Friday, December 21, 2012

December "Set" Lists

At the cornerstone campfire, Aimee encouraged me to do the Fleetwood Mac song, and basically lead it on guitar (after I told her the chords) because the uke doesn't carry in that huge room.  Everyone knew it and my voice carried nicely tho!  I was really glad for her support to have such fun.

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The next nite at the T-jam, I gave up trying to remember the chords for the song I thought I was willing to try, on the uke I was wearing out there for the first time, and I asked Rob to "help" me with it, ha.  So he told everybody the gist of it and we did "If Wishes Were Horses" in a key other than my fave, and with rather a peppy rhythm to it.  I kept remembering after how I'd announced "okay okay I will SING you a uke song."

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I was superkeen, personally, to see what little jenny can get up to on the bass!  It was nice to plug in my uke and speak lyrics in the mic, using my under-the-weather voice in a whole new way.

so-called setlist Sat.Dec 22, Sis Jam
Santa Baby
River
Christians and Paegans, on Guitar
West Virginia, on Mandolin
If Wishes Were Horses
I Will Wait
Werewolves of London
It's A Heartache
Jolene
Fields of Gold
Dreams
Am G F G jam
Hit The Road Jack/Stray Cat Strut/Cat Came back mash
 e t c .




Saturday, August 18, 2012

Practice

my very first scale "assignment"
came from Brother Mikey in AZ
ever since i mastered the c scale on the uke and got to enjoy it, i try to come up with 15 min of music practice time every day.  and, finally, i am giving thought to precise playing/technique, in the hopes of earning some speed, ha.  sometimes i try to toss a scale between the other fun stuff i am doing too...




right now i am working on the C scale on piano.  for my product knowledge test i learned a two octave pattern, shown to me by the teacher there.  i do it with each hand separately, around middle C.  my friend told me that when i have it down pat with each the left and right hand, then i can try doing both at the same time while reading a book.  i also throw in a cool two hand at a time C scale shown to me by a co-worker.

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i am also working on a G scale on the guitar.  now that i have totally memorized the note pattern on the fretboard and can hear it, i am paying attention to which finger.  also, i had the invention today to incorporate the keeping-the-other-fingers-down-while-moving-one exercise.  i suddenly noticed the way each other finger was sticking straight up stoopidly while i worked on playing the notes.

i can't remember right now who drew me this one.
i like trying this finger pattern once in a while too...

mostly, always, i am trying to memorize song patterns, the story itself, with the minimum of chord change patterns to master, ha. i just love singing.

Friday, August 17, 2012

Searching Descriptive Words for Guitar Tone?

how about putting each word into the thesauras? i would love to dabble with helping with such a writerly chore!
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Timbre: The Color of Music          Module by: Catherine Schmidt-Jones. 

One of the basic elements of music is called color, or timbre (pronounced "TAM-ber"). Timbre describes all of the  aspects of a musical sound that do not have anything to do with the sound's pitch, loudness, or length. In other words, if a flute plays a note, and then an oboe plays the same note, for the same length of time, at the same loudness, you can still easily distinguish between the two sounds, because a flute sounds different from an oboe. This difference is in the timbre of the sounds.
   
    Timbre is caused by the fact that each note from a musical instrument is a complex wave containing more than one frequency. For instruments that produce notes with a clear and specific pitch, the frequencies involved are part of a harmonic series. For other instruments (such as drums), the sound wave may have an even greater variety of frequencies. We hear each mixture of frequencies not as separate sounds, but as the color of the sound. Small differences in the balance of the frequencies - how many you can hear, their relationship to the fundamental pitch, and how loud they are compared to each other - create the many different musical colors. The harmonics at the beginning of each note - the attack - are especially important for timbre, so it is actually easier to identify instruments that are playing short notes with strong articulations than it is to identify instruments playing long, smooth notes.

 The human ear and brain are capable of hearing and appreciating very small variations in timbre. A listener can hear not only the difference between an oboe and a flute, but also the difference between two different oboes. The general sound that one would expect of a type of instrument  - a trombone  for example - is usually called its timbre or color. Variations in timbre between specific instruments - two different trombones, for example, or two different trombone players, or the same trombone player using  different types of sound in different pieces - may be called differences in timbre or color, or may be called differences in tone or in tone quality. Tone quality may refer specifically to "quality", as when a young trombonist is encouraged to have a "fuller" or "more focussed" tone quality, or it can refer neutrally to differences in sound, as when an orchestral trombonist is asked to play with a "brassy" tone quality in one passage and a "mellow" tone quality in another.
Many words are used to describe timbre. Some are somewhat interchangeable, and some may have slightly different meanings for different musicians, so no attempt will be made to provide definitions.
Here are a few words commonly used to describe either timbre or tone quality.
Reedy
Brassy
Clear
Focussed or unfocussed
Breathy (pronounced "BRETH-ee")
Rounded
Piercing
Strident
Harsh
Warm 
Mellow
Resonant
Dark or Bright
Heavy or Light
Flat
Having much, little, or no vibrato (a controlled wavering in the sound); or narrow or wide, or slow or fast, vibrato

