tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-101809802024-03-23T13:31:58.096-05:00Pratie PlaceReflections and news, primarily from the previous millennium. Because I can't keep up.melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.comBlogger2650125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-88861052392806296742023-10-21T13:57:00.007-05:002023-10-21T13:57:57.590-05:00Animated music video for Hallowe'en: Lucy Wan<p>Lucy Wan is Child ballad 51 (read about it <a href="https://mainlynorfolk.info/martin.carthy/songs/liziewan.html" target="_blank">here</a>) and one of the grimmest we've ever done. We put it on our cd "<a href="https://pratieheads.bandcamp.com/track/lucy-wan" rel="nofollow">We Did It! Songs of people behaving badly</a>." I used my cigar box fiddle, which I bought in 2008, only once, to record this song. Ever since it's hung on my window. </p><p><img src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyky5JLpqIAFtThDRzK-PMo61eyE8G9YPTgCq5E4vv8G7i1qAngy7iskCHDfcd2Z9qu1gi1xjDwevcMHcE22D1CYGJFIVpc0hKdFFqpfs_8QnGkUStxianNK2nxsLgLZfMCiIe/s1600/asheville+062.jpg" style="max-width: 100%;" /></p><p>
It was a puzzle, how to make a video that wasn't overtly grisly while still conveying the darkness of the song. </p><center><a href="https://youtu.be/OI7LQ2-ycPM?si=FZbzmfUwDj385uQN" target="_blank"><img border="3" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi15LnEyl-UadPQ1Y6EXvsFjoLsNUl_B0O3Ff21aQCponfBxXsgEzqHqxVZI4bGx2wYXzRTYba_fNcIvpfCceJholdCCGnDEGuRPc8xKP_-nKD3NxXrn5jfxHdlcYyKQ2Sk6njThW076YgjAtwoJVW7PzI1SYDspIasx9TfTHb8VXi6NPmlUU3k/s320/lucy-wan-button.jpg" /></a></center><p></p>melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-3543830244103016222023-10-10T07:00:00.002-05:002023-10-10T07:47:33.694-05:00Animated music video: "What a Shocking World This Is for Scandal" (I Never Says Nothing to Nobody)<img border="1" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjipI-J6YG35l_Caf2QbrouzcVLMN4J22LL82RuEKGPZTs6SEjCtCu2Mg1DDhWKPlcqyhznJkKw1GBRSmWZmk5aR4G2AfF5Et9PXnpD2IuFMbxwzd0uiTZvCvtAGCSaHC-1bhMlfUcXzkYK4Fwq0VH891KFsnvgzLeLZRdRUTpVvYcV6h5CLnB1/s320/title-youtube.jpg" style="float: left; margin-right: 15px;" width="500px;max-width:100%;:" />Sixteen years ago Bob Vasile and I recorded a Pratie Heads cd called "We Did It! Songs of people behaving badly."<p></p> We got the idea from Clarke Thacher, head of the local folk song society, who said every proper British Isles traditional band should have a collection of murder ballads. We expanded the remit to include the other seven deadly sins and this was the opening song, as true today as it was back then. I found it decades ago in a tiny folk song collection, the collector averred it was written in 1818. Now, sixteen years later, I've made an animated music video for it.<p></p>
<center><a href="https://youtu.be/hqzcZQYv5-E" target="_blank "><img border="3" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj4dYaIEwPkedPszjl8XzV8Cvj6rsRUXuSJCx5f4raxCzUz1R5H1hHC1OaenTRIwfo5-lHB4heU_lkua9_KNfmFeDyps972HKak5ox4lPGgg43xdhvfK1QAD-xxbkHVew4jXQVJAv1RbXjq3lyVkATq4FXTKUxfZwrBnqizswbmVzUQ5_KelyD_/s320/what-a-shocking-world.jpg" /></a></center>
<p></p>
That was long before the internet. Now I can look it up and see it's usually called "I Never Says Nothing to Nobody," and that it was first published in 1826. And further, that Thomas Hudson himself performed it in "the singing taverns and supper clubs that influenced early Music Hall." And yet further, that Hudson published 13 collections between 1818 and 1832. I'm going to see if there are other delights within. Supposedly the tune was heard from Henry King in Hampshire in 1906 by the collector George Gardiner.
<br /><br /><center><table cellpadding="15" style="width: 80%;"><tbody><tr><td><center><b>What a Shocking World This Is for Scandal</b></center><br />What a shocking world this is for scandal<br />The people get worse ev'ry day, when ev'rything serves for a handle<br />To take folks' good names away.<br />In backbiting vile each so labors<br />The sad faults of others to show body<br />I could tell such a tale if I liked<br />But I never says nothing to nobody, fallerollolliday. <br /><br />The butcher, so greasy and fat,<br />When out, he does nothing but boast<br />He struts as he cocks on his hat <br />As if he supreme ruled the roast<br />Of his wealth and his riches he'll prate <br />Determined to seem such a fine body <br />He's been pulled up three times for short weight<br />But I never says nothing to nobody, fallerollolliday. <br /><br />Tis a snug little house I reside in<br />And the people who're living next door<br />Are smothered completely such pride in<br />As I never have met with before<br />But outside their door they don't roam<br />A large sum of money they owe body<br />When folks call they can't find them at home<br />But I never says nothing to nobody, fallerollolliday. <br /><br />The publican, thriving in trade<br />With sorrow is now looking down<br />His sweet little pretty barmaid<br />Has a little one just brought to town<br />He's not to be seen much about<br />His wife is a deuce of a shrew body<br />The gossips are on the lookout<br />But I never says nothing to nobody, fallerollolliday. <br /><br />The new married couple, so happy,<br />Seem quite the quintessence of love <br />He calls her, before every chappy, <br />"My darling," "My Duck," and "My Dove." <br />In private there's nothing but strife <br />Quarrelling, fighting o'erflow body <br />In short, quite a cat and dog life<br />But I never says nothing to nobody, fallerollolliday. <br /><br />I could tell if I liked such a tale <br />Of neighbors all round, great and small <br />That surely, I think, without fail,<br />Would really astonish you all. <br />But here now my short ditty ends <br />As I don't want to hurt high or low body <br />I wish to stay in with my friends<br />So I never says nothing to nobody, fallerollolliday.</td></tr></tbody></table></center>melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-16934259393442584972023-09-30T16:39:00.001-05:002023-09-30T16:39:29.487-05:00Music Video: "Our Captain Cried All Hands."<p>I heard this song from the wonderful band <i>The New St. George</i> in 1994 and fell in love with it. My kids and I had a family band called <i>Flash Company</i> toward the end of the 1990s and we performed it a couple of times. I wanted to revive it when I started playing with Jack Herrick and Bob Vasile a few years ago, but it's tricky because the verses are very short and dense and it was hard to figure out how to space them out for some breathing room. The tune I finally settled on is a version of the English Country Dance "Mary and Dorothy." Bob sang and played bouzouki and I tracked the rest of it. </p><center><a href="https://youtu.be/QrKzxppYCS4" target="_blank"><img border="3" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiNg3GiqMfbuGmlzbwwtNvHIkzv4DFv_8wwPDO8MtxWn2nLsTlUrEm7agonI96H_N0E7t644elmsuAer4akaxjoQEnLUFPMvDrxjb_9YUhgARQHSE6E_MOoJG8V9_jZSQBfA-1iMCjmfpKjc3h6ZgI5t89nLbo6AeOaP6AfGoPlJ7hpSRuYnWaX/s320/our-captain-button.jpg" /></a></center><p>I made this video when I was visiting my daughter and had no access to art supplies, so it was all done on computer. I just got a drawing tablet and am struggling to make it work. My granddaughter and I really laughed over the last image (they were mostly generated by Bing Image Search) because the woman so clearly is not buying what her sailor is trying to sell her.
</p>melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-84243310755747324502023-09-29T08:11:00.001-05:002023-09-29T08:11:24.959-05:00Animated music video: Take a Bumper and Try (from the woman's point of view)<p>In the 1980s I sang this song with Bob Vasile to great audience approbation. Middle aged ladies would come up to me and say "That's the story of my life." Beth Holmgren and I recorded it on our cd "<a href="https://skylarkproductions.bandcamp.com/album/courting-disaster-centuries-of-failed-love-songs" target="_blank">Courting Disaster</a>" way back when... A couple years ago I recorded it again with Bob and Jack Herrick, and Jack mixed it in his studio, and this video is the result.</p><p>
</p><center><a href="https://youtu.be/AMU9uRgHl8Q" target="_blank"><img border="3" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhtxBidGJhMciopDBBk-l3iAIA2scDcK0gG-FDK9Oi_s2wURJhaW0ff1okRX2KR4pGu22UAZQcT17_VboMQ5mISASTHR6cPsDX6wjhH4nuFVZU7VTageCjNGAx9OmMbrpkHk3y-ZUzzbIN_R_FpKx47h6A8mTDPTLuXJkRlmYVJUeZfxJP9H8pO/s320/take-a-bumper-button.jpg" /></a></center>
<p>The song was originally from a man's point of view, and of course outrageously sexist. It was popular in Colonial America, and can be found in <i>Chappell's Popular Music of the Olden Time; A Collection of Ancient Songs, Ballads and Dance Tunes.. with... Notices... from Writers of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries</i> published in 1859. Some enjoyable (if you like this sort of thing) verses we didn't sing include:
</p><pre>They tell me, my love would in time have been cloy'd;
And that beauty's insipid when once 'ts enjoy'd;
But in wine I both time and enjoyment defy;
For the longer I drink the more thirsty I am.
Perhaps, like her sex, ever false to their word,
She had left me, to get an estate or a lord;
But my bumper (regarding nor title or pelf)
Will stand by me when I can't stand by myself.</pre><p></p>Pelf, by the way, is a wonderful word used in other Colonial American songs. It means "money, especially when gained in a dishonest or dishonorable way."
