Welles Park original map

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Marquette, Michigan

Mending and Tending – a tune about taking care of ourselves

I was inspired to write this tune after a recent conversation with my friend Amanda Healen in which we were talking about my mending from some physical health challenges and about her time tending to her garden. I wrote it on my tenor banjo. Give it a listen below. And, you can download the standard notation of the tune, here.

Amigos de Basketball en el Barrio – New Song

We can’t have camp this year because of the pandemic. So, Coach Denisse Franco and I wrote a little song to share with the campers. Today, in Segundo Barrio, El Paso TX, some of the coaches will be distributing care packages with books, sports equipment and a zine with this song. It’s called Amigos de Basketball en el Barrio. Since 2016 I’ve been the music director at the best summer camp. It’s called Basketball in the Barrio and it is the most amazing sports, literacy, health and fitness, music, poetry, social justice, visual art camp you’ll ever experience. I wrote the tune and made the zine. Coach Denisse wrote the lyrics. I think you’ll agree that they are very fitting for this challenging time in our society. Here are the lyrics. Download a zine to help you learn the song here. A recording of me singing and playing the song is after the lyrics. Pronto jugaremos, sí. Yo te cuido y tú a mí. – Coach Denisse En Español Escribiendo, saltando, comiendo,Y canciones componiendo,Disfruto lo que aprendí,Todo lo que compartí.Aunque no esté en Armijo,Aún tengo a mis amigos,Basketball en el Barrio,Basketball en el Barrio.Hasta volvernos a ver,Cuídate y que estés bien,Pronto jugaremos, sí,Yo te cuido y tú a mí.Aunque no esté en Armijo,Aún tengo a mis amigos,Basketball en el Barrio,Basketball en el Barrio. In English Writing, jumping, eating – yum!Making songs is so much fun,I enjoy what I have learned,All the moments that we shared.Though I’m not in ArmijoI still have my amigosBasketball in the BarrioBasketball in the BarrioUntil we can meet again,Hope you’re well, take care my friend,Soon we’ll play, oh yes, indeed,I’ll care for you as you for meThough I’m not in ArmijoI still have my amigosBasketball in the BarrioBasketball in the Barrio

Banjo

Lager in a Pickle Jar – New Banjo Tune!

The title of this tune was inspired by a banjo video that Jonas Friddle recently published on Youtube. I didn’t have an empty pickle jar to put a lager in, so I opted to include a jar of pickles. Here is Lager in a Pickle Jar! And here is the video that inspired the title.

Chicago

Lunch Time! With Hibbard Elementary Room 208

I don’t know about you, but as the social distancing continues, I sure am missing eating lunch with my friends. That made me think of this song that I wrote with some 3rd graders at Hibbard Elementary a few years ago. It’s rockin! Here is a recording of the song and a lyric and chord sheet that you can download to help you learn the song. Let me know if you learn to play and sing it!

Chicago

Cheers to the Sound Engineers!

I spent the day working on “social distance sound”; both my own and others’. I run in a community of educators and teachers who, like many people in the country, have been thrown into a world of having to have what amounts to a television studio in their apartments. We’re all grabbing all the equipment we’ve gathered over the years and we’re trying to make a go of it as best as we can. It’s been a couple weeks of experimenting with mic placement, charging and recharging our phones, moving lamps around our apartments, turning off radiators and covering windows with bedsheets to gain some control of the audio and visual of online music education and concerts. All this work has got my mind on all of the sound engineers that I’ve worked with over the years, including one in particular; my friend Dave Unger. About four years into our journey, the Young Stracke All-Stars (my youth folk band) was really cookin’ and we started to get some high profile gigs. And the people that were asking us to play, wanted to hear our music! We’d spent four years cutting our teeth playing small venues like the Lincoln Restaurant where we didn’t need amplification. But, with the introduction of better gigs came the need to use a sound system properly. With that in mind the great Chicago sound engineer ,Dave Unger, to lend us a hand. I made a vocabulary list (with a crossword puzzle!) and some drawings, the band invited some friends and Dave spent the afternoon helping us understand how mics, amplifiers and mixing boards work. It was a very fruitful day! Over the next 7 years of the band’s travels we never had another proper Live Sound workshop, the band members who received this training were able to train the following generation. And those members were able to pass it along to the next members and on we went! So, I write all of this just to say cheers to Dave and cheers to all the sound engineers who also got the rug pulled out from under them in this challenging situation. Us musicians already knew that you had a big job and a lot of expertise and now it’s even more clear. We’re stuck at home without you, and our sound suffers for it. I think I can speak for pretty much every musician I know when I say that we’ll all be too happy to put some of this work back in your capable hands.

