Archive for December, 2009

Catching Up

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009
Murphy Henry

Murphy Henry

As you may have noticed, we have been rather recalcitrant about blogging this week. Call it the Christmas ho-hums. And it’s not really ho-hums so much—we’ve all got plenty to do—but it’s just that our various schedules are still in interruption mode. Which is wonderful because Red’s mom is visiting us from Tallahassee and Casey is here from Nashville. So we’ve been busy doing things with them, which lives little time for blogging.

I will mention that on Christmas Eve, David McLaughlin had his annual open house, which we have turned into an annual picking party because we don’t know how to behave at a “regular” party where you might have to actually talk to people…about something other than bluegrass! So we hide behind our instruments and this makes us happy and in general pleases most of the people at the party.

Red, Casey, Chris, Jenny Obert, David Himself, Gerald Crowell, Logan, and I rendered tunes for about three hours with no stopping other than the obligatory nature calls. Casey was playing her fretless, nylon-string Fielding banjo which provided a novel element (in a good way!), Logan outdid himself on my Stelling banjo, David played mostly fiddle and a little bass, Red and Chris played mandolins, Jenny played fiddle, and Gerald and I played guitar. I was perfectly content to play guitar, because that enables me to sing more, which seemed like a good thing that night.

My favorite jam sessions feature the old, moldy songs generally from the Stanley Brothers, but it seems like we hit quite a variety of numbers. It’s been several days since the party but I do remember these:

Please Papa Don’t Whip Little Benny (sung by Casey)

Daddy Frank

I Don’t Want Your Rambling Letters

East Virginia Blues (which sounds just like Rambling Letters so we didn’t do them close together)

The Prisoner’s Song

Beautiful Star of Bethlehem

Christmas Time’s A-Coming

Sally Goodwin (so Logan could practice it)

Cumberland Gap (which Logan mixed up with Sally Goodwin, of course—everybody does it)

Cripple Creek (which sounded great on the fretless banjo)

Traveling the Highway Home

Better Get in That Number

I’m Going Back To Old Virginia (sung by Casey and Chris—it’s a number David wrote and they recorded)

Rank Stranger

We ended with Beer Barrel Polka followed by Old Spinning Wheel, for which I took over on banjo

Robyn, Logan’s mother, asked for Blackberry Blossom but, of course, I wouldn’t do it. Later, I told her that the type of jam session we were in made BB inappropriate. So Robyn later asks, “At what type of session would it be appropriate?” Casey immediately says, “One that Murphy’s not at.” I had to protest, but only a little bit, because that is partly true. But on another level, to me, each jam session that’s really rolling has its own flavor, and we were doing old singing songs. Of which Blackberry Blossom is not one (to use good grammar….I think!). Besides, Logan didn’t play it. It just didn’t have the right energy. Besides, it was too early for me to go get a beer, which is what I usually do when BB surfaces!

All in all, a good time was had and we went home and nestled all snug in our beds. And, sure enough, Santa arrived sometime during the night! And we had a glorious time opening presents the next morning! Hope you got everything you asked for. I know I did!

Merry Christmas

Friday, December 25th, 2009

xmas-blog09

Bob’s Excellent Lesson

Thursday, December 24th, 2009
Murphy Henry

Murphy Henry

Bob Mc gets his own (long) blog today, because he had such a great lesson on Tuesday that I just have to tell you about it.

You know how I’m always talking about improvising and lick substitution? Well, Tuesday night Bob and I started working on having him substitute the Roll in My Sweet Baby’s Arms lick into a bunch of songs he already played. It worked like a charm.

This is especially gratifying to me because Bob and I have a long history with “Roll in My Sweet Baby’s Arms” that goes back to the days when I was still giving lessons at Brill’s Barber Shop.

I forget now how Bob and I first got together, but I distinctly remember Dalton, who owned the shop and cut Bob’s hair, telling me, “You’ll like him.” And I did. Immediately.

Bob, who is somewhere in the middle of his life, came to me with no previously musical experience but with great determination. “You’ll have to kick me out,” he said more than once. “I won’t ever quit.” I haven’t kicked him out for three or four years now.

