Workshops
| The County Clare Dulcimer | |
Playing traditional music is so much more than just banging out the right notes. The particular treatment a musician gives to a tune can identify it with a country, a region, an individual musician, or even a place in time. Clare is a region in Ireland whose fluid, unhurried style of music is reflective of its people and its geography. This workshop will use this elusive dialect of Irish Traditional Music as a framework in which to examine ornamentation for the hammered dulcimer that is culturally relevant, respectful of tradition, yet innovative. | |
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Crooked Tunes From Quebec | |
Up until the end of the 19th century Quebecois fiddlers, playing for social dances, nearly always played solo, accompanied only by the binary rhythm of the dancers' feet. Along with the lack of recording devices, this seems to have yielded a quirky breed of tunes, unconcerned with whether a tune-phrase ended in the standard 16 beats, or whether it ended on 15, 18 or even 22 beats. These crooked tunes are unique, fun and, well...crooked. Try not to trip over yourself as you participate in this enjoyable workshop. | |
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Scales and Chords | |
| (to expand your horizon & impress friends at parties) | |
With time, most dulcimer players learn the chord shapes and patterns needed to play fiddle tunes, traditional folk melodies, and perhaps a few more intricate pieces. Some players wish to stretch themselves further but aren't sure how. This workshop will provide geometric patterns, chord progressions, arpeggios and scales that will change the way you look at your instrument and allow you to delve into more exotic music styles such as Jazz, Gypsy Swing, Klezmer, Tango, or Musette. Many of the exercises offered in this workshop will also help to build dexterity, hand separation, economy of motion, and confidence. | |
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Foundations of Gypsy Jazz | |
Gypsy Swing, Jazz Manouche, or Gypsy Jazz are all terms that refer to the wonderful genre of music that centers around the guitar genius of Django Rienhardt. Django was a Belgian-born, Sinti Gypsy who grew up playing traditional music outside of Paris in the early 20th century. At age 18 he was injured in a caravan fire and was left with only two playing fingers on his left hand. This limitation led him to re-learn his craft in an entirely new way. Django's newfound techniques, Gypsy heritage, Parisian influence, and love of the American Jazz songbook, all meld together to give us Gypsy Jazz. While the dulcimer is not typically a jazz instrument, its shared lineage with the Gypsy cymbalom makes it an exciting instrument for playing this style of music. | |
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Ducli-Musette | |
In late 19th century Paris an interesting musical phenomenon occurred. Peasants from the Auvergne region migrated to the city, opening cafes and bars. They brought with them a french bagpipe called the Musette and began holding dances at their establishments. Many Italians had already been living in these same districts of Paris, and their Italian accordian soon became a staple at these events. Add to the mix the influence of itinerent Gypsy musicians with their Eastern-sounding scales, as well as an increasing Parisian interest in American Jazz, and the quaint, little waltz known as Bal-Musette was born. This workshop explores playing Bal-Musette on the dulcimer. | |
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3 is a Magic Number | |
Are you a two-handed dulcimer player? Than this workshop is for you! Often times tunes lead us to melodic and rhythmic patterns that consist of multiples of three. These include triplets, jigs, slip-jigs, and waltzes to name a few. If you do the math, playing patterns of three with two hands can present challenges. This workshop turns obstacles into opportunities. | |
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