'Ukulele

Let’s Have a Pizza Party! – Songwriting with 2nd Grade

It’s Saturday and for many people that means pizza! Here’s a fun song to go along with your pizza party. Some second graders from Hibbard Elementary and I wrote this song in 2018. Here is a lyric and chord sheet that you can download to learn to play the song yourself!

'Ukulele

How to Find the Minor 2 (ii) Chord in a Major Scale – Video Lesson

During this challenging time of life I’ve been inspired by the Marquette Makers’ Project to keep busy with some creative work. I’ve made a lot of lessons like this, but this is the first one where I used a virtual whiteboard and recorded my voice along with the drawings I made on the whiteboard.  It turned out pretty well and I learned a lot! In the video I mention two songs that use the minor 2 chord.  Here are lyric and chord sheet for those to songs Old Devil Time by Pete Seeger Hungry Heart by Bruce Springsteen [vimeo http://vimeo.com/400364601] Here is the weekly schedule for Marquette Makers’ Projects during the physical separation from our communities.  Cool stuff.  I’m excited to see what people are working on.

Harmonica

Music Video for “Juice Box” – a new song for youth musicians

Thank you to Huxley and Theo for their help making this music video for my song, Juice Box!  This song was written with young students like them in mind. I you’d like to learn the song yourself, you can listen to just the audio recording and download a FREE handout to help you learn the song, here. The handout has the chords, standard notation, and harmonica notation. It also has the chords, standard notation and harmonica notation for Twinkle Twinkle Little Star! Now presenting JUICE BOX! [vimeo 392866503 w=640 h=360]  

Goals and Education

Recap: Family Harmonica at Winter Roots Festival

Wow! What great musicianship at the packed house for Family Harmonica Workshop at Saturday’s 2020 Winter Roots Folk Festival! Most of the attendees had never played the harmonica before and they plowed through ALL of my teaching material for the day. Three of the songs were the classics – Hot Cross Buns, Twinkle Twinkle Little Star and Boil ’em Cabbage Down. The last was an original song by me called Juice Box (which you can learn to play here.) We even had some juice boxes at the end to celebrate our music. Looking forward to another opportunity to play together! Photos and video by Susan Rutter Divine, Katy Divine and Sue Demel. [vimeo 392247139 w=640 h=1138]  

Snowy Day – A Song for Young Musicians – Video and Zine

Recently, it was a very snowy morning here in Marquette, MI.  I was waiting for some of my students to have their lesson and I wrote this song. I made a video of me playing the song, and there is a .pdf of a zine that you can print out to help you learn it.  Print it double-sided and then follow the instructions to make the zine! The zine contains the lyrics, standard music notation, and specialized notation for harmonica, guitar and ‘ukulele.  I was wondering, what would happen if we changed the lyrics from “snowy day” to “cloudy day” or “sunny day”.  What changes would you make in the rest of the lyrics so that the song is about your day? Download the Snowy Day Zine here. Be sure to print it double sided and then watch the short video below to learn how to fold your zine. Thanks to Ore Dock Brewing Company for letting me use their beautiful community space to make some music.

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