Now, learning the tunes themselves did not pose much of a problem for Bob. His hurdles were learning to hear the chord changes and getting back into the break if he made a mistake. The one tune he had trouble with was “Roll in My Sweet Baby’s Arms,” which we first tackled a couple of years ago. For some inexplicable reason, Bob made a mistake when he learned that beginning phrase, the one I call the “Roll in My Sweet Baby’s Arm” lick and he practiced it wrong all week. At his next lesson, I pointed out the error and we practiced it correctly many times. I was certain he understood the lick when he left. When he got home, however, he backslid bad and practiced it wrong. So we were back to square one. This happened a number of times.

Finally I said to Bob, “I’ve got a suggestion that I think you’re not going to like.” Bob, in his friendly, smiling way, said, “Try me out.” I said, “I think we need to leave ‘Roll in My Sweet Baby’s Arms’ alone for a while. If I ask you NOT to practice it, do you think you can? Will you promise me?” And good-hearted soul that he is, he agreed and stuck to his word. We left it alone for two or three months. When we finally got back to it, he was further along with his playing and was able, with some hard work, to finally play it right.

Fast forward two years. Bob’s been taking lessons steadily, an hour a week, he’s been practicing as much as he can, he’s been jamming with the Misfits, and he’s been listening to lots of bluegrass. He’s also learned “I’ll Fly Away” and “When the Roll Is Called Up Yonder,” both of which use the “Roll in My Sweet Baby’s Arms” lick. Chord changes still present a challenge, but he is beginning to be able to come back in more often when he makes a mistake.

So recently he had this song he wanted to learn. It is called “Keeper of the Door” by the Gillis Brothers. (I like the Gillis Brothers a lot because they sound so much like the Stanley Brothers.) There’s no banjo break on the song, so I just made up something consisting of licks that Bob already knew. I did have to show him a short (two-beat) D lick. He learned the break easily and I recorded it the old-fashioned way: onto a cassette! Then, at this week’s lesson, we played it again, and lo and behold, he had used the Ralph Stanley D lick out of “When the Roll Is Called Up Yonder” as the short D lick. I was very impressed. Way to go, Bob!

I guess it was his own substitution that sparked my idea to have him try using the “Roll in My Sweet Baby’s Arms” lick. I could hear the lick so clearly in my own head, that I didn’t even realize that we would be playing it against a C chord and then a D chord. It’s a little unorthodox to do that, but, hey, it works.

So I explained what I wanted him to do, probably saying something like, “Just put it in on that last line.” He immediately wanted to know how many beats were in the lick. Well, that’s not the way my mind works—I don’t think in beats—so I had to figure out how many beats it was (eight if you count the tag lick as part of the lick, which I do). I said, “It will take the place of your C lick and your D lick.” Then, because I wasn’t being clear, he thought he would have to do two tag licks. I said, no, the tag lick that is part of the “Roll” lick will take the place of the tag lick you’re already doing. I think I even said that one would be “superimposed” on the other. (We just don’t have the language to talk about this stuff! But Bob and I are used to our occasional miscommunications, so we just keep trying till we figure out what the other person is trying to say!) We finally got things untangled so that he understood that there would be just one tag lick.

So, with me backing him on guitar, off we went, and by golly, after all that talk, he laid that lick right in there. It was perfect! So we did that a couple more times just to make sure the lick was solid. It was.

Then I said, “Let’s try that same lick in some other songs you know.” So we went through the low break to “Lonesome Road Blues,” “Worried Man,” “John Hardy,” and even “Foggy Mountain Breakdown.” Bob hit them all pretty much the first time. We had a little problem with “John Hardy” in that, after he did the “Roll” lick, he automatically went to the pinches afterwards. Well, that screwed up the entrance to “John Hardy” which, as I’m sure you remember, has all those pickup notes. So I said, “You have to learn how to get back in if you play those pinches. So where you want to hit it is on the down beat. It’s in the first C lick.” (I might have played it for him, I’m not sure.) But by golly, he understood what I was saying—understood where the down beat was—and hit that C lick every time. I was flabbergasted. I was pretty much sitting there, playing the guitar with my mouth open. Bob was clicking on all cylinders and I felt so happy to see him playing so well. It was like he had broken through a mental barrier, a playing barrier, and all of a sudden could “hear” what we’d been working on for so long. I was so proud of him. I think he was even proud of himself. And maybe a little bit surprised.

I reminded him of all the trouble we’d had with learning “Roll in My Sweet Baby’s Arms” to begin with. He hadn’t forgotten! And now he was just throwing that lick in right and left, as if he owned it. Which he did! And when you get to this stage, when you can “hear” lick substitutions, it makes playing so blessedly simple. You hear a lick, you play it. And nobody sees or knows about all the hard work that has gone before.

