Archive for the ‘Adam Golf’ Category
The Greatest Putters in Golf
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We all know that putting is a game within a game and those who manage to excel at the black arts are usually the ones to go home with someone else’s money in their pocket
Willie Park Jr famously said that the man who can putt is a match for anyone and in the rarified atmosphere of today’s pro Tours that has never been truer. Players can hit the ball so far, with such accuracy, that the man who can putt the best settles tournaments and championships on the greens. It has always been so but never more than today, when everyone, it seems, is a peerless ball striker. Moderate players can have a hot streak in which the hole is as big as a bucket and the ball drops with relentless certainty but those streaks don’t last and the golfer who wants to build a long career needs to be able to putt consistently well.
So here we present the definitive list of the greatest putters that ever lived, with two deliberate exceptions. Women are excluded because women cannot putt. And anyone who wields a long putter is excluded because they have already conceded, by having the monstrosity in their bag, that they are fallible on the greens (and because it’s not golf to use one).
25. Billy Casper
The 1959 US Open champion of whom Gary Player once said, with just a tiny hint of irony: ‘I feel sorry for Casper, he can’t putt a lick. He missed three 30-footers out there today.’ Casper hated analysing his play and once when asked about technique, replied: ‘How does a seagull fly? How does a centipede get all those legs working at once?’
Thanks Billy.
24. Ken Brown
One of the qualities that many people in this list have is that they moved with an unhurried, tranquil slowness – and there was never a slower player than Brown. Best friend Mark James wrote: ‘When he stood over a putt you were never sure which would come first, his backstroke or darkness.’ But the painstakingly deliberate method helped Brown sink more than his fair share.
23. Phil Mickelson
One of only two left-handers in the list (along with Bob Charles), he’s always good but often inspired. At last year’s US Open he and Retief Goosen putted the lights out on some of the hardest, fastest and lumpiest greens ever produced for a Major, and of course at the Masters he simply looked as if he knew he would hole everything he looked at. And he did.
22. Nick Faldo
Especially in his younger days, Faldo was remarkably gifted, with the same sort of free-flowing, rhythmical action that characterised his long game and he himself said in his autobiography that in those days he didn’t think he would ever miss. When he re-built his swing over two long years he neglected his putting but then re-dedicated himself to that as well, with six Majors being the result.
21. Lee Trevino
Unorthodox in everything he did, Trevino grew up poor and his real education in golf came in money matches that he could ill-afford to lose and against opponents to whom it was unwise not to pay up – few things will find the faults in a putting stroke quicker. In consequence the Mexican genius developed a sound, consistent, repeatable action that wouldn’t work for everybody but certainly did for him.
20. Jose Maria Olazabal
Ollie’s driving problems have been an almost perennial part of his career but so, thankfully, has one of the most effective putting actions in the world. You only need to get two things right to hole a putt – pace and direction – and this man gets them right a helluva lot of the time.
19. Walter J Travis
Golf writer Charles Price summed up the Australian who played through the turn of the last century with the words: ‘Travis holed out from such immeasurable distances that his opponents claimed he could putt the eyes out of a chipmunk.’ He didn’t take up the game until he was 37 and three years later won the US Amateur.
18. Isao Aoki
The popular Japanese player probably had one of the most idiosyncratic actions of all but, awkward though it looked, it was effective. He would address the ball with the toe of the putter pointed skywards, in a way that made you scared he would dig the heel into the ground during the stroke – but he never did. The first Japanese superstar led the way on the greens.
17. Brad Faxon
Some say that if Brad couldn’t putt he probably wouldn’t be on Tour but he is blessed with one of the smoothest, most effective putting strokes ever seen, and you don’t make two Ryder Cup teams on putting alone. He is consistently rated number one by his fellow pros – most of who would sacrifice their first-born for Faxon’s stroke – and they should know.
16. Walter Hagen
The Hague virtually owned the USPGA Championship when it was matchplay, and it’s matchplay where the best putters dominate. Which also explains his Ryder Cup record of played 9, won 7, halved 1 and lost 1. He had all the gamesmanship and psychological tricks but they don’t work if you can’t back it up, and he could.
