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"They were all terrible sight readers in (Duke Ellington's) band.
Ellington's sidemen didn't learn Ellington's music by reading it.
They got it by playing every night." Billy May, jazz arranger Q:
"How did you learn to play the saxophone?" Lester Young: "Just
picked up the m-----f---er and started playing it " "A lot of the
boys didn't read music, but they had a good mind-- we called it a
good ear. All we wanted to know was how did it sound... wasn't
nothing written down." Louis Armstrong Many of the greatest
musicians of the last hundred years learned music "outside of the
academy: " with little or no formal training, musicians like John
Lennon, Merle Haggard, Burt Bacharach, Paul Simon, and others
became greater than many musicians who took lessons their whole
lives. How did these and other non-traditionally trained musicians
learn music? Are there common ways that non-traditionally-trained
musicians follow to become proficient as players, singers and
composers in spite of their lack of formal training? And can those
ways be formalized into a musical pedagogy that could, in fact, be
a more effective method of mentoring musicians than the traditional
"academic" approach of lessons, theory and study? In A Musical Way,
Max Harrick Shenk explores the ways that we learn music in spite of
formal training, reflecting on his own experiences as a listener,
songwriter and musician, and drawing on the experiences of
musicians who not only learned music without lessons or schooling,
but often didn't even realize that they were learning. Shenk takes
those experiences and proposes a "musical way" that a teacher could
use to help a musically-interested student express his or her
musical ideas, without getting hung up or stuck on technique,
theory or an uninteresting, uninspiring repertoire. "I realized I
was free to play music any way I wanted to," he writes about one of
the many breakthrough moments in his own informal musical
education. Fostering and encouraging that freedom in students is
Shenk's "musical way." Interwoven with quotes, anecdotes and even
excerpts from Shenk's own fiction, A Musical Way will help
listeners, players and teachers understand the ways that we learn
music, and inspire and encourage them to not only teach others, but
to make music of their own.
15 year old softball pitcher (and Beach Boys fan) Margo LeDoux has
a crush on Beach Boys drummer Dennis Wilson, and wants to meet him.
Her boyfriend Scott doesn't like the idea, but Margo sends Denny a
letter anyway, and when she finally gets an autographed record back
from her heartthrob ("He wrote 'Love Dennis Wilson' on the label.
LOVE ") she also finally gets up the nerve to break up with Scott,
who, it appears, is getting a little too close with his neighbor
and best friend, Annie. Meanwhile, Margo's friend (and our
narrator) Brian Pressley and his grlfriend, Christy Kelly, are
trying to arrange a "meeting" of their own. They're taking steps
toward going all the way, steps that get interrupted when Christy
takes off on an unplanned trip to DC with her big sister Kathy. The
girls get grounded with the prom coming up, but Kathy's got bigger
problems: she's apparently pregnant. This doesn't stop Christy from
asking Brian if they can set a date to go all the way: June 18th,
her birthday. Margo's catcher, Tara, and Brian's buddy Marty are
also neighbors and friends, both of whom have always had crushes on
Margo. When Margo invites her archrival pitcher Tammy to a softball
team cookout, Tara spends the evening sitting by the fire talking
to her. "It's a good thing they didn't meet before the playoffs,"
Margo says. "Tara might've thrown the game." Now it's prom weekend.
Who's meeting whom? Where? When? How? And why? The answers are in
BOOK SEVEN of MEETING DENNIS WILSON. Book Seven is the final
installment in this series.
In the first three books of Meeting Dennis Wilson, we meet the
characters: 16-year-old Margo LeDoux, who has a crush on Beach Boys
drummer Dennis Wilson, and who decides that she's going to try to
meet him... the narrator, Brian Pressley, Margo's best friend, and
his girlfriend, Christy Kelly, who decide they don't want to go ALL
the way, but just "some of the way..". Margo's boyfriend Scott, who
declares that Margo "better not send" a letter to Dennis Wilson "or
else." ("Or else what, Scott? What?")... Margo's catcher Tara
Longbaugh, who might have a connection that can get Margo closer to
Denny... Marty Morone, Brian's best guy friend, who has a Margo
crush and a Beatles obsession... and Christy's big sister Kathy,
whose romance with Marty's brother Davy has cooled considerably. So
what happens when Christy and Kathy get back from their trip to
Washington? Was Christy really mad at Brian, or was it all in his
imagination? What does Scott's best friend Annie think of the way
he's treating Margo... and what does she think of Brian? Who
finally confesses their longtime crush to Margo? What does Margo
say in response? And how could her reaction not only hurt her
chances at a softball championship, but at her chances of Meeting
Dennis Wilson? The answers (and more questions, of course ) are
between the covers of BOOK FOUR...
In book one of Meeting Dennis Wilson, we met the three main
characters: 16-year-old Margo LeDoux, who has a crush on Beach Boys
drummer Dennis Wilson, and who decides that she's going to try to
meet him... the narrator, Brian Pressley, Margo's best friend, and
his girlfriend, Christy Kelly, who decide they don't want to go ALL
the way, but just "some of the way..". and Margo's boyfriend Scott,
who declares that Margo "better not send" a letter to Dennis Wilson
"or else." ("Or else what, Scott? What?") In book two, the plot
thickens as we meet Margo's softball catcher Tara Longbaugh, whose
nickname around school is "Tara Fawcett-Majors," and who hangs
around Margo like a puppy dog... Brian's best friend Marty Morone,
a shy kid who's obsessed with the Beatles and has a crush on
Margo... and Kathy Kelly, Christy's 18-year-old sister, who's got a
bad case of senioritis and a boyfriend whom she can't decide
whether to take to the prom or never ever see again. As Margo asked
in book one, "Brian, how do we put UP with all these people?" Find
out in Book Two of MEETING DENNIS WILSON.