<p>Although audiences laugh at this song, I find it deeply melancholy as I had an alcoholic mother who drank alone. That's why I decided to start this video with bright colors and finish it in somber hues.</p>melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-71417895763375735372023-06-24T08:59:00.003-05:002023-06-24T09:02:05.795-05:00Music video made with images from the Codex Manesse: Touch But My LipsThirty some odd years ago my vocal ensemble "The Solstice Assembly" got hired to do the occasional Renaissance Fair. We became acquainted with the Society for Creative Anachronism. I'm at the bottom right with my mouth hanging open.<br /><p><img border="1" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhyxBSe2lNOcQJHmEHnUuv_2-1y5uSLugptqm28wj9AxAWCt-4e1HQiZSYMozJ5UZ2DTDmpXLFbiUVimjl1nnJ2kPZhnvHXH_FYhfE0nbkhRF3lr2AaETDmeVIdvyG7KSU2LT0Vwz_pgiagQ2_zBedsSRRlH-V304bQhNavSanqIbyD5LtaULvu/s1600/solstice-assembly-5b.jpg" style="max-width: 100%;" /></p>
<p>We didn't really have enough suitable material so I wrote some. Like most things at Renaissance Fairs, my songs were mashups. For this one I selected three quatrains from Shakespeare's romantic poem "Venus and Adonis" (not medieval, obvs), which is as I recall (I haven't googled it) about the goddess Venus falling in love with a mortal man and getting the cold shoulder from him.
</p><p>Then I went to the UNC Music Library and looked for suitable melodies, but all I could find from way back when was wandering trails of noteheads, without any indication of rhythm or duration. I took one of these wandering trails and hammered it into this melody, which I think is the prettiest one I ever came up with. </p><p>Bob Vasile and I used to play it in Pratie Head concerts, and at weddings, but for the cd <a href="https://skylarkproductions.bandcamp.com/album/under-the-drawbridge-music-for-every-season" target="_blank"><b>Under The Drawbridge</b></a> David DiGiuseppe accompanied me on the cittern. Here's the video for it which I finished just today, decades later.
<p>< ></p>
<center><a href="https://youtu.be/jq-c0ROZxN4" target="_blank"><img alt="" border="3" data-original-height="141" data-original-width="250" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjOmqlb9LkNeAm3v04Rw6iM8HNcGPqjDiA41v1c-3SdQjNvul27NWjN3fQSgjVeAjSQTHr4sGtH6eEu1EXsLDjMzZtKoStNnRTK69F4ns3yCBmW35hZDGqbeY65P7jindlKz5igPGMBJnNtMrthVTUGHRw4HD6L90DfLRL-QOTr8TeZOSdMhlsZ/s1600/touch-but-button.jpg" /></a></center><p> </p><p>Almost all the images in the video are from the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codex_Manesse" target="_blank">Codex Manesse</a>, a German songbook of the early 14th century. I cut them out on the computer and mashed them up with whatever.
</p><p>< ></p>As I did it I was thinking about the method demonstrated in the video <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iggy2vCh0ng" target="_blank">Terry Gillium teaches Monty Python animation (1970)</a>. Terry cut things out of photographs and magazines and the pieces were so flimsy he had to put a piece of glass over his scene to keep them from flying away. He doesn't say how he kept them from all sticking to the glass when he went to make his miniscule adjustments. It's much easier to do in Photoshop (I'm still using an ancient version because I refuse to pay a monthly fee to have the newest iteration). Of course there are other programs that make this all much easier, but I think my technology has plateaued. <p></p><p>I was thinking about this song because I'm on a campaign to throw away all the heavy boxes of old cds in my attic. It makes me sad, we loved this music so much (I still do) but not that many people got a chance to hear it. <br /></p><p></p><p></p>melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-30465939090783486042023-05-23T11:59:00.005-05:002023-05-23T11:59:42.671-05:00Another music video with paper cutout animation: Away With These Self-Loving LadsThis one has some moments that really make me laugh, amusing myself as usual. It didn't take as long to put together because the song is shorter and there are fewer "scenes."
It's a challenge figuring out what to do during the instrumental breaks. In this case, I took the original songbook cover from 1587, cut the images out of it and blew them up and colored them. The idea was going to be, they were going to hop out of the cover, and if I had fancy software I could have done that, but my end result is so simplified I fear the idea was lost. It was fun, anyway.
The song was recorded in my living room in 1990. At that time I had a four-track machine and a two-track machine and the cuts were edited with a razor blade and tape. A tiny sliver of the first verse was just - blank space - on the cd, which astonished me. Had I really not noticed this, way back when? Or did I just forget? I thought maybe it was a manufacturing error so I went up in the attic and dragged down some boxes of these 33-year-old cds and tried some others, the silence was on all of them. I tried to paper it over by copying a smidgin of the instrumental break into the hole and then singing a half-word over the top. It was not very successful but I think it's better than the sliver of silence.
I paid my granddaughter 6.5 cents per angel for her artwork!
The angel in the last scene is doing a dance modeled after "Toto ballerino" which my sister-in-law sent to me.
<center><a href="https://youtu.be/x3yutAC3iHw" target="_blank"><img border="3" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiInF2ofAqz5Ozk3ememtsXonB9JRIptsJz47Z7UkSRO_g5X-4xCY15FANQ3L2HBXiV6-SQydV7xwzCt9OLvTaW4Zqj65HmDfGwqSarq84ftRqPum3hPoR9LvDEKqk28H2dhTBoF-WJiGoEZfOOdFplvimKSgaFPOPYmK_7WgiJfA7G_RCMAQ/s320/away-with-these-button.jpg"/></a></center>melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-34927935895246691922023-05-23T11:46:00.008-05:002023-05-23T11:46:55.010-05:00Music video with paper cutout animation: Turpin Hero
Another in my series of recordings of songs nobody ever wanted to perform with me. I learned this one at a house concert in Durham NC featuring the wonderful Brian Peters. I've loved the song ever since, and taught it to my grand kids.
I tried lip syncing in this one. I took pictures of myself making the different sounds and put the shapes on the puppets' mouths. It was only partially successful.
<center><a href="https://youtu.be/tjiADM1WTb8" target="_blank"><img border="3" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiilrafTJ8aH7wiaGjz7qEXeu-Fk-PGi27yB_n2X4-wZOSv9NnbKZEYaVowcdZLefHN1KakINYXSKkSXd_2CTTZGtXENU2tobWIatTYTVBi4qdot0VP_mDX4JRfxKaemEjjiZgCwkHiOdLTVvaW6sPw6HxWLvdvvzufjxx7zsdjw8PbOBKeBw/s320/turipin-hero-button.jpg"/></a></center>melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-31108410164724100142023-05-23T11:34:00.001-05:002023-05-23T11:34:10.261-05:00Music video with cutout animation: The Day We Went To Rothesay-O, a Scottish folk song<p> My grandkids came to visit and while they were here I got my grandson to sing on the choruses of two songs, this was the first. A song I could never get anybody to record with me before! As usual, making the animation took almost a month, and so far, only 51 views on youtube. I keep reminding myself I do it for my own enjoyment. I chuckle over my own jokes and figuring out what I can actually manage to pull off is good brain massage. I spent more than a whole day on a tableau that appears on the screen for like a second and a half.</p><p>The best part of this video is the bugs we all drew together when I was in Manhattan with them. "There were several different kinds of bugs, some had feet as big as your clogs."</p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p>
<center><a href="https://youtu.be/lPnes9xkYPk" target="_blank"><img border="3" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhwrBxEDxst_QFZPiLP_VzJy38vBsNXrkG9GdR2kCy8YN5xjtTWxR-gaUNkWx50_j2pFwAnlQPy9LK0PxcCJP36c_sTO-GLjQyA4Qamww0I07NeIp4YfJUsAHZ-snyi_n8vgmjIg5maid9zWdRGxe8OPvFwz13CBscNureBNz9AY0OLgHDP6g/s320/day-we-went-to-rothesay-button.jpg" /></a></center>melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-13258321129297153822023-05-22T16:56:00.000-05:002023-05-23T11:22:42.917-05:00Grandma Peppler's coconut custard pie<p>This was one of the first recipes I got from my grandmother when I was in high school and so inexperienced that I didn't realize (and she hadn't thought to tell me) that you have to cook a cornstarch mixture in order for it to jell up. I put it all together, uncooked, and refrigerated it in hopes of a miracle that never occurred.</p><p>Lately I had to increase the amount of filling, pie pans are bigger than they used to be.<br />