I might have kept going longer than our appointed hour, but as a Christmas present Bob had brought me a tin of one of my favorite confections, homemade buckeyes—the candy that looks like, well, buckeyes, and has a chocolate outside wrapped around a peanut butter filling in the middle. YUM!

So thanks for the excellent lesson, Bob. Moments like this make me realize how much I love my job. I’m looking forward to more breakthroughs like this. And who knows? Maybe it was the buckeyes that set everything in motion. Bring some more the next time and we’ll test that theory!

The Issue of Speed

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009
Casey Henry

Casey Henry

There has been some discussion on this topic lately over on the Banjo Hangout, so I thought it would be a good time to say a few words about the issue of speed in learning to play the banjo. As all of you know, one of Murphy’s mantras is “speed is not important.” And that is absolutely true. When you’re learning a song, speed should be the last thing you think about. The rolls, licks, phrases, chords, kickoff, and ending all come before speed. But as some point, all students begin to wonder, when am I ever going to be able to play fast?

Thing #1 — It takes a long time to build up your speed. One of the quickest ways to screw up your playing is to try to speed up too soon. It will make your playing sloppy, your picking inaccurate, your timing irregular, and it’s a blue burning hell to go back and fix later.

As Murphy has previously written about, the average speed for moving through the lessons on our DVDs is one song per month. When you’ve worked on a song for a month and are preparing to move on to the next lesson, that first tune is not going to be up to speed. It will still be slow. Some people think that each song should be up to speed before moving on to the next one. Absolutely not. You are ready to move on to the next song when you can play the first song

  1. in time
  2. all the way through without stopping to think
  3. at least five times in a row, without stopping in between repeats
  4. preferably along with the Slow Jam DVD.

As you progress through each DVD (I’m thinking of the Beginning Banjo and Misfits discs here, but it really applies to any of them) you’ll amass a repertoire of slow-to-medium tempo versions of the songs. The earlier ones will sneak up in tempo without you even noticing it, so long as you keep practicing them.

Thing #2 — Always keep practicing all of your old material. As you keep adding new tunes, remember to play through each of your old tunes. Ideally you’d play everything daily. Realistically you should aim for three or four times a week. The longer you have known something, the faster it will get, even if you don’t think it’s getting any faster.

Thing #3 — The number one best way, and possibly the only way, to really gain speed is by playing with other people. No other experience gives you that same surge of adrenaline that will make your fingers move faster than you think they can. But, again, I refer you back to Thing #1. Do not pursue speed at the expense of clarity in your playing. Hoo boy, will you regret it later!

Flathead or Archtop? — YOU make the difference!

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009
Red Henry

Red Henry

We often have beginning banjo students ask, “What’s the difference between a flathead banjo and an archtop? Do I need an archtop if I want to sound like Ralph Stanley, and a flathead if I want to sound like Earl?” When they ask this, they’re referring to the kind of tone-ring the banjo has. That’s the big metal part that sits right under the plastic banjo head, on top of the banjo’s wooden shell.

Well, the truth is that in one way, it isn’t a simple question to answer. The best of the old Gibson flathead banjos had a characteristic powerful, low-end resonance that Earl took advantage of when he played, and which helped make his much-admired sound. But we have to remember that it was Earl playing, and he’d have sounded like himself whether the banjo had a flathead tone ring, an archtop one, or no tone ring at all (as when he was playing with Bill Monroe in 1945-7 and used a banjo with just a little tone hoop). In all those situations, he still sounded and sounds like Earl.

Some folks like to have an archtop banjo so they can “sound more like Ralph Stanley.” Frankly, it is fun to play ‘Little Maggie’ and ‘Clinch Mountain Backstep’ and hear that higher timbre come out of the banjo. But you don’t need an archtop tone ring to make it that way, because (1) banjos like Murphy’s Stelling have plenty of high end to go with the low end flathead sound, and (2) you can adjust your hand position on any banjo to get more of that high end out of it.

That sounds complicated. What’s the answer? Well, it’s simple. If you want to play a particular kind of banjo music, LISTEN to it and PLAY THAT SOUND. It doesn’t matter what design of banjo you have, as long as it’s a decent-quality instrument. The better the banjo the better you’ll sound, generally speaking, but you can certainly play Earl’s music on an archtop banjo, as Little Roy Lewis did for years, and you can certainly play Ralph’s music on a flathead as some pickers (like myself) have done for a long time. So what makes the difference? What makes the difference is YOU. You need to LISTEN over and over to the music you want to play, and play not just the notes, but the SOUND.