15-year-old Margo LeDoux has a crush on Beach Boys drummer Dennis
Wilson, but her boyfriend Scott doesn't want her to meet him...
meanwhile, Margo's catcher (Tara Longbaugh) has a crush of her own:
on the (very) uninterested Margo Then there's our narrator (Brian
Pressley) and his girlfriend Christy Kelly: they're "taking steps"
toward going all the way, steps that get nterrupted when Christy
and her big sister Kathy make a trip to DC to see their dad, U.S.
Senator Tom Kelly... which gets the girls grounded with the prom
coming up. Christy tries to sweettalk her mom into letting her go
anyway, but when she loses her bra in a rainy makeout session with
Brian, she just gets FURTHER grounded Meanwhile, Margo gets a
letter and a record in the mail from Dennis Wilson ("He wrote 'Love
Dennis Wilson' on the label. LOVE, Bri LOVE ") and not only beats
her archrival Tammy Montgomery in the District softball tourney,
but introduces Tammy to Brian and invites her to a team cookout
after the game "His girlfriend's GROUNDED, Tammy " Margo calls
after her. "Why'd you tell her that?" Brian asks. "Ahhhh, she won't
come," Margo says. Does Tammy come to the cookout? Who goes home
with whom when the coals cool? And who comes late to the party with
not one, but two pieces of bad news? The answers are in BOOK SIX of
MEETING DENNIS WILSON.
15-year-old Margo LeDoux has a crush on Beach Boys drummer Dennis
Wilson, and her boyfriend Scott doesn't want her to meet him. Margo
says (and Scott's friend Annie agrees) that Scott is "throwing a
fit," but the upshot is, they're not together... meanwhile, Margo's
softball catcher, Tara Longbaugh, has a connection that might help
a meeting take place-- Tara's mom knows Dennis' brother Carl-- but
now it turns out that Tara has a crush of her own: on the (very)
uninterested Margo "When I say 'I love you, '" Margo tells Tara, "I
don't mean I'm into THAT." Margo insists she didn't mean to hurt
Tara, but when she reaches out to Tara, Tara tells Margo to "leave
me alone " Will Tara's distance hurt Margo's chances at meeting her
dream Beach Boy? Worse, with Tara behind the plate catching for
Margo, what will happen when Quaker Valley enters the District
softball tournament? Meanwhile, Margo's best girlfriend Christy and
her boyfriend Brian (our narrator) are "taking steps" toward going
all the way, steps that get interrupted when Christy and her big
sister Kathy make an unplanned weekend trip to Washington DC to see
their dad, U.S. Senator Tom Kelly... a trip that makes them miss
two school days AND gets them both in hot water. "Mom just sees me
as the accomplice," Christy says. "Kath is in REAL trouble." Still,
Christy's grounded with the prom approaching, and so she and Brian
need to sneak steps when they can... including some rainy
after-school steps that end up getting Christy in even bigger
trouble than before Unrequited love... friends who want more than
friendship... groundings and detention... a makeout session in a
dark auditorium and an unintentionally see-through t-shirt... and a
package in the mail, postmarked CALIFORNIA. All of that and more is
in Book Five of MEETING DENNIS WILSON
In books one and two of Meeting Dennis Wilson, we met the
characters: 16-year-old Margo LeDoux, who has a crush on Beach Boys
drummer Dennis Wilson, and who decides that she's going to try to
meet him... the narrator, Brian Pressley, Margo's best friend, and
his girlfriend, Christy Kelly, who decide they don't want to go ALL
the way, but just "some of the way..". Margo's boyfriend Scott, who
declares that Margo "better not send" a letter to Dennis Wilson "or
else." ("Or else what, Scott? What?")... Margo's catcher Tara
Longbaugh, who might have a connection that can get Margo closer to
Denny... Marty Morone, Brian's best guy friend, who has a Margo
crush and a Beatles obsession... and Christy's big sister Kathy,
whose romance with Marty's brother Davy has cooled considerably.
Book three raises a lot of questions: why do Christy and Kathy
decide to run off to Washington DC for a weekend? How did Jeff
"P.A." Shannon, "the most annoying guy in school," find out
Christy's bra size? Why does Brian think the best reaction to this
is to hide in the drum room reading PLAYBOY? And speaking of
hiding, who's avoiding who: Margo or Scott? Some of the
answers--but mostly questions-- are in MEETING DENNIS WILSON BOOK
THREE. This is the third of seven installments of MEETING DENNIS
WILSON. Books 4-7 will be published through the summer and fall of
2013, with a hardcover edition gathering all seven books at year's
end.
MEETING DENNIS WILSON follows the exploits of sixteen-year-old
Margo LeDoux, who has a crush on the Beach Boys' drummer and
decides she's going to meet him... if only sigh it was that easy
Her best friend Brian and best girlfriend Christy both support her,
but they've got problems and wishes of their own... meanwhile, her
boyfriend Scott is against it ("I'm not having you running off and
being some groupie "). What's a girl with a crush (or obsession) to
do? Find out in MEETING DENNIS WILSON This is book one of a
serialized novel. Seven books will be published during 2013 in both
softcover and Kindle editions, with all seven books to be collected
in a limited edition hardcover eventually.
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