15. Ernie Els
Despite those two woeful misses on the 18th green in last year’s Open, over the course of his career Ernie has been a textbook putter. His reading of greens is superb but, as with so many other truly greats, it is the smooth and unhurried but accelerating rhythm of his stroke that elevates him to the ranks of the very best.
14. Loren Roberts
It was Loren’s caddy who first christened him with the dreadful monicker ‘Boss of the Moss’ but the nickname has more than enough grounding in truth to have stuck. Along with Faxon and Crenshaw has consistently been the man most envied by his peers and least likely to break a putter over his knee.
13. Hale Irwin
Yes, he famously missed a one-inch putt to get into a playoff for the 1976 Open but that was through carelessness. And yes, with the exception of that famous 1990 effort on the 72nd hole of the US Open at Medinah, he’s not renowned for making bombs. But he is the master at getting the job done – three-putting rarely, leaving himself anxiety-free second putts, and holing out when he has to.
12. Paul Runyan
Still remembered on the US Tour as the sort of opponent that everyone hates. He was a short, slight man who was consistently out-driven by everyone – often by a huge margin – but could get up and down better than almost anyone who ever lived. Won the USPGA in 1934 and ’38 when it was still matchplay and when the quality of opposition was awesome.
11. Greg Norman
People remember the numerously inventive ways he found to finish second in Majors but none of them came on the greens, where he was as good as anyone. He sank a 40-footer on the last green in the ’84 US Open to force a playoff with Fuzzy Zoeller, knowing that he had to make it, and that takes bottle and technique. And when he got hot, no-one could scorch round a golf course better.
10. Ben Crenshaw
Widely regarded by his peers as the best they have ever seen, Crenshaw’s smooth, unhurried rhythm was the key to his success. Tom Kite, who grew up with Crenshaw in Texas, once said of him: ‘I don’t remember Ben ever missing a putt from the time he was 12 until he was 20.’ He didn’t miss too many after that either. Inevitably his only two Major successes came at Augusta, where putting is the first game you need to bring.
9. Bobby Jones
The Master stayed faithful to his putter ‘Calamity Jane’ throughout his career, and she remained faithful to him, helping deliver a remarkable string of success. Between 1923 and 1930, when he retired, Jones played in 23 of the Majors for which he was eligible, and won 13 of them – a strike rate of 62%, which no other player has come near matching. And a lot of it was down to putting. In almost every regard he was, simply, the Greatest.
8. Seve Ballesteros
Missing a putt, to Seve, was a personal insult, and he hated to be insulted. From the marvellous fist-pumping excesses of St Andrews 18th green when he beat Tom Watson in the ’84 Open, to the miles and miles of putts he holed in the Ryder cup to beat the hated Americans, Seve played on the green exactly as he did everywhere else on the course, with no fear. He was aggressive, bold and even towards the end of his career, never frightened of the one coming back.
7. Tiger Woods
When Phil Mickelson was asked in March this year by US magazine Golf, who he’d pick to make a five-footer for his life he said: ‘Tiger, because he’s made more clutch putts under the gun than anybody I have ever seen other than maybe Nicklaus.’ He went on to cite the sliding 5-footer against Bob May at the 2000 PGA Championship, and the putt he made in the Presidents Cup in the dark from 15-18 feet. As Phil said: ‘He’s made a lot of ‘em.’ Great putters make them when they have to and there has probably never been anybody more consistent from 10-feet and under when it counts.
6. Jack Nicklaus
His awkward, crab-like stance, hunched over the ball, right knee bent and all his weight on the left side, never looked to be the most aesthetically beautiful thing in golf but few actions were as effective. His finest day came in the ’86 Masters, his last Major, when he wielded an over-sized MacGregor Response putter to devastating effect over the back nine to pinch the green jacket from under the noses of Seve Ballesteros and Greg Norman, but that was only the most recent of many memorable days of the short grass for the Daddy of them all.
5. Peter Thomson
The Australian who took five Open championships, three of them in a row, is probably the most neglected multiple Major champion in golfing history. His quietly spoken, relaxed demeanour disguised the depth of his bloody-minded determination to win and he probably had the smoothest and best-looking putting stroke of anyone on this list. It wasn’t quite as effective as some but was a thing of beauty, and it got the job done.
