Do Pets Like 'People' Music? | Care2 Healthy Living

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Some pet owners might insist their animals like exactly the same music they do, but this might not be true. Research has indicated animals typically don?t have much response to human music, but music that has been composed with their acoustic and vocal range in mind does create a more observable responsiveness, according to Charles Snowdon, an animal psychologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Dogs might be the exception to this general observation, as they seem to become more relaxed with classical music and agitated when heavy metal is played. Snowdon said, ?So, it is possible that they might be responsive to music in our frequency range. My prediction is that a big dog might be more responsive to human music than a smaller dog such as a Chihuahua.? (Source: MSNBC)

It is hard to tell how much the two large dogs in this video are enjoying playing a piano. They might be participating because they are following the lead of a human, had extensive training, wanting food reward or all of the above. Some might interpret such a scene as confirming that dogs like the same music and have the same emotional responses to human music, but what scientific research has confirmed such a view?

Some pet owners might vehemently assert that they have seen responses in their pets when they play certain pieces of music, and they could be right, but it?s hard to make conclusions based on personal anecdotes. Some pets might be responding to the change in mood for their owners and not to the music the owners play, for example.

Also, it seems fairly common for humans to project their own emotions on animals, which denies the perspective of animals, and the fact that, though there could be some overlap, there are also differences. These differences are something to keep in mind when playing music for or around animals. Other factors, like volume, should also be considered, as high volume can be stressful or damaging to pets? ears.

If you are interested in the growing field of species-specific music, cellist and composer David Teie has created music specifically for cats and it is available online. There are several samples you can listen to on the bottom of this page. This music doesn?t sound quite right to human ears, but the point of the research really is that animals have different responsiveness. A Care2 writer, Lisa Spector, who is also a concert pianist has created soothing music just for dogs.

Image Credit: Ohnoitsjamie / Creative Commons

Related Links
Tips for Adopting Shelter Animals
Music Just for Dogs
Mozart for Mutts?and Marine Life?

Source: http://www.care2.com/greenliving/pets-prefer-their-own-music.html

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Redigi Case Poses A Novel Copyright Question on the Resale of …

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[unable to retrieve full-text content]You know all those used music stores you used to love to go to back in the day when you bought music on CDs? You could browse through used CDs and buy them for less than retail. Of course, many…

Source: http://masslawblog.com/uncategorized/redigi-case-poses-a-novel-copyright-question-on-the-resale-of-mp3s-is-digital-first-sale-legal/

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Spotify now offering 320kbps music quality to Apple mobile devices

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Popular on-line music streaming service Spotify has dished out a brand new mobile application that offers users a superior quality over the music purchased from Apple’s iTunes Store, claims the company.

The new app is available for both the iPad and iPhone users, where this “Extreme” service will provide songs at no less than 320 kbps quality. This surpasses the iTune Store’s 256 kbps offerings. The new app, according to experts, has been targeted specifically at those hi-fi music lovers who prefer CD audio quality in their music.

The new offering could help the company narrow the lead that Apple’s iTunes Store enjoys over it. Spotify happens to be the second most popular music service in Europe, trailing just behind Apple’s own?iTunes Store.

What still remains to be seen is whether or not the music streaming also comes up with a similar offering for the users of its Android app, which delivers only the capability of 160 kbps.

“The app’s “free use” restricts users to playing music stored locally on their devices – no subscription, no 320 kbps streaming,” David Murphy of the PC Mag noted in his report.

Apple iTunes Spotify link

Source: http://www.itproportal.com/2012/02/15/spotify-now-offering-320kbps-music-quality-to-apple-mobile-devices-/

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Google Music Manager: A frustrating way to download your music library (Digital Trends)

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google-music-download-purchased-songs

Google Music users, you can breathe a slight sigh of relief, but don?t get too excited. Google has finally enabled a way for you to retrieve the music you upload to its new music storage locker service. The announcement was made on the official Android Market Web site.?

Using the Windows or Mac desktop PC client, you can now click one of two options. You can ?Download my library? or ?Download purchased music.? One of these options presumably downloads only the music you purchased from Google, while the other lets you download all of the music tracks that you have personally uploaded to the service.

A confused cloud

After hearing this news, I tried out the updated app on my Windows 7 machine this morning to mixed results. While it definitely seems to work (it downloads tracks), Google?s new download feature is extremely limited in functionality and its ability to detect which songs are purchased is completely broken. I tried to download only my ?purchased music,? thinking that there would be nothing in there except for the few free songs I?ve downloaded on Google Music, but to my surprise, Google Music believes that it now owns a hefty portion of my music library. Hundreds (maybe thousands) of tracks that were ripped from CDs, purchased on Amazon MP3, and given to me by friends are now all labeled as Google Music purchases for no good reason. If this wasn?t frustrating enough, to download music, you can only download all of it. For me, that means I have to download all 7,900 songs I?ve uploaded to Google Music.