</p><p></p><div class="frame"><center><b>Grandma Peppler's coconut custard pie</b></center><center><b> </b></center>
<div style="margin-left: 35px;">
scant 1/2 cup sugar plus 1/4 cup for meringue
<br />
1/2 cup cornstarch
<br />
1/4 teaspoon salt
<br />
3 cups milk
<br />
1-1/2 tablespoons butter
<br />
4 eggs, separated
<br />
2 teaspoons vanilla
<br />
2-1/2 cups flaked, sweetened coconut
<br />
baked pie crust</div>
<br />
1. Mix the sugar, cornstarch, and salt in a non-stick saucepan till there are no lumps. Add a tablespoon of the milk and mix it in as well as possible, then add milk just a tiny bit at a time till you have a stiff lumpless gook. Then turn on the heat and add the rest of the milk gradually, stirring constantly. Cook until it thickens.<br />
<br />
2. Add the butter and melt it. Then add 1-1/2 cups coconut, give the pot a few good stirs, and turn off the heat.<br />
<br />
3. Meanwhile, separate the eggs. Put the yolks in a smallish bowl and whip them smooth with the vanilla.<br />
<br />
4. In a separate bowl beat the egg whites stiff, gradually adding 1/4 cup of sugar as you go.<br />
<br />
5. Drop a few dollops of the hot custard mixture into the egg yolks and whip them together (this is called tempering) - then add the egg yolk mixture back into the custard mixture and cook a little longer (so the egg yolks cook a bit).<br />
<br />
6. My grandma would fold all the egg whites into the custard, but I've taken to folding only half the beaten meringue into the custard. Then I dump the custard-mixed-with-meringue into the cooled (well, supposedly, but actually I never wait and dump it into the baked pie crust when it's still hot) pie crust and spread it evenly.<br />
<br />
7. Spread the remaining 1/2 of the meringue on top and cook in the oven at 350 degrees for about 10-14 minutes until the meringue is a bit browned. Please do not eat this pie hot. If you put it in the freezer to hasten the cooling, don't forget you put it in there.</div><p></p>melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-17954600905513520222023-03-23T10:30:00.001-05:002023-03-23T10:30:11.141-05:00Another cut out animation video: Ben Franklin's Advice<a href="https://skylarkproductions.bandcamp.com/track/ben-franklins-advice" target="_blank"><img alt="Ben Franklin with a dog with fleas" border="3" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgCnSRHY8N9gJHl5aDILOR2imnasO0rNuHcLRO1cD92e94xptL3Yeg0w888xgR57CBWzWn8j2S5ClxKlTcMPHUgcH6nImS9Fuaxd9AAlGB9WcIeg0oxthEGurdQP-skQzG1KQ9yVtfnBFqw1BnRxBM-Y2kf6qkj5ouDyJ9_RplLgfGupDQxCQ/s1600/ben-franklin-bandcamp.jpg" style="float: right; margin-left: 15px; max-width: 100%; width: 350px;" /></a><p>Lately I decided to start recording songs that, for whatever reason, I never put out there before. It's a bit mortifying not to sound the way I did a decade or two ago, but this is where I am now. Here's my rendition from last month (just finished the animation this morning):</p><p>
</p><center><a href="https://youtu.be/OVcWSv4vp-I" target="_blank"><img border="3" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhx_FhBY136IZyRu8TwxGYMxN_QfHMdW_y5m8o69KTnqYNjgvJH-TSUop-7EY0sEEUUr3_qN2-8DKV7f_gqrANfpazFXNeXc5D8xoiBmEgOi6w89uguyRJrNaIG2d7cne5EsiB7tfRHgr67v55JDJkXF0W8yL0iLpxmRItzPX8NpMd84czwGQ/s320/ben-franklin-button.jpg" /></a></center>
<br /><p></p><p>Ken Bloom and I were hired to do a presentation at the Bruce Museum in Greenwich for their Ben Franklin exhibit in 2006. I wrote a couple of songs for the occasion. One was "<a href="https://pratieheads.bandcamp.com/track/downfall-of-piracy" target="_blank">Downfall of Piracy</a>," lyrics by Ben Franklin as a 13 year old (note the "purple gore") and published on his brother's printing press. Bob Vasile and I recorded it that year - Bob regaling us with Franklin's enthusiastic history of the pirate Edward Teach, aka Blackbeard. </p><p></p><p>The other song I wrote was this one, <a href="https://skylarkproductions.bandcamp.com/track/ben-franklins-advice" target="_blank">Ben Franklin's Advice</a> (I actually called it Ben Franklin's Aphorisms at first, but too many people didn't know what an aphorism is). I googled up a handful of his pithy comments as printed in Poor Richard's Almanac, and shook them into five verses. I always thought this song would be good for re-enactors and historic events, but we never got a chance to do many of those events so the song got forgotten.</p><p>The animation took weeks. I have tried several lighting setups and none of them have worked well so far, so it turns out all the time it took cutting out the figures with little tiny scissors and an X-acto knife was wasted - I had to finish it all in photoshop.<br /></p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p>melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-20069504270497126782023-03-04T12:22:00.000-05:002023-03-04T12:22:04.982-05:00My first cut-out animation music video: The Frozen Girl (Pratie Heads version)<p>The Frozen Girl was a very popular song from its beginnings in 1840 through the early twentieth century; more than 200 versions have been collected, in thirty states and in eastern Canada, titles including <i>The Fair Sharlot, Frozen Charlotte, Fair Charlotte</i>, and <i>A Corpse Going to a Ball</i>. The heroine scoffs at the notion of dressing warmly to ride in an open sleigh, twenty miles, at night, in Maine, on New Year's Eve, to go to a dance. When her idiot boyfriend (why did he let her go out like that?) gets her to the dance, she is dead. In the newspaper story, it says the ball went on regardless. </p><p>There was even a merchandise tie-in, see the Frozen Charlotte dolls below.
</p><center><p><img alt="Row of Frozen Charlotte Dolls" border="1" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj6HQBv6EsKU_-LACwUEmbiU8dgb2MiYr447QYoWIQbQStb1WHYU0EZZHMrE-vuWkWHndOryka7cD-S9v4W76gYlQarUTJyTBWcH6M4YT8LCP1nX5xJjiGvJC-xQDMvAfCJrmhIg09ERvmGQjnkEL7Y6eemEjzF-25zAeNx7hA-FBcbJShx4A/s1600/frozen-charlotte-dolls.jpg" /></p></center>
<p>The poem on which this song is based was written by Seba Smith (or, perhaps, his wife, as I have seen in one published broadside), and it recounts in rhyme a supposedly true story which took place on New Year's eve, 1839. At the foot of this post you'll find the original story; originating in the New York Observer, it was reprinted in newspapers across America.
</p><p><img src="http://photos1.blogger.com/x/blogger/5130/775/400/340425/rag.jpg" style="float: left; margin-right: 15px;" />I first heard a version of Young Charlotte sung by Tim Eriksen on an album by <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cordelia%27s_Dad" target="_blank">Cordelia's Dad</a>. I love Tim Eriksen's voice, and I loved the story, but the tune was so slow and dreary, so I wrote my own tune for it and reworked the lyrics for my own entertainment. I recorded it with Bob Vasile on our cd "<a href="https://pratieheads.bandcamp.com/album/rag-faire-music-from-the-british-isles-and-beyond" target="_blank">Rag Faire: music of the British Isles and beyond.</a>"
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</p><p><a href="https://youtu.be/fWHAnCcmRgU" target="_blank"><img border="3" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgMBG0VRGrsvYi0_iNiOukqqsFIiWgHias_n9HcGIsvF8zh5FshmicVHZlpActF3iTIFEl0T-0KUoSSKRZL1dO9OJoj6tqopDBFUsuBOl7Y5Oza5vaUeJthEFnAhmfeNBG1FmWVe-cgssT0ZV4iW5eEp1OgtmmtweHTGZ_3HWwFpEUAaH1ekg/s1600/frozen-girl-button.jpg" style="float:right;margin-left:15px;"/></a>I've been working on this animation for the last two and a half weeks. It took a lot of time to get set up and do the paintings. I found the colored pencils my aunt gave me in the 70s which I've never used until now. It did feel like playing with paper dolls, as Mike Craver says. (See his cutout animated music video which inspired me here: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ge8ZuBXOu8c" target="_blank">The Dame of Camellias</a>.) My biggest problem (besides lack of talent) was insufficient light, I hope to fix that by the time I do the next one.
