Archive for the ‘R&B Music’ Category

R-Bet Review

Posted under: R&B Music


R-Bet is the latest in a long line of roulette beating programs that have been released to the general public in the hope of beating the game of roulette. In this R-Bet review I’m going to speak about the pros and cons of R-Bet, how it actually effects to beat the casino, how much you can expect to win with it and finally, is R-Bet actually worth your money?

R-Bet works by taking several factors into account before the player places a bet. The first is by using an age-old mathematic formula to judge how much should be bet based on previous wins and losses. Called the Martingale principle, it isn’t 100% foolproof in the long run as in the event of a losing streak this would require the player to bet more than the table limit to recover a loss. However R-Bet has a way of making sure this never happens which we’ll talk about next.

R-Bet also implements smart betting strategies in two ways. Firstly, R-Bet only tells the player to place a bet on a certain section if it hasn’t come up for a long period of time. This capitalizes on the law of averages and has it work in the players favour. Secondly, R-Bet continuously calculates the amount of wins and losses the player has generated and will tell the player to quit or switch tables a long time before his losses have outgrown his winnings. This effects to remove the Martingale’s flaws from the system as it will not allow the player to continue betting if it records a scenario that is going to lead to an unrecoverable loss.

The last thing R-Bet does is to record exactly where the ball is falling, in order to judge where it is most likely to land next. While this is not a guaranteed winning strategy as the ball has no memory, it does work the highest likelihood in the player’s favour and after all, that’s what roulette’s all about – odds.

In the end, none of the individual strategies R-Bet utilizes are foolproof, however when combined together they do effect to give the player a much higher odds of winning that he normally would. While R-Bet will never be something a roulette player can use to make millions or buy a Bugatti Veyron, it is very realistic that a player using R-Bet could leave his job for a career in online gambling.

When I first began using R-Bet I started betting with small $1 bets to test the system out, and even betting in this fashion I made $55 in the first hour which meant I had recouped the cost of buying the system as well as put an extra $15 in my pocket, and the next two hours made me an additional $90. This means in just 3 hours I had profited $105, which is a lot more than many people make in a whole day of employment in a 9-5 job.

I recommend you begin betting on R-Bet with small amounts as I did in order to create a bankroll to bet larger later on, however if you do have some excess cash at your disposal, there’s nothing wrong with betting $2, $3 or even $5 at a time. In the end, the more you bet the greater your winnings will be at the end of the day.

I hope this R-Bet review has helped you to make a more informed decision about R-Bet and I hope you can generate the same or better success than I did with the program. It is a great investment and you should definitely get the money you spent on it back in only an hour or less.

I’d say good luck, but I think with R-Bet you won’t need it!

By: David Morris

About the Author:
David Morris is a seasoned gambler who has made a living gambling online for over five years. You can CLICK HERE to find out more about the R-BET ROULETTE PROGRAM.



R&B Music

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Blues Guitar Player

Posted under: R&B Music


If you are a beginner guitarist, you will naturally to be apprehensive about what type should you buy and the cost of buying one. Beginner players are often offered package deals in most music stores. The benefits of a good slow down music product such as Riff Master Pro are crystal clear to both players and listeners as differences in style and accuracy of musical performance have been observed in most cases. New players need never have them in the first place if proper technique is used right from the start. The truth is that this can help you all, whether you are beginners or advanced players. Everybody loves to listen to solos like the ones achieved by world wide famous players but few can even dream of reproducing their songs at the early days of learning to play.

Just like the player could use heavier gauge strings, but they would feel and play like steel cables to his fingers. If the reality is that your guitar player has marshall stacks larger than refrigerators, and even you, can not hear your drums, then you really do need microphones on your kit. Knowing how to handle the guitar while playing your favorite songs will surely be a great benefit in your becoming guitarist. If you want to become a professional guitarist you will have to give up such programs at some point in time and choose something else. It is any one of a number of systems originally conceived to allow a guitar player to play synthesizers. However, many a times looking at a player reading his musical sheet you must have wondered, how to read musical notes like a pro.

Wisdom and experience are necessary for learning to play perfectly and to become a proper player. These are some of the volume pedals, which are being widely used all over the world by professional players. If you were learning for instance, the best way to improve your playing would be to imitate and play in time with professional players. Even now they are so popular that we first notice that any other musician in a music show. And a left handed player looks fabulous. To become a good player and to even go halfway, the blues have to be experienced because the blues has it all. The pick a player chooses will affect tone.

