Showing posts with label sheet music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sheet music. Show all posts

Thursday, November 28, 2013

We Gather Together to Ask the Lord's Blessing


In honor of the holiday I've posted some of my arrangement ideas for the traditional Christian hymn, We Gather Together to Ask the Lord's Blessing. Go to my website, www.SueWilsonDulcimer.com, scroll down the home page until you see the FREE SHEET MUSIC button. You can take it from there.

Have fun! and Happy Thanksgiving!!

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Is Your Music a Mess?

Remember old 'nomes?

Here we are, the first day of spring, and thoughts turn to ....
... spring cleaning?

I've been straightening up and dusting the music room, trying to de-clutter as I go. I think I'm finally ready to give up that old mechanical metronome! I've brought in a couple of baskets to contain small frequently used items, such as the digital metronome, tuners, tuning wrenches, etc, and larger items such as headphones and recording devices. The thing that always slows me down is the mess of sheet music ... and I'm talking multiple piles. What to do with it all?


It's not that I don't try to keep it all organized. At my house, sheets of music notation are organized in a number of different places:

Multiple, thick, three-ring binders full of pages of music slipped into plastic sheet protectors and arranged (mostly) in alphabetical order. Each contains a particular category of music:
  • my arrangements
  • tunes I've gotten from my teacher, Ken Kolodner
  • tunes / arrangements I play with my music partner, Betsy
  • special collections, such as Christmas tunes, or Hymnody of Earth, by Malcolm Dalglish
Plastic containers and expanding files that mimic file drawers
  • music printed out for workshops that I teach
  • music that I commonly give to private students
  • music that I've acquired from other teachers' workshops
Bookcases for actual books full of tunes

Baskets for holding (hiding) loose piles of mostly uncategorized music in no particular order

My dining room table for stuff I'm currently using with my students or in my own practice

My computer - the neatest and easiest to search option!
  • music notation software containing all my arrangements, written out
  • tunes and arrangements scanned into the computer for reference
It's a common problem. My friends and students ask me, "What's the best way to store sheets of music?" There must be as many answers to that question as there are musicians shuffling all that paper. What is your solution to this problem? One master file drawer? Multiple systems like mine? Any words of wisdom out there?

One thing's for sure:
You must find a system that works for YOU.

Then comes the tricky part:
You must USE it!




Friday, November 23, 2012

CTO ... Free Christmas Music

Thanks to Carol L who found this link to FREE Christmas carol sheet music:

www.ChristmasCarolMusic.org

Search by title, first line, composer, or arranger. Listen to the tune in four parts, or just the basic tune.  Find who has recorded the tune and on what cd. Choose sheet music written to include the basic melody plus chords ... all you need to create your own arrangement. Sorry, no guarantee that you'll find every tune in a "dulcimer friendly" key, but that just forces you into the netherlands of your instrument.  Or ... you can always transpose, right?

Check This Out ... while you're digesting that Thanksgiving feast. The day after Thanksgiving may be the biggest shopping day of the year for some, but I'd rather stay home and play music. In my book, it's the official start to the  holiday music season!