4. Young Tom Morris
Bob Ferguson, who himself won the Open three times in succession, said of the man who was first to achieve the feat: ‘Tom Morris would putt and before the ball was halfway to the hole, turn away and say to the boy carrying his clubs: ‘Pick it out of the hole, laddie.’ And this was in the days when greens resembled sheep-grazing tracks (which, incidentally, they often were) and clubs were made from the jawbone of an ass. It is important, though, to make the distinction between Tom Morris Jr and his father, who couldn’t putt a tennis ball into the Grand Canyon.
3. Sir Bob Charles
The first left-hander and New Zealander to win the Open (in 1963), Charles is now 65 and has just announced that next season will be his last as a golf professional, after almost 50 years of showing his fellow pros how it should be done on the greens. So good and consistent has his putting stroke remained that he won 23 times on the US Senior (Champions) Tour, at an age when many others are fighting the yips, and he has 70 professional wins in total. First came to prominence as an 18-year-old amateur prodigy when he won the NZ Open and he hasn’t stopped winning since.
2. Bobby Locke
The South African was unconventional in everything he did. He wasn’t even named Robert but was christened Arthur D’Arcy – the Bobby came from his habit of bobbing up and down in his pram. He familiarly wore a white cap, shoes and shirt (including necktie) and dark plus fours, in which he carried his portly frame down the fairways with such ponderous elegance that his passing could have been likened to that of a royal barge on the Thames. His golf game was also out-of-the-ordinary, and involved sending every shot at least 40-yards right of target and hooking it back it into play. But it was on the greens where he broke people’s hearts and he always maintained that any round of golf involving more than 28 putts was a bad one. He won four Opens and when he went to America they laughed, until he won six times in a short space of time with such dominance that the ever-insular US Tour changed its rules so that he couldn’t go back. One of the Americans he beat, Lloyd Mangrum, said in 1982: ‘That son of a bitch Locke was able to hole a putt over 60-feet of peanut brittle.’
1. Sir Michael Bonallack
Quite simply, in the eyes of many, the former secretary of the R&A is the best putter there has ever been. As a lifelong amateur he was never tested against the very best pros but many of those who witnessed him in action agreed that he was peerless. Like so many masters of the green, he stayed faithful to one putter and had an idiosyncratic style that was all his own. Peter Alliss said of him: ‘Michael Bonallack was a remarkable player. He had a magnificent short game that was all of his own making. When putting he took up a big, wide stance with his nose almost sniffing the ball and had a short, jabby swing but all the putts went in the hole.’ Sir Michael’s honours in the amateur game are far too numerous to mention but include five amateur championships and four English amateur titles. In the 1963 English Amateur at Burnham & Berrow, he got up and down in two 22 times in 36 holes against Alan Thirwell. Far too modest to agree with this assessment, he nevertheless was the best.
Definitely not on the list
Ivan Gantz; early US Tour pro who was famous for hitting himself in the head when he missed a short putt, and once even knocked himself out.
Larry Nelson; who once said with commendable honesty: ‘I play along every year, waiting for one week, maybe two, when I can putt.’
Clayton Heafner; of whom fellow American pro Cary Middlecoff said: ‘The only time he could putt was when he was mad enough to hate the ball into the hole.’
Had it but lost it
Tom Watson; Fearlessly aggressive in his early days and never minded knocking it five feet past because he would always get the one coming back.
Now he doesn’t
Ben Hogan; Still a fabulous swinger of a golf club well into his 50s but couldn’t putt for his life.
Tony Jacklin; Never the same after Lee Trevino broke his heart and picked his pocket for the ’71 Open by chipping in from everywhere.
Peter Alliss; Lost it at the Italian Open when he retired mid-round after missing a two-footer.
Sam Snead; Rescued himself for a while by putting sidesaddle but when that was outlawed he was back to the yips.
Honourable mention
Bernhard Langer; for having, and overcoming, the yips three times, which is just about unique at the highest level.
Almost made it into the top-25
Arnold Palmer; Always wonderfully aggressive but his collection of more than 80 putters reveal how he struggled at times.
Retief Goosen; One of the most consistent holer-outs in the world and his two US Opens are a measure of his ability.
David Toms; Rarely three-putts and WGC Matchplay win might just propel him to the next level.
Potential to join the greats
Paul Casey; The combination of Luke Donald’s iron play and Casey’s putting wrapped up last year’s World Cup of golf.