With experience and a solid background on musical theories, bass players can switch easily from bass player tabs to scales. Understanding the entire process and system will equip the blues guitarist with the coveted improvisation skills. Some people may choose to ask someone that they know that is already an experienced guitar player, for some helpful tips and different types of easy techniques for beginners. You can also sign up for forums to get more ideas from other players. Learning chords can be very complicated and even confusing at times, even for a more advanced guitar player. Another important thing to remember if you want to be a good guitar player is that you must stay true to yourself. You should want to improve your skills, even if you are already a good player. I knew enough about training beginning guitarist, because my teacher had given me a good system to work with.



By: Ronald W. Firquain

About the Author:

Ronald Firquain is a musician, writer, marketer, entrepreneur, webmaster and has 18 years of computer knowledge. guitar music lessons



Blues Music

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S.M.A.R.T. Goals

Posted under: R&B Music


(excerpted from the Jim Rohn One-Year Success Plan)

Jim Rohn’s Second Pillar of Success: Goal-Setting, Part Three – S.M.A.R.T. Goals

Hi, Jim Rohn here. As you know, we are focused on the Second Pillar of Success this month – Goal-Setting.

We have introduced the four main components of Goal-Setting:

1. Evaluation and Reflection.
The only way we can reasonably decide what we want in the future and how we will get there, is to first know where we are right now and secondly, what our level of satisfaction is for where we are in life. As we focus this month on goal-setting, our first order of business and our topic two weeks ago was evaluation and reflection.

2. Dreams and Goals.
What are your dreams and goals? Not related to the past or what you think you can get, but what you want. Have you ever really sat down and thought through your life values and decided what you really want? This isn’t something that someone else says you should have or what culture tells us successful people do or have. These are the dreams and goals that are born out of your own heart and mind. These are the goals that are unique to you and come from who you were created to be and gifted to become. Last week we showed you exactly how to find out what you want from life.

3. S.M.A.R.T. Goals.
S.M.A.R.T. means Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Realistic, and Time-sensitive.

Specific: Don’t be vague. Exactly what do you want?

Measurable: Quantify your goal. How will you know if you’ve achieved it or not?

Attainable: Be honest with yourself about what you can reasonably accomplish at this point in your life – along with taking into consideration your current responsibilities.

Realistic: It’s got to be do-able, real and practical.

Time: Associate a timeframe with each goal. When should you complete the goal?

We will spend time this week looking at how to apply the S.M.A.R.T. test to your goals to make sure they are as powerful as they can be!

4. Accountability.
Think of the word “accountable.” It means to “give an account.” When someone knows what your goals are, they help hold you accountable. Whether it is someone else going through this program with you (have you thought about inviting a friend to join you on this one-year journey?) or just someone you can give the basic idea to, having a person who can hold you accountable will give you another added boost to getting your goals! Next week we will show you how to set up an accountability partner.

This week we will be discussing point 3 – S.M.A.R.T. Goals.

S.M.A.R.T. means Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Realistic, and Time-sensitive.

I really like this acronym S.M.A.R.T., because we want to be smart when we set our goals. We want to intelligently decide what our goals will be so that we can actually accomplish them. We want to set the goals that our heart conceives, that our mind believes and that our bodies will carry out. Let’s take a closer look at each of the components of S.M.A.R.T. goals:

Specific: Goals are no place to waffle. They are no place to be vague. Ambiguous goals produce ambiguous results. Incomplete goals produce incomplete futures.

When we are specific, we harness the power of our dreams and set forces into action that empower us to achieve our goals. We then know exactly what it is we are shooting for. There is no question. As we establish our priorities and manage our time, we do so for a specific goal to achieve the results we expect. There is no wondering or guessing. The future is locked into our minds and we see it – specifically – and that is powerful! Never underestimate just how important it is to have very specific, concrete goals. They act as magnets that draw you toward them! A S.M.A.R.T. goal is specific.

Measurable: Always set goals that are measurable. I would say “specifically measurable” to take into account our principle of being specific as well. Our goals should be such that we know when we are advancing and by how much. Whether it is by hours, pounds, dollars or whatever, we should be able to see exactly how we are measuring up as we proceed through the journey of life using our goals. Could you imagine if you didn’t measure your goals? You would never know which way you were going or even if you were going anywhere! A S.M.A.R.T. goal is measurable.

Attainable: One of the detrimental things that many people do – and they do it with good intentions – is to set goals that are so high they are unattainable. Yes, it is very important to set big goals that cause your heart to soar with excitement, but it is also imperative to make sure that they are attainable. In the next section we talk about being realistic. So what does it mean to be attainable? An attainable goal is one that is both realistic but also attainable in a shorter period of time than what you have to work with. Now when I say attainable, I don’t mean easy. Our goals should be set so they are just out of our reach; so they will challenge us to grow as we reach forward to achieve them. After the next paragraph, I will give you an example of a goal that is both attainable and realistic. A S.M.A.R.T. goal is attainable.

