Engaging with music was always been a part of the Jonas Brother’s lives when they were growing up in the state of New Jersey. Music has always been their past time along with their music lover parents.
Kevin, the oldest among the three brothers plays the guitar and back up vocals was home sick when he found a guitar accompanied by a guitar book just lying inside the house. He started learning how to play the guitar and its chords.
Nicholas or Nick began singing as soon as he could talk when he was 2 years old. He would wake up in the morning and start singing all day. He also shares the lead vocal Joseph in the group. While Joseph, first aspiration is to become a comedian and auditions in comedy shows still found himself attached to listening to music and enjoy singing especially rock songs.
Before getting into their own band, the three aspiring performers went out on certain commercials like Burger King, LEGOS, Battle Bats and a lot more. But as time passes they still find themselves pretty much performing on their basement. Composing songs and practicing all together as a band.
After an amazing group audition, they are indeed pointing to 1 clear direction which is to perform and called themselves “The Jonas Brothers”.
The great excitement began when the three merge their talents in singing, performing and song composition and record their first debut album. “It’s very awesome to have my brothers on stage and in the studio with me with the security that everything will be just fine” said Nicholas.
“When we are writing a song we three get in a triangle and I start playing the guitar and chords that we’ve chosen over and over until we have figured out what’s the lyrics of the song” explains Kevin.
Joseph sees them all joining forces for the next years to come. “We are brothers and we love doing this, entertain people” he said.
Inspiration for their songs came mostly from their personal experiences: from the ups and downs of dating till just walking alone the road have been given the chance to follow their dreams at such a very young age.
“We know how it feels when someone breaks your heart and how to have crushes so we know how to write the songs down” says Nicholas.
For now the Jonas Brothers are just appreciating the experience of having other people hear and feel their music and earn new fans everyday. “It is very heart flattering when somebody tries to recognize and relate to our songs that we play and sing” explains the three.
Read more!
Monday, September 8, 2008
Jonas Brother's Band
The Rules Of Buying And Selling Antiques
Most people imagine that the word “antique” speak about only older generations. And that, only oldies are fascinated in or have the required aptitude, knowledge, skill and expertise about antiques and everything related to it. But in realism, the scene is much different.
Nearly every antique owner shows the signs of being attracted towards antique from quiet juvenile age. So, it’s not all fair to say that, only senior populace are antiques lover and devotee. Though, they may hold the majority. It’s evident that they’ve spent their whole life in becoming a classic antiques possessor.
It’s on the part of this generation to inculcate the hobby and passion for such timeless legacy. As their parents and grandparents encouraged and advised them, so should they, pass this wisdom to their children and grandchildren. As, only with their effort and endeavor, the upcoming age band will realize and grasp the qualities of dealing with antiques.
Like for anything else, buying and selling antiques, requires certain rules and regulations and convention. One must not blindly buy each and every crap that one find anywhere and everywhere. But follow and take precautions in buying antiques, as one does, when buying anything other thing. So, here are cautions, measurements, warnings and the points to keep in mind before entering into the gallery of antiques:
1) Haste makes wastes: Be a very patient buyer, while buying any antique object. As any speedy decision may lead to great risks and you leave your bank balance nil.
2) Hot pockets: Taking a clue from above, have your pockets really hot. Even a modest antique article may cost you to spend huge bucks. So, always take out more than enough money while seeking for an antique.
3) Cunning trader: be careful from cunning and pseudo antique shopkeepers. You must have the eagle’s eye to recognize and classify between a genuine and illusory dealer. They sell anti-antique articles and may even induce and compel you to buy bogus item that too at a higher price.
4) Keen eye: have that eagle’s eye while buying antiques. Know before hand what is the article that you searching for and what’s the lowest price for it. As you don’t know when or where you may find your pick. Traveling is also quiet crucial if you want to own a fine antique collection. Try to dig up antique stuff from variety of places.
5) Legitimate: The most essential factor. Always and always check the authenticity and genuineness of any such article that you buy. Look for the original date and place of manufacture. Plus always, take a careful and watchful look at the object from every and different angles. See that it’s not defected or broken from somewhere.
6) Specialists: you needn’t be a top class expert to buy an antique. Always take guidelines suggestion, tips, tricks, and ask for precautions and rules to follow while buying antiques from experts. These experts gurus are helpful in buying real antique articles at real prices
These are some the rules which can direct and show the way even in the long run, if followed attentively and with some brain too. Trading and assembling antiques is a life long process. Keep searching for pleasant and classic antique objects in your in your day to day life also. A keen eye and penchant for antiques will help you find more collectibles than there are!
Read more!