For more information on what causes timbre, please see Harmonic Series I, Standing Waves and Musical Instruments, and Standing Waves and Wind Instruments.) For activities that introduce children to the concept of timbre, please see Timbre Activities

Thursday, August 09, 2012

Uke Orchestra, Blue Skies Festival Aug 2012

okay, so you saw me in the photos, but how many of my ukes???



over all, the Blue Skies workshop programming was amazing! i can't believe i didn't think to look at the schedule til after i was home. ha, egads etc.

its true i meant to participate in the choir.  but, excepting  the U2 and Neil Young tunes, the material didn't resonate with me. And, they were sight reading in their parts, which i can't do.  am i even an alto? I didn't even have my glasses for the words.  No wonder i never went back after the first practice!

Eve's uke workshops, for me, on the other hand, were amazing!!!  All three of them, and then the performance was fun.

First of all, she seems to have stuck it in my head good and for all time, finally, that your FIRST string is closest to the FLOOR!

the bass player i accidentally forced a uke on (in order to run back to my tent for extras), tabbed out the other Latin Times homework for me in 2 seconds flat.  So, I have take away stuff to work on, for all that missed tuning ukes for little kids ha.
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the rest of our set list included:
Sloop John B
My Girl
Feelin' Groovy
>> one of these had some intro picking pattern i don't remember, didn't it?
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 for me it wasn't the performances on the main stage, or even the wonderful Blue Skies workshops, it was the memorable musical moments of the informal jams. it was awesome that the fire ban lifted with the rain!!!  Standing by other people's canaopies listening and smiling, joining in, sometimes even sitting down and accepting a glass of wine and instrument, ha.  when i enthused about my nighttime adventures to my tent mate she said, "congratulations, you've arrived at blue skies"





Considering a Music Teacher?


“don’t place too much emphasis on the importance of performance ability.  Emphasis must be placed on a candidate’s capabilities as a teacher, not on their capabilities as a musician.”

 Instead look for:

Good communication skills
High degree of maturity and responsibility
Enthusiasm and a positive attitude
A true interest in musi education
Adequate performance ability
Knowledge and use of suitable age and level appropriate lesson curriculum

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A musical education is never wasted?  Check out this discussion...

For more benefits of a musical education, click this link as well.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Uke Tunes! (Hillside Workshop) Performing Arts Tent 2012


Day 1, maximum 25 people passed through, with only about 6 ukes, including an unknown celebrity stop by (when the gathered shouted, ukulele at him, insisting he stop in)

Celi recorded an album at 18, and played us some tunes from it.

the youngest participant shared
the most complicated strumming pattern.  he was awesome!


"usually i say that the painted laminate "toy-like" ukes like denver/maholo are indestructible.  but this one here, isn't playing nice at hillside.  it seems pretty destructed.  We will use it for practicing the fingering with muted strings only.  This les Paul knock off uke made by Epiphone I bought for $125 or so, and splain as the PICKUP I bought, with a uke installed on it.  (instrument mic woes/moving vs. keeping a rhythm).  This one is a tenor sized solid top uke with an electric guitar style headstock that isn't my favourite, personally.  a friend of mine is going to deliver my concert sized kala mahogony one. my favourite in the universe that i have tried, so far, is a louis mesquita one with the sound hole on top a la birdsell guitar.  it feels like a kiss, so romantic! but about $2,000

thanks to Chris Hum for sharing his gift uke still in the original box from hawaii!
*
Day 2 about 20 people with ukes desccened at the same time. I need to learn how to more effectively get 20 varying level of player to tune CORRECTLY at the same time!  There were almost enough instruments for all!  I took it as a good sign that folks from the day prior returned.  And, that at the end there were requests to take it to another field someplace and continue.

after this complicated Bb required ditty,
we did Pay Me the way I learned it off Dan Zanes at Harbourfront.

next uke circle i want to take a uke collection portrait shot,
instead of pics of people, lol!