Adam Scott; At his best a wonderful putter but not at his best often enough yet.
Stewart Cink; Rolls them in from everywhere
Mike Weir; Won the Masters on the greens but not yet truly consistent enough.
Sergio Garcia: Currently worried about his inconsistency but has the stroke and imagination to be a world beater.
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Play Better Golf for Seniors
Play Better Golf for Seniors : Golf may be a sport you can enjoy from youth through AARP membership, but a 50-year-old man can’t play the game the same way he did at 25. With a loss of flexibility comes a loss of power, and unless you adjust your swing, you’ll lose accuracy, too. In response to the limitations that age brings, the authors of Play Better Golf have created the “S swing,” a way of striking the ball accurately and powerfully with a shorter backswing. This short swing not only makes for lower and more consistent scores, it helps avoid back, shoulder, and elbow injuries caused by forcing your body to do things it is no longer able to do.
Many of the tips in the book have nothing to do with the swing. For example, golfers with arthritis in their hands are advised to wear padded weightlifting gloves instead of the standard golf glove. There’s even a tip for players who wear bifocals (don’t wear them on the golf course, since you’ll have to change your swing to be able to see the ball; opt for distance-vision-only lenses).
Of course, much of the information–particularly the tips for chipping and putting–can be used by all golfers. But if you’re the competitive sort, you might not want others (like your regular playing partners) to get their hands on this valuable guide. –Lou Schuler EUR 24,98
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The 4 Key Exercises To Develop A Powerful, Muscular Back
It’s fairly safe to say that most guys hitting the gym are focusing more on their upper body than their lower body, and more on their chest than on their back. It’s easy to see why – a huge, bulletproof chest complimented by powerful shoulders and huge arms are easy to show off, with gains appearing relatively quickly.
However, focusing all your effort on your chest and neglecting your back will never give you the ‘V’ shaped look that defines superior upper body physique. It is essential that you target the key muscle groups of the back if you ever want to achieve that wide, powerful look that screams ‘strength’.
It’s easy to understand why most weight lifters neglect these back muscles:
They view the back muscles as less important than the other muscle groups they train.
The back doesn’t tend to get as cut or ripped as other areas, and so gains aren’t as readily apparent.
Training your back is hard work.
It is important that you understand this: you will never achieve that wide, powerful looking upper body physique without building your lats, traps, rhomboids, lower back, and spinal erectors. This fact becomes even more apparent when you realize that roughly 70% of your upper body mass is located in this area.
Sit down and review your workout plan. Make room for the following four essential back exercises in order to properly develop your back muscles:
Barbell Deadlift: Nothing beats this simple exercise for hitting the major muscle groups in your back all at the same time. From your rhomboids to your traps, from your erectors to your lats, your back muscles are engaged throughout this movement. This exercise should be a staple of your back workout routine.
Lat Pull-Down: Targets your lats, giving you that ‘V’ shaped look you’ve been looking for. If you’re working out at home or don’t have access to a lat machine, a simple overhand pull up will achieve the same results.
Rows: There are several different rowing options available, from seated machines to free weight rows. All of them target the upper to middle portion of the back while also engaging the lats. It’s a matter of personal preference as to which exercise you choose, but dumbbell or barbell rows are recommended.
Shrugs: A good way to end your back workout, shrugs emphasize the upper traps and will help give you a ‘diamond’ shape from behind. Simple dumbbell shrugs are all that are required.
A sample workout routine for your back follows:
Barbell Deadlift: 2 sets of 5 – 7 reps
Lat Pull-Down: 2 sets of 5 – 7 reps
Rows: 2 sets of 5 – 7 reps
Shrugs: 2 sets of 10 – 12 reps
Notice the relatively low number of reps. The focus here is on quality, not quantity. Work to muscular failure employing the above routine and steady growth in both back size and strength will follow.
As with any workout routine, keep careful notes about the number of reps and amount of weight being used for each exercise. Try to increase either the amount of weight or the number of reps being performed each week. Doing so will lead you well on your way to that thick, powerful back you’ve been dreaming of.
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Golf Swing Basics – Finding Great Basic Golfing Tips
Looking for good golf swing basics on the internet can be a journey that goes in circles. Th web is loaded with great knowledge, but there is also a lot of contradicting info. Search engines make it even harder, because of the big, random list that pops up. Here is a better way to find tried and true golf swing basics and golfing tips that have worked for other golfers.