Royal Opera House by The Story
The Royal Opera House is the third theatre on the Covent Garden site. In 1728 an actor/manager by the name of John Rich commissioned “The Beggars Opera” from John Gay, a poet and dramatist. The success of this production helped provide the capital for the first Theatre Royal to be built and on the 7th December 1732, it had its opening night.
The theatre was primarily a playhouse for the first hundred years or so, with King Charles II granting John Rich and the Theatre Royal in Covent Garden, as well as the Drury Lane theatre, almost exclusive rights to present drama in London. Rich also began developing pantomime as an art form which led to the tradition of pantomimes being performed every Christmas - a tradition that lasted until the 1930’s at Covent Garden and still continues today at theatres across the country.
The first serious musical works to be performed at Covent Garden were the operas of Handel, who gave regular seasons there from 1735 until his death in 1759. Unfortunately his organ, which he had bequeathed to John Rich, was burned, along with most of the theatre, in a fire in 1808.
The rebuilding of the theatre began at once and, in September 1809, the second Theatre Royal opened in Convent Garden with a performance of Macbeth. To attempt to recoup the costs of rebuilding the theatre, ticket prices were raised. However, after two months of disgruntled theatre goers disrupting performances with booing and hissing, prices were forced back down.
In 1846, a dispute with the management at Her Majesty’s Theatre (the exclusive home to ballet and opera in London at the time), conductor Michael Costa aligned himself with Covent Garden, taking most of his company of singers with him. The auditorium at Convent Garden was completely remodelled and the theatre re-opened in April 1847 as the Royal Italian Opera.
Fire struck again in 1856, completely destroying the theatre, and work on the third and present theatre began in 1857, before re-opening in 1858. Just over thirty years later, in 1892, the theatre officially became the Royal Opera House, with summer and winter seasons of ballet and opera produced regularly. This carried on until the First and Second World Wars, when the Royal Opera House became a furniture repository and a dance hall, respectively.
Several renovations took place in the 1960s including improvements to the amphitheatre, but it was clear that the theatre needed a complete overhaul. Despite being given land adjacent to the theatre to make room for the renovations in 1975, it wasn’t until twenty years later before work began when the newly created National Lottery granted the Opera House £58.5 million towards the rebuilding costs. The new Royal Opera House was opened in December 1999, with two new, smaller performance areas added to the theatre as well as the now historic main auditorium.
Now open all day and not just for evening performances, visitors come from all over the world to the theatre, packing the nearby hotels in London, and enjoying not only the wonderful shows, but also the beautiful interior of a historic building. The views that the Royal Opera House commands across London from the Amphitheatre Terrace have delighted tourists and guests since it’s re-opening, almost as much as the productions performed.
Read more!
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Creative Art Maker (Homemade)
Whenever any special occasion comes, it also came with the celebration at that time. No celebration is considered complete with party and no party is complete without gift. Gift doesn’t mean buying expansive thing and deliver it to the host. A gift indicates the love and care that you have in your heart. If a homemade or self made gift is presented to the person, it seems more valuable.
Gifts that are homemade not only reveal your ability it also indicates your love and affection. Homemade gifts are inexpensive but they are fun to make, also, it is priceless for love and creativity that goes into them. To make homemade crafts you need not any special and expansive things. You can make your gift even with the waste things and with vegetables. Some of the effective methods with the list of items are mentioned below.
Vegetable craft
Vegetable art is a simple and less time consuming. Even children can make different and beautiful items with the help of vegetables. For making crafts you need some vegetables, a piece of cloth and fabric colors. It is your option you can make length or breathe wise slices of capsicum or any vegetable that is chosen by you. You can make beautiful patterns with the help of vegetable.
Take a capsicum and cut in two pieces. Take fabric color and apply the paint on cut edge of capsicum. You can take any color of your choice. Now, make the petals of flower with this by pressing it on the cloth. Take lady finger and cut in length wise apply green color to it for making leaves of petals of flower. You can punch this flower design any side of cloth either in center, middle or side of the cloth.
Read more!
Friday, August 1, 2008
The Darkside Jewelry and Goth fashion

No, by jewelry and the darkside, we are not referring to Darth Vader’s dark side of the force. However, the idea of jewelry inspired by Anakin Skywalker, the Sith and his Emperor sure is tantalizing. Here, if you think more about the likes of Morticia Addams of the Addams family, then you’re on the right track. Gothic jewelry is the type of jewelry that the likes of her would wear: mysterious, brooding, yet elegant. Viewed this way, jewelry and the darkside certainly can go hand in hand.
Gothic jewelry, or darkside jewelry, as opposed to ‘light,’ evokes images of the macabre and the preternatural: vampires, the dead and undead, spirits, black magic and the black arts. As such, artisans craft items that would appeal to a person’s dark or gothic side. There is an abundance of e-commerce websites and specialty stores whose emphasis is on jewelry and the darkside. In these places, a person will be able to find gothic jewelry such as pentacle pendants, gothic cross necklaces, spider-and-web piercings, and more.