Friday, July 20, 2012

Uke Petting Zoo/Singalong Visits Summer Camp


You Are My Sunshine
my very own song Love Call (with lots of excellent bird sounds)
The Lion Sleeps Tonite (with lots of amazing lion roars)
accidental Horse Beats parade in walk, tot and canter with boomwhackers 

 This Old Man
Oh When The Saints (marchers got Zazu books, trumpeters got free kazoos)

She’ll Be Coming Round The Mountain
The Cat Came Back with improv verses
Skip To My Lou
He’s Got The Whole World
Ive Been Working on the Rail Road













i even had "merch"
14 3.5-6 yr olds
3 staff, 5 +5 leadership youth
$20 expense recovery budget

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Youth Songwriting Programs

songwriting requires both left and right brain activity, creativity and problem solving.

as a form of self-expression, songwriting is an outlet for ones feelings, thoughts, observations, queries, philosophies and politics.  Not only learn to understand themselves but also to observe and empathise with others

because a song is short, it is manageable in terms of time commitment and a sense of accomplishment is felt relatively quickly

Thursday, July 05, 2012

Upcoming Events

July 10 - Afternoon Veggie Pick up Jam, Ignatius
July 17 - Afternoon Veggie Pick up Jam, Ignatius
July 20 - Morning Uke Circle, Parkwoods Neighbourhood Group
July 25 - Guelph SAC Open Stage, Vienna
July 28&29 - Hillside Festival, Uke Tunes Workshops
July 29 - Jimmy Jazz Open Stage
July 31 - Veggie Pick up Jam, Ignatius
Aug 3-5 - Blue Skies, Choir?
Aug 7-10 - Uke 101 Class at L&M Guelph
Aug 14 - Afternoon Veggie Pick up Jam, Ignatius


Thursday, June 14, 2012

SAC meeting notes

the check marks indicate things i was able to bring up for discussion...
it felt good to share the story of "Guelph Speaks" getting me underway as a recording artist lol.

Next Times

i think it would be legit for me to say "i'm performing at a few festivals this year," what with my hillside workshop coming up and the eden mills art festival gig that past...

in the meantime, here's some "notes to self" for next time...


Friday, June 08, 2012

Shepherd's Pub, Elora

Well, wasn't that nice?
after Peter's songs, he packed up his guitar right away, so I boldly asked Sarah the host if I could use hers.  Wasn't it funny that there was no volume for a bit because I hadn't plugged in? ha.

It was really awesome to play with a band.  Drums, bass, pedal steel, fine fine electric guitar, and me on rhythm/acoustic electric guitar.

A fellow jammer, the waiter and at least one other person used the word "beautiful" about the songs I did.  Are they just being encouraging?

We did the L&N and then Rocky Spine.  It was especially fun to give them all a look to s t o p, and then sing one more line.

On the drive home, Peter gave me the best compliment of all
"oh, the band knew where YOU were going."

I'm so grateful we could get out for this adventure together!

Monday, May 28, 2012

What A Great Uke Circle Experience!

I didn't have to ride my bike over there, I was pleased to hop in a carpool!

I was informed on arrival that I wasn't on the list to perform 12-1.  But, I did get to sound check and we played together to Miss Ohio!  What a great experience to learn to ask to hear one's own vocal in the monitor etc.  That Gwen was awesome on Viola!!
I got to walk around and enjoy the amazing work of the artists!  I announced from the stage that their cool initative of getting a ballot initialled by each artist was very cool, but that the work was so great I was seeking autographs and KEEPING MY BALLOT ha.

Then I returned to our beautiful venue the Meadow!  I love the garden walls....  and, I wished I'd taken a snap of the audience once they arrived and settled and in, organically rearranging the furniture...  for most of the show there were more guitars on stage than people in the audience lol.






Some would say it was Peter and Gwen Potter that stole the show, and it's true they were professional and fun to listen to... I don't think he minded that I made him a merch table with mailing list and mentioned his CD's for sale for $10 when it was my turn on stage.



I enjoyed Chris's version of the Elizabeth Cotten song Freight Train as the highlight of the day!




My set list
= literally unsayable to drum circle, finger picking
= miss ohio as sing along to drum circle
at 1:38 the sound man turned on my vocal mic!
= love call as sing along with uke play-along and sing-along chorus
electric uke too! but i couldn't hear it in my monitor very well...
I Will Always Love You
it was fun to get a chance to play with Peter and Gwen again to:
If Wishes Were Horses
Not Going Down That Way
She Wore Flowered Dresses
(I also told a silly story about the best party that ever happened in Guelph, when Slaid Cleaves did the backyard house concert ha)







Wednesday, April 25, 2012

The Forgotten Intro

hi, my name is kim logue and i come out to these things looking for someone to collaborate with, given my level of musicality.  i don't read music, and i am a beginner at playing it, but i have done a lot of work to find a voice.  now i am going to play you a song i have never tried in our club before, on my kala concert uke.  its a slaid cleaves song, She Wore Flowered Dresses, are we allowed to do covers?

if you want to sing or play along i would love that.  i really lake to make it up along the way, especially singing with other people.

 the song structure is simply
verse chorus verse chorus verse chorus
verse = C F Am G X 4
 chorus = F G C C X 2
F G C F
F G C C.

here's how i do it....