</p><p></p><center><img alt="Newspaper article, A Corpse Going To A Ball" border="1" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgBzyaphdHFG-Py2qntNcOLxkJK2p-xSjAcbwUmE6WDXcaaemYWxLemmi5NUvBwoBm-vyA6bq_atVBJlNWGIhSvsoSat2LjX9ViFfcdklp2M8WFwoxPticDQUTLB31D9eF9wlPBecFxHns3l-Sux3xtSDnxfeh6wyp-GVETEsjwklBZ9hy4Qg/s1600/a-corpse-going-to-a-ball.jpg" style="max-width: 100%;" /></center><p></p><p></p><p></p>melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-59966162429790865762023-02-12T08:34:00.179-05:002023-02-12T09:43:51.433-05:00Links for studying cutout animation<ul style="text-align: left;"><li style="margin-bottom: 10px;">Mike Craver's cutout masterpiece <a href="https://youtu.be/ge8ZuBXOu8c" target="_blank">The Dame of Camellias</a> - he uses watercolors and works very large, using an old iPhone SE because the camera is so good. He has rigged his to a tripod but I'm thinking about using a boom microphone stand and a fixture that holds the phone to the stand. He is very old school! No computer manipulation. If he doesn't like a character's face, he whites it out and paints it over again.<br /></li>
<li style="margin-bottom: 10px;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/KOqcHCEqO1k" target="_blank">Tutorial by Terry Gilliam of Monty Python's Flying Circus</a>. He used pictures cut out of magazines and they were so flimsy he had to put a big piece of glass on top to hold them down for every shot. Then when he picked up the glass the pieces flew around unless he had tacked them all down.</li>
<li style="margin-bottom: 10px;">
<a href="https://youtu.be/EoSB5j5czpA" target="_blank">How to Make a Paper Puppet for Stop Motion Animation</a> by John O'Donnell - (he uses a quarter-inch hole punch to make a hole in the back piece. Puts a dab of glue on the back of the front piece and attaches it through the hole to a paper disk behind the back piece.</li>
<li style="margin-bottom: 10px;">FayeMaybe's <a href="https://youtu.be/luxHBmMQClI" target="_blank">Making Puppets for Animation</a>. She is using index cards for her puppets. She pokes a hole in the back piece, bends an L shape out of wire and tapes it to the front piece, turns it so the wire stands up and pokes it through the back piece. Then she makes a spiral out of the wire and flattens it on the back of the back piece. Looks hard.</li>
<li style="margin-bottom: 10px;"><a href="https://youtu.be/GvfF1YNDrTw" target="_blank">Houston Filmmaker Explores Dimensions of Paper Animation</a> is a good overview of the wonderful work of animator Brandon Ray. He photographs his moving characters on a piece of glass suspended over a background or a green screen. Not sure why.</li>
<li style="margin-bottom: 10px;"><a href="https://youtu.be/V7t4p3RjuNE" target="_blank">Making of Paper plane</a> by Massimo Giangrande gives a good overview of the initial planning and the drawing process. And here is the finished product: <a href="https://youtu.be/NYvGpuE24oc" target="_blank">Giangrande's Paper Plane</a></li>
<li style="margin-bottom: 10px;"><a href="https://youtu.be/ibK2HjJiTaQ" target="_blank">Gianluca Maruotti's cutout animation music video for Tay Oskee's song Black Smoke</a></li>
<li style="margin-bottom: 10px;"><a href="https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00178QQ84/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o02_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1" target="_blank">Aleene's 29-2 Tack-It Over & Over Liquid Glue 4oz</a> for holding things down temporarily</li>
<li style="margin-bottom: 10px;">The bigger you work, the easier the creating and manipulation are. Mike's puppets are about 8" tall. </li>
<li style="margin-bottom: 10px;">Outline the body parts and cut right to/through the outline. Recommended to blacken the edges of the pieces to avoid flashes of white</li>
</ul>melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-17376521048993540082022-12-12T14:00:00.000-05:002022-12-12T16:49:08.856-05:00Let Memory Keep Us All: a songbook, a video, a remembrance. Available as a digital download (pdf file).<b>UPDATE:</b> Reposting to add the video I just made of this song, which is on our "Under the Drawbridge" cd available at Bandcamp: <a href="https://skylarkproductions.bandcamp.com/track/let-memory-keep-us-all" target="_blank">Let Memory Keep Us All</a>. Here's the video:
<center><a href="https://youtu.be/Xx2ikMEWohc" target="_blank"><img border="3" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEipwIzMkiLKI46FHt-dThEGFs9r2OgvcUN-Wz8dwcm1uxnAV3fXe-dvACRJ_rxZ8r-6sD-EaLOOhdBXJTaZm0d8-OC9jJsYSAQgrXWqpU6wU4fREtEYrm08JRhIsxW6KvExpYSzbKntLBmHtcVlSvCec0NJbQabk_Ga8gHt27IKx27Cp1DK6A/s320/let-memory-keep-us-all-button.jpg"/></a></center>
<center><b>The Solstice Assembly Songbook: 66 songs to sing in harmony<br />
Choral arrangements for folksong lovers</b></center><br />
<img border="0" style="width:250px;float:left;margin-right:15px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj0xhEgmGyJcTj6XDqjVq18125J7kFrnw75OXaxSMUw2LPdKJPPkVuqnDaF2ee16nuOXS2S3QJzgzasEj3ZT-tGhvL6XmCw1Dd-2DJncIxANpa1hpSqZSHqBo0p6VrWKqSY6WZd/s320/medieval-fair-trio.jpg" />This is a picture of Mitzi, Mona, and Sandy at the Medieval Fair at the Castle McCullough in Jamestown, NC, back in the 1990s, wearing nice outfits we sewed out of cloth we dyed ourselves.<br />
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There were usually about sixteen people in the Solstice Assembly, a mainly <i>a cappella</i> ensemble. Everybody had a busy professional life elsewhere but we made three recordings and performed at Piccolo Spoleto and an annual "Solstice Extravaganza," which was a little like the Christmas Revels except it included Hannukah and Winter Solstice music too.<br />
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I disbanded the group in the mid 1990s but I still miss it... so I put together a songbook of our best music. I hope some of you will enjoy this sheet music, suitable for small groups or a chorus or chorale.<br clear="all" /><br />
<hr><img border="1" style="float:right;margin-left:15px;width:250px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi4kgTax0hBUAOa5labr0U9Zp77MnEtiTgHkg0tgTCk3RHOfU-BCmi7-GwrfYJq1Cpzrwj9Pwn_QmecaaFoOQYiv0ggVJNPiWRzyNzZwK7VwwxyATEij6WInympm0Isab0zTrW2/s320/let-memory.jpg" />BUY THE BOOK AT LULU OR AMAZON:<br />
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<a href="http://www.lulu.com/content/paperback-book/let-memory-keep-us-all-the-solstice-assembly-songbook/2694057" target="_blank">Let Memory Keep Us All: full size and spiral bound at Lulu.com</a> ($15.80)...<br />
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<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Let-Memory-Keep-All-arrangements/dp/0981811531/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1255167957&sr=8-2" target="_blank">Somewhat smaller, somewhat cheaper, and perfect-bound, at Amazon.com</a> ($13.05)<br />
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Or buy the pdf format digital download book directly from me for $7 via PayPal: <form target="paypal" action="https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr" method="post"><input type="hidden" name="cmd" value="_s-xclick"><br />
<input type="hidden" name="hosted_button_id" value="8YMJ78YER7BW6"><input type="image" src="https://www.paypalobjects.com/en_US/i/btn/btn_cart_SM.gif" border="0" name="submit" alt="PayPal - The safer, easier way to pay online!"><img alt="" border="0" src="https://www.paypalobjects.com/en_US/i/scr/pixel.gif" width="1" height="1"></form><hr><br />
<img border="0" style="width:260px;max-width:100%;float:left;margin-right:15px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_iAmAPkz5MfSKJnQZD5dTliKnMaHuxYsHJWaxr2FiVlXn-Y3IVN0U1PxCyBKPLSLXw1kqCwvMciic4nUQXEPFv9as8z0wrgWBZ3Rh5s1lh4C_sODvXwpBbdhiaJGqIoV2XSrA/s1600/carol-boren-owens.jpg" />This picture (left) is of Carol Boren Owens: the woman <i>Let Memory Keep Us All</i> was written for. Carol was one of the original sopranos with the Solstice Assembly, a beautiful, kind, funny, sassy Southern girl with deep roots in the Chapel Hill area. <br />
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Everybody loved her and she had a wonderful voice.<br />
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She was only 33 years old when she died instantaneously. We had finished taping and mixing our first recording, "Three Log Night," but she died before she had a chance to hear it. When we met to listen to the mixes we were stunned into silence listening to her beautiful solos. We have never forgotten her.<br />
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That's my daughter Hannah, in a homemade hennin, holding her hand. The picture was taken at the Renaissance Fair at Castle McCullough in Jamestown, NC.</p><br clear="all" /><br />
<hr>Below, brief descriptions of the songs in the book. If we recorded the song, you can click to hear (or purchase) the mp3.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=8/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>The Agincourt Carol</b>: I heard this from the singing of <a href="http://www.folkmusic.net/grahamandeileenpratt/">Graeme and Eileen Pratt</a> on their album Regal Slip (it's great). It was written in the early 15th century and tells of the 1415 Battle of Agincourt, in which the English army led by Henry V of England defeated the French.<br />
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<img border="0" style="float:right;margin-left:15px;width:200px;max-width:100%;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhbJshVl1Tb7gOeoCkYZNkCVHDvVeUlz_aK-FQtG16BoVQXh6YF71JTqmtf5Tj4DP4o1_5v_LjTorS7a0AvH4TVFHosnXp4GZGNumoSAFhBD3OUOYBRFKK3FKzB_pqzeaQbi4Bx/s320/randy.jpg" /><b>An Equal Song</b>: I combined the Sacred Harp song "Poor Mourning Souls" with lyrics from another Sacred Harp song, both slightly, uh, reorganized.<br />
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<a href="http://skylark2.com/track/away-with-these-self-loving-lads" target="_blank"><b>Away with these self-loving lads</b></a>: By lutenist John Dowland, from his 1597 <i>First Booke of Songs or Ayres</i>, arranged by me and Doug Holmgren (who played the sprightly harpsichord setting). "My songs they be of Cynthia's praise, I wear her rings on holidays, On every tree I write her name, and ev'ry day I read the same ... If Cynthia crave her ring of me, I'll blot her name out of the tree!" Somethings never change. The track is from <i>Courting Disaster</i>, a cd I did with Beth Holmgren in 1991. (In this case, click on the title of the song to hear it.)<br />
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<b>Ayo visto lo mappamundi</b>: I heard this on the Waverly Consort's <i>1492: Music From The Age Of Discovery</i> and was enchanted. "I have seen the map of the world... I've been everywhere ... but there's nobody as cute as my girlfriend Cecily." I arranged it for the Solstice Assembly and later did it with my world music band, and that's where we got our name!<br />
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<b>Barrett's Privateers</b>: I arranged this one, written by Stan Rogers and brought to me by Mark Biggers, for the kids chorus at the Emerson Waldorf School and later did it with the teen traveling camp at Village Harmony.<br />
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<b>Brave Wolfe</b>: This one is in many songbooks because it is historically significant: General James Wolfe triumphed at the battle of the Plains of Abraham outside Quebec and it turned the course of the war.<br />
