Mötley Crüe – “Home Sweet Home”- A Vital Song in the Understanding of the mean speed of music, srHz*10 – Note the speed avoids the languid.

meanspeed® music modern tempo chart - Motley Crue - Home Sweet Home - 76.4 Beats Per Minute

meanspeed® music modern tempo chart - Motley Crue - Home Sweet Home - 76.4 Beats Per Minute

Meanspeed Music Tempo map - SPEADSHEET, actual, part 1

Meanspeed Music Tempo map - SPREADSHEET, actual, part 1

“We are entering a world,” said one expert, “where people aren’t interested in
whether something is true or not, or whether they believe it or not, but
whether it works.  Reject any idea or theory
or practice unless it has the practical value of making you feel more at
home in the world and more accepting of yourself.”

HOME SWEET HOME - Motley Crue

HOME SWEET HOME - Motley Crue

OK.  Does meanspeed music theory work?  Take the first step.  Try to settle, change or set your mind through song speed and the emotive characteristics I have given anywhere, any time in the last 21 years.  All letters will be printed.   My subjects are too few to generalize from.  Unfortunately for – well, you guys at “rip off the lyrics for pennies on the click dot com” and all the rest losing out to interest in this site, the easiest, cheapest and best way to set an attitude is by this new mathematical psychology theory. meanspeedc2ae-screen-shot

I will henceforth stress how being aware of the, as Lennon and McCartney said, “The music playing in your head”  (from Lady Madonna, ownership, who knows, either Fidelity insurance, the Michael Jackson Peace Fund, or Knights for Nobility, a group of private philanthropists – all anonymous in the tradition of trye and good donations to a cause.  Especially on the day that Google finally steals my web traffic so [expleteive] can hawk something, using keywords bought by the “never be evil” Google.  Pretty [expletive] funny!  Especially because meanspeed® and mean speed® are registered trademarks, and any [expletive] who is making money illegally will be having sex with Bernard Madoff, Scott Peterson and the rest of their ilk.  I do not to want your money.  However, anyone pretending to be me or this company who “makes” money from the unlawful violation of FEDERAL STATUTE will have a terrible life ahead.  Those are the parasitic greedy swine that pushed the United States into a savage yet unnecessary “depression.”

/Ian Andrew Schneider/

Meanspeed® Music School

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Home Sweet Home (Mötley Crüe song)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

“Home Sweet Home”
Single by Mötley Crüe from the album Theatre of Pain
Released September 30, 1985
Genre  Glam metal
Length 3:59
Writer(s)  Lyrics: Nikki Sixx Music: Nikki Sixx, Vince Neil, Tommy Lee
Mötley Crüe singles chronology
"Smokin' In the Boys Room" (1985) "Home Sweet Home" (1985) "Girls, Girls, Girls" (1987)
“Home Sweet Home '91”
Single by Mötley Crüe from the album Decade of Decadence
Released 1992
Genre  Glam Metal
Writer(s)  Lyrics: Nikki Sixx Music: Nikki Sixx, Vince Neil, Tommy Lee
Mötley Crüe singles chronology
"Primal Scream" (1991) "Home Sweet Home '91" (1991) "Hooligan's Holiday" (1994)
"Home Sweet Home" is a song by the American glam metal band Mötley Crüe and is one of the first examples of a power ballad. Originally released on the band's 1985 album, Theatre of Pain, the song was accompanied by a music video which documented the band's undertakings over the course of a concert, or several concerts. "Home Sweet Home" was later remixed and re-released as a single in 1991, as "Home Sweet Home '91." This version featured on the band's Decade of Decadence compilation album. The song is often referred to as a power ballad, and its success was a prelude to similar marketing formula for other hair bands in the late 1980s.[1] The song ranks #12 on VH1's chart of the greatest power ballads of all time. The original release of "Home Sweet Home" charted at #89 on the Billboard Hot 100, and "Home Sweet Home '91" peaked at #37 on the same chart in 1992.[2] To date, "Home Sweet Home '91" is the last Mötley Crüe song to chart in the American Billboard Top 40.
Contents [hide] 1 Cover Versions 2 Track listing 3 Personnel 4 References
[edit] Cover Versions The song was covered by Linkin Park vocalist Chester Bennington on vocals along with Vince Neil, the rest of Mötley Crüe filling their respective places in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. The music video for the song shows video of Katrina rescues, along with performance from the band. It was also recorded by Limp Bizkit for their Greatest Hitz album, although it is joined by a remake of "Bitter Sweet Symphony" by The Verve. [edit] Track listing Home Sweet Home Red Hot [edit] Personnel Vince Neil - vocals Mick Mars - guitar Nikki Sixx - bass Tommy Lee - drums [edit] References ^ Theatre of Pain article on Allmusic ^ Whitburn, Joel. The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits, 6th ed, Billboard Publications, Inc. 1996. ISBN 0-8230-7632-6
[show] v • d • e Mötley Crüe 
[show] v • d • e Carrie Underwood 
Preceded by "Celebrate Me Home" by Ruben Studdard
American Idol Farewell Song Season 8 (2009) Succeeded by TBA

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