There are options to download tracks from http://music.google.com, but you can only download each song or album two times. Yep, two (2) times?forever. If your computer is acting up and you don?t finish a download, well, too bad; you?ll have to use your last download to get your songs. Google announced this limitation for music purchased through Google, but it seems to apply to all music, even the music that you own and have uploaded to Google Music.

google-music-1-download-remaining

This album (above) was purchased and downloaded from AmazonMP3, and uploaded to Google Music. Google has no ownership of it, yet I am only allowed to download it once. If you download an album, but have already downloaded one of the songs on that album twice, that song will be skipped and you will be prompted to use the Music Manager to get the song. That means you?ll have to download thousands of items to get a single song. The Manager does have one good feature: You can choose to download only the songs that were added since your last mass download. This is useful, but we hope Google adds an auto-download feature that automatically downloads tracks to a PC when it?s added to Google Music. Moreover, it should be possible to upload tracks from an Android phone or tablet.?

On top of these troubles, Google?s Music Manager uploading has not operated well since launch. The software is a bandwidth hog, even when its upload speeds are dialed down. It seems to upload incredibly slowly, no matter what you do. I?ve been uploading my collection off and on since the service launched in June 2011, and have still only uploaded about 7,900 songs out of 12,000+. I don?t have a particularly slow connection either. I imagine if I let Google Music run straight and kept my computer on at night, it might take about a month to upload my tracks, maybe longer.?

Certain track features, like song ratings (1-5 stars) are not pulled in and converted into Google?s Thumbs Up or Thumbs Down system either, meaning hardcore users will have to re-rank their music.?

Android pinning problems

google-music-android-pinning-for-offlineI realize that this is a free service, and that Google has to deal with a lot of backward thinking music labels, but these limitations are confusing. Music labels may have good reason to force users onto a PC before they can download tracks, but it?s harmful to the entire experience. You cannot download unrestricted Google Music songs to an Android device either. You can choose to ?Pin for offline? any album, artist, or track, but those songs are not available outside of Google Music and there is no download dialog for them, so you don?t know if they are actually ?pinned? to your phone or not.

To touch on one last issue, the interface of the Google Music app for Android is improved with Android 4.0, but it?s still quite unpolished when compared to the included music players in Windows Phone and iPhone.

Why not charge?

As someone hunting for a cloud music solution, I?d almost prefer that Google offer a paid option for Google Music, which would give me full access to all of my tracks and the freedom to download them where I please, with the option to specify how the files are formatted and such. But for now, I sit and wait.?

This article was originally posted on Digital Trends

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/digitalmusic/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/digitaltrends/20120127/tc_digitaltrends/googlemusicmanagerafrustratingwaytodownloadyourmusiclibrary

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The curious case of Grammy nominee Linda Chorney (AP)

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. ? Linda Chorney is the feel-good, do-it-yourself success story of this year’s Grammy Awards. Or she’s an unworthy impostor who broke the unwritten rules regarding self-promotion for music’s top showcase.

It just depends who you talk to.

How the little-known 51-year-old singer-songwriter parlayed pluck into a career milestone provides an interesting window into the inner politics of the Grammys and the role influence can play in shaping nominations. Chorney’s nod for best Americana album at the Feb. 12 ceremony has drawn a range of reactions, not all of them kind. She’s been mocked on Twitter and by a majority of taste-making bloggers, and only occasionally has anyone come to her defense.

Since her Nov. 30 nomination for her self-produced independent double album “Emotional Jukebox,” she’s been taking advantage of the opportunities while turning some of the criticism back on itself in the same irrepressible way she’s carved out a career in music over the past three decades.

“It’s not cool,” she said. “But what can you do?” The positive reaction has outweighed the negative, she says: “I’ve had an outcry of letters from people my age who have said what an inspiration this is. That it gave them hope. So that’s been pretty nice. I didn’t expect to hear that, which was really beautiful.”

Her critics say Chorney’s use of a National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences social-networking site to introduce her music to voters ran afoul of informal rules about lobbying. David Macias, a Grammy winner based in Nashville, thinks her nomination could have damaged the credibility of music’s most prestigious showcase.

“The Grammys run the risk of being diluted,” Macias said.

Chorney has defended herself, saying she simply took advantage of the Grammy365.com social-networking program the academy encouraged her to use. And Neil Portnow, the academy’s president, agrees. He says her story shows there truly is a level playing field for all artists.

“It shows everybody has a shot,” Portnow said. “That really is the truth.”

