Here is my first in a series of Christmas songs! Have to do them now because nobody likes Christmas songs after Christmas, go figure.
I found the sheet music on
8notes and sang all five versus. If you want to hear words muddying up my beautiful voice, you can sing them yourself ;)
It's difficult to sing off of Western sheetmusic. The notes are written differently and everything is upside down. My higher notes are towards the bottom, but the sheet music has them towards the top.
I also got bored of singing the same song, over and over, so I started messing around with it ;) Here's the music and lyrics if you want to play or sing along :)
We Three Kings from 8notes.com
There is apparently a piece of music hidden in
Leonardo da Vinci's The Last Supper. There's apparently some disagreement as to if Leonardo did it intentionally or not. All I know is there is something playable in the painting and Leonardo probably won't get around to telling us the answer any time soon.
Supposedly, the hands and loaves of bread correspond to notes, and you should read the music from right to left (the same way Leonardo wrote). There's
news articles and
Wikipedia which can tell you all about it.
Music in Da Vinci's Last Supper
The music is supposed to be in the same style as what was common in the time that the painting was made. It sounds a little bit gothicy (time period, not the people who wear black and pretend they can't feel anything) or chanty. I decided to take a shot at the song. After all, how many people can say they've played Da Vinci's music? I didn't do a performance quality piece, then again, I just wanted to play it.
RubyStarfire got me a new toy! He got me a
Samson Go Mic to use when recording songs. Before, all I had was the crappy little mic on the front of the computer; now I have something to make higher quality recordings, and it's portable! Here's a video I made while experimenting with the new mic *ignore the man touching me, I'm the one who's important here ;)*.
I did a little tuning exercise to make sure my voice was in good shape followed by some random playing and fingering exercises. The mic was inside to catch the full range of my singing, but I think it caught too much of my range. I will continue to experiment with different positions and see how well they work.
The mic was real easy to setup, I just plugged it into the computer and voila! There was one slight hiccup, the computer decided it was a sound out device as well as sound in, so it tried to use the mic as a speaker. It also comes with music editing software that can record audio and add audio to video, but unfortunately it doesn't capture video as well :(
Recording the video was a lot of fun. It's been awhile since I've been done a recording and I hope to do many more in the upcoming months. Follow my progress with new music here!
RubyStarfire and I have been singing together for many years now and we can't bear to be far from each other for long. People call him a musician when they see us together, though he doesn't call himself one (he doesn't write music).
Several people we've met recently are learning how to sing or are shy to sing in public. Ruby and I tell them to record their singing so their friends and family can share their enjoyment of the music and they also so they have a record of their own progress. I know without being able to look back at early songs, I wouldn't have any confidence in myself.
Here's a song that Ruby and I recorded a long time ago for just this reason.
Actually, it's the very first song we ever sang together! It's titled "A Song for School"
Listening to this song brings back fond memories. Ruby was still very hesitant in his caresses and he was just starting to learn how to listen with his soul. (He also looks so young!) Even if he doesn't call himself a musician, I certainly do. When we're both in good shape we're able to sing the song that's there instead of the song on the paper, and only a musician is able to do that with his/her partner.
It took several takes to get a video good enough to keep, but that's one of the benefits of recording in private. One of the most difficult songs we learned took fourteen takes to get one that was good enough to keep, perhaps I'll share it with you one day.