Free webhosts are a crock. At first they offer "too good to be true" services for free web hosting, then 3 months after you relocate your website to them, after you notify all the sites that linked to your old location so they could change their links, then they change their services to limit "bandwidth transfer" and start charging you money. Geocities started doing this on Sept 13, that's right - 2 days after Sept 11, because they could get away with it. I relocated this website from Geocities, Angelfire, and Worldzone due to their "excessive" webpage blocking for "excessive bandwidth consumption" and their "excessive" solicitation for "excessive" amounts of money. Every time I recloated, each pulled the same bait and switch. Register so I can let you know where this website is going to be located next when this web host starts shutting it down. Maybe eventually all free webhosts will cease to exist on the internet and this website will only be a memory. Everytime this website gets shut down, the rug gets pulled out from under me and I have to start all over again. It was hard to find this webhost and it'll be harder to find another one should this one start shutting down. Now the "free webhost" sites I find want an "anual fee" or a "startup fee", they blatently demand money and advertise themselves as "free." Enjoy these webpages while you still can.

If you found this webpage from a search engine, please look through the pages to find the particular topic that you are interested in. Bookmark the main MENU webpage (this one) only. Spread the word on these webpages: tell your friends, tell your coworkers, and add links to the MENU webpage (this one only) from your websites. This MENU page links to all the other pages, and if this website gets shut down, it'll link to the next location. I update these webpages constantly.

Writing Music

Mark Van Overmeire - Recording classical guitarWriting music is a very fascinating process. The most intriguing part for Mark is the ability to channel the music that he "hears" into a composition.

Mark writes mainly on classical guitar and keyboards. It's always mood and color that provide the first creative sparkle. Once an idea is worth exploring Mark starts arranging the song with the computer, a speciality called midi-composing. He uses realistic samples of music instruments in order to "feel" the song as he continues writing.

Some songs, such as Titicaca, take a few days to write. Others, like La Danza De Los Emigrantes with a score of 40 pages, take many months to complete.


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