The Home Stretch: Why It s Time to Come Clean About Who

The Home Stretch: Why It's Time to Come Clean About Who Does the Dishes  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by First1 at March 6, 2020
The Home Stretch: Why It's Time to Come Clean About Who Does the Dishes

The Home Stretch: Why It's Time to Come Clean About Who Does the Dishes by Sally Howard
English | March 5th, 2020 | ISBN: 1786497573 | 336 pages | EPUB | 4.74 MB

Forty years of feminism, and still women do the majority of the housework. Why?

Complete Time Management Course Raise Personal Productivity  eBooks & eLearning

Posted by ELK1nG at Jan. 1, 2023
Complete Time Management Course Raise Personal Productivity

Complete Time Management Course Raise Personal Productivity
Last updated 11/2022
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 27.02 GB | Duration: 26h 12m

Time Management Skills to Boost Your Management Skills, Productivity and Goal Setting Abilities
VA - The Columbia Jazz Piano Moods Sessions (Remastered) (2000)

VA - The Columbia Jazz Piano Moods Sessions (Remastered) (2000)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks, cue, log, scans) - 1.2 GB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 897 MB
6:29:55 | Jazz, Swing, Bop | Label: Mosaic Records

This seven-CD collection exhaustively documents Columbia Records' first attempt at niche marketing with the Piano Moods series. Born out an impromptu marketing plan by a small Columbia Records staff in 1950, the Piano Moods series was hatched from the marketing discovery that there were more pianos than phonographs (that's record players for all you kids who don't remember vinyl LPs) in the homes of postwar America. The 12" LP had been launched a scant two years before and few titles were available. The Piano Moods series linked 20 albums of the same general type, all of them produced and sequenced by George Avakian, who had created the jazz and pop catalog on LP for Columbia beginning in 1948 – though they were originally released 33 rpm 10" discs to keep the folks with all those 10" 78 rpm discs happy when it came to storage. The sides were cut – usually – with no spirals (spaces) between tunes, giving the side a longer feel than its 17 minutes because the music was continuous. Most pianists preset their sequences and prepared introductions of the key of the preceding tune that modulated into the key of the next one.
VA - The Columbia Jazz Piano Moods Sessions (Remastered) (2000)

VA - The Columbia Jazz Piano Moods Sessions (Remastered) (2000)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks, cue, log, scans) - 1.2 GB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 897 MB
6:29:55 | Jazz, Swing, Bop | Label: Mosaic Records

This seven-CD collection exhaustively documents Columbia Records' first attempt at niche marketing with the Piano Moods series. Born out an impromptu marketing plan by a small Columbia Records staff in 1950, the Piano Moods series was hatched from the marketing discovery that there were more pianos than phonographs (that's record players for all you kids who don't remember vinyl LPs) in the homes of postwar America. The 12" LP had been launched a scant two years before and few titles were available. The Piano Moods series linked 20 albums of the same general type, all of them produced and sequenced by George Avakian, who had created the jazz and pop catalog on LP for Columbia beginning in 1948 – though they were originally released 33 rpm 10" discs to keep the folks with all those 10" 78 rpm discs happy when it came to storage. The sides were cut – usually – with no spirals (spaces) between tunes, giving the side a longer feel than its 17 minutes because the music was continuous. Most pianists preset their sequences and prepared introductions of the key of the preceding tune that modulated into the key of the next one.
VA - The Columbia Jazz Piano Moods Sessions (Remastered) (2000)

VA - The Columbia Jazz Piano Moods Sessions (Remastered) (2000)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks, cue, log, scans) - 1.2 GB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 897 MB
6:29:55 | Jazz, Swing, Bop | Label: Mosaic Records

This seven-CD collection exhaustively documents Columbia Records' first attempt at niche marketing with the Piano Moods series. Born out an impromptu marketing plan by a small Columbia Records staff in 1950, the Piano Moods series was hatched from the marketing discovery that there were more pianos than phonographs (that's record players for all you kids who don't remember vinyl LPs) in the homes of postwar America. The 12" LP had been launched a scant two years before and few titles were available. The Piano Moods series linked 20 albums of the same general type, all of them produced and sequenced by George Avakian, who had created the jazz and pop catalog on LP for Columbia beginning in 1948 – though they were originally released 33 rpm 10" discs to keep the folks with all those 10" 78 rpm discs happy when it came to storage. The sides were cut – usually – with no spirals (spaces) between tunes, giving the side a longer feel than its 17 minutes because the music was continuous. Most pianists preset their sequences and prepared introductions of the key of the preceding tune that modulated into the key of the next one.

V.A. - DJ Essentials Soul, Funk & Disco 12" (24CDs, 2011)  Music

Posted by Discograf_man at Feb. 26, 2017
V.A. - DJ Essentials Soul, Funk & Disco 12" (24CDs, 2011)

V.A. - DJ Essentials Soul, Funk & Disco 12" (24CDs, 2011)
Soul, Funk, Disco | MP3 CBR 320 kbps | 3,12 Gb
Label: DMC Records | Release Year: 2011

Brand New Selection Of Extended 12" Mixes Of Soul, Funk & Disco Classics. Soul music (often referred to simply as soul) is a popular music genre that originated in the United States in the late 1950s and early 1960s. It combines elements of African-American gospel music, rhythm and blues and jazz. Soul music became popular for dancing and listening in the United States, where record labels such as Motown, Atlantic and Stax were influential in the civil rights era. Soul also became popular around the world, directly influencing rock music and the music of Africa.