Friday, November 20, 2020

Tancuj Tancuj





Slovakian Folk Song

When I am searching for folk songs from different countries, I find this site useful.  https://www.mamalisa.com/?t=es&p=3705#

Today, I am looking for  Slovakian folk songs.  I found a version of the number Tancuj Tancuj which I am told is a very popular song there. 


Here is my video tutorial on playing Tancuj, Tancuj on violin speciully for students Anna and Sara. My version is in the key of G major. Remember to keep 1 and 2 close together on A string 


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6CBvjaBb0c&t=218s


Download my version of the sheet music here https://drive.google.com/file/d/1QDbnJPsos9ujmsOUXVn0Gkq_-W75Dpdr/view?usp=sharing


Tuesday, October 13, 2020

Great Violin Players of the Past: No 2 Fritz Kreisler

 Fritz Kreisler 1875-1962 No 2 in my canon of great violin players is the Austrian, Fritz Kreisler. A child prodigy, Kreisler graduated at age 10! from the Vienna Conservatory. One of the key aspects of his style was a very warm vibrato.  He was the first violinist to make lots of recordings which helped to make him very popular and very famous. He was a 'secret' composer. For encores he sometimes played pieces that he had written himself but he passed them off as works by obscure unknown composers. It seems he was a bit shy about introducing pieces he had penned himself.

He joined the Austrian Army during WW 1 and was injured and discharged. I love Kreisler's  pieces and whenever I hear them I imagine I am in a Viennese Coffee House eating delicious cake as there is a real feeling of lighthearted café music about many of his encores. Here is one I love to play myself; Liebesleid which is in waltz time. Listen to Kreisler himself playing Liebesleid here  http://www.viewpure.com/AqQ2_2qd-5Y?start=0&end=0 and a more recent video version by the German violinist David Garrett.



Vibrato is a technique where you warm up the sound by making  your finger quiver or shake on the string. 

Check out this version played by Joshua Bell on the WAMA Strings Spotify List https://open.spotify.com/track/4PAwFMCI2N0tPqAoX0lBnt?si=nR20gjaISD2ihI8Zs16P4Q





Tuesday, September 22, 2020

The Sleeping Beauty Waltz: Grade 3 Violin RIAM

 


This lovely waltz is on the Grade 3 Violin Syllabus of the Royal Academy of Music Ireland . The arrangement  Have a listen. 

Listen to a song version here Once Upon a Dream

Find out more about the Russian composer Tchaikowsky here https://www.classicsforkids.com/composers/composer_profile.php?id=75

Sunday, August 23, 2020

Great Violin Players You Should Know: 1: Niccolo Paganini




This is the first post on famous violinists of the past that violin students should know something about.
Spotify Playlist 
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2yqqecyPEeJy0GFDoXVqpe

The  first great violinist on my list was born before recording and photography began so we have only the reports of his legendary skill and of course the pieces he wrote. Paganini is still recognized as the most remarkable violinist of all time and one of the world's first international superstars.

 Niccolò Paganini was born in Genoa, Italy in 1782. Paganini's first instrument was the mandolin. When he was seven, he switched to the violin.  He came up with new, dazzling effects on the violin that people had never heard before. His rock star personality onstage had a great influence on Franz Liszt, who decided he wanted to be the Paganini of the piano. Paganini's best-known composition is a set of 24 Caprices for Solo Violin, especially the Caprice #24, which has inspired pieces by dozens of other composers.

Stories of Paganini's performances are legendary, with audiences said to have been moved to tears and hysteria. His astonishing technical ability led many to believe that his mother had sold his soul to the devil in return for a career as the greatest virtuoso in the world. Paganini made a lot of money but he was known for his excessive gambling that at one point forced him to pawn his own violin. By the mid-1830s Paganini's health and ability began to fail and he died in May 1840 from internal hemorrhaging before a priest could be summoned. This added to suspicions that he had entered a pact with the devil.

 Paganini came to perform in Dublin. The concert didn't start out too well for him. Here is an newspaper article recalling the performance 

 'Many years ago I heard an old music lover boast proudly that he had heard Paganini play in Dublin. I am reminded that in 1831 a musical festival was held in Dublin, under the conductorship of Sir George Smart, and the promoters decided to engage the services of the world-famous violinist at a very high fee. Paganini was not only a marvellous violinist, but he was also an accomplished actor. When he came on the stage of the Theatre Royal before his packed audience, he stood for a few moments, as if thinking what he should play. Read the full article published in 1931 here 
      https://www.irishtimes.com/news/paganini-in-dublin-1.271643

More fascinating facts about Paganini here https://www.connollymusic.com/stringovation/8-secrets-of-paganini

Caprice: A capriccio or caprice, is a piece of music, usually fairly free in form and of a lively character. The typical capriccio is one that is fast, intense, and often virtuosic in nature.
Check out Paganini's best known piece in the videos below and in the tracks on the Spotify playlist.

A version of this appeared on a Grade 3 ABRSM syllabus recently. It is a great piece to have in your repertoire.

Quiz

1: Where was Paganini born (Which country) ?
2: What century was he performing in ?
3: Why don't we have any recordings of him.?
4: What was his nickname?
5: Who recorded a rock fusion version of his 24th Caprice?


