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PulauWeb Web Hosting Murah Indonesia: Keep Posting Bos..http://blogs.unpad.ac.id/tabletandroid/2011/10/06/adira-asuransi-kendaraan-terbaik-indonesia or http://blogs.unpad.ac.id/tabletandroid/2011/10/05/pulauweb-web-hosting-murah-indonesia or http://blogs.unpad.ac.id/tabletandroid/2011/10/25/viar-motor-indonesia or http://blogs.unpad.ac.id/tabletandroid/2011/11/02/ban-terbaik-di-indonesia-gt-radial or http://bloggue.edublogs.org/2011/09/27/adira-asuransi-kendaraan-terbaik-indonesia or Thanks...
medicine: good article!
Rinckle: Hello Ur Blog is Awaysome ! Its Preety Good !
R.Rama Sethu: Hi the Mail id isramasethu2001@gmail.comRegards.R.R.Sethu
Rama Sethu.R: Hi,Greetings from India.Great Site,good music.Can you sen some of that real Country Music to me onramasethu2001@gmail.comIll be honoured sir.Thanks.God Bless.Regards.R.RAma Sethu
MiracleGirl: yo check my latest entry!!
Courtney: THANK YOU for working through my design issues with me. Doesn't my blog look pretty?Thanks to everyone who's been commenting. KEEP IT UP. :)
Courtney: bear with me if you're on the page right now and it keeps changing. i'm trying to find something i like. i wish i knew REAL html so i could just make a real pretty music blog. ah well. such is life.
Lady Wolfen Mists: I love country music. Just thought I'd give you a friendly tag stop by my place sometime
Cheryl: Hi, I love country music too. I wrote and recorded a few songs but have not got anywhere. I just sing in the dang bars right now. Nice journal.
Elyse: Hiya there and thanks for the tag......and I agree randomness is a huge part of life.....Hope to see you around and guess what?? Tag your it!!
Luisa: yeah i'm liking being 20 ok at the moment, thanks for the birthday well wishes! :DLuisa xoxo
karen: i'm really glad you liked my layout... and it's really nice meeting new rentheads!!! :D
Josh Nay (Jay Roberts): Awesome! Good weeks are awesome and awesome weeks are good...or something.
sparkle: Wishing you an awesome week
sugar08: hey! thanks for stopping by my site! ur's is cool....ttyl
darnesha: Awesome. I'm a pianist too, and I have a guitar, but I suck terribly at that. and I hate my voice, so I mostly just shut up and play piano.;)
Courtney: hey everyone! i'm leaving home for about a week and i'm not sure if i'll be able to update. sit tight until then, I promise wonderful things for your patience!
darnesha: Awesome! What instrument? Guitar? Piano?
Josh Nay (Jay Roberts): Yeah, the Nintendo Wii is going to be a terrific system. I love the fact that it will be able to play DVDs and CDs too. Anyways, thanks for the tag, and I'll see you on Monday! Have a safe weekend!
darnesha: Hiya! Thanks for stopping by! Are you a musician too? It's great to meet you, come by again.:)
Mey: Hi Courtney. Thanks for your lovely comment on my journal and for your visit! please come again
Janaka: Hi Courtney!Thanks for visiting my web site.....I like your page too! Keep up the good work! Ciao!
Josh Nay (Jay Roberts): Thanks. Good luck with the country music!
Josh Nay (Jay Roberts): Yeah, same. I'm gonna add you to my friend list if that's okay. If not, let me know and I'll remove you.
Jenn: What a wonderful journal! I have really enjoyed my visit! Wishing you many blessings....
Queen: oh, then i guess i'll be praying for somenew shows to fail like badly. Yeah the WB and UPN mainly appeals to teenagers.
Raine: Hi! Thanks for dropping by at my journal. I like your site! Interesting!!! have a great day!
Queen: Thanks for the stopping by!!!! I LOVE country music. It's my favorite type. My favorite artist is Martina McBride!!!!!!!!!
MiracleGirl: yay! nice blog! =D
Jan: Hi Courtney, thanks for dropping by and glad you enjoyed my journal..pop in again soon.
leenie: Hi Courtney, thanks so much for dropping in and saying hello...you have a great place here
hotbiskit: Thanx court. Nice to see your blog too. Congrats on the piano, and best of luck for guitar. I also play. It;s a beautiful instrument.
Amanda: thanks so much for the comment. I hope you don't mind that i add you as a friend. Anyway, take care!
Elyse: Hey thanks so much for stopping by...I wish I had learned to play..You go and hey!! Tag your it!!
jr: good site

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Monday, August 7th 2006

8:38 PM

MOVING!