Her competition is previous category winner and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame member Levon Helm, Country Music Hall of Fame member Emmylou Harris, Lucinda Williams and Ry Cooder ? owners of nearly two dozen Grammys collectively. Chorney’s detractors say she doesn’t belong.

In what seemed to be a veiled swipe at Chorney, when Lost Highway Records congratulated Williams on her nominations on its website, it added: “One might think Lucinda would be up for the award alongside the likes of amazing albums such as `KMAG YOYO (& other American stories)’ from Hayes Carll or Robert Earl Keen’s `Ready for Confetti,’ but alas, here is a full list of the Americana Album nominees,” then listed Chorney’s name first.

Chorney, a resident of Sea Bright, N.J., has made a living as a musician for 30 years outside the label system, visiting all seven continents and releasing six albums along the way. While she never achieved her larger goals, she engineered a career with a willingness to barter and surprisingly lucrative gigs in resort locales ? at one, she memorably sang in exchange for rounds of golf.

“Will sing for greens fees,” Chorney said. “Seriously. It’s an alternative way. I tried making it in the business, to get the big record deal, but I’ve had a pretty good life singing all around the world. I like to climb. I went to Mount Everest. So it’s been pretty rewarding.”

Along the way she made lifelong friends who contributed to her career in interesting ways. One gave her a pass that allowed her to fly standby anywhere in the world for seven straight years and she crisscrossed the globe. Another friend, anesthesiologist Jonathan Schneider, sent her career in a completely unexpected direction when he offered to pay for “Emotional Jukebox,” dropping around $80,000.

Backed by a strong crew of musicians that included “Saturday Night Live” band member Leon Pendarvis, “Late Show” bassist Will Lee and famed session singer Lisa Fischer among others, Chorney produced what she feels was the best album of her career. The first disc includes eight original songs and covers of The Beatles, Led Zeppelin and The Rolling Stones. A second disc includes an original classical symphony.

She became an academy member at another friend’s suggestion. With two weeks to go until the close of nominations, someone else urged her to use the Grammy365.com website to seek voter support. About 1,500 of the academy’s 12,000 voters accepted her contact and after that it was up to them to listen to her music and make a decision.

“I think the system is a wonderful opportunity for independent artists,” Chorney said. “Basically a one-year membership is $100. Grammy365 to me is, you buy your $100 lottery ticket and the odds are like winning the lottery. Except, rather than having a number, you have your music, which can make your odds better if your music speaks for itself and gives you an edge.”

It’s that edge Macias objects to. He says over the years, NARAS officials had made it clear in “unwritten rules” that blatant self-promotion was out of bounds. Not only was it always difficult to determine who voters were, if a publicist or artist did cross into forbidden territory they were asked to step back in line.

Macias, a Nashville-based artist manager who runs the management and marketing firm Thirty Tigers, is one of the few members of the loose-knit roots rock community willing to talk on the record about Chorney’s nomination. He makes it clear that his opinion is his own and not that of the Americana Music Association, of which he is the outgoing president.

AMA’s executive director Jed Hilly declined comment. And interview requests extended to the publicists or managers of the category’s nominees and the artists who produced the top 10 most-played Americana albums in 2010 went mostly unanswered.

Macias realizes that he’s coming off like a jerk for going after Chorney, but he believes she broke the unwritten rules about promoting yourself, depriving artists like Carll, Jason Isbell and John Hiatt of a well-deserved nod.

“I guess it just comes down to the question: What do the Grammys mean?” he said. “… Honestly, I think people voted for it because she asked them to and she worked really hard. And I think the Grammy voters by and large ? I hate to say it ? I feel like maybe they just weren’t paying as close attention.”

Portnow and Bill Freimuth, the academy’s vice president of awards, said it’s as easy as ever to make educated decisions, however. A listening function available to voters offers more than 90 percent of music that’s eligible for nomination.

That’s one of a handful of recent changes that Chorney was able to capitalize on while seeking her nomination. Freimuth said about four years ago the academy changed its outlook on lobbying and now embraces the practice within certain guidelines. Along with the Grammy365.com website, the academy worked with Billboard Magazine this year to produce a voter’s guide that included “for your consideration” style advertising, for example.

Chorney simply used the system to her advantage.

“She kept herself very busy reaching out to the voting membership and tried to make sure as many people as possible, especially those who were voting in that category, knew about her work,” Freimuth said. “All of that is perfectly legitimate as far as our process goes.”

Enough people heard Chorney’s voice that she’s being fitted for a new dress, borrowing $6,000 earrings and heading to Los Angeles next month. And she intends to have a blast.

___

Online:

http://www.lindachorney.com

http://www.grammy.com

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120120/ap_en_mu/us_music_grammywatch_chorney

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