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<b>Brightly Dawns our Wedding Day</b>: Four of us from the Solstice Assembly sang this song (from the Mikado) for Ed Norman's wedding and I taught it at the Village Harmony Adult Camp a few years ago. I've always wanted to do it at another wedding but the words are a little strong for present-day brides: "All must sip the cup of sorrow, I to-day and thou to-morrow, this the close of every song. What, though solemn shadows fall - sooner, later - over all? Sing a merry madrigal!..."<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=908696185/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=5/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://pratieheads.bandcamp.com/album/the-pratie-heads-early-fare-volume-i">The Pratie Heads: Early Fare, volume I by Pratie Heads</a></iframe><b>The Bundling Song</b>: This was an invention. When I was researching music of Colonial America for the Pratie Heads North Carolina Arts Council Touring Program performances, I ran across the text in an old book. Now you can read the whole thing on line: <a href="http://www.fortklock.com/bundlingartch7.htm" target="_blank">A New Bundling Song, or, A Reproof To Those Young Country Women, Who Follow That Reproachful Practice, And To Their Mothers For Upholding Them Therein</a>! I made up a tune and a harmony for it and pared it down mercilessly (the parson who wrote it had a bit of an obsession) and we sang it to the great amusement of all. My favorite couplet: "Bundlers' clothes are no defense - unruly horses push the fence!"<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=922013601/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=18/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/under-the-drawbridge-music-for-every-season">Under the Drawbridge: Music for every season by Skylark Productions</a></iframe><b>Cadgwith Anthem</b>: We learned this from Mark Biggers, who loved Fairport Convention and Steeleye Span, and a quartet of us recorded it on "Under the Drawbridge"<br />
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<b>Ce mois de mai</b>: Mitzi Quint brought us this one, a madrigal by Clement Janequin.</p><br />
<b>Claudy Banks</b>: Ken Bloom gets us to sing this at his Revolutionary War reenactments. A soldier comes back from war and, meeting up with his old girlfriend (but unrecognized by her) says "Your boyfriend is dead" -- just to see her get upset. Then he says "Just Kidding!" If I were her I'd conk him over the head.<br />
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<div class="frame"><center><img border="0" style="width:550px;max-width:100%:" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhKF0EqRa4oYEx-RcqUslozha3qC6AhpTpTLpSmbs5Dwm6Ux9PxcCLeXXgFFVZTYA9BwBSiHfhbGTMvZeUUEthGJAOIRHDkUC2A5zevfuzTpCkDx1o5e7XrRpfa-rNcBUiZ84ww/s1600/some-assembly-required-covershot.jpg" /></center>The Solstice Assembly at the Piccolo Spoleto Festival, 1992: Alice Kaplan, Ben Bingham, Candace Carraway, Doug Holmgren, Ed Norman, Jane Peppler, Joe Sickles, Jon Newlin, Laurie Fox, Lisa Pickel, Mark Biggers, Mitzi Quint, Paula, Randy Kloko, Rivka Gordon, Rob Rich, Stacey Anderegg. We used this photo on our third recording: <a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required" target="_blank">Some Assembly Required: Centuries of great vocal music</a>.</div><br />
<b>Come Here, Fellow Servant</b>: Incredibly, <a href="http://mappamundi.com">Mappamundi</a> got a gig at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles! Well, truth to tell, we were not actually IN the bowl, we were in a little theater NEXT to the bowl, doing a week-long show for families on American History through music. The lady who hired us, Marnie, found this song and I tweaked it and re-arranged it quite a bit. The idea is, even the rich masters for whom the servants work are slaves to somebody or something. "The fat shining glutton looks up to his shelf, the wrinkled lean miser bows down to his pelf, and the churl-pated beau is a slave to himself" Vocabulary word I learned from this song, pelf: "Wealth or riches, especially when dishonestly acquired."<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=502414929/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=15/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/sedgefield-fair-more-or-less-traditional-songs-from-england-scotland">Sedgefield Fair: More-or-less traditional songs from England & Scotland by Jane Peppler</a></iframe><b>Come, Lasses and Lads</b>: This was a bringing-together of the 1670 Playford English Country Dance tune, Epping Forest, with the text of a John Roberts and Tony Barrand song. I recorded it with genius pianist Jacqueline Schwab and bassist Robbie Link.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=922013601/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=10/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/under-the-drawbridge-music-for-every-season">Under the Drawbridge: Music for every season by Skylark Productions</a></iframe><b>Con el viento</b>: Somebody in the Solstice Assembly heard Libana sing this song and I transcribed it as best I could. We recorded it on "Some Assembly Required" and you can also hear Libana sing it at <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Okxc9iDHizU" target="_blank">YouTube</a><br />
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<b>Daniel Prayed</b>: A Red Clay Ramblers favorite which I also did with the Triangle Jewish Chorale. Here's a similar (but all-men) arrangement sung by Joe Newberry, Jim Watson, Bill Hicks & Mike Craver at <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bheAr0U5-uY" target="_blank">YouTube</a><br />
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<b>Devotion</b>: A Sacred Harp song.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=922013601/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=1/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/under-the-drawbridge-music-for-every-season">Under the Drawbridge: Music for every season by Skylark Productions</a></iframe><b>Down with the Rosemary and Bays</b>: Mark Biggers brought us this song. First I made a three part version and then a four-part version. Words by Robert Herrick, song is from William Henry Husk's 1868 Songs of the Nativity.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=20/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>Drive Dull Care Away (traditional version)</b>: Mid-1970s, a folksinging circle in Cambridge sponsored by the Folksong Society of Greater Boston (ah, why don't we have one of those down here in North Carolina?). I heard this song and was riveted. That being pre-internet, I ended up having to make several phone calls (which I hate) and then drive 35 miles to grab this song from the guy who sang it. Now it's probably just a mouse-click away. I love the lyrics so much that I wrote another setting and recorded it on Some Assembly Required.<br />
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<img style="float:left;width:250px;max-width:100%;margin-right:15px; border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgGDZBsSh3yMVixfrF4wvUGER9iXASvtqB9gKzpmGc-CnXpUkIM2En9Nqt3yV0JxrlwVAsH1ldhW13Jx72IeqQmZu6M7t7OTsa-vPqdFuUa9xQlSo37o1RvMAXzQhjowkBh-hy4/s320/rob-and-me.jpg" /><b>Durme, durme</b>: This gorgeous Sephardic song, sung in Laduvane, has been recorded many times, I first heard it on Judy Frankel's cd Stairway of Gold: Songs of the Sephardim. The Solstice Assembly sang my <i>a cappella</i> version for many years and the Triangle Jewish Chorale loved the song too.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=11/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>Fine Knacks for Ladies</b>: This is from John Dowland, too, and I wrote this arrangement when we were asked to do an Elizabethan gig - some of the songs we scrabbled together were a bit, uh, spurious, but this one was the real thing.<br />
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<b>Fortune, My Foe</b>: Supposedly Henry V wrote this, but I bet he just stole credit for it. Still happens all the time.<br />
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<div class="frame"><b>CD Review magazine said about the Solstice Assembly's <i>Under the Drawbridge</i>:<br />
<blockquote>An all-seasons follow-up to Three Log Night, a regional Christmas favorite, Under the Drawbridge is an impressive introduction to the elegant, elastic vocal stylings of North Carolina's Solstice Assembly, an inventive 18- voice choral group that specializes in updating folk songs that span the last 800 years. These modern minstrels, favorites on the East Coast Renaissance festival circuit ... whether singing a cappella or accompanied by guitars, fiddles, percussion and recorders, showcase forceful harmonies with reverent relish and a youthful spirit. The alternately festive, romantic, and haunting arrangements mirror a variety of familiar vocal settings, including madrigal choruses, barbershop quartets, even such peers as the Bobs and the Roches... The most lasting pleasures ... are the older songs, all performed with an earnest affection that accents their beauty rather than their age.</blockquote></div><br />
<b>Furry Day Carol</b>: learned from Dave DiGiuseppe, friend of the Nee Ningy band, former member of the Band of Ages, the Banished Fools, the Big Zucchini Washboard Bandits, and a Mayday organizer. We did a Mayday concert with him and sang this song.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=9/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>Gaude Mater Polonia</b>: Ed Norman learned this one in high school. Wikipedia says: "It was probably the most popular medieval Polish hymn, written in the 13th-14th century in memory of saint Stanislaw Szczepanowski, bishop of Kraków." Polish knights used to sing it after victory in battle. Since Ed is from Alabama, not Krakow, the words may be a bit folk-processed.<br />
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<b>Give Me the Roses</b>: learned from Mike Craver of the Red Clay Ramblers. I wrote this arrangement for us to perform at a musical lecture Jack Bernhard gave at the Ulster-American Park when a bunch of us went over to Northern Ireland to sing Sacred Harp at their bluegrass festival.<br />
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<b>Golly</b>: I ordinarily fear rounds - I always wonder, <i>what if it never stops?</i> - but this one, by P.D.Q. Bach I think, is cute.<br />
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<b>Good in Living</b>: It was Stacey Anderegg, now leader of the Stella ensemble, who brought us this song.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=922013601/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=12/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/under-the-drawbridge-music-for-every-season">Under the Drawbridge: Music for every season by Skylark Productions</a></iframe><b>Hard Times, Come Again No More</b>: Somebody asked us to learn this Stephen Foster song. The Red Clay Ramblers used to do a wonderful version of it but their arrangement wouldn't work for mixed mens and womens voices so I wrote one for us.<br />
