Archive | By Feeling

Learning by the feeling it gives you.

Tatering level 3 – chord tone double stops

Level 3 is a bit more tricky, technically speaking.  This involves including other notes from the chords as they pass in a progression… not just necessarily the tonic (name of chord) and it’s fifth anymore.  This means that you’ll have to learn some (simple don’t worry) Music Theory or Music

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Tatering level 1 – play the name of each chord

Level 1 is the easiest.  I actually get a new student to do this in the very first lesson, mainly just to give them a musical experience right away!  Even if they do not hold the bow correctly, or know anything about fingering yet, in the first lesson, we can

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Tater Section

“Tater” as in po-tater po-tater or po-tato, po-tato (long – short short, long – short short bow strokes) in the Suzuki tradition, or more generally as the art of creating improvised double string back-up support parts based on the underlying chord progression of a song.  …Don’t worry, it’s not as

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Musical Priest – Irish/Celtic tune

Being a metaphysically oriented guy, I kind of think of myself as always aspiring to be a musical priest of sorts.  A priest of jamming!  ;~)  This tune caught my eye, just for its title at first, but I’ve grow to love it.  My students seem to like it

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Simone Jamming with the A Major Scale!

Geoff on piano, Simone (age 6) on violin, brother Sandore (age 3) dancing and announcing the sad/happy sections he had requested.  Simone is using the A major scale. Notice her great sense of phrasing! This kind of thing is common in my private lessons, and typifies the Fiddle Jam Approach.

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Melodie Au Crepuscule

A beautiful Django ballad. Many bands stumble on this one.  The song form is more complicated than most gypsy tunes with 4 separate sections.  It is not quite as difficult as it seems though if you can take a “step” back and see the more general chord progression “trends.” Learn

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Babik

Babik was Django Reinhardt’s son.  I’m told the name means “little one” but I have no verification of that.  Our gypsy jazz group Babik considered ourselves “sons of Django,” so adopted the name, and had to put this tune in our song list.  It leans toward the BeBop vein more

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