Sunday, April 01, 2012

A Bit about Patti G

I had the history of her first two albums backwards in my mind!

And, I didn't  know that A&M released a stripped-down reworking of her demo tape, as an album called Living with Ghosts. instead of what she'd recorded with Dan Lanois in Nawlins. Griffin's second album, 1998's Flaming Red was a departure from the acoustic sound of Living with Ghosts, with a mix of mellow songs along with other, very high tempo rock and roll songs.

Swoon:
I think this is a really well written and well laid out bio
http://www.pattygriffin.net/PattyBio.html

Friday, March 23, 2012

quotes to consider

http://www.masslive.com/entertainment/index.ssf/2012/03/shelby_lynne_brings_revelation.html


"I never have more fun than when I play a show with just me and a guitar," she said during telephone interview last week. "Playing with a band is great, too, when everyone is hooked into each other, but there's something about a solo shown that's very intimate, kind of like a date."

comes out good, I'll keep going. It gave me a lot of confidence."
She added that she didn't let "not being the best musician in the world" affect the songs negatively, but rather used it as an opportunity to let the songs shine on their own, without a lot of fancy trappings.
"This situation was pretty limited as far as the licks I could play," she said. "But I've played with some of the best players in the world, and sometimes they play too good, you know? Sometimes you want to tell them, 'play a little less good on that part.' So I just tried to complement each song the best I could with playing that doesn't get in the way."

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Kim Logue, Artist Bio

With a beautiful voice, natural rhythm, and an irresistible lifelong affinity for all things musical, Kim Logue is finally turning her efforts to developing her own songs and ability with a variety of instruments.  With an application for a FACTOR award, still pending with its second jury, Kim Logue hopes to record some new song demos in 2012.  Established as a poet, commissioned film maker, emcee, award-winning broadcaster, artist manager, fun dancer, papermaker, loud laugher, community builder, and writer... the musical future looks bright for this artist.

Upcoming Events:
May 26 & 27 Eden Mills Arts Festival

Recent Performance Highlights:
Uke Songs
- a 2011 series of novice singalong ukulele workshops at Cambridge/Stratford Long & Mcquade Stores
Songwriters Association of Canada, Guelph Regional Writers Group Meetings 
-- especially, Hillside Performing Arts Tent, Songwriting Workshop Host, 2011
Donkey Day,
-- with Trish Henry, main stage, 2010

See notes re: Additional Breadth of Experience Details

Friday, February 17, 2012

Creation of Audio Support Material

The Way the World turns was really re-worked magically by Sean eh? I did not even give him a good take!  Have you listened to the before and after I posted on myspace?  I submitted both the before and after tracks in my FACTOR submissions.

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Cubase 5.5, Apogee Duet (interface) and Neumann TLM103 microphone, Universal Audio Plugins for processing

Not like this witness didn't point that all out to me, ha.  I was glad for the company on the adventure!

We delivered his CD to a bunch of my favourite city record shops and hten both played a couple songs at an open stage, before heading out of the big city!

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Nov 2010 Minutes, 2 meetings


CMW Conference 2010

I was so happy when the Songwriters Association of Canada gave me a free pass to Canadian Music Week, that I snapped a picture to commemorate the moment in the beautiful Royal York Hotel (restroom) in Toronto, Ontario.





Who knew I was about to run into a good buddy from G-town!  We had just collaborated on my song Winter Blues the Guelph Regional Writers Group Meeting before that ...

Jerry got his pass from C.F.R.U. Guelph's Campus and Community Radio station.




p.s.

I was really relieved that my CD/lyric sheet wasn't pulled out for the Song Evaluations

First of all, at these things they only seem to look at the words. That bababa baby is only about the melody and sing along fun. People love it. But I couldn't take an evaluation from those folks in a room that big like that. Why did I even put one in the box?

*
Other thoughts for the SAC ? More song structure commentary, more explanation of what is happening, including more feedback on anything that's working...

Monday, January 09, 2012

Boxing Day Jam Glow

I was happy to have brought an instrument!!!






"A big thank you to everyone who came by to make merry - it was the groovin'est, jam-sing ever with the GRS (Guelph Rhythm Section - Adam and Jesse) lockin' in, and the welcome addition of soprano sax and a plenitude of ukes. At the population peak (Locomotion?) the place was so loud with voices I couldn't hear my guitar! Love it, love it, love it.  Looking forward to the next one near summer solstice - we'll let you know when we set a date.
A big lovin' hug . . . and happy 2012 to all!"