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<b>Haymaking</b>: Mark Biggers and Randy Kloko sang this song, which we learned from John Roberts and Tony Barrand.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=922013601/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=19/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/under-the-drawbridge-music-for-every-season">Under the Drawbridge: Music for every season by Skylark Productions</a></iframe><b>The Hock Cart</b>: I sort of wrassled this melody together out of a fragment of a medieval melody which I pushed and prodded until it wasn't really recognizable, then added an Elizabethan text.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=908696185/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=10/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://pratieheads.bandcamp.com/album/the-pratie-heads-early-fare-volume-i">The Pratie Heads: Early Fare, volume I by Pratie Heads</a></iframe><b>How Stands the Glass Around?</b>: Learned for Early American gigs. I arranged it for four-part choral singing. The song was collected from the notebook of Thomas Fanning, 1780. It was General Wolfe's favorite song. Recording by the Pratie Heads.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=21/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>Imi Nahtna Leviva-Li</b>: One of the first Hannukah songs we learned for the Solstice Extravaganza.<br />
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<b>In Sherwood Lived Stout Robin Hood</b>: Another one learned for a Renaissance Fair. By Robert Jones, 1609. I love this tune so much I made it the ringtone for my phone.<br />
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<div class="frame">Cue Magazine wrote:<br />
<blockquote>The Solstice Assembly then took the stage, and I mean TOOK IT, with an earthy vocal/choral style that reaches far back into folk traditions. Their singing tone is a full-throated delivery that commands attention and delivers great excitement and driving energy." </blockquote></div><br />
<b>It Was a Lover and his Lass</b>: This is one of several songs I concocted for an Elizabethan evening. The text, of course, is by Shakespeare. The tune was kludged together out of a Welsh folksong I'd mostly forgotten.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=922013601/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=24/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/under-the-drawbridge-music-for-every-season">Under the Drawbridge: Music for every season by Skylark Productions</a></iframe><b>Let Memory Keep Us All</b>: The song that inspired this lens. The tune was learned from Peter Bellamy's <i>The Death of Admiral Nelson</i> and I wrote the words with some input from my then-husband.<br />
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<b>Let Us Drink and be Merry</b>: A round I learned from the singing of Suzy Liebert, a long-ago roommate.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=3/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>Love Is Come Again</b>: From the Oxford Book of Carols. One verse was written by our tenor Ben Bingham.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=922013601/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=7/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/under-the-drawbridge-music-for-every-season">Under the Drawbridge: Music for every season by Skylark Productions</a></iframe><b>Margot Labourez les Vignes</b>: Alice Kaplan, Professor of French Literature at Duke and one of our sopranos, helped with the words of this song, which I'd known since highschool. It was originally a folksong but was turned into a madrigal by Jacob Arcadelt (or was it Orlando di Lasso?)<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=14/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>Northfield</b>: One of everybody's favorite Sacred Harp songs. Words: Isaac Watts, 1701; music: Jeremiah Ingalls, 1800<br />
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<b>Northill May</b>: Perhaps I heard the Watersons do this on a long-ago LP, or maybe it was the Young Tradition?<br />
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<b>O My Hart</b>: Henry VIII claimed the authorship of this one. Yeah, right. See Henry V, above.<br />
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<b>Ode to the Fourth of July</b>: Written in 1803 by Walter Townsend, arranged by me for some Revolutionary War reenactment.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=922013601/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=15/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/under-the-drawbridge-music-for-every-season">Under the Drawbridge: Music for every season by Skylark Productions</a></iframe><b>Once I Had a Sweetheart</b>: Mona Shibers brought us this song. I first heard her sing it when about twelve of us were packed into a Motel 6 room in Greensboro. In the morning we stumbled out of our couple of rooms, dressed in jerkins and bodkins and henins and tights for the Medieval Fair, to the astonishment of the truckers who are the usual inhabitants.<br />
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<b>Pace-egging Song</b>: Learned from Dave DiGiuseppe for a Maying sort of event. What wonderful Mayday celebrations they used to have out at the farm, with a really really TALL Maypole and beautifully hand-died ribbons and sometimes I'd play with the little band and watch people weave in and out...<br />
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<b>Parting Glass</b>: Bob Vasile of the Pratie Heads and I learned this for our dear mentor and friend Carl Wittman when he was dying. Recently I spruced it up and presented it at a Village Harmony camp.<br />
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<div class="frame">The Charleston Post & Courier wrote:<br />
<blockquote>The harmonious and high-spirited Solstice Assembly belted out a cappella renditions with enough talent to raise the roof ... Sixteen voices full of musical gusto sang the reverent to the irreverent as a class act in the Piccolo Spoleto Traditional Folk Music Series ... the audience wanted more as they showed their appreciation with applause and shouts of encore." </blockquote></div><br />
<b>Peculiar Cheer</b>: I can't at all remember where I heard this. I think it's a twelfth-night song. Did I invent it? Did it come from a dream? If you've heard it before, please put me out of my misery and tell me where it came from!<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=10/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>Peddler's Song</b>: This is an Elizabethan text and a tune I think I invented. We recorded it on Some Assembly Required.<br />
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<b>Pretty Maid Come Along</b>: Jon Newlin brought us this song, short and sweet.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=922013601/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=4/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/under-the-drawbridge-music-for-every-season">Under the Drawbridge: Music for every season by Skylark Productions</a></iframe><b>Rainbow</b>: A classic but rarely heard shape-note hymn.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=922013601/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=22/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/under-the-drawbridge-music-for-every-season">Under the Drawbridge: Music for every season by Skylark Productions</a></iframe><b>Resonet in laudibus</b>: I learned this from Pat Peterson and the singing of her group Fortuna, which used to perform in our annual Solstice Extravaganzas.<br />
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<b>Rich Man</b>: I just love this song, which I found in an Ingalls songbook.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=4/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>Ripe and Bearded Barley</b>: I learned this mysterious English folksong from Larry Gordon.<br />
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<b>Rolling Ages</b>: Here you have it: the entire destruction of the world as we know it in four short verses. An old shape-note type hymn, written before the four shapes were invented.<br />
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<img border="0" style="float:right;margin-left:15px;width:250px;max-width:100%" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjpcs04yAikEwbkLDUi8ILcXZaC8_e2iz-Yd85ymt-t4z1rcAu9_JyhQpm-VsBIf_yS3WcpBM89VshpuppFck89BF1m5dYGJGe38aM5hGfY2HCKNz2I1fYaSpjmTCPGrqCPME-4/s320/solstice-assembly-guys.jpg" /></a><iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=5/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>Roulez!</b>: I loved William Pint & Felicia Dale's version of this and gussied it up for the Solstice Assembly to sing with the Band of Ages. We recorded it on Some Assembly Required.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=17/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>Shnirele Perele</b>: First heard at KlezKamp in the early 1980s.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=2/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>Sigh No More, Ladies</b>: Shakespeare's words, my tune and arrangement, last verse by Randy Kloko.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=922013601/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=8/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/under-the-drawbridge-music-for-every-season">Under the Drawbridge: Music for every season by Skylark Productions</a></iframe><b>Silent Bird</b>: I found this Irish song in a book and harmonized it. Judy Stafford wrote the third verse.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=24/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>So Will We Yet</b>: Learned from the singing of the brilliant and sorely missed Tony Cuffe.<br />
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<b>Solis Praevia</b>: Learned from a cd of Bohemian or Moravian early music.<br />
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<b>Sweet Kate</b>: Learned from John Newlin for our Elizabethan gigs. By Robert Jones c. 1600<br />
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<b>There is a Lady Sweet and Kind</b>: From Thomas Ford's <i>Music of Sundry Kinds</i> of 1607.<br />
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<b>This Old World</b>: I heard this from the singing of <a href="http://www.folkmusic.net/grahamandeileenpratt/">Graeme and Eileen Pratt</a> and friends sang this on their wonderful album Regal Slip.<br />
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<b>To Portsmouth!</b>: A nice round for the pub.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=922013601/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=11/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/under-the-drawbridge-music-for-every-season">Under the Drawbridge: Music for every season by Skylark Productions</a></iframe><b>Touch But My Lips</b>: Of the songs I've written, this is my favorite. Words from Shakespeare's <i>Venus and Adonis</i>.<br />
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<b>Turtledove Done Drooped His Wings</b>: A Georgia Sea Island song. I think I first heard Larry Gordon and the Word of Mouth chorus do it.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=6/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>Vegan Fight Song</b>: We had been performing "This Aye Nicht," a medieval song, using something close to the Young Tradition arrangement, for a while when Lisa Pickel showed up with these alternate words.<br />
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<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 42px;" src="http://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2686036365/size=small/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/artwork=false/t=1/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://skylark2.com/album/some-assembly-required">Some Assembly Required by Solstice Assembly, New Hope Harmony, The Band of Ages</a></iframe><b>Whitsuntide is Come</b>: I think I learned this from John Roberts and Tony Barrand, except there are three parts and there are only two of them, so maybe not.<br />
