How Steve Jobs Changed The Music Industry One IPod At A Time

The music industry is buzzing with personal accounts of how Steve Jobs and his innovations changed their lives and careers. TakeLessons, the nation's fastest growing private music lesson provider, joins the conversation.

As Steve Jobs is recognized and celebrated as a huge innovator for the music industry, it's clear that the fusion of music and technology is the norm for today's generation. TakeLessons (http://takelessons.com), the nation's fastest growing private music lessons provider, has seen success with the intersection by providing online accounts for teachers and students alike.

As technology progresses, innovations like these can be game-changers.

RiverFrontTimes.com recently created a list of Jobs' Six Best Music Innovations - and we especially like the following less-obvious items:

1. The USB Port. Although Apple didn't invent USB, the company was the first to include USB ports on home computers. Ever since, these ports have become an integral part of modern music. Mp3 players, recording interfaces, portable hard drives stocked with a lifetime supply of obscure dub remixes; USB (or its more intense big brother, Firewire) is essential in syncing our computers with our analog, real-life music experiences.
2. Garage Band. Many recording studio owners, engineers, and producers have spent the better part of twenty years freaking out about becoming obsolete. While these professionals generally have an advantage in the skill department, they've lost a bit of their edge with the boom of home recording products that have been stealthily improving over the years. GarageBand is by no means as powerful of a music production tool as ProTools or its competitors, but it's a stellar introduction to the often intimidating process of recording. The fact that it comes standard on all current Mac computers puts its capabilities in more hands than any similar program to date. With enough time and energy at your disposal, you can even use GarageBand to make a hit. Remember "Fireflies", the Postal Service-aping single by Owl City? The track was produced on GarageBand.
3. The iPad. Gorillaz used an iPad to produce an entire record. Brian Eno used the device to take his generative music concept to a new level. The Digitech guitar effects company just developed a system interfacing digital recreations of famous guitar pedals with a physical board to step on during live performance. The most exciting thing about the iPad is that we've barely unlocked its capabilities.

The impact the music industry has seen with these innovations will only continue. Just think - what's next? What will be the next big thing to revolutionize the way we listen, play, store, share, or create music? Check out the TakeLessons Blog, and their recently posted tips for caring for your vocal cords, and join in on the discussion on Facebook(http://facebook.com/takelessons).

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Tags: music, music industry, music lessons, technology


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