The reason I tend to stay away from search engines when looking for golfing tips is because you never know what you are going to get. It’s such a random list and you have no clue where the good info is and where the bad info is. It’s a crap shoot and it can cause a little bit of frustration. This is why I recommend another solution to locating golf swing basics that really work.
This alternate solution is nothing other than internet forums. There are tons of big golfing forums across the web and they are the ultimate place to locate tried and true golf swing basics. Remember, for every one golfer (which I assume is you) looking for ways to improve your game, there are dozens and dozens of golfers who have already found the ways, tips and techniques that truly work. You can find their stories, links, knowledge and everything else inside of the thousands of topics in these great forums. It’s a good way to find out exactly what has worked for others who were in the same position that you are in now.
Finding good golf swing basics should be a fun experience and this can help you achieve that, as well as see the results on the course.
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Adams Golf A7 Select 60 Series Putter (Right Handed, 35-Inch, Steel Shaft)
Adams Golf A7 Select 60 Series Putter (Right Handed, 35-Inch, Steel Shaft)Adams: 120660550 The new A7 Select Putters features soft stainless steel head construction, precision micro-milled faces and co-molded urethane technology (CUT Design) inserts for enhanced feel and weight distribution. Blade style for thinner top lines and weight distributed to the heel, for balance and control. The Adams A7 Select 60 Series putter is a 345 gram stainless steel heel/toe blade featuring a classic plumber’s neck hosel with a full shaft offset.
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PGA Play Better Golf for Seniors
PGA Play Better Golf for Seniors After reading this book and putting in practice what I learned, I felt I had to come back here and post a comment on it. Let me tell you that this book became my Bible on golf. I have shown it to some of my golf friends and ALL of them ordered one. Even my brother who is handicap 2 and a golf fanatic ordered one. Mike covers ALL aspects of the golf swing: grip, stance, movement, etc. The comparison of the Classic and Modern swings is very well done and his tips, believe me, help a lot! If you had many golf professionals teaching you different things, you need a reference. I made this book my own. : Another publication from the Academy of Golf at PGA National, this book is a comprehensive programme specifically tailored to the needs of the female golfer.
This book features advice from the world’s leading college golf coaches, LPGA players and US Amateur Champions and it covers every aspect of the game, starting with a very important–and often neglected–task of choosing the equipment suitable for your needs. It includes an analysis of all the fundamental points–the set-up, the swing, the short game and coping with hazards and trouble spots, as well as the more advanced techniques for those who are (or become) more proficient. There is some excellent advice on playing strategy, fitness, golf course design and, most importantly, on golf club customs and procedures.
The book is well illustrated, with some stop-action photography sequences that will be of particular value to the novice golfer or anyone who has a problem with their golf swing. The authors are renowned for their instructional articles in various publications–Mike Adams (known throughout the world as the “Swing Doctor”) and TJ Tomasi each have more than 20 years teaching experience. Adams, in fact, was a former PGA touring professional and he is renowned for his “eagle eye” in detecting faults in the golf swing. Kathryn Malone is an LPGA teaching professional in Florida which ensures that she is fully up-to-date with all the latest techniques in golf instruction.
If ever one book was a complete instruction manual for the female golfer, this is it–there is certainly nothing on the market as complete and easy-to-follow. –Ben Naylor EUR 22,21
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Understanding the True Meaning of God’s Grace
Religion can be negative to many, who would perceive it as moralistic, judgmental, and even condemning. In short, to many, religion has the connotation of rejection.
If you are sinful (as a matter of fact, we all are), you may not want to come to God, thinking that God is moralistic and will punish you for your sins. You may get the misconception that you must be good enough in order to be acceptable to God.
All sinners experience brokenness, emotional pain, as well as despair and despondency. For some, they may perpetuate their sinfulness because they simply cannot bring themselves to believe in a power greater than themselves that could give them hope and strength to turn around. Without salvation, they might as well continue with their sinful lives.
It is important that we reject the sinful behavior, but not the person who acts out the behavior. Unfortunately, in real life, many of us have the tendency to blend the two into one: we often associate the behavior with the person. In this way, we become moralistic and judgmental, knowingly or unknowingly. The individual who indulges in the sinful behavior perceives our moralistic attitude or that of society, and may therefore become more adamant and reluctant to change for the better.
