can go to in order to learn violin online are virtually unlimited. If you head on over to Google and look up online violin lessons, you can find them all…but, don’t do that because I’ve done some of the work for you.

One place online is Violin Online. This is a web site that not only has violin instruction but also sheet music that you can get as well. Their site is very simple. They have an exercise studio, listening room, a music store and of course their violin basics course. It’s pretty basic and will only take you so far, but it’s an adequate start.

And then of course you can always go to music groups at Yahoo. Yahoo is one of the biggest online places for groups of all kinds, including music instruction. There are more violin groups there than you can shake a stick at. Of course the drawback to these groups is that they are not as structured as a formal course, but they can get you started easily and for free. That’s a big thing with a lot of people.

Then you have Instrument Master. You might have seen this advertised on TV. That’s something that is more and more common today…Internet sites that promote their products and services on the tube. The guy who runs this site is a 20 year performing artist for Sony Records, so he most certainly knows his stuff. I have personally found this to be the most comprehensive online course that there is.

Below you will find my review of Instrument Master. I think you will find it most helpful and have no doubt that you’ll be pleased with their service.

Don’t be afraid of learning the violin. Just the fact that you want to will be enough to take you to where you want to go.

Click Here To Violin Lessons!
Regards,
Joseph Park

Can You Really Learn To Play Violin Yourself?

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xnIp6bbYMFk

I’m not going to lie to you, the violin is considered the most difficult instrument in the world to learn. The main reason is because you have to have a pretty good ear to play it. Unlike an instrument like the guitar, which has frets, the violin has no frets, and thus, you have to “hear” the notes. This takes a bit of practice. So, can you really learn to play violin yourself? The answer, surprisingly, is yes. Let me explain why.

Have you ever watched shows like Hee Haw from back in the early 70s? Have you watched some of those fiddle players? Well, believe it or not, almost none of them were classically trained. Most were self taught. You’re probably wondering how that’s even possible if this is such a hard instrument to play. Well, part of the secret to this is in something that YOU have already. It’s called desire.

See, the main reason you’re reading this article is because this is something that you want to do. Otherwise, you wouldn’t be reading this. I mean let’s face it, reading about learning how to play violin isn’t a casual reading experience. It’s almost like trying to read War and Peace. Not something you do on a Sunday afternoon in between football games.

So your desire is there. And let me tell you something, once you’ve learned to play this wonderful instrument, it will be like a feeling you’ve never experienced before. It’s very hard to explain what it’s like. But trust me, when you pick up the bow and actually make “real” music for the first time, your eyes will light up.

And believe it or not, you CAN learn to play online. Below is a review of a great course that teaches violin and piano combined in a very unique way. I am sure you’ll find my review quite helpful.

The journey you’re about to take is going to be like none you have ever taken before.

Click Here To Play Violin!
Regards,
Joseph Park

I Want To Sell My House…HELP!

Sell House Quickly

Sell House Quickly

I can hear you screaming “I want to sell my house…HELP!” You are NOT alone. Pretty crappy situation we have out there isn’t it. We wouldn’t be in the mess we’re in if people with $99 and a job weren’t getting loans that doctors couldn’t pay off. It’s totally insane. But, it is what it is and we’re left to clean up the mess. Those of us with homes to sell are pretty much S.O.L. Or are we?

See, this is where homeowners go into a panic and you can’t do that. Yeah, I know…it’s a buyers market. I’m not going to lie to you, but as a homeowner, there are many things that you can do to give yourself the advantage. No, you don’t have to sell your home for pennies.

Peter Iannnelli was where you are now. His story of how he kept dropping the asking price of his home $10,000 every week is legendary. Talk about being confronted with the possibility of foreclosure. This was a man who was at the end of his rope, as I am sure you are close to being as well.

Nothing was working until he realized that the strategy that he was using to price his home just wasn’t working. You know the one I’m talking about. Where your home is worth $150,000 so you price it at $165,000 and hope to get $150,000. In a sellers market, this works fine. But it doesn’t work today.

Today, you have to go about this a totally different way. See, the buyer has the upper hand today. He knows that the market is crap. But you don’t have to make things worse by putting up ads that sound like your first born has just been kidnapped. No, you have to learn to deal with your prospects from a position of strength…and that starts with your mindset.

Peter figured that out.

Below, I’ve reviewed the incredible system that Peter came up with for selling a house even in a buyers market. I think you’ll find the review most interesting and hopefully quite helpful as well.

Click here!

Regards,
Joseph Park