Also known as pagan jewelry, gothic body ornaments are made from many types of materials, but they are typically available in gold, sterling silver and pewter. They may come plain or be encrusted with jewels. Many pieces of gothic jewelry have their roots in esoteric sources, such as signs and symbols used in ancient Egyptian lore or those employed in Celtic rituals. Other pieces of gothic jewelry are timeless icons representing the eerie: coffin-shaped rings, heavily ornate cross brooches, earrings shaped like the heads of howling wolves.
Slave bracelets, also known as handflowers or maille bracelets, are also popular examples of gothic jewelry. These look like chain mail, or pieces of woven metal. They are different from conventional bracelets in that they are worn not just on the wrist, but on practically the whole hand, and their intricate patterns are sure to attract attention. Bib and choker necklaces are also popular gothic accessories. Catalogues of gothic jewelry oftentimes include so-called ‘poison’ rings or bracelets. These items have a small compartment where the wearer can presumably keep very small or fine materials, such as powder. Maille, chandelier or dangling earrings are also available to complete one’s overall look of mystery.
Gothic jewelry is easy to wear and can be used to dress up or dress down. They are easily available and the variety offered is endless. Because they depict arcane symbols and figures, gothic jewelry imparts a sense of mystery and secrecy. Popular among both the young and not-so-young, gothic jewelry may be dark, but not dreary; ornate, but not tawdry. In fact, it is just the opposite: jewelry and the darkside – a hauntingly beautiful combination.
Read more!
The Truth of American Independence

It was late in 1775, and King George III was at Buckingham Palace, sitting in reflective mood on his commode. His 13 year old son Prince George (yes, they were very imaginative with their names, those royal types), was sitting on the floor nearby, otherwise occupied with the 18th century equivalent of Game Boy: a model soldier with a rifle sat on a model elephant, shooting at a model tiger two planks of wood away. Their peace, tranquility, and respective modes of concentration were broken by the excited entry of a royal messenger. You could be excused for thinking that he had arrived over 200 years early for an audition for “Robin Hood – Men In Tights”.
The tight clad messenger hesitated before the King, seemingly unsure of whether to bow or curtsy. It was not clear whether this was caused by uncertainty over his own sexuality, or that he had been out of the country so long he had forgotten the refinements of British court life. He bowed. “Your Highness”, he said, breathlessly. “I have grievous news from the Americas.” The King looked puzzled for a moment, but Prince George ignored his Game Boy and started to pay attention. Finally, the King said: “The Americas? Is that one of my domains?” “Yes, your Highness, it is the 13 American colonies.” “Aah,” said the King, “since I past the 100 mark I’ve had trouble remembering them all.” “The news is not good,” the messenger resumed. “It seems that some strange illness, a virus, has hit the whole population. It has had a terrible effect, your Highness. It has affected their vocal chords. All the population is affected.” “Why is that so grievous? Do they not have a doctor over there?” the King asked in unworldly innocence. “Your Highness. They can no longer speak the King’s English. They’ve all started speaking in a strange accent, and all the words of the King’s English are being distorted. They sound like they’re of another world. The virus is so virulent, your Highness, nobody can speak the King’s English any more.” “This virus, could it have been planted by the French? They’re so jealous of all my colonies; they’d stop at nothing,” the King responded. “This accent they all now speak in, this foreign tongue, does it sound French?”
“Thankfully not, your Highness. But how would the French smuggle this virus in?” asked the messenger. “You remember Troy? The Trojan horse? That’s how they’d do it, the sneaky French. Trust them to use a Trojan horse to get a virus into my domain,” the King conjectured. The messenger looked anxiously and expectantly at the King, who went on: “There’s only one thing for it. I cannot have subjects from my own land not speaking the King’s English.” He waved his arm dismissively. “Get rid of them”, he said. “Leave them to fend for themselves. I know they’ll never survive on their own, let alone progress, but we cannot have my Kindom corrupted by those virus ridden settlers.” “But your Highness, don’t you think you should visit the territory to assess the problems for yourself?” the messenger suggested. The King shook his head knowingly. “We have no cure for this mysterious virus. What would be the point of my going?” Prince George looked across pleadingly: “Oh, please, go Daddy. I want those domains.” “No son, those colonies are no longer part of my realm, and will not be part of yours to inherit,” the King replied. With the wave of a hand, the King dismissed his American colonies. But it was not the end of the story by far.