I'm combining this blog with my old personal one in a new location:  courtney903.blogspot.com.

No entries will be moved, but both will be continued at that address.

Come visit!
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Friday, August 4th 2006

10:58 PM

10 hours in a Honda

  • cd of the day: Tim McGraw and the Dancehall Doctors
  • topics discussed: Tim McGraw and Blue Highway

Spending nearly 10 hours in a car in one day gives a person a lot of time to ponder a lot of things.  I actually didn't make it through the amount of music you'd expect I could... I slept a lot, read quite a bit, and repeated a few cds because I was just enjoying them so much.  Plus I spent a little over an hour listening to Dane Cook.  Yay.  But what I did listen to today?  Oh was I satisfied.

The first cd I pulled out was Tim McGraw's "Set This Circus Down."  I listened to it twice.  You know?  He is not an earth-shattering vocalist, but he picks lyrically amazing songs and some truly musical ones too.  They're not just pop recreations of the last big thing.  They're fresh (at least for the time they were released) and not overdone in the least.  Favorites from the album?  Angry All the Time, a duet with Faith.  Set This Circus Down.  Cowboy in Me.  Take Me Away.  Why We Said Goodbye.  But in all reality?  The whole cd is amazing.

That said, the next cd I put in was Tim McGraw and the Dancehall Doctors.  And if you thought "Circus" was a fantastic project, "Dancehall Doctors" blew it out of the water.  This was the first album Tim did with his road band in the studio.  I've always been intrigued by the music... I knew I loved it but I never really knew why.  Listening to it today, I realized that while the musicianship is great, it's not done by people who are normally studio musicians.  The style is extremely different.  Plus, these people play together all the time and have these personal and musical relationships that all come through in the music.  A lot of it is not technically masterful like you expect an album of studio musicians to make it to be, but it is tight in so many ways that are just indescribable.  Plus, the overlapping of certain sounds is something that is not heard a lot in country music.  Banjo and mandolin?  Oh yes.  But not bluegrassy... just... there.  In a stylistic way.  Piano?  AWESOME piano.  AND the kind of piano that I can and do play.  Guitar, dobro, steel... it's all there.  AT ONCE.  The way it all overlaps and blends and... mmmm...  I love every moment of it.  EVERY moment.

And last?  Here's your bluegrass recommendation of the day:  The group? Blue Highway.  The cd?  Marbletown.  The first song you should listen to when you get it?  "Her Tears Fell on Missouri."  The one disappointment?  No fiddle to be found anywhere on the disc.  The intriguing part?  The major use of other stringed instruments besides just mandolin and banjo.  Guitar obviously, and I suspect I may hear some dobro, and maybe even steel guitar.  I'm not sure.  But my ears are intrigued.  The best?  The vocal harmony is great.  Creative.  It's subtle, so if you're not listening for it, the coolness escapes you.  But listen.  Mmmm.  Creamy.  Blue Highway's Myspace is here.  They used to have the song on it, but they've got a new album out so that one's been taken down.  Sad.  Still, listen.  Maybe you'll hear some of the other things I was talking about.

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Thursday, August 3rd 2006

8:10 PM

Faith Update

  • topics discussed: Faith Hill, Tim McGraw, Soul2Soul
Who remembers my Faith Hill contemplation?  Does she sing her earlier hits in concert?  Doesn't she?

"If you catch the show expecting a litany of Hill's early hits arranged to sound just like the original recordings, you'll be disappointed. No "Wild One," no "It Matters to Me," no "Let's Go to Vegas," but you will hear plenty of songs from her latest album, Fireflies. As expected, everything's delivered with booming notes and big finishes.".

