I have three Echo devices in my bedroom. Two Echo Shows that we use as bedside clocks and then an Echo Dot connected to a Bose soundbar on the wall at the opposite side of the room. I could have sworn I saw somewhere that you can set up the settings so that when you ask Alexa to play music that it will play music on one specific device in that room by default. I understand that I can specify Alexa to play it on my Echo Dot by saying "Alexa, play Christmas music on my Bedroom Dot" but I'd rather just be able to say "Alexa play Christmas music" have it automatically play on the Echo Dot that's connected to my Bose soundbar. The problem I'm having is that if I'm sitting close to my bedside table and I ask Alexa to play music it will play music on the Echo Show (and its shitty speaker) and not on the high-end Echo Dot connected to the Bose across the room where the sound is much better.

If your slide show is longer than one song, you can add more songs. However, if you find that you're having trouble synchronizing the music with the slide show, you can use a third-party audio editing tool, such as Audacity, to string the songs together into one file so they play continuously throughout the slide show.


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It sounds like you've adjusted the correct setting, but just to confirm, did you adjust this setting by following these steps? And if you check now, is the setting still off? Open the Apple Watch app on your iPhone and tap the My Watch tab. Tap General, then tap Wake Screen and turn off Auto-launch Audio Apps. This information is from here: Listen to music, podcasts, and audiobooks on your Apple Watch.

Choose from the pre-built lessons, the song list, or create your own from scratch! Musicplay is a menu and includes paths for Orff and Kodaly specialists and general classroom teachers. This resource also works well as a printable lesson planning guide and includes: year plans, scope & sequence, month outlines, song notation and activities. There are curriculum correlations suggested to help connect to other areas.

Each instrument program has lessons that focus on building skills and learning through concepts through playing. Programs include recorder, ukelele, guitar, bucket drumming, body percussion, frame drumming, boomwhackers, and more!

The online site includes 3,000+ interactive activities to use on computers and student devices! We're constantly updating and finding new ways to use gamification to reinforce concepts. You'll find fun music games, solfa and note naming activities, tone ladders, beat and rhythm activities, melody composition tools, rhythm composition tools, pop quizzes, and more!

To turn Autoplay on or off, tap the Autoplay button in the upper-right corner of your screen. If you turn off Autoplay on one of your devices, then Autoplay is turned off on any device that's signed in with your Apple ID.

If you're at a friend's house or have guests over, you can all add music to the queue on an Apple TV or HomePod. Everyone that wants to add music needs a subscription to Apple Music and an iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch.

Tip: For speakers, Smart Displays, and Smart Clocks that you set up, you can manage access to news and podcasts in Digital Wellbeing settings. Learn how to manage use of your Google Assistant device.

On Smart Displays, you can get podcast recommendations based on your web and app activity from other Google products. You also get an explanation of why a specific suggestion was made for you. To hide a podcast recommendation, tap Description .

With bagpipes playing and jazz trumpets blaring, a crowd of 500arts supporters delivered a strong and creative message to thedoorway of the New Jersey Senate Budget Committee last week as theybegan hearings to eliminate millions of dollars in artseducation programs -- the arts are important to Americans.

And indeed they are. According to a recent Gallup Poll conductedfor NAMM, the International Music Products Association*, 95% ofAmericans consider music to be part of a well-rounded education,and 93% feel that schools should offer music education as part ofthe regular curriculum. Nearly four in five (79%) even say thatmusic education should be mandated for every student inschool.

During times of economic difficulty, the arts, including music,are often among the first public education programs targeted forcuts. Now is one of those times. Nearly all state budgets are infiscal crisis -- five states have budget gaps of $1 billion or more-- and education budgets will likely be hit hard with cuts inprograms. According to the poll, the possibility of these cuts doesnot bode well for future musicians -- 30% of all respondents (aged12 and older) who play a musical instrument told Gallup that theyfirst learned to play by taking lessons in school, and another 9%said their first encounter with playing music was in a school bandor orchestra. Roughly a quarter (26%) said they first learned withprivate lessons.

Overall, 37% of the respondents to this survey said they play amusical instrument. Although there are no differences between thepercentages of men and women who play, it is interesting to notethat twice as many women as men first learned to play throughprivate lessons (35% vs. 17%, respectively), but that nearly threetimes as many men taught themselves to play, 33% vs. 12%.

While 82% of Americans who play an instrument began theirmusical training between the ages of 5 and 14, the joy of musicendures long after the last school bell rings. In fact, 42% ofthose between the ages of 35 and 50 who learned to play aninstrument still play, as well as 20% of people aged 50 and older.For some people, it's a lifelong pursuit. At 70, the great jazztrumpeter Louis Armstrong was going strong. He told his doctor justa few months before he died, "My whole life, my whole soul, mywhole spirit is to blow that horn."

Certainly the benefits of music go beyond pure auditory delight.According to the poll, 85% of Americans believe that participatingin a school music program correlates with better grades, and 80%feel that playing an instrument makes people smarter. Most parentsprobably wait until their babies arrive before introducing them tocomposers such as Debussy or Stravinsky, but 54% of Americansbelieve children should be exposed to music before their firstbirthday.

It is clear that music is a valuable tool that brings joy tonearly all Americans. Now the U.S. Department of Education hasgiven music (and art in general) its due. For the first time, thearts have been included as a "core academic subject" in the NoChild Left Behind Act of 2001. That is good news for the long term,once the current budget crisis has passed. Now that the arts havebeen established as an equal contender with other subjects, musicclasses will be eligible for many federally funded programsearmarked for core curricula only. With adequate funding, musicwill remain an essential ingredient in every child's education forgenerations to come.

Plato, for one, would be thrilled to hear that 88% of Americanssay that music is a very important part their lives. More than2,000 years ago, he recognized music's value. "Music is a morallaw," he said, "It gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind,flight to the imagination, a charm to sadness, gaiety and life toeverything."

"Finally!! Thank you for FINALLY making an app like this! This is super helpful! Especially for dancers who struggle with having to record and have music play at the same time! Easy app to use also!"

"Just What I Was Looking For! This App is great! I am a drummer using an iRig2 to record drumming with music. This app allows me to record my drumming with a song playing simultaneously with a click of a button. I had an error saving videos, emailed the app creator, and he fixed it with an update in just a day!"

"Exactly what i was looking for! I am a track and field thrower and recording my throws is essential for technical changes to my throw. I always want to listen to music when i throw and this app allows me to! Amazing app!"

If I am playing music on my Mac (which is basically always when I am working on my Mac and not in meetings) and I need to play a video somewhere else (say Youtube), I click the play button in the browser and video starts to play. So I then click Play / Pause on keyboard. What I would like to happen at this time is the music pauses. Unfortunately, it pauses the YouTube video (or whatever video is playing). That is never what I want to happen. 2351a5e196

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