Realistic: The root word of realistic is “real.” A goal has to be something that we can reasonably make “real” or a “reality” in our lives. There are some goals that simply are not realistic. You have to be able to say, even if it is a tremendously stretching goal, that yes, indeed, it is entirely realistic — that you could make it. You may even have to say that it will take x, y, and z to do it, but if those happen, then it can be done. This is in no way to say it shouldn’t be a big goal, but it must be realistic. This is to a great degree, up to the individual. For one person a goal may be realistic, but for another unrealistic. I would encourage you to be very honest with yourself as you do your planning and evaluation. Perhaps it would be good to get a friend to help you (as long as that friend is by nature an optimist and not a pessimist). This can go a long way toward helping you know what is realistic. A S.M.A.R.T. goal is realistic.

Example of Attainable and Realistic: Knowing that perhaps you could use a bit of help differentiating attainable and realistic, here is an example: You are overweight and have 150 pounds to lose to get to your proper weight. Is that goal attainable? Yes, considering that you also make it realistic. For example, it isn’t realistic to think you can do it in 5 months. 18-24 months would be realistic (with hard work). Thus, losing 150 pounds in 2 years is both attainable and realistic, while losing 150 pounds in 5 months is neither attainable nor realistic.

Time: Every goal should have a timeframe attached to it. I think that life itself is much more productive for us as humans because there is a timeframe connected to it. Could you imagine how much procrastination there would be on earth if people never died? We would never get “around to it.” We could always put it off. One of the powerful aspects of a great goal is that it has an end, a time in which you are shooting to accomplish it. You start working on it because you know there is an end. As time goes by you work because you don’t want to get behind. As it approaches, you work diligently because you want to meet the deadline. You may even have to break down a big goal into different measured parts time frames. That is okay. Set smaller goals and work them out in their own time. A S.M.A.R.T. goal has a timeline.

Be sure to spend some reflection time this week to make sure your goals fit the S.M.A.R.T. parameters. Go through the reflection questions below and the action points associated with them. Doing so will put a real engine in your goals and make them charged with power to help you accomplish your dreams.

Until next week, let’s do something remarkable!

Jim Rohn

By: Jim Rohn

About the Author:

Reproduced with permission from Jim Rohn’s Weekly E-zine. Copyright 2005 Jim Rohn International. All rights reserved worldwide. To subscribe to Jim Rohn’s Weekly E-zine, go to [http://Jim-Rohn.InspiresYOU.com]



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The History of Memphis Blues Music

Posted under: R&B Music


Memphis blues music has a very rich and interesting history that is packed with many of the biggest names in American music. Created in the 1920s and 1930s, Memphis blues music was created by musicians that lived in the area, like Furry Lewis, Frank Stokes, John Estes and Memphis Minnie. At first, it was only popular in vaudeville and medicine shows, but soon it quickly grew to capture the interest of the entire nation.

Memphis blues music really got its start on Beale Street, the place where the nightlife and culture of Memphis was (and still is). There have been several books written, dedicated only to Memphis blues music and Beale Street, including Goin Back to Memphis by James L. Dickerson, which came out in the year 2000.

Memphis blues music gained a lot of popularity very fast, largely in part to its unique sound. Because many of the musicians were poor and could not afford to buy traditional instruments, they were forced to improvise using household items that were previously not known for their sound producing capabilities. For example, washboards, kazoos and Jews harps were all prevalent in early Memphis blues music.

Quite possibly the most unique and frequently used odd instruments found in Memphis blues music is the jug. To replace the sound that an expensive bass guitar would make, people would blow into various sized jugs to create a deep and hollow sound. Of course, some of the people in Memphis blues music were able to get their hands on traditional instruments such as violins, banjos and mandolins.

Memphis blues music never really featured any electric instruments until after World War II, when Memphis blues music musicians slowly started buying and using them. Memphis blues music also started to transform itself as new musicians came onto the Memphis scene. This is because many African Americans started to migrate away from impoverished rural areas in search of cities and good jobs. Among those making the trek to Memphis were Willie Nix, Ike Turner, Howlin Wolf and B.B. King.

Still, Memphis blues music remained confined to the area of Memphis. That is, until Sun Records took an interest in Memphis blues music and started signing local artists as fast as they could. Eventually, Memphis blues music would go on to influence rock and roll, modern jazz and rhythm and blues music, and has been cited by several famous musicians in their songs.



By: Phoenix Delray

About the Author:

To know more about Memphis Blues Music please visit our website.



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