The article is basically a little review of the Nashville show.  She did sing "Piece of My Heart"--not exactly like you'd expect it, but I don't think you can expect a person to sing the same song the exact same way for 15 years.  I wouldn't.  Still, it disappoints me a little that they don't do more of their older stuff... but I suppose on seperate tours that may be more of a feasible option.

I guess I won't know for sure until I dish out the money and the miles to see Tim and Faith live.
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Thursday, August 3rd 2006

6:26 PM

I Will Sail My Vessel till the River Runs Dry...

  • cd of the day: Garth Brooks, Ropin' the Wind
  • topics discussed: Garth Brooks, The River
I heard "The River" by Garth Brooks on the radio today. 

If I ever redo ONE song by ANYONE, it will be that song. 

You know a dream is like a river
Ever changin' as it flows
And a dreamer's just a vessel
That must follow where it goes
Trying to learn from what's behind you
And never knowing what's in store
Makes each day a constant battle
Just to stay between the shores...and

I will sail my vessel
'Til the river runs dry
Like a bird upon the wind
These waters are my sky
I'll never reach my destination
If I never try
So I will sail my vessel
'Til the river runs dry

Too many times we stand aside
And let the waters slip away
'Til what we put off 'til tomorrow
Has now become today
So don't you sit upon the shoreline
And say you're satisfied
Choose to chance the rapids
And dare to dance the tide...yes

I will sail my vessel
'Til the river runs dry
Like a bird upon the wind
These waters are my sky
I'll never reach my destination
If I never try
So I will sail my vessel
'Til the river runs dry

There's bound to be rough waters
And I know I'll take some falls
But with the good Lord as my captain
I can make it through them all...yes

I will sail my vessel
'Til the river runs dry
Like a bird upon the wind
These waters are my sky
I'll never reach my destination
If I never try
So I will sail my vessel
'Til the river runs dry

Yes, I will sail my vessel
'Til the river runs dry
'Til the river runs dry


I've never found a set of lyrics I've loved more.  EVER.  I have loved this song from the very moment I heard it as a young child and I will continue to love it until the day I die.  It is probably THE best "follow your dreams" song on the face of humanity.  Yes, I know that didn't make sense.  I like it anyway.

If you were never a Garth Brooks fan:
What rock were you living under?!
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Wednesday, August 2nd 2006

10:07 PM

Sarah Watkins Blurb

  • topics discussed: Sarah Watkins
So, I'm not entirely certain I've ever given Sarah Watkins a fair break.  Nickel Creek is featured in a Dolly Parton video, "Heaven Let Your Light Shine Down" (yes, it's the song you think it is) and for the first time in my life I was quite impressed with her fiddling abilities...

I'm just not sure why she never does anything cool in ANY of the stuff the release...
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Wednesday, August 2nd 2006

9:22 PM

Songwriting...

  • cd of the day: Reba, For My Broken Heart
  • topics discussed: Songwriting
Songwriting is such a weird process for me.  I know it's different for everyone, and I think in order to really become a songwriter, you have to learn on your own.  It's a thing that can't be taught.  The fundamentals?  The music theory and ear training and all that?  Yeah.  It's helpful.  But to truly write music, not just put notes together for a class assignment... it's something you have to do for yourself. 

One of my best friends, Dani, wanted to write a song with me.  She'd never written before.  Nothing.  What it ended up being was me sitting at the piano writing the song and she was the idea queen.  We liked it then, but looking back at the finished product, I'm not satisfied.  Because I wanted to make it a part of both of us, I was really trying to use her ideas as much as possible.  Still, it wasn't always something I was feeling or really knew how to put into words eloquently.  The finished product was a mediocre look back at my early high school writing days. 