Red

Let it Snow, Let it Snow, Let it Snow!

Monday, December 21st, 2009
Murphy Henry

Murphy Henry

“Oh the weather outside was frightful
And if I’d been more insightful
I’d have stayed by the fire delightful
And let it snow, let it snow, let it snow…..”

Actually when I left for Georgia Friday morning, the weather was fine. Cloudy, yes. Cold, yes. Snowing, no. But I’d heard the rumors: 6 to 18 inches, coming up from the south. But whoever believes the weather report? Old folks, that’s who. And why? Because they have had the life experience of ignoring the reports and have been caught—as I was—on the interstate in a snow storm. Not fun.

The trip to Clarkesville, which normally takes about nine hours, took almost thirty and involved an unexpected overnight stay in Rogersville, Tennessee. It started snowing, lightly at first, about four hours into the trip. But the thing was, it just didn’t stop. Cars were sliding off the road right and left. I didn’t want to be one of them so I slowed to a crawl—20 mph—and just kept going, keeping a great deal of space between me and the car in front. I didn’t know what else to do. By the time I reached Abingdon, about 2 pm, I was thinking I might have to stop there and spend the night with [Bluegrass content!] The Dixie Bee-Liners. But somehow, I found myself passing up that exit, especially since the ramp and the roads below looked seriously unplowed. I kept moving.

At 20 miles an hour, though, I was getting nowhere fast. All of a sudden, Knoxville, a mere 96 miles away, looked impossibly far. But I was still upright. My plan now was to keep moving west, hoping I’d drive out of the storm. However, I knew it would be getting dark around five and that I needed to find a place to stay before that. Also, I was tired. The “constant vigilance” and the white knuckling was wearing me out. (Fortunately I had my amazing iPod, newly reloaded, to listen to. “Heads Up For the Wrecking Ball” was awesome.) I started imagining the best possible scenario: an expensive motel (which would be well lighted, clean, and not scary), a nice restaurant nearby where I could get a good hot meal and a glass of wine, and a flat exit ramp, preferably plowed.

As the motel-less miles went by and it got darker and darker, I revised my wish list: a decent motel with a drivable exit ramp. I could eat the peanut butter crackers and apple I had in the car. (I had already eaten all the Hershey kisses I’d put in for Mama and Daddy!) With Casey’s internet help I found a Very Nice Best Western. Foodwise, I settled for McDonald’s and Corona. Not a bad combination!

The next morning I arose to no precip and a clear interstate, while back in Winchester, Red woke up to a foot of snow with more falling. I knew that everything around Asheville would be a mess, so I took the only roads to Georgia that I knew were open: Knoxville to Chattanooga to Atlanta to Gainesville to Mama and Daddy’s front door. A 200 mile detour. By the time I hit Lula, the temp was 50 degrees, the sun was shining, and blue sky was peaking through puffy white clouds that didn’t have a bit of snow in them. If I’d found a Starbucks, everything would have been perfect!

My plans to drive back on Sunday evaporated when I realized how hard Virginia had been hit by the storm. So, here I am, safely ensconced in my old bedroom, typing out this blog. I’m fixing to go sit in the TV room with the folks and watch more episodes of “Get Smart” on DVD which is what I gave Daddy for Christmas. I imagine the phrases “Sorry about that, Chief” and “Would you believe….?” will soon be cropping up in my blogs. I didn’t realize until I started watching these reruns that the show was written by Mel Brooks. No wonder it’s so funny and has held up so well.

If you have your own snow adventures, please feel free to share them in the comments. I can no longer say I’m dreaming of a white Christmas. I’ve seen all the snow I want to for a while!

Learning from Bill—By Ear!

Saturday, December 19th, 2009
Red Henry

Red Henry

Casey’s description of learning a tune by ear reminded me of my own experience. When I was a brand-new mandolin player, just starting out, I acquired Bill Monroe’s LP “Bluegrass Instrumentals”. Now, you might think that that was pretty far advanced for a beginner (and it was) but I knew the kind of  music I wanted to learn, and that was it.

Bill played a lot of great tunes on that album, and quite a few of them were both fast and complicated. So, how does a newbie learn something like that? Well, I had the means right at hand: Bill’s album, and a record player that slowed down to half speed, 16 2/3 rpm.