This is where God’s race comes in. Jesus is not moralistic. In the parable of the prodigal son, the father is not moralistic and judgmental, and he throws his arms around his returning son, while his other son is moralistic and self-righteous – Jesus does not approve of that moralistic attitude and behavior; on the contrary, Jesus wants us to do just the opposite.
Jesus wants us to understand the true meaning of God’s grace. He wants us to know that God’s grace is God’s unconditional love with no strings attached. A moralistic attitude becomes a piece of string attached to that love, which then becomes “conditional.”
It must be understood that our moralistic perceptions of God stem from our own sinful nature. It is like a child who knows he or she has done something wrong and now stands in trepidation before his or her parents. But by God’s grace, we are not only totally forgiven but also given the opportunity to begin anew. We are provided with hope and promised meaning of life and living. God’s grace not only mends but also renews our relationship with God. Through God’s saving grace, we see our own powerlessness in the face of adversities and temptations. Once we believe that our lives are in a power greater than ourselves, we begin to regain our sanity or to see the meaning out of the chaos in our lives.
The word “grace” has significant meaning for our relationship with God, with our own self, and with one another. Grace is God’s love, which is all-embracing and all-inclusive, and totally unconditional. It means God is showing us the way, the truth, and the life as God would like us to live. Through grace, God comes to us and reveals Himself to us, because we cannot by ourselves find God, or even come to know Him and believe in Him as He really is – we cannot do this by our human effort. We need His grace, which is freely given to all just for the asking.
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Does Music Make Your World Go Round? Do You Have What it Takes to Be the Next Owl City?
My name is Pete, I live in a small town. Where I am from, small reality is the theme of this place. The idea that there is a plan for each person has died off. The ideal that any single person can achieve anything they have ever dreamed of has left. Once, where we believed in ourselves and pushed our own gifts, and the gifted to that next level. As far as your dream will go, is only as far as your own reality will take you anymore.
I am the person people talk about long after I have passed. I don’t live a normal life, forgive me if I still believe in people and there talents. I say what I mean, and mean what I say. This is what makes me one of those people, hopefully not one of the few that still believe that there is something inside of every single one of us that is scratching, and screaming to get out of us. I would absolutely die for any one of the things I truly believe in.
So, what does this have to do with anything you might ask? Well, if you are one of the people I am talking about that seem to be stuck, or perhaps one of the people who knows what needs to be done and are ready to act on those dreams that you have kept inside, now is the time.
This article is about living your dream, however I can only focus on one dream at a time. So because of my love for music and all of its wonder. I have chosen to share with you the motivation that one requires when they are starting out. See, where you might be living and breathing a art form such as music. I am living and breathing motivation.
There is on thing I have always understood to be the rock which the river breaks itself upon, and that is you can be the very best there ever was at anything. But if you lack the motivation, you will simple be none existent to the power of it. So what does this mean? This means you must have motivation. How does someone get motivated? That’s easy, you pick something you could die for, then you live for it. That could be anything, that could be music, baseball, golf, writing, painting. It is the one thing that has always been crying out to you, its what keeps you awake at night when you have thought your way past the bills, and work.
So if you are here to live for music, then let me get you started on the right foot. There are three simple tools which can make you the next Adam Young. For those of you that do not know Adam, allow me to introduce you to him. Adam was a soda pop distributor, he is 23 years old, and he could not sleep at night because he believed, and blamed his love for music on his insomnia. So after a long shift at work, Adam would come home and write music. Only thing is, Adam just started out of the blue. He used only his computer, and a keyboard in his parents basement. He played music for only a few years before his song Fireflies, and his one man band Owl City landed a hit in the top 9 at 9 around the us, and then the world. Thus this article about music!
If I told you, that you could get virtually the same tool Adam used to create his hit Fireflies for only a one time download cost for $20.00 would that drive you mad? Well its true, and its called the SSynth, short for synthesizer.
Maybe you have heard of thy ultimate tool for music creating, maybe not. Either way its yours for 2o bucks. Pretty cheap way to get started, and not only is it the ultimate instrument, it is cheap. You can not get that anywhere else.
