Family holiday singalongs

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Tom

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I'm updating/broadening the family singalong portfolio in preparation for the upcoming holidays. Grandkids, their parents and other adults enjoy these events. This year we'll miss some musicians from the extended family, but should still have a great time. I'm thinking of inviting neighbors at our winter retreat to join us.

In prior years I've played a ukulele. Since we won't have a guitarist this year, I've dusted off a couple of guitars and attempted to regain muscle memory. Since we won't have a banjo player, I'm trying to decide if I'll haul my plectrum banjo or a banjo ukulele.
 
I wish you the best of luck. I dusted off my guitar and attempted to play it recently and was embarrassed. My muscle memory has switched from guitar to ukulele. I hope you have better luck than I have had. :(
 
Our family Christmas traditions include a sing along with piano instead of guitar. We do all the traditional Christmas songs, and I can usually play them. Occasionally I end up with just the soprano and alto lines, but that is ok since we don?t have men who sing harmony! Making a sheet with just the lyrics is something I have been meaning to do for quite a while since we are too many to just sit around the piano. The younger crowd don?t know all the words like us older folks do.
 
[quote author=SeilerBird]My muscle memory has switched from guitar to ukulele.[/quote]
Our ukulele band Music Director switches between uke and guitar several times during our weekly practices, and inevitably his muscle memory gets confused. It helps when a band member shouts out "guitar" or "ukulele" when he switches instruments.
 
[quote author=UTTransplant4]Our family Christmas traditions include a sing along with piano...[/quote]

I keep looking at my Yamaha keyboard and, knowing I have a keyboard at our winter retreat, I keep telling myself I need to get some practice in. But I play it about as well as I type on a computer keyboard, and Chris tells me I'm the fastest 1-finger typist she knows  :-[
Making a sheet with just the lyrics is something I have been meaning to do for quite a while...
Starting a couple of years ago, I prepared a set of folders containing only lyrics and leave them at our winter place.
 
Tom said:
Our ukulele band Music Director switches between uke and guitar several times during our weekly practices, and inevitably his muscle memory gets confused. It helps when a band member shouts out "guitar" or "ukulele" when he switches instruments.
If I play both of them and alternate I don't have a problem. My problem is that the last two years I have not been playing a guitar, only ukes and so my muscle memory has just flat out switched. I tried to play 'Stairway to Heaven' on the guitar last weekend and it was embarrassing. I used to be able to play it in my sleep and now the guitar feels foreign to me. I am going to have to fix that problem.
 
I suppose that's where playing a baritone uke would be helpful, since it's tuned like the (musically) highest 4 strings on a guitar. My baritone ukes seem to gather dust nowadays.
 
I did not buy a baritone uke just because it was in reality just a tenor guitar. But it would not have helped me to play one. My mind is just mush now.
 
[quote author=SeilerBird]I did not buy a baritone uke ... it would not have helped me to play one.[/quote]
I was thinking it would be easier to switch between baritone uke and guitar, rather than a re-entrant tuned uke and guitar.

My mind is just mush now.

That's my normal state  :-[
 
Tom said:
I was thinking it would be easier to switch between baritone uke and guitar, rather than a re-entrant tuned uke and guitar.
No doubt you are right. However I did not really learn about a baritone uke until I had bought a bunch of ukes and decided the 8 string was my favorite. I didn't think there were any 8 string baritone ukes until I just searched and found one:

https://reverb.com/item/5438924-kala-ka-abp8-ctg-acacia-cedar-top-8-string-baritone?gclid=Cj0KCQjwjbveBRDVARIsAKxH7vltGNBlkaQdTPO5lO8zP_lfH6QK3gsX7-dpAtJxckrLJUvdIkYp6_EaAvOQEALw_wcB&gclsrc=aw.ds&pla=1

However it has no tuner or pickup so I would not buy it. I refuse to buy any instrument that does not include a tuner.
 
A few downsides to our (early) holiday travel schedule this year:

  • I'll miss 3 Christmas concerts with the Delta Strummers; 51 folks have signed up to perform at the main concert, and I project there'll be 55 on stage.
  • I'll miss leading the singing at our monthly retired guys club, including  the 5-song Veterans Day tribute to our troops and veterans, and the mixed (guys & gals) Christmas lunch. I have two backup singers who do a great job of filling in for me; One has a really good voice, and is choral leader and teacher for a local church.
Meanwhile, I'm hoping that the ENT Doc can help heal my vocal chords that were damaged/irritated by tracheal intubation during a recent surgery; I currently speak with/like a rasp, and have zero vocal (singing) range or volume. I think I jinxed myself when, laying on the OR table, I waved a finger at the anesthesiologist and said "stay away from my vocal cords".
 