Check out this classical rock fusion version played by Juliajn Lloyd Weber

Saturday, May 2, 2020

Irish Music Module: Star of the County Down part 2

Continuing from previous post tackling a well known folk tune in E minor. See previous post for more notes and the first part. Link here https://cathysmusicstudents.blogspot.com/2020/05/lockdown-irish-music-module-tune-no-5.html



Second part 


      from Tús Maith Folk Tunes for Beginners Ciaran Deloughrey Greatisle Music


















































Friday, May 1, 2020

Lockdown Irish Music Module: Tune no 5 The Star of the County Down









The Star of the County Down is a very popular tune to a well known song. I would start by listening to some vocal versions. Van Morrison recorded it with the Chieftains (listen on the link here  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QSvVVzH3O5E). and the High Kings have  also recorded it.  It is always good to know a verse or two to help catch the feel of a song. Also  I suggest you listen to an instrumental version on solo cello by well known British cellist Julian Lloyd Weber. I like the way the cellist repeats the last phrase at three different pitches at the finish https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XmylIY_d-8I

In the song version, only the second part is repeated.  My source for the version here is 'Tús Maith', a collection of folk tunes for beginners by Ciaran Deloughrey.

Part 2 coming up in the next video

Note Don't Forget you can adjust the setting of youtube videos to slow it down to half or even a quarter speed if you want a slower speed to play along with.







The Star of the County Down.
Near Banbridge town, in the County Down


One evening last July
Down a bóithrín green came a sweet cailín
And she smiled as she passed me by.
She looked so neat in her two bare feet
To the sheen of her nut-brown hair
Such a coaxing elf, I'd to shake myself
To make sure I was standing there.
From Bantry Bay down to Derry Quay
From Galway to Dublin town
No maid I've seen like the fair cailín
That I met in the County Down.

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

One String Cello Tune and Variations



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IRixaQ4hpEI

Click on the link to watch an appearance by Yo Yo Ma on Sesame Street.








Lockdown Music Module: The Mazurka Part B





Part B of the Mazurka Shoe the Donkey. Have a look at the second video to see the a Polish dance troup dance to this tune.

See the previous post for part A.








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Lockdown Music Module: A Mazurka





"The Mazurka (Polish: mazurek or mazur) is a Polish folk dance in triple meter, usually at a lively tempo, and with "strong accents unsystematically placed on the second or third beat".

Polish composer Chopin was one of the most famous pianists. He  wrote more than 50 mazurkas  ...

Watch  one of Chopin's Mazurka's played by one of Poland's best pianists 












Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Lockdown Learning: Hubaitse: Violin Tutorial Beginners' Easy Jig




Beginners' Violin Tutorial on an easy 8 bar jig. 

Try this easy jig. You can break it down into steps 

          1 Clap or say the rhythm.
             2 Shadow Bow the rhythm 
                             3 Bow the rhythm on an open string
      4 Say the note names
 5 Say the fingers 
             6  Play pizzicato plucking
             7 Bow and play the tune  


Key Signature F# C#
Key D major.

The tune uses 5 notes of the D Major Scale d r m   s l 
It skips the 4th and 7th notes 

Theory Corner 

Search Results

Featured snippet from the web



D major pentatonic scale notes
The major pentatonic scale is made from the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th and 6th notes from the major scale above. The 4th and 7th note of the major scale are not used. Below are those notes numbered 1 to 5 on the piano keyboard.
Virtuoso Corner
Yo Yo Ma from America is one of the world's best cello players. Even though he can't perform at the moment in concert halls, he is still performing at home. Here is a performance he recorded specially for all the people working in hospitals.  









A longer version of the tune. Can you spot the difference in the second 8 bars?
Close Up on the Board

Lockdown Music Module: Hubaitse Jig on Cello

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Beginners' Cello Tutorial on an easy 8 bar jig. 

Try this easy jig. You can break it down into steps 

          1 Clap or say the rhythm.
             2 Shadow Bow the rhythm 
                             3 Bow the rhythm on an open string
      4 Say the note names
 5 Say the fingers 
             6  Play pizzicato plucking
             7 Bow and play the tune  


Key Signature F# C#
Key D major.

The tune uses 5 notes of the D Major Scale d r m   s l 
It skips the 4th and 7th notes 


Theory Corner 

Search Results

Featured snippet from the web

Image result for Pentatonic scale D major

D major pentatonic scale notes
The major pentatonic scale is made from the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th and 6th notes from the major scale above. The 4th and 7th note of the major scale are not used. Below are those notes numbered 1 to 5 on the piano keyboard.
#









Close Up on Board

Wednesday, April 8, 2020

John Ryan's Polka Part B




 In the video, I look at the second part of John Ryan's Polka.
The letters above the sheet music at the bottom show what chords to play.
Let me know how you get on.






Tuesday, April 7, 2020

John Ryan's Polka








I love to play polkas. They are the easiest of the Irish dance tunes to play. Try this one . If you are playing guitar uke or piano, you can add the chord of D major. It will work for the whole tune. Cellos and violins could also play the easy osinato shown on the chart. Part B cvoming up in the next video. Let me know how you get on in the comments.



Ostinato for cello and violins

Note values 




D major Map

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Slow Air Mo Gile Mear Part B





Video tutorial of part B of slow air Mo Gile Mear. Looking forward to playing this with my students post pandemic.

See the previous post for part A.
Mo Gile Mear Part B

Question The key signature is missing What should be added at the beginning for G major?





Monday, March 23, 2020

Mo Gile Mear Violin Tutorial




Hello to all my violin students in Waterford. Keep practising. Here is a new tune for you to try.


Listen to Sting and the Chieftains sing it here https://safeshare.tv/x/K4gjc8p7qzo#



Monday, January 20, 2020

Songs My Mother Taught Me

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x2pt8re5oYA

Posting this for Milena. This song is on the RIAM syllabus for Grade 2. It is very slow. Sung her by the great American bass, Paul Robeson.  It is always good to have an idea of the lyrics when playing songs