Band Drawing How do I transfer my hand-drawn band logo on to my computer?
i hand drew a logo for my band and i don't know how to upload it on my computer so i can use it for flyers and shirts and stuff
pick up a descent scanner at your local retail store and then scan the logo and save it. from there you can use photoshop to clean it up and add colors, effects or what have you. even add text to create the flyers you want to hand out or post to get the attention you need. so good luck and keep up the music!
"Progressive" is a description that's thrown around far too liberally in rock & roll; saddled upon artists as dissimilar as Dream Theater, Phish, Isis, and Brian Eno at any given time, and all for simple lack of a better term. Perhaps "unconventional" would be a more ideal generalization, though, since, the one thing all these acts do have in common is the desire to reject mainstream music clichés and try to do things differently. In accordance with this line of reasoning, what qualifies Dutch band Textures as inherently unconventional is their staunch refusal to finish songs the way they started them -- never mind following pop music's typical verse/chorus/verse/chorus/bridge/chorus pattern in any way, shape or form. No chance of that here, for just as was it was with their outstanding debut, one could spend a lifetime dissecting every unexpected twist and turn coursing through the whole of album number two, 2006's Drawing Circles, yet barely remember when and where any given song began or ended. And why bother, when, the band's very name explicitly suggests the importance of textures, as heard in the ambient beauty of "Upwards," the momentary, pure thrashing of "Stream of Consciousness," or the majestic advance of "Surreal State of Enlightenment," over anything so trifling as songs? Of course there is something to be said about the art of writing a simple, concise pop song (one can envision hundreds of Ramones fans lining up to challenge Textures on that very point), but since said concept would never even register on this band's radar, their only major sin of derivativeness is relying too much on that unmistakable, loping rhythm patented by Sweden's Meshuggah. Their frequency -- even if used for usually short snippets within multifaceted songs like "Drive," "Denying Gravity," and "Millstone" -- inevitably gets a little tiresome, but not enough to scuttle the remaining material's restless inventiveness. So throw away the rule book of popular music at the door, because that's an essential condition of appreciating and understanding Textures' wildly "progressive" -- errr -- "unconventional" music. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia, Rovi Performers: Eric Kalsbeek - Vocals; Jochem Jacobs - Vocals (Background), Guitar
If the sweetly dreamy but subtly twisted sound of Desertshore sounds a bit familiar, it may be because you're remembering guitarist Phil Carney's previous gigs in Red House Painters and Sun Kil Moon -- or you may be picking up on the classical background of his partner, pianist Chris Connolly. On the band's second album, the two are joined by drummers Dave Muench and Mike Stevens, and by Carney's former Sun Kil Moon bandmate Mark Kozelek, who sings on the first six of the album's ten tracks. The resulting sound is utterly gorgeous: if song titles like "Randy Quaid" and "Pollen Hinges" signal any ironic intent, it's thoroughly buried beneath layers and layers of softly ringing guitars, gently relentless melodic hooks, simple-but-elegant piano parts, and Kozelek's disarmingly plainspoken vocals. As enjoyable as Kozelek's contributions are, though, it's the instrumental tracks that embed their hooks most deeply: the shimmering "Matchlight Arcana," the gorgeous and disappointingly brief "Pollen Hinges" and "Light Flowers," and the equally beautiful "Hellborg" (a tribute to bassist Jonas Hellborg, perhaps?). This is an exceptionally lovely album. ~ Rick Anderson, Rovi Performers: Chris Connolly - Piano, Keyboards; David Muench - Drums, Percussion; Mark Kozelek - Bass, Guitar, Vocals; Mike Stevens - Drums, Percussion; Phil Carney - Guitar
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How To Draw a Band
Would it be tacky if I draw my favorite band's logos on my black binder with a white sharpie?
I'm going back to school in august (9th grade)
And my mom already bought all my school supplies (weird I know, but she does that every year)
I got a plain black binder and it's kind of boring.
Would it look lame if I drew band logos on it with a white sharpie?
Example: Black veil brides, slipknot, linkin park, etc. Etc
No that would be so effin cool! Draw Iron Maiden's Eddie on there too for me please!
I don’t like the backround blurred, it draws too much attention, and the face in the new one, while good detailed, looks too pained emo/punk, that or a strange wtf face. I don’t know if richard was going for fear but it looks strange. It would look good in a band drawing but not a military outfit
I don’t like the backround blurred, it draws too much attention, and the face in the new one, while good detailed, looks too pained emo/punk, that or a strange wtf face. I don’t know if richard was going for fear but it looks strange. It would look good in a band drawing but not a military outfit
not