[quote author=SeilerBird]I didn't think there were any 8 string baritone ukes until I just searched and found one:[/quote]
You shouldn't have shown me that! The 8-string re-entrant Kala has been my primary uke for several years, and playing a 4-string sounds 'empty'. The Kala folks didn't mention the 8-string baritone when we toured their Petaluma factory a couple of years ago, nor did they have it in their extensive showroom. A call and visit to my favorite music store and Kala dealer in LaFayette may be in my near-term plans!
 
It does look very cool and tempting but with no electronics I would have to have a pickup and tuner installed. However I am way too in love with my new Lanikai to even consider getting one, thank heavens. I am in love with a keyboard and I am anxious to sell my current one and buy the new one.

https://www.ebay.com/itm/Music-88-Key-Electric-Digital-LCD-Piano-Keyboard-with-Stand-Adapter-3Pedal-Board/123416640958?_trkparms=aid%3D555018%26algo%3DPL.SIM%26ao%3D1%26asc%3D52885%26meid%3D6af57731727c4696af07cc30c8ac3ebe%26pid%3D100005%26rk%3D2%26rkt%3D12%26sd%3D123416641050%26itm%3D123416640958&_trksid=p2047675.c100005.m1851
 
I see both Seilerbird and Tom are having Ukulele conversation. A friend of mine and I were talking this past Saturday about her family business in Boyertown PA called Funky Frets and Ukulele's are their thing. They host get togethers with folks from around the country and said that someone from S Florida has come up. I know Seilerbird you are down in FL somewhere and was wondering if you ever made it to Boyertown's Funky Frets Uke Fest.
https://funkyfretsukefest.com/
 
martin2340 said:
I see both Seilerbird and Tom are having Ukulele conversation. A friend of mine and I were talking this past Saturday about her family business in Boyertown PA called Funky Frets and Ukulele's are their thing. They host get togethers with folks from around the country and said that someone from S Florida has come up. I know Seilerbird you are down in FL somewhere and was wondering if you ever made it to Boyertown's Funky Frets Uke Fest.
https://funkyfretsukefest.com/
No I have not had the pleasure if attending BFFUF but it sounds like a blast.
 
Tom said:
Meanwhile, I'm hoping that the ENT Doc can help heal my vocal chords that were damaged/irritated by tracheal intubation during a recent surgery; I currently speak with/like a rasp, and have zero vocal (singing) range or volume. I think I jinxed myself when, laying on the OR table, I waved a finger at the anesthesiologist and said "stay away from my vocal chords".
Hope they can find something easy to fix. I had issues after part of my thyroid was removed. Intubation and just general throat trauma reduced my normal booming projection to barely more than a whisper. It was terrible! ENT said he couldn?t see anything wrong, but I happened to mention it one day to the physical therapist working on my knee. She checked me out, and I had significant scar tissue in my throat around the vocal cords. She (very painfully) broke up the scar tissue over a few visits, and I can now project my voice to the back of the church again! Just something else to keep in mind if the ENT can?t help, though they probably can.
 
Thanks for the info on the alternate fix for scar tissue. How did the therapist break down the scar tissue?

My ENT appointment is next week, but tomorrow I have another procedure requiring anesthesia and intubation; I hope it doesn't compound the issue.
 
Speaking of singing, I just stumbled on this interesting video of Paul McCartney singing the same song over almost 50 years. It is amazing how much his voice changed over the years.

https://youtu.be/u4ioG9fboR0

Blackbird was my party piece. My best friend in 68 when it came out was a guitar teacher. He asked me if I wanted to learn to play it and I laughed. I had only been playing guitar for three years at that point and I thought it was way to hard for me to learn. Only took me a week to nail it. But it never sounded exactly right to me the way I was playing it. I slowed down the record trying to figure it out but I could not figure out exactly what I was doing wrong. When Paul plays it in concert he sometimes asks the audience if anyone has learned to play it and an amazing number of hands go up. Then he tells them most people play it wrong. He is doing a brush stroke where most people are individually picking the notes. But in 50 years of playing it I never once had someone tell me I was doing it wrong. People were always amazed I could play it. Recently I found a video on the Internet that shows exactly how to play it. I tried to play it the right way and could not defeat my muscle memory to play it right. Finally I just gave in and decided to keep playing it wrong.

 
My family tried a sing a long once. The SWAT team showed up thinking someone was being tortured.  :eek:

It is amazing how much his voice changed over the years.
I have a friend who was a street musician/folk singer who just turned 80. I met him 15 years ago when he was still singing. I have many of his cds, and listen to them frequently. The difference in his voice between the cds (he sounds alot like Willie Nelson) and the last couple of years he was doing house concerts is quite distinct.
 
[quote author=cadee2c]The difference in his voice between the cds ... and the last couple of years he was doing house concerts is quite distinct.
[/quote]
Prior to puberty I was a soprano, but now have a very distinct baritone voice, bordering on bass.
 
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