“What use was a piece of old junk like that”, you may ask, “something my grandparents threw away in 1973?” Well, in this case, the ‘old junk’ slowed Bill Monroe down to exactly half-speed—just slow enough for me to hear his notes—while staying in tune with my mandolin. (Okay, the music was down an octave—it sounded pretty low—but that was no problem.)

I started learning all the tunes I could off that album. Bill’s showpiece number “Rawhide” still comes to mind. I listened and listened, learning all three of his breaks the best I could, and played them for a while. Naturally I, as a beginner, didn’t hear and play all of Bill’s notes, but I’d made a good beginning, and anyway I was playing the SOUND. Weeks later, I went back to the record and learned the tune better. Later still, I went back and got my version even closer to his. Eventually, within the first couple of years, I knew what Bill had played and could play it myself. Since I’d learned it from the recording I had both the NOTES and the SOUND, and it was RIGHT.

The equipment available now (computer programs for low-speed playback) is more versatile in letting you listen to what you want to learn. You don’t have to listen with the music an octave down any more. But the principle is the same—as Murphy says, “Listen, listen, listen, and play, play, play.”

That’s what you do when you learn by ear—you learn what you can, get that into your brain and fingers, then go back later and find that you can learn still more. And more. Yes, it takes time and effort. But did you think that something this great—playing bluegrass music—was going to be easy?

Red

Misfit Jam

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009
Murphy Henry

Murphy Henry

Okay, this is so funny I have to tell it first before I forget how it went.

So in the middle of “Old Joe Clark” I catch Logan yawning. After the song is over, I say something to him about being tired. Before he can even respond Bob Van barks, “What time did you get up this morning, boy?”

I immediately say to Logan, “Don’t answer that!” Because I know where Bob is going.

Logan, ignoring my advice (!), boldly says, “Four o’clock.”

I’m going like, “Way to go, Logan!” And everybody is laughing.

Then, Logan takes it a step further and says to Bob, just as brassy as can be, “What time did YOU get up?”

The rest of us are holding our sides with laughter. What happened to the quiet young man who usually shows up at the jam?

Bob says, “Quarter till four.”

More laughter. I figure Bob is just one-upping Logan in that oh-so-masculine way. Then Bob says, “My alarm didn’t go off.”

Susan, Ellen, Mark, and I are now hysterical with laughter. I’m thinking, “This jam is SO worth it!”

But Logan wasn’t done for the evening. Before our last song, “Wagon Wheel,” I was looking around for my piece of paper with the words on it. I asked Logan to look in a stack of papers that was near him. He came up with several pages of sheet music which he was looking at. Bob, standing nearby with the bass, could see them too.

“What kind of music is that?” Bob asks. (Like Logan would know.)

Logan answers, man-style, “Ukulele music.”

I’m thinking, “Huh?” (I actually thought it was music to “Loveliest Night of the Year” that a fiddle student had brought in.)

Bob goes, “How do you know that?”

Logan says, “Because I’m the Bluegrass Master!”

The rest of us burst out laughing.

Then Bob, obviously consumed with curiosity, says, “Now really. How did you know that?”

(And frankly I was wondering that too. I thought maybe it had some 4-string chord shapes in little boxes over the words and notes.)

Logan replies, “It says so right here on the music. For ukulele.”
Bada-bing!

So, the unusual tunes we played tonight were “Sally Goodwin” and “Old Home Place” (from the Easy Songs DVD—might as well get in a plug!)

Logan had learned the high and low breaks to “Sally Goodwin” (off Advanced Earl) and he did a great job. Susan (who was the inspiration for Logan’s learning it) and Logan haven’t gotten to where they can switch breaks yet—which is hard—so they just played everything they knew to play (AABB high, AABB low) and then we quit!

Interestingly enough, Logan was “hearing” the B part the same wrong way I first heard it, but we got that straightened out. I hope to blog further about my own trials and tribulations with “Sally Goodwin” when I find a good long stretch of time. (Which I used today to go Christmas shopping!) Right now Logan hates the tune (even after listening to Earl! Sacrilege!). I told him that I believe over time he’ll just learn to love it. And told him to listen to J.D. Crowe’s version. His next challenge is “Ground Speed.” He’s making noises about wanting to play professionally so we are Seriously Studying Earl. I’ll keep you posted! (He’s definitely getting the humor thing down! Which is essential for going on the road….)

