I wanted to create this blog as a place where I can store and retrieve information for future reference. I chose the name Humble Uker Ramblings because I have started out strumming my father's 1950's painted Harmony ukulele. I think that the greatest appeal of the ukulele as "the people's instrument" is it's humble simplicity. My contact email is HumbleUker@gmail.com. I have also been working on a blog for the Baritone Ukulele called Humble Baritonics.
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Kim Jorgensen || Spanish Lady (Original)
Friday, June 11, 2010
Sir Reginald Farnsworth
Thursday, March 11, 2010
Jeffrey CrashandBurn
--> Sugartime (as sung by the McGuire Sisters, in the key of F)
--> Breaking Up is Hard to Do (Doctor Ukes version)
So I, invoking my alter ego as Jeffrey Crashandburn, got up on the stage and got the meeting going. Starting to learn music at 45 years old I have a lot of musical defugalties and frequently goof up. But, I have learned from many good friends over the last 5 years, that the getting together and sharing music is great fun, and that bringing some creative music and starting off a song doesn’t mean you have to be flawless. Sometimes you just need to have the fortitude to get the ball rolling. 1…2…1234…
This night there were several new faces, and I was really amazed at how quickly everyone seemed to pick up on the music. Doctor Uke’s arrangements sometimes overwhelm me but I found the Neil Sedaka song to be a very fun finger yoga tune to play. The biggest trick is moving from the Bm (4222) to F#+ chord (3221). But I found an easy answer, After the two beats of Bm, slide your hand down so that the barred finger is now at the first fret and covers /1111/ this moves the ring finger is at /3xxx/ and then bend the middle finger to get /x22x/.
Yes that sounded awful but the transition from Bm to F#+ becomes a simple step. So much of the musical notation I read I perceive as a list of instructions, or map of the music. Once you know where you are going you can put the map back in the glovebox.
Well, with a modicum of success, and no ready volunteers, I continued on with:
--> Sweet and Slow (Steven Strauss’ version found on BUC Songlist)
--> Stray Cat Strut (my personal adjusted arrangement – which I will e-mail to anybody that wants a Microsoft Word copy – It’s a lot of fun.)
Then our Danish representative, Kim Jorgensen, came up and pulled Mood Indigo from the BUC hymnal. Kim has found a new Louis Armstrong-ish voice within himself that brings a bit more fun to the song. I have Kim’s breakout YT video with this voice posted in the blog about a month back.
Then the club got moving along and I drifted in and out of various musical selections. I checked the key of the songs and got in the far back of the room and just improvised as best I could to songs in the key of C and F. I am SO advanced that I know my C scale in 2 places and my F scale in one place. I amaze myself with this! But my friend Goovy aka BajanPiedPiper from YT and Barbados has challenged me to improvise.
I don’t sound really solid yet, but following Groovy’s advise on magic notes, pentatonic scales, chromatics, timing, blues notes, etc. has opened up some new potentialities to my musical experience. I have links to Groovy’s stuff in my music theory section.
[Note: if you learn BPP or Uncle Groovy's pentatonic scale pattern which he plays in G on the Baritone ukulele, it is the C pentatonic scale on the standard uke, then you can easily move the pattern up 2 frets to get the D scale, one more and you have Eb. This musical knowledge just keeps on building! Oh yeah and the Bb scale is just one fret down!]
Sunday, February 7, 2010
Presenting... Kim Jorgensen... getting Bluesy
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