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SOAR
offers Americana course
Sisters
children got a taste of American roots music over the past two weeks through
a SOAR (Sisters Organization for Activities and Recreation) music program
led by Brad Tisdel.
According to Tisdel, the two-week
SOAR music program is part of an effort to expand the wildly successful
Sisters Folk Festival Americana Project into the middle school and eventually
into the elementary school.
The Americana Project has
given numerous Sisters High School students the opportunity to learn and
polish guitar-playing and songwriting skills, record CDs and discover
the historical roots of American music.
Tisdel said the SOAR program
would help put the program in front of younger students. SOAR provided
some funding for the summer program, with an eye toward creating a Sisters
Middle School Americana Project soon.
"I'm hoping to get guitars
into the hands of the kids in the program and maybe do some student-to-student
mentoring," Tisdel said.
Tisdel said his main goal
is "just to get them excited" about playing and creating their own music.
The dozen students in the
program -- ranging in age from about 11 to 14 years -- learned basics
such as how to tune a guitar, a little bit of chord theory and got a little
exposure to old-time blues, folk and other forms of American music.
The students also did some
writing. One is working on a slice-of-life tune called "I Fell and Scraped
My Knee."
Then Tisdel got the group
working on chord changes and strums, making their