No songwriter writes the same way.  It just doesn't happen.  Different things work for different people, with their style of music, what they want to have accomplished by the time the song is done, even the reason for writing the song comes into play.  So, cowriting becomes tricky.  Most people don't even write on their own anymore... they cowrite.  Cowriting is something I have very little experience with, so I can't comment too much.  However, I can say that it is nearly impossible when one party is somewhat accomplished and the other has never tried it.  It turns into a lesson, and the lesson will be completely useless.  You canNOT teach a person to write a song.  It's a discovered process, and a lot of the time, not even describable.

Dani has asked me millions of times "how do you do it?"  And I always sit there thinking, trying to come up with an intelligent answer.  I really don't know.  I do know that I can only write if I'm in the right mood.  Sometimes something very specific triggers my imagination and I go into writing a song with one line or even one word in mind.  Sometimes I just sit down and write what comes out.  Both methods work really well for me, actually... As for writing the music... sometimes the melody creates itself as the lyrics do.  Sometimes all I really have to go on is a rhythm or a groove.  Sometimes I have nothing and just sit at the piano or at my guitar and play around with notes and rhythms until I find something that intrigues my ear.  Sometimes I start at the piano and the words come later.  Sometimes I stop every 2 seconds to write every little detail down (though not as much recently since I started audio-recording my writing sessions).  Sometimes I'm stubborn and refuse to write anything down until the whole thing is perfect, and along the way I forget some REALLY cool stuff, end up pissed, and quit.  Sometimes I remember everything and don't even need to write it down.  Carried Away was never completely written down until I wanted to give it to Preston.  It was always up in my head...   Sometimes I just need to sing what's in my head.  Sometimes I need the piano to guide me along.  Sometimes I know EXACTLY what the chord progression should sound like, and sometimes I just play around with different stuff until, again, I'm intrigued.  And how do you teach that to a person?  There IS no method.  It's not the "brainstorm, freewrite, organize, proofread, edit, publish" thing your english teachers always give you.  Sometimes it happens and sometimes it doesn't...

That being said, I wrote a song last night and today called "Thank You."  Don't worry.  Nothing like the Dido song... still... I really like it.  I'm working really hard to get a PERFECT recording of it (I've done like 8 versions and I'm not satisfied with any of them, but then again my voice is hating me the past few days so that probably has something to do with it...) and it's a favorite for the BMR cd. I'm so anxious to get that sent off, but I'm so afraid that I'm going to send it and THEN write the best song I've ever written.  Oh well.... if I live with that fear, nothing will EVER get done.  I need to conquer!

This was a little random... but I felt like talking...
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Wednesday, August 2nd 2006

9:56 AM

It counts, right?

Original post made on July 31, 2006. 

So, after taking an early evening "nap" last night, I couldn't fall asleep for the life of me.  I watched my "best of Friends Season 1" dvd in its entirety for the second night in a row, and then made it all the way through the dvd from the Garth Ltd. Edition box set.  All the while my mind was wooooooorking and wooooooorking.

Lately I've really gotten into this standup comedy stuff.  I mean, who doesn't love to laugh, right?  I got out my dad's Blue Collar Tour dvd a few weeks ago and watched that about eight times, and today while in Best Buy (to get a microphone!  woo!) I picked up a Dane Cook cd/dvd.  I didn't actually realize it was a dvd until after I had made the purchase, at which point I went "woooo!  dvdeeeee!" because I am ALWAYS looking for random things to entertain me while all other media centers in the house are occupied.  And they often are.  Anyway, I've really become a Dane Cook fan lately.  I've had a few friends over the past few months that have just sung his praises.  My friend Tyler sat me down in front of his fireplace one night (because he knew if he lit the fireplace there was no way I was leavin...) and popped in the Dane Cook dvd.  That was my first Dane experience.  I was intrigued.  So when I came home for the summer and discovered Dane's "Tourgasm" on HBO I was like, "Hey, let's try this on for size, huh?"  And the more I watched the more and more addicted I became.  It's actually very very inspiring... he's always talking about how he wants to be this rock star... have a rock star show and have rock star status... and he makes me realize that I don't just want to be a singer, I wanna be a stand up too!  I mean... the singing comes first, definitely, but the way he entertains people on stage... I want to have that.  I am always watching live shows, whether actually live or televised or whatever, and just observing and dissecting EVERYTHING to see what works, what doesn't, things I would be able to pull off and things that really just aren't me.  Watching the Garth dvd last night, Dane started to come to me.  It was a little strange, and you can call me psycho if you wanna, but it's true.  I'd also been listening and singing along with Reba earlier that day and thinking about which songs I've always wanted to do in my live show, whether or not I recorded them.  Getting Garth back out the same night made me think....