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<div class="frame">OK, so now that you've heard all these great songs, don't you want to be able to sing them yourselves with your friends? The songbook has chords and choral arrangements, mostly SATB but some are three or two-part and some are just for soloists.</div><br />
<hr><img border="1" style="float:right;margin-left:15px;width:250px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi4kgTax0hBUAOa5labr0U9Zp77MnEtiTgHkg0tgTCk3RHOfU-BCmi7-GwrfYJq1Cpzrwj9Pwn_QmecaaFoOQYiv0ggVJNPiWRzyNzZwK7VwwxyATEij6WInympm0Isab0zTrW2/s320/let-memory.jpg" />BUY THE BOOK AT LULU OR AMAZON:<br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.lulu.com/content/paperback-book/let-memory-keep-us-all-the-solstice-assembly-songbook/2694057" target="_blank">Let Memory Keep Us All: full size and spiral bound at Lulu.com</a> ($15.80)...<br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Let-Memory-Keep-All-arrangements/dp/0981811531/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1255167957&sr=8-2" target="_blank">Somewhat smaller, somewhat cheaper, and perfect-bound, at Amazon.com</a> ($13.05)<br />
<br />
Or buy the pdf format digital download book directly from me for $7 via PayPal: <form target="paypal" action="https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr" method="post"><input type="hidden" name="cmd" value="_s-xclick"><br />
<input type="hidden" name="hosted_button_id" value="8YMJ78YER7BW6"><input type="image" src="https://www.paypalobjects.com/en_US/i/btn/btn_cart_SM.gif" border="0" name="submit" alt="PayPal - The safer, easier way to pay online!"><img alt="" border="0" src="https://www.paypalobjects.com/en_US/i/scr/pixel.gif" width="1" height="1"></form><hr>melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-5747954900300107442021-12-14T10:09:00.007-05:002021-12-14T10:09:44.683-05:00Blueberry buckle<p> Make in an 8x8 or 9x9 greased baking pan. Preheat oven to 375.<br /></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"> <b><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">Blueberry buckle</span></b></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">3/4 cup white sugar</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">1/4 cup butter (softened)<br /></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">1 egg</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">1/2 cup milk</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">2 cups all-purpose flour</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">1-1/2 teaspoons baking powder</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">1/2 teaspoon salt</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">2-1/2 cups fresh blueberries</span></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">Topping: <br /></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">1/2 cup white sugar</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">1/3 cup all-purpose flour</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">1/3 cup oatmeal</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">1/4 cup melted butter </span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;"> </span></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">Cream sugar, butter, and egg.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">In a separate bowl mix flour, baking powder, and salt. Stir into sugar mixture, alternating with
milk.</span></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">This is a sticky dough. You could mix it with the blueberries but I made a base of half the dough, then poured in the blueberries, then put blobs of dough on top. </span></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">Topping: Combine sugar, flour, oatmeal, and butter. Sprinkle over cake batter.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: .0001pt; margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115%;">Bake for 25-30 minutes.</span></p>
melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-79848590276631636502021-12-01T12:20:00.001-05:002021-12-01T12:20:10.544-05:00Genevieve's tamalesGenevieve's tamales<br /><br />2 chickens: breasts, thighs, and legs, boiled. Save the water. Shred (takes a long time to shred)<br /><br />3 pounds tomatillos<br />3 plum tomatoes or any red<br />5 jalapeno peppers<br />1 big clove of garlic<br />blend the 4 ingredients above, then boil down, finally, saute with some oil. Put the chicken in.<br /><br />Maseca - she used a whole bag and it made a tremendous number of tamales<br />blended with oil, salt, and water<br /><br />3 bags of husks - get the big ones<br /><br />She used the hot cooking water to mix with the maseca and oil and salt<br /><br />Lay out one or two husks, give two good smears of dough, filling, wrap.<br /><br />Steam for a half hour with layer of foil on top. <br /><br /><br />melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-69626548615727527672021-01-17T08:54:00.003-05:002021-01-17T08:54:38.240-05:00Swedish Raspberry Almond BarsThis is a favorite recipe for dazzling people. Hard to stop eating<br /><br />3/4 c. soft salted butter<br />3/4 c. confectioner's sugar (regular sugar will work too)<br />1-1/2 c. flour<br />3/4 c. raspberry jam<br />3 large egg whites<br />6 tablespoons sugar<br />1/2 c shredded sweetened coconut (just the regular kind at the grocery store)<br />1 c sliced almonds (it's better if you toast them but don't burn them)<br /><br />Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees<br /><br /><br />Cream butter &amp; sugar, add flour. Press into a 9 x 13 pan and cook 18-20 minutes (until light brown). Cool a little bit at least.<br /><br />Spread raspberry jam as evenly as possible.<br /><br />Beat the eggs, add the sugar to the stiff-peaks point<br /><br />Add coconut and 1/2 cup of the almonds. Spread on top of the base layer. Sprinkle with the rest of the almonds.<br /><br />Bake for 18-22 more minutes, until golden brown.<br /><br />melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-23812276066701471152020-05-02T16:54:00.001-05:002020-05-02T16:58:03.734-05:00Tex-Mex chicken cheese turnovers (empanadas)I'm "sheltering in place" with my son, daughter, son-in-law, grandkids, and two kids and a dog. We take turns cooking and this is what I made tonight, with my favorite pie crust recipe. It made twelve big empanadas.<br />
<br />
<img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhYx4qeRkG08fGAac8M_HYePJH8H4f_Tp5vo_4bmZmJ0-6zKOoxSOCA-rZ2gYwTPUXxr7jdpzW79DV-m5dPFaXEhIQf3TatAXHlP5HxjhYfDr61uzhy2ytC5N1_TI5O75FZk-tQ/s1600/empanadas.jpg" style="max-width: 100%;" /><br />
<br />
Pre-heat to 400 degrees<br />
<br />
Pie crust dough<br />
<br />
1 stick (1/2 cup) salted butter<br />
2+ cups of flour<br />
1 egg yolk (save the white for glaze)<br />
1/2 ts salt<br />
2/3 c sour cream (I ran a little short of sour cream and substituted cream cheese)<br />
<br />
Mix it in the food processor into a ball and chill while you make the filling<br />
<br />
Filling<br />
<br />
2+ cups of chopped or shredded boiled chicken breast (I pulsed it in the food processor)<br />
2+ cups shredded cheddar cheese<br />
5 oz cream cheese<br />
2 T milk<br />
2 cups chopped scallions and parsley mixed (I pulsed them in the food processor with a few walnuts)<br />
3 cloves minced garlic<br />
salt and pepper<br />
<br />
if you wanted it spicy you'd add chopped green chiles but since I'm feeding kids I didn't<br />
<br />
I rolled out the dough in batches, VERY thin, and used a 6-1/2" bowl to cut circles. Moistened the edges with water, put in a blob of the thick filling, tried to close the edges very well, glazed with egg white, cooked for half an hour. melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-84890077907365243632019-11-28T07:53:00.001-05:002019-11-28T07:53:32.647-05:00Ozark puddingI saw this mentioned on twitter and tried it yesterday. It is not a beautiful dish but it's very tasty and best of all, it's incredibly easy and fast to make and you usually have a couple apples around the house. If you need a last-minute potluck dish, this could be it.<br />
<br />
Ozark pudding<br />
<br />
2 eggs<br />
3/4 cup sugar<br />
1/4 cup flour<br />
1-1/2 ts baking powder<br />
3/8 ts salt<br />
1-2 apples, diced (no need to peel them) (you could probably use any fruit)<br />
1 cup chopped nuts (walnuts or pecans) (optional to toast them first)<br />
1 ts vanilla or lemon juice<br />
<br />
Grease a 9" square baking tin. Preheat oven to 325 degrees.<br />
<br />
Beat the eggs and sugar together until foamy. Add everything else. Dump in the baking pan and cook 40-45 minutes.<br />
<br />
It's good with whipped cream.melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-2151832435679246202019-09-06T09:58:00.000-05:002019-09-06T09:58:05.862-05:00Caribbean bean and rice saladThis is one of the most precious things left behind by a boyfriend I lost long ago. A delicious recipe and you can make it the day before you want to serve it.<br />
<br />
1/2 cup olive oil<br />
1/4 cup apple cider vinegar<br />
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard<br />
1 teaspoon ground cumin<br />
1 teaspoon minced garlic<br />
<br />
2-1/2 cups cooked long-grain rice<br />
1 15-ounce can black beans, rinsed & drained<br />
3/4 cup chopped red bell pepper<br />
3/4 cup chopped yellow bell pepper<br />
3/4 cup chopped green onions<br />
<br />
whisk the dressing together, season with salt & pepper<br />
combine all ingredients, season with salt and pepper, cover and refrigeratemelinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-10443664020643333662019-07-02T16:57:00.002-05:002019-07-02T16:57:44.620-05:00Albanian spinach pie (Byrek me spinaq)<center>
I took a break from politics to make this. <br />
<br />
<img src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiZBsuqg44NDHb1WwMDJSIB9mALYnsz_2RYXJMiY1XvZI3JqwDCKspupTJki3PNqkRA_qKd8avRwLqe-wKiGs4C8PH_Ew0IbUxAAc0hXSojs_Zhfadhhe1795xumoaMpelryL4z/s1600/albanian-spinach-pie.jpg" style="max-width: 100%;" /></center>
<br />
Filling:<br />
2 teaspoons red pepper flakes<br />
1 medium finely chopped onion<br />
1 pound chopped feta cheese<br />
30 ounces frozen chopped spinach defrosted<br />
1 egg<br />
<br />
Dough:<br />
salt, 1 egg, 4 cups flour, about 1-1/2 cups water<br />
6 tablespoons butter (to spread between layers)<br />
<br />
Saute the onion (I added some of the spinach juice and sauteed it dry). Add the other ingredients.<br />
<br />
Mix salt, flour, egg, water, knead, roll into a roll, cut in half, then each half into five pieces. Roll each into a ball. Roll one ball to size of small plate, put it on a square of wax paper, brush it with butter. Repeat with the next four balls so you have a stack of 5 on your wax paper. Butter the top. Put in the refrigerator and do the other five. Chill for at least ten minutes.<br />
<br />
Preheat oven to 360 degrees. <br />
<br />