All CDs on Sale Now!

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

xmasheader_websiteFrom now through December 24th all CDs are on sale for just $10. Shop now!

Fiddle Sisters Hit The Nursing Home Circuit

Monday, December 14th, 2009
Murphy Henry

Murphy Henry

Okay. So I had planned to write this awesome blog about learning to play by ear to complement the one Casey wrote. I was planning to write about “Sally Goodwin” since I have several students—both mail order and “live”—working on that particular piece. I pictured a leisurely morning in which I would drink hot tea with sugar, read my current book (a biography of Ayn Rand), and write my blog in a timely fashion.

Instead I left my boudoir about 8:30 a.m. to the heinous sound of I didn’t know what—it sounded like a loud grinding of metal on metal coming from our basement. Afraid that something was fixing to explode, I ventured down the stairs to be met with the sight of water all over the downstairs floor, fans going, rugs rolled back, a garden hose leading to the outside, and Red cutting through the copper pipe going to our water heater which had decided to disgorge its contents all over the linoleum.

Red had encountered this same sight—sans fans and water hose—at 5:30 this morning when he got up. He was kind enough not to wake me.

So we spent the morning dealing with that. A morning I had planned to spend practicing my fiddle, since the Fiddle Sisters were spreading Christmas cheer at a series of four nursing homes that afternoon. Fiddle Sister Patty, who lives nearby and is young and strong, was kind enough to come over to help Red load the now-drained water heater (still under warrenty) into the van for transport to Lowe’s. She said I was welcome to come shower at her house and we could ride together to Fiddle Sisters Charlotte’s where we were gathering at 1 p.m.

At 11:30 I was still mopping. I finally gave it up and headed over to Patty’s house to shower and get ready for the gig. I was absolutely filthy from crawling around on a dirty, water-soaked floor. Of course, I had to take a change of clothes, a cosmetics bag, a hair dryer, a jar of organic peanut butter and some crackers since I didn’t have time to eat lunch, and my fiddle.

I showered, changed, and just had time to spread peanut butter on bread and take it with me (eschewing the crackers). Patty threw in a box of Triscuits for her lunch although I didn’t see her eat any. I finished my sandwich on the road. Patty was driving. “This is why I don’t play out much anymore,” I said to Patty. “It’s just too much. I loved it when I was younger but now I just don’t have the energy. And what if you didn’t like the band members you were playing with? What if you all were fighting? There is so little room for the music. The Fiddle Sisters are the only group I would consider expending this much energy for right now.” (Did I mention it was RAINING? And COLD?)

Luckily, the rest of the day went fabulously. It stopped raining, the sun came out, and we shucked coats, hats, and scarves right and left. We all looked great in our red Christmas attire. The folks we played for loved us and we felt like we were bringing a little joy into their lives. And I had brought a whole bag of Hershey’s Kisses (“Silver Bells” as Mama calls them) to keep up our energy. We even managed to work in a visit to Starbucks in between venues.

I will have to say that in the middle of our second performance my cell phone started vibrating in my pocket. I was deep into “Jingle Bells” so I didn’t take the call. Later I looked at it. It was a text message from Logan. It said, “Sorry to bother you but…I HATE SALLY GOODIN’.” (Logan’s mother is Fiddle Sister Robyn.)

I sent him back a text saying, “She hates U 2. Hang N.”

I didn’t hear back so I hope he kept practicing.

Also at that same nursing home, one of the residents said he had a cousin who had won several national fiddle contests. Naturally, I was skeptical but I asked who that was and he said “Buck Ryan.” Well, Buck, who played with Don Reno for years, is from around here (Mt. Jackson) and he was truly  a great fiddle player, so we talked about him for a little while and that was kind of neat.

We finished up our four gigs at a little after 5 p.m., and headed to Olive Garden for some rest, relaxation, and red wine. It was wonderful. We are truly a compatible bunch of women.

In case you are interested, the tunes we were playing were (not in this order):

Silent Night

Joy to the World

O Come All Ye Faithful

Jingle Bells

Silver Bells (City Sidewalks)

Away in a Manger

Little Drummer Girl

Good King Wenceslas

What Child Is This (in D minor!)

We Wish You a Merry Christmas

And a great big thanks to the Fiddle Sisters: Charlotte, Patty, Robyn, Sandy, and Susie. We are FABULOUS!