Posts Tagged ‘Music’

Take a Ride to the Outer Reaches of the Mind at The Museum of Science when “Ghosts of Jupiter: Music Experience” premieres at Charles Hayden Planetarium on June 22

Take a Ride to the Outer Reaches of the Mind at The Museum of Science when “Ghosts of Jupiter: Music Experience” premieres at Charles Hayden Planetarium on June 22













Ghosts of Jupiter


Boston, MA (PRWEB) May 30, 2012

On Friday, June 22, 2012, visitors to the Museum of Science, Boston will experience a rock-and-roll journey through space and time, with the premiere of Ghosts of Jupiter: Music Experience. Celebrating the release of their self-titled album, Ghosts of Jupiter, the Boston-bred rock quintet has partnered with the Museum to create a new eye-popping music entertainment show in the Charles Hayden Planetarium that will take museumgoers on a fantastic ride into the outer reaches of the mind.

“The Museum kept what was great about the old Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd shows… then made it way better.” – Kevin Johnson, Berklee College of Music

Inspired by the classic rock of Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath and Cream melded with the serious crush of contemporaries like The Raconteurs and The Black Keys, this Boston-based quintet is the rare act that merges all the things you love about rock music into a cohesive whole. Founded by keyboardist Nate Wilson, Ghosts of Jupiter have been steadily making a name for themselves in the New England music scene. The band features the twin guitars of Adam Terrell and Johnny Trama, along with bassist Tommy Lada and drummer Tom Arey holding down the band’s rhythm section. Powerful, fuzzy guitars with soaring, airy vocals; pounding drum and bass lines and ethereal lyrics; songs that evolve over five minutes and riffs that explain themselves in a second: it’s a classic rock feel with a futuristic aura.

Ghosts of Jupiter: Music Experience is a vibrant combination of the band’s eponymous album and the Museum’s cutting-edge technology. The newly renovated Charles Hayden Planetarium is the most technologically advanced digital theater in New England. Powered by superior full-dome video and audio systems, the theater has created a fully-immersive rock entertainment show that transports visitors through the outermost reaches of space, all underneath the Planetarium’s 57-foot dome screen.

Admission to the Charles Hayden Planetarium is $ 10 for adults, $ 9 for seniors (60+) and $ 8 for children (3-11). For information on tickets and showtimes, please call 617-723-2500, 617-589-0417 (TTY) or visit the Museum’s web site at mos.org. For additional information about Ghosts of Jupiter, visit: http://ghostsofjupiter.com/MOS.

About the Museum of Science

One of the world’s largest science centers and Boston’s most attended cultural institution, the Museum introduces about 1.5 million visitors a year to science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) via dynamic programs and hundreds of interactive exhibits. Founded in 1830, the Museum was first to embrace all the sciences under one roof. Highlights include the Thomson Theater of Electricity, Charles Hayden Planetarium, Mugar Omni Theater, Gordon Current Science & Technology Center, 3-D Digital Cinema and Butterfly Garden. Reaching 25,000 teens a year worldwide via the Intel Computer Clubhouse Network, the Museum also leads a 10-year, $ 41 million National Science Foundation-funded Nanoscale Informal Science Education Network of science museums. The Museum’s “Science Is an Activity” exhibit plan has been awarded many NSF grants and influenced science centers worldwide. Its National Center for Technological Literacy®’s engineering curricula have reached 35,500 teachers and close to 3 million students nationwide. The Museum has also: been recognized by Boston and Cambridge for its energy and sustainability efforts; named an Employer of Choice by Work Without Limits, a Massachusetts disability employment initiative; is Yankee Magazine’s “Best of New England Readers’ Choice” for Cultural Attraction in Science; and is El Planeta’s Best Tourist Attraction for the Massachusetts Latino population. Visit http://www.mos.org and follow the Museum on social media at http://www.facebook.com/museumofscience and @museumofscience on Twitter.

Press Contacts:

Please don’t hesitate to contact Melissa Zeigler at Powderfinger Promotions for more information on this event or to schedule an interview at 800-356-1155 x4233, or melissa(at)powderfingerpromo(dot)com.

AJ Gosselin (Museum of Science): 617-589-0251 or agosselin(at)mos(dot)org

Philip Stepanian (Management): 617-628-5600 or pstep(at)highsteppinproductions(dot)com











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Internet & Computer Help : How to Put Music on an SD Card

In order to put music on an SD card, start off by inserting it into the integrated card reader on a pc. Copy music onto an SD card by pasting copied files into a new folder withhelp from a Internet designer in this cost-free video on laptop or computer guidelines. Expert: Noah Blumenthal Bio: Noah Blumenthal is a personal computer specialist who worked as a Internet designer at Netbuzz, an on the web Internet style and advertising firm in Paris, France. Filmmaker: Paul Volniansky

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