The messenger was sent on his way to tell the King’s officials to prepare papers that would lead the way to American Independence; and just as an afterthought, he also sent a message to Parliament, to inform them of his declaration of American Independence. Matters of state moved quite slowly those days, but by January of 1776 the British officials had prepared a paper entitled: The British Route To American Independence. Armed with this historic document, the King’s messenger set off for what the King now regarded as his former American colonies. This was no Instant Messenger. The British and French had not yet been on friendly enough terms for the Concorde to have been born, so it was down to a long and arduous journey by ship. The messenger arrived on American soil several weeks later, carrying The British Route to American Independence.
Local British representatives were briefed on the King’s instructions. There was no such thing as a photocopier in those days, so there were just two handwritten copies of this historic document. One was to be retained by the King’s messenger, the other to be given to the leader of the colonists. The most common means of communication then was still word of mouth, and that was to lead to a turn of events that has irrevocably altered non-history. Not only was communication verbal, but it was slow. The virus that had afflicted the vocal chords of colonists had already affected the pronunciation of route. What was “root” in the King’s English, had become “rout” (as in out) in those affected by this mystery virus. So, as news of the King’s declaration began to leak, the initial chatter in American quarters became about the British “rout” to American Independence.
A British official in Boston heard of all this chatter about American Independence and the British rout. Now, in the King’s English, he thought that the British had been routed, which meant they had been hammered, beaten to a pulp. In a game of football it would have been a like one side scoring 13 goals against 0. The British, all of a sudden, had been routed by the American colonists. The British official panicked, and with others in Boston, planned their escape by sea. Their troops had been routed, or so they thought, so they had no choice but to escape on the first ship out of Boston Harbour. That was in May 1776. As the ship left the bay, the people of Boston started to get wind of what had happened. The British troops had been soundly beaten by the colonist forces. They were jubilant, and quickly organized a giant celebration in an open plaza by the sea. The local t-shirt manufacturer quickly designed an American flag, and ran off thousands of t-shirts with the flag printed on front and back.
Local Irish bar owners unlocked their secret vaults of stockpiles of Guinness, and carted the crates out to the plaza for the impromptu celebration. Bostonians were each given their own t-shirt, which they were proud to put on instantly, and a half share of a crate of Guinness. They drank long into the night, and as each crate of Guinness was emptied, it was tossed into Boston Harbour, or as they now called it, Boston Harbor. This great event became known as the Boston T-shirt Party (later to be revised to Boston Tea party and moved back to 1773.) Over a period of a few months to the end of June 1776, similar scenes were repeated across the colonies. The news of the British rout had reached the British troops in the field, one battalion at a time, and they laid down their arms, believing that their army had been defeated. All of the stories circulating were of the British being badly beaten, and soon of mass surrenders. Forlorn British officials who made it back to London were full of stories of army defeats and other humiliation.
The troops themselves were too ashamed to return and face the wrath of their King.
King George III toyed with the idea of making a speech on the balcony of Buckingham Palace about his granting of independence to the American colonies. However, the court historian pointed out that monarchs didn’t yet do such things. A speech in the House of Lords was ruled out, as it was too high a place to discuss settlers, albeit in a former domain. And so it was, that on July 4th 1776, the Foreign Secretary stood up in the House of Commons and formally granted independence to the 13 American colonies. Back in the former colonies, things had moved on apace. Stories of victories over the British abounded, but as they had not actually happened, they tended to be vague. There must be some great stories in the war, everyone thought, and in the many victorious battles which had led to the rout of the British troops. But where was the detail?. Colony leaders began to despair. How can they record these proud moments of their history with a single sentence “The British Have Been Routed.” Exactly when? Where?. In Washington, a special secret meeting of the Continental Congress was held. It just happened that one of the members was a keen theatre patron, and had been talking to a thesbian group who had been on tour and performing locally. They had their own scriptwriters, led by a young lady called Holly Wood.
An excited Congress, prompted by the forceful Holly, started to piece together the events that led up to what they would announce as The American Declaration of Independence. They decided to start in 1773, and put the historic “facts” together from there. One of them had heard about the Boston T-shirt Party; another was a disgruntled tea importer. They came up with the Boston Tea Party story as a kick off for the anti British movement that would lead, via a war and many great battles, to American independence. For the last few days of June and the first 2 days of July, the team of scriptwriters, or non-historians, worked day and night to put together a solid and impressive history for the American Wars of Independence. When another secret Congress gathered to hear the revised history, the representatives lapped it up.
“That’s it,” they declared unanimously. “But how do we put all this out to the American public.” The group of scriptwriters was again put to work, so that by the morning of July 4th, everything was in place. The history, and the publicity, was all ready to present to the awaiting American public. Thus, two great institutions were born in July 1776. No, not the Senate and the House of Representatives; they came later. No, it was two institutions more far reaching: Political Spin, and Hollywood. (Please note, any resemblance between the above and American, British or Guinness history, is purely co-incidental.)
Read more!