Now that you have the instrument, learn some music writing theory through a video series. One that is very good. Once you have learned this, its time to test your freshly written song! Throw it up on YouTube and Amazon! Let the world wide Internet decide how great you are, and make some money every time someone decides to download your song! It is extremely easy if you use a program that can walk you through the steps of listing your music online!
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The Flintstones (DVD) Review
Turning the television world flat on its head, The Flintstones became the first animated hit series in prime time history. Set in the Stone Age town of Bedrock, the show explored the lives of ancient cave dwellers through the lens of a modern lifestyle, with bird beaks acting as phonograph needles, elephant trunks as vacuum cleaners, and fireflies as light bulbs. With its measured use of top-grade humor and clever visuals, The Flintstones became an instant smash hit – spawning decades of syndicated re-runs, spin-offs, and thousands of derivative products…
Loosely modeled after the hit show The Honeymooners, The Flintstones follows the lives of burly loudmouth Fred Flintstone (who has a heart of gold) and his wife Wilma (who puts up with him). The couple lives next door to best friends Barney and Betty Rubble, and they have a dog (a dinosaur) named Dino to keep them company. Following in the footsteps of shows such as I Love Lucy, the show’s characters are always inventing hair-brained schemes, attempting to cover up little white lies, or engaging in some other form of behavior bound to get them in trouble. The Flintstones also features numerous cameo appearances parodying famous personalities from the early-sixties… In the show’s later years, each couple would add a child to the mix with Fred & Wilma having Pebbles (a little girl) and Barney & Betty adopting Bamm-Bamm (a little boy)…
The Flintstones DVD features a number of hilarious episodes including the season premiere “The Flintstone Flyer” in which Fred pretends to be sick so he and Barney can get out of going to the opera with Wilma and Betty. Escaping in their Stone Age helicopter, the two go bowling, but it isn’t long before Barney spills the beans on what they really did… Other notable episodes from Season 1 include “The Swimming Pool” in which Fred and Barney build a pool together only to have it strain their friendship, and “Hollyrock, Here I Come” in which Betty and Wilma win a trip to Hollyrock as a television game show prize…
Below is a list of episodes included on The Flintstones (Season 1) DVD:
Episode 1 (The Flintstone Flyer) Air Date: 09-30-1960
Episode 2 (Hot Lips Hannigan) Air Date: 10-07-1960
Episode 3 (The Swimming Pool) Air Date: 10-14-1960
Episode 4 (No Help Wanted) Air Date: 10-21-1960
Episode 5 (The Split Personality) Air Date: 10-28-1960
Episode 6 (The Monster from the Tar Pits) Air Date: 11-04-1960
Episode 7 (The Babysitters) Air Date: 11-11-1960
Episode 8 (At the Races) Air Date: 11-18-1960
Episode 9 (The Engagement Ring) Air Date: 11-25-1960
Episode 10 (Hollyrock, Here I Come) Air Date: 12-02-1960
Episode 11 (The Golf Champion) Air Date: 12-09-1960
Episode 12 (The Sweepstakes Ticket) Air Date: 12-16-1960
Episode 13 (The Drive-in) Air Date: 12-23-1960
Episode 14 (The Prowler) Air Date: 12-30-1960
Episode 15 (The Girls Night Out) Air Date: 01-06-1961
Episode 16 (Arthur Quarry’s Dance Class) Air Date: 01-13-1961
Episode 17 (The Big Bank Robbery) Air Date: 01-20-1961
Episode 18 (The Snorkasaurus Hunter) Air Date: 01-27-1961
Episode 19 (The Hot Piano) Air Date: 02-03-1961
Episode 20 (The Hypnotist) Air Date: 02-10-1961
Episode 21 (Love Letters on the Rocks) Air Date: 02-17-1961
Episode 22 (The Tycoon) Air Date: 02-24-1961
Episode 23 (The Astra’ Nuts) Air Date: 03-04-1961
Episode 24 (The Long, Long Weekend) Air Date: 03-10-1961
Episode 25 (In the Dough) Air Date: 03-17-1961
Episode 26 (The Good Scout) Air Date: 03-24-1961
Episode 27 (Rooms for Rent) Air Date: 03-31-1961
Episode 28 (Fred Flintstone: Before and After) Air Date: 04-07-1961
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