Tick. Tock. Tick. Tock.
Time’s ticking. You can’t control it. All you can do is live with this fact. Even as I am typing on my keyboard, I am consuming time. The thing is, it’s not wasted.
Whenever we pass by the tick of the clock, take some time to think about what you are doing–if it really is a contributing factor to what you are going to become in the future. Are you being productive? Or just futile?
No time must be wasted. As you breathe in and out every single second of your life, live it well.
Live it well.
Band: Lady Antebellum
Lady Antebellum’s truth is in the music. But the alchemy which forged this seven-time Grammy award winning trio extends beyond its signature vocal blend and heartfelt songwriting gifts. With a self-titled double platinum debut album and triple platinum second effort—Need You Now—it’s easy to applaud their amazing achievements, but equally significant is the underlying importance of the group’s shared heartbeat.
“That’s the core of our group, how we started,” says Dave Haywood, harmony singer and multi-instrumentalist. “What spawned our friendship was that special writing chemistry. That’s when we are the happiest, just sitting in a room together making music.”
“Maybe it’s a self preservation kind of thing,” agrees co-lead singer Hillary Scott. “Especially on the road we have to work to nurture our relationship. I write so much from about what is happening in my life and the people closest to me, so knowing my friends care about what is going on in my life outside of Lady A, makes me more likely pour it all out into a song.”
“Writing lets us chill and slow down a bit,” says Charles Kelley whose edgy lead vocals merge and weave with Hillary’s velvet tone.”
Lady Antebellum formed in 2006. Hillary and Charles decided to try writing together after a chance meeting at a Nashville music spot. Charles and his high school musician friend and co-writer Dave Haywood were living with Charles’ brother Josh Kelley at the time. Late night songwriting sessions with the new trio soon became the genesis through which they discovered the remarkable emotional effect that was created when Charles and Hillary’s vocals blended. With Dave’s harmony sounds and instrumental prowess added to that mix the three young musicians realized they might not just be writing songs for other people, but perhaps would get to perform them, too. A Music Row “buzz” began to spread as the newly-formed trio started making appearances on local stages.
Soon key tastemakers began to believe in the group, including producer Paul Worley who has worked on all three Lady A albums. By April 2007, a blink of an eye in music industry time, Capitol Nashville had signed Lady Antebellum to a record deal and the trio began to ascend toward the constellation of country music stars with powerful hits such as “Love Don’t Live Here,” and “I Run To You.”
The group’s second album, Need You Now (released Jan. 2010) took the band to an even larger audience. To date the album has sold over five million copies worldwide, spawning three multi-week No. 1 hits (“Need You Now,” “American Honey” and “Our Kind of Love”), and scored five Grammy Awards. It has also received over a dozen other award show trophies. ‘Need You Now’ introduced the world, outside North America, to Lady Antebellum. The single was a huge airplay hit around the globe, reaching the No. 1 spot in numerous markets and achieving Top 5 Airplay in 30 countries world-wide. The album has sold in excess of one million units outside the US, and ‘Need You Now’ remains in the airplay charts more than 18 months since release.
“We never expected to be thrust into the international spotlight in the way that we were…from the success of just one song,” says Kelley. “It was six months or so after the album came out that we were finally able to go play overseas. When we got there, we were floored at the life that ‘Need You Now’ had taken on. The power of that one song really changed the scope of our entire career at home and in all these places we had only dreamed of playing.”
Summer Breeze
Good morning, sunshine!
As I woke up today, I realized that it’s summertime!
Just want to share this song to hype up the summer fever.
See the curtains hanging in the window
In the evening on a Friday night
A little light a-shining through the window
Lets me know everythings alright
Summer breeze makes me feel fine
Blowing through the jasmine in my mind
Summer breeze makes me feel fine
Blowing through the jasmine in my mind
See the paper laying on the sidewalk
A little music from the house next door
So I walk on up to the door step
Through the screen and across the floor
Summer breeze makes me feel fine
Blowing through the jasmine in my mind
Summer breeze makes me feel fine
Blowing through the jasmine in my mind
Sweet days of summer, the jasmine’s in bloom
July is dressed up and playing her tune
When I come home from a hard days work
And you’re waiting there, not a care in the world
See the smile a-waiting in the kitchen
Food cooking and the plates for two
Feel the arms that reach out to hold me
In the evening when the day is through
Summer breeze makes me feel fine
Blowing through the jasmine in my mind
Summer breeze makes me feel fine
Blowing through the jasmine in my mind
Thank God It’s Monday
We use to label the first day of the week, Monday, as a long stressful day. Most of us follow this pattern:

Today. Why not make a shift of your paradigm? Try working a significant percent of effort each day. Don’t burn yourself out. Instead, work one step at a time. There’s no need to rush. Just be excellent in every effort you exert.
Remember that there is always grace. Grace for significance.
May you have a great Monday–an awesome start of another fun-filled, challenging week ahead! Good morning! (GMT+08)




