Getting Ready for the 2019 Los Angeles International Ukulele Festival!

Setting up at the 2018 festival

On Saturday, September 28, you can find me at the Los Angeles International Ukulele Festival at the Torrance Cultural Arts Center. This week I’ve been focused on getting things in order for my vendor booth at the festival. My booth will be in the Marketplace, which is completely free and open to the public. Last year my booth was across the way from a group of talented musicians who were jamming the entire day, and it made the whole area feel like a party!

Wearing the new merch: an adorable ukulele necklace and a Let’s Play t-shirt.

Wearing the new merch: an adorable ukulele necklace and a Let’s Play t-shirt.

Visit the Marketplace

To find my booth, just look for the purple pop-up tent. :) This year I’ve expanded my offerings to include some fun new products:

  • My Christmas songbook — $12

  • NEW! Laminated chord charts — $5. Stay tuned for a whole separate blog post with a video on these and what makes them unique

  • NEW! Ukulele necklaces — $12, pictured at right

  • NEW! Let’s Play! t-shirts in women’s sizes — $24, pictured at right

I’ll also be running two beginner’s workshops, so my awesome friends (and ukulele players) Katie and Jane will be helping out at the booth. Come say hi!

Get Your Tickets

I love that this festival is truly a family-friendly event. Tickets are $45/person, $20 for students with ID, and kids 12 and under get in free. Buy your tickets today by visiting the Los Angeles International Ukulele Festival website.

A Song to Commemorate Juneteenth - Free PDF Download with Ukulele Chord Chart and Lyrics

Update 6/15/20 to add a little historical conte†: After the Civil War, many African-Americans were imprisoned and forced to work building railroads or in mines. Take This Hammer is a prison work song men would sing as they worked on the railroad line. This song has common chord progressions and very simple lyrics but don't let that fool you— it’s a powerful song that feels incredibly relevant for our time. Strumming and singing Take This Hammer is a dynamic way to connect to the past while we go marching on, and I hope you find a little time to make music this week. Let's play in honor of all who have marched toward freedom's light.

Take This Hammer_Blog Header.png

In honor of Juneteenth (June 19th, a day that commemorates the end of slavery in the United States), I thought I’d share one of my very favorite American folk songs. Take This Hammer is a song to sing when you’re feeling fed up, down and out, or ready to break free from something that’s weighing you down. Lead Belly’s recording is probably the version that’s imitated the most but, like many folk songs, Take This Hammer has been covered by hundreds of artists, so it’s always interesting to listen to multiple versions and hear how differently artists can interpret a song.

In the audio clip above, I’m playing Take This Hammer on a tenor ukulele with a low-G string in the key of A with A, A7, D, and E7 chords, paired with a strum you can learn from a YouTube video by TenThumbs Productions. How will you play it?

 


The Bollywood Song I Can't Get Out of My Head

Have you been to a BollyX class? BollyX is a high energy, Bollywood-inspired cardio dance workout (similar to Zumba) and, at my age, these classes are the closest I get to a night out at the club. I found the music video for my favorite BollyX song on YouTube, which has over 122 million views. “Gallan Goodiyaan,” from the movie Dil Dhadakne Do, was shot in one take (!) and features an all-star cast, including an adorable and captivating Priyanka Chopra. Please watch it:

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