Take one of the dough stacks out of the fridge and roll it out thin, put it on your baking pan, I used a pizza pan about 15" in diameter. Spread the filling on it. Roll out the other dough stack, put it on top of the filling, crimp the edges. Press a 5" bowl with straight sides down in the center of the pie and cut around it. Cut a cross through the circle. Then use a pizza cutter to pre-cut serving size pieces radiating from the circular center. Glaze with an egg beaten with the remaining butter. Bake for at least 45 minutesmelinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-4337560944410337832018-07-29T09:08:00.003-05:002018-07-29T09:08:45.126-05:00Voting by mail (Absentee Ballot) in North Carolina for the Nov 6 2018 general electionI've spent most of this past year canvassing. I meet a lot of people who are going to have trouble getting to the polls in November: the NC GOP has reduced the number of early voting sites and throttled the weekend hours many working class people use to vote. It was intentional, of course.<br />
<br />
I also meet a lot of people who don't have cars, or who are ill, or who are the only caretaker for children or disabled family members or the elderly. If they can't get anybody to come spell them, they can't get to the polls.<br />
<br />
Middle class people have trouble understanding that this can be an actual problem. For instance, in all of Nash County (which is very big) there are only TWO early voting sites.<br />
<br />
So I've been telling people to vote by mail - in NC you don't need an excuse, anybody can get an absentee ballot. Another reason might be: if there is last-minute election hacking, your vote will already be safe.<br />
<br />
I made a not-very-good video about it:<br />
<br />
<center><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QftVWx7PO8o" target="_blank"><img src="http://nc-02.com/pics/NC-vote-by-mail-button.jpg" /></a><br />
<br />
Please note that the NC Board of Elections REALLY wants to refer you to downloading stuff yourself. But a lot of people don't have the internet. So if you call the number, be sure to get a real human being and you can ask that human being to mail you a form.</center><br />
I decided to request an absentee ballot for myself this year - for one thing, I want to see if it works, and for another, I'm probably going to be working for the election and not want to take the time to vote in those last important weeks.<br />
<br />
You request a NC absentee ballot here: <a href="https://www.ncsbe.gov/Portals/0/Forms">North Carolina Absentee Ballot Request Form</a><br />
And by the way, if you also need to register to vote you can send in both forms at the same time. Here's where to download a <a href="https://www.ncsbe.gov/Portals/0/FilesP/NCVRRegFormv102013eng.pdf">NC Voter Registration Form</a> to fill out.<br />
<br />
It's sometimes hard to find the mailing address for the local county Board of Elections offices. I put them all here: <a href="http://nc-02.com/get-registered-in-nc.html">http://nc-02.com/get-registered-in-nc.html</a>. I've just filled mine out and am sending it to the Orange County Board of Elections. Will keep you posted.<br />
<br />
PS: After you've sent in this request form, they'll process it and at some point before the election you will receive your ballot in the mail. You'll have to have two witnesses sign it. Here is a video from the NC BOE itself about successfully filling out and mailing your absentee ballot: <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Sz7huOCPa8Qjtb1BLjxkjwtnlSaeZzvO/view">Civilian Absentee Voting in NC</a> (turn down the terrible music).melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-36466491730385925692017-07-01T20:00:00.002-05:002017-07-01T20:00:22.595-05:00My two donkeys free to a good home. Hector and Jethro are calm, smart, and gentle. I've loved being a donkey owner but it's time to find them a new owner to enjoy them and feed them treats (they like banana peels, for instance). If you have a good place for them (gelded males) and can come get them, they are yours. Write me at jane@mappamundi.com<br />
<br />
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi3oSkGt3aTdR4f5D5vRM7X4NcHZQJVOvzm1jGxfDCmLiRPk5SEAIiL5OIqABe4I07kulLjSdIePm7NUgtRzDlBaAf5CbstFds9kGZNWaspC1SKFEtvZ6k6N09vs52synFGMleR/s1600/jethro-and-hector2.jpg"><img border="0" data-original-height="884" data-original-width="900" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi3oSkGt3aTdR4f5D5vRM7X4NcHZQJVOvzm1jGxfDCmLiRPk5SEAIiL5OIqABe4I07kulLjSdIePm7NUgtRzDlBaAf5CbstFds9kGZNWaspC1SKFEtvZ6k6N09vs52synFGMleR/s1600/jethro-and-hector2.jpg" style="max-width: 100%;" /></a><br />
<br />
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcG2nHgr85cY4B9yKqOtAhmAR_xAv2CjAuiNFzLR-NVT_L3bYHKFVNUhUaG7nXgjDAQGoWksD3-odV6D4JY7YsV8RSY5J3Ha2CmyIU87pY9H2GZeNI9XSN6_KnHMXMrWcQ0NNh/s1600/jethro-and-hector.jpg"><img border="0" data-original-height="768" data-original-width="1000" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcG2nHgr85cY4B9yKqOtAhmAR_xAv2CjAuiNFzLR-NVT_L3bYHKFVNUhUaG7nXgjDAQGoWksD3-odV6D4JY7YsV8RSY5J3Ha2CmyIU87pY9H2GZeNI9XSN6_KnHMXMrWcQ0NNh/s1600/jethro-and-hector.jpg" style="max-width: 100%;" /> /></a>melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-49904045488177360192017-05-27T10:27:00.004-05:002017-05-27T12:15:08.648-05:00Aunt Mary Taylor Mason of Germantown of Germantown, Pennsyvlania (1971-1957)<img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiq5HvneLRELefmXYl_IWwG341Yl4gwkHw8t5olqke1Qgd_jVKu9jhzpD73b9KWOAks3c-MOmY_L2F5Lw5VXwwwZOC68UmVA30gMCVtMAvF2gSSD5EewmS-rV1xkFtn68bppxeu/s320/mason-mary.jpg" style="float: right; margin-left: 15px; width: 256px;" />I was named after my grandmother's aunt Jane Mason, who lived her entire life with her sister in Germantown, Philadelphia. They were always cited thus: "Aunt Jane and Aunt Mary."<br />
<br />
It must have been a slow news week when Life Magazine decided to do a story on their 75th anniversary 'At Home' party at Cerne, the house which family legend has it was brought over from France on a boat and reassembled stone by stone on Schoolhouse Lane.<br />
<br />
Here's what Life Magazine wrote:<br />
<br />
<div class="frame">
<center>
Life Goes to a 75th Anniversary "At Home"<br />
THE MISSES MASON HAVE A FESTIVE DAY</center>
<br />
In 1878 Mary and Jane Mason moved into a new house which their father, a wealthy shoe-blacking manufacturer, had bought in Germantown outside Philadelphia. The Misses Mason have lived there ever since -- Jane is now 84 and Mary 82 - and this fall they decided to give a big "At Home" to celebrate three quarters of a century at Cerne.<br />
<br />
The years between have been busy for the sisters. Miss Mary was graduated from Bryn Mawr in 1892 and won a medical degree though she never practiced. Almost every other year the sisters traveled abroad and when she was over 50 Miss Mary climbed the Matterhorn. When someone asked if there would be personal friends or just family at the anniversary "At Home" Miss Mary said briskly, "All our personal friends are in the cemetery."</div>
<br />
Here's a picture from the story:<br />
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgcM9fnVFPvM4PCZcVhw6laleMiZ-x5eFnImUON0W0PAedu6Kx4IxGwg7d8hrKo0YKFOEVAHyZiPXShQ0ASHXu8LzqbhMqQ_va5dC64DvUNRlIQw1okFY6Ge3NhkH8e6icLrUJk/s1600/mason-mary-and-jane-life-magazine.jpg" imageanchor="1"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgcM9fnVFPvM4PCZcVhw6laleMiZ-x5eFnImUON0W0PAedu6Kx4IxGwg7d8hrKo0YKFOEVAHyZiPXShQ0ASHXu8LzqbhMqQ_va5dC64DvUNRlIQw1okFY6Ge3NhkH8e6icLrUJk/s1600/mason-mary-and-jane-life-magazine.jpg" style="max-width: 100%; width: 685px;" /></a><br />
<br />
All I know about them is that Aunt Jane was the sweet one and Aunt Mary was an old battleaxe, suspicious and frugal and unkind. Their father, Richard Servetus Mason, had inherited a flourishing business from his father James Servetus Mason, and had built it up. He had been a harsh man - the story is that he died of apoplexy when his servant laid out the wrong time for a board meeting. My great-grandfather Charles Thomas Mason fled to California and raised his family there, as far away as possible from his father and his two at least slightly nutty sisters.<br />
<br />
I wonder what kind of life "Miss Mary" had, with her medical degree she never used, spending virtually her every waking moment with her sister. Nothing is left of their house on 21 School House Lane in Germantown.<br />
<br />
<img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjo1mJ7Hf1SKQjYBfMcFq77QglbAuK-F1ckUnBx8Zy6CiMNF8cium0I91Va0V_yFPmUBAohOFC5Sv_2ieWvTP-9Tv_CNWMmqfZ9DtfIc6_sfSXngfD6ncTroip7HJbssEJiGmkh/s1600/cerne.jpg" style="max-width: 100%; width: 1080px;" />melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-9864808013955540402016-11-23T06:49:00.001-05:002016-12-04T12:04:33.997-05:00Recipe: cranberry muffinsI developed this recipe from a blueberry muffin recipe. I dealt with the problem that cranberries take so long to cook - and also, that they're a little gross when they pop in your mouth - by chopping them up.<br />
<br />
<div class="frame"><center><b>Cranberry muffins</b> (makes a dozen)</center><br />
<div style="margin-left: 25px;">1-1/2 cups cranberries chopped in a food processor or blender with 3 tablespoons of sugar. Don't pulverize them, just get them in littler pieces.<br />
2 cups flour<br />
1 teaspoon baking soda<br />
1/2 teaspoon baking powder<br />
1/2 teaspoon salt<br />
1 egg<br />
1 cup milk<br />
6 tablespoons oil or unsalted melted butter<br />
3 more tablespoons of sugar</div><br />
Stir dry ingredients and the chopped cranberries together. In another bowl beat the egg, add the milk and butter. Stir all together and drop into the muffin tins. Cook at 425 degrees about 12 minutes.</div><br />
melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10180980.post-88205177457671835912016-11-13T11:04:00.003-05:002016-11-13T11:04:44.202-05:00A nerdy problem (only Yiddish enthusiasts should take note)I have a lot of paperback books for sale at Amazon's Createspace, and in general it's a great resource for authors and readers alike.<br />
<br />
But what a problem I have with my Yiddish titles! They don't allow Hebrew characters in the titles or descriptions (if I try, it comes out gobbledygook)<br />
<br />
That makes the books hard for people to search for.<br />
<br />
For instance, take one of my favorite Yiddish books, by Mendele Moykher Sforim (whose name is spelled at wikipedia Mendele Mocher Sforim and as brittania.com says:<br />
<blockquote>
Mendele Moykher Sforim, Moykher also spelled Mokher or Mocher, Sforim also spelled Seforim or Sefarim, pseudonym of Sholem Yankev Abramovitsh </blockquote>
<br />
So when you can't even figure out how to spell the author's name, that's a problem.<br />
<br />
The name of this beloved book, which I put out as a paperback with larger print than you can otherwise get it, is in Yiddish (or rather, Hebrew)<br />
<br />
<center>
<span style="font-size: 200%; font-weight: bold;">מסועת בנימין השלישי</span></center>
<br />
It means <i>The Travels of Benjamin III</i> but it's often translated <i>The Brief Travels of Benjamin the Third</i><br />
<br />
And that is variously transliterated as Masoes Binyamin Hashlishi or Masoes Benyomen Hashlishi or even Masoes Benyumen Hashlishi<br />
<br />
If you don't guess right, you don't find the book.<br />
<br />
Anyway, since blogger at least will allow me to use Hebrew letters, I'm leaving this post here to help people who're looking for a new, well-bound copy of this book. You can get it by clicking here:<br />
<br />
<center>
<a href="https://www.createspace.com/4902170" target="_blank"><b>$8.00</b><br />
<img border="0" height="154" src="https://www.createspace.com/Img/T490/T21/T70/BookCoverImage.jpg?random=0.9977607533864401" /><br />
Masoes Benyomen Hashlishi by Mendele Mocher Sforim</a></center>
melinamahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01628499858283988824noreply@blogger.com0