"Do you remember the weird things you used to think as a child?  I mean, just the things that make no sense, and yet because you have this young innocent mind, they just make sense to you?  For instance, I used to think trees made the wind.  No, there was no big mean cloud with scrunched up eyes and a little round mouth blowing the trees over like they were trick birthday candles that just wouldn't blow out.  Oh no.  The trees waved and tossed about by themselves and that is why the air blew sand in my eyes.  Damn trees.  Yeah.  When I was four or five years old, I fell in love with country music.  I did.  I remember how old I was and I remember who my first favorite artists were, and I remember which cds were the first I ever heard.  Want to hear the great part?  My two favorites were Reba and Garth.  And I thought they were married.  Yeah.  Wanna know why my little five year old mind thought they were married?  Because their cds sat next to each other on my daddy's shelf.  It never failed.  If I wanted one of those cds, all I had to do was open that cabinet door, and there they were, right next to each other.  It was fate.  They were in love..... I guess all I have to say about that is I hope that someday, when I have a few cds out, I hope on some little girl's daddy's shelf, my cds sit right next to Dierks Bentley's.  Hey.  At least then we can be married in some alternate universe, right?"

I mean, I have no idea how funny that actually is.  In my head at 3:00 in the morning it seemed entertaining.  I said "I'm gonna blog that so I have it forever!"  And here I am writing it going... well... yeah but... hmm....

But the thing is, being on stage, whether you're a singer or a guitar player or a comedian means entertaining people.  It doesn't matter how big your range is or how fast your fingers move or how funny you're jokes are, if you stand up there and you don't deliver in a creative way, you won't entertain people and they won't pay for your cds, they won't pay for tickets to your live shows...  And really, a musician isn't in it for themselves.  I mean, yeah... it is satisfying to me to write a song and it makes me feel better just because I've gotten it out.  Still, when I have a chance to share it with someone just because I think they might get it, I jump at that.  And when they DO get it?  Ohhhh my goodness.  It's like winning the lottery every single time.  Just to hear someone say "Courtney, I LOOOOOOOVE that song.  You are so amazing."  It's enough to keep me going for months and months... because if just ONE person gets it, and you were lucky enough to find that one person, you have to believe that someone a lot further out there would get it too, if only you could get it to them... THAT is what music is about.  That's what entertaining is about.  It's not about you.  It's about everyone else. 

happy reading

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Wednesday, August 2nd 2006

12:18 AM

"Every Mile a Memory" on CMT

  • topics discussed: Dierks Bentley, his break up songs, and "Every Mile a Memory"
It's such a treat to discover a new single you don't know by an artist when you own every album they've ever released. 

Apparently "Every Mile a Memory," Dierks Bentley's new single from his yet-to-be-named third album, has been at radio since June 27.  I don't listen to a lot of radio.  Most of the mainstream doesn't appeal to me anymore.  Still, that means I miss out on subtle things like songs only currently at #23. 

Still, I think this is my favorite Dierks single EVER.  Not my favorite Dierks song, but radio single?  Yes.  Hearing this, I am so anxious for the new album to come out.  I have always considered him an amazing songwriter.  I didn't ever fall quite as in love with his sophomore project as I did his first effort, but it is fantastic, none-the-less.  Still, hearing this third song, it seems like, while still staying true to who he is, he's taken a bit of a new road.  You can still listen, and even if it weren't his voice in those words, it would be easy to tell he had penned them.  Still, there is something in this song that has grown from the last two projects. 

