Pan Flute, Furry Drum, Guitar, Baritone Ukulele (?)
More Hungarian Kaláka (No Bari this time)
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Friday, October 1, 2010
The Debutant Hour || No Scrubs (Band) (TLC Cover)
Mia Pixley (Cello), Maria Sonevytsky (Baritone Ukukele), Susan Hwang (Hobo Drum Kit)
YT tags were quite interesting: NYC brooklyn literate cabaret vaudeville close harmony humor acoustic alternative americana anti-folk antifolk art rock avant-garde cool sassy eclectic experimental female female vocalists franz fun girl group great lyricists indie je ne sais quoi nicolay nyc retro singer-songwriter theatrical unique vintage weird outre
PHOTO: Emily || Hippomaiden of YouTube
"This is hippomaiden from YouTube. I read your message then told myself to look for a picture. Here is one -- I hope it works! Thank you so much for your continuous support of my videos, I really appreciate it! Hope all is well with you. :) Emily"Emily is just starting off her journey in college as a music student of course. I really enjoy the energy she puts into her music and the Sea Shanty song is my favorite. I wish her the best and hope she'll check in once in awhile.
Malvina Reynolds || No Hole in My Head
Here's a classic from the Pete Seeger Rainbow Quest. Malvina has a unique strum that I wanted to record. This is great vintage stuff. I will post non-bari stuff about 5% of the time when I think there's a bari benefit.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ACvZkuTrctk Shiny & the Spoon from Cincinnati, Ohio and it's on their EP too.
I naively thought this was an unheard song and I was on to something, but it has also been covered on standard GCEA ukuleles by casetone2514 and adellethegreat
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ACvZkuTrctk Shiny & the Spoon from Cincinnati, Ohio and it's on their EP too.
I naively thought this was an unheard song and I was on to something, but it has also been covered on standard GCEA ukuleles by casetone2514 and adellethegreat
NivramFalcon || Limehouse Blues
P.S. I know there's a Marvin Falcon in uke player history. So who is Nivram?
Professor Peter & Doctor Dick || Bass-o-lele
I have had a couple of e-mail conversations with the gentlemen from The Netherlands about the song Red Lips Kiss My Blues Away. They just let me know that Doctor Dick plays another version of the baritone that uses the low 4 strings of the guitar rather than the high 4 strings. They call it the bass-o-lele. Here's a photo...
"Hello Jeff, I play the baritone uke but . . . . not as a baritone ! I call it my bass-o-lele. I have the four low strings of a classical guitar on my bariton and play bass on it. The idea is that the gap between a normal bassguitar and a soprano uke is to big. The gap between my bass-o-lele and a uke is the same as between a basguitar and a guitar. I use it in my duo PROFESSOR PETER AND DOCTOR DICK (our real names are Peter and Dick). You can find us on our website www.kleinleed.nl Greetings from Dick The Netherlands, Europe"
Here it is in action...
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