And does he ever know how to write a break-up/broken-up song.  From "I Wish It Would Break," "Forget About You," "I Can Only Think of One," "Distant Shore," and "Whiskey Tears" on the first album to "Settle for a Slowdown," "Down on Easy Street," and "Good Man Like Me" (which, by the way, features the Del McCoury Band) on the second, to the new single, "Every Mile a Memory," (that's not just a clip, it's the whole song) I'd say they're his strength... maybe even his specialty.  It amazes me how many different ways he can come up with to say "I still miss you,"  especially considering the fact that he's happily married.  You gotta have some bad breakups in your past to be able to keep coming up with that stuff.

I can't say enough how excited I am for the new album, slated for an October release.  October releases are perfect.  The last album I specifically remember being an October release?  Phil Vassar's "Shaken Not Stirred."  Nothing good ever comes out in October.  And when it does?  That's awesome.  Because I don't have to debate over which of the five cds that came out on the same day I want more.  Yay! for Dierks' Bentley.  Yay!
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Tuesday, August 1st 2006

11:39 PM

Cross Country

  • topics discussed: Crossroads, Cross Country, Randy Travis, Josh Turner
CMT has a new show coming out called "Cross Country."  It's basically the same format as the show "Crossroads" with one difference.  While "Crossroads" put two artists together--one country and one from another genre--"Cross Country" will put two country artists together.  The first program airing will be a pairup of astronomical proportions.  Josh Turner and Randy Travis.  If you know anything about Josh Turner, you know Randy Travis is his all time musical hero.  Josh has got this amazing agile bass voice, and you don't get that a lot in country music, or contemporary music at all.  Most popular male voices are baritone or tenor.  That said, Randy Travis is a BASS.  It makes sense for Josh to have looked up to him.  So basically, this "Cross Country" puts together a newer artist and one of their heroes. 

CMT Pure just played an excerpt from the show--a duet version of "King of the Road," originally a Roger Miller song.  It was so amazing.  First of all, Josh starts out by SINGING the bass part.  Not the vocal bass part.  The string bass part.  Then Randy chimes in after much applause with the first verse.  He's starting to look a little old, I must say.  He's not aging quite as gracefully as Harrison Ford... but you know what?  He can still sing.  It really saddens me though, that to my future children he will be nothing but some old guy who used to be really popular.  Because he is and always has been amazing.  Anyway, I digress.  He is sounding fantastic, and Josh pops in with the next verse.  And just when you thought Randy was delivering the best version since Roger's very own, Josh shows him up and then some.  His voice is just so open and resonant and deep.  Randy Travis may be a bass, but Josh?  If God sang country, He would use Josh Turner's voice.  And they continue trading verses back and forth and then there is a modulation.  Yay!  Everyone loves a modulation.  But neither one of them let that modulation be an excuse to say "hey, we modulated.  built-in excitement.  we don't have to do anything new!"  And they completely went to town.  There was one point where Josh put like 8 notes into a 2 second period.  You're always hearing me say that that's not necessarily what makes you cool, and it's not.  But it was the way he did it, and it's not something I can explain, but I just giggled out loud and said "Whoa."  And then the camera panned to Randy he had a BIG cookie-eatin' grin on his face.  You could tell he was thinking the exact same thing I was.  Oh boy.

It's just a GREAT match up.  I can't wait to see the whole episode.  Click here (in explorer) and then hit the "King of the Road" link to see what I'm talking about.  It's SO COOL. 
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Tuesday, August 1st 2006

9:55 PM

Nickel Creek and 330 Sessions

  • cd of the day: Melonie Cannon... duh...
  • topics discussed: Nickel Creek, videos, and 330 Sessions
Some time ago I wrote about Nickel Creek and their song "Speak."  I found the link for the video on CMT.com. 

just visit this page.  Most of their videos are on the site, so please view them all.  They're very very cool.  But make sure you check out Speak. 

I've also come to realize that ALL of the 330 Sessions I'm always gushing about are online.  The stupid thing is that they aren't all archived in the same place, just under the individual artists video pages.  If you are curious about a specific artist, hit CMT.com, search his or her name, and hit the "view all videos" link.  If they did a 330 Session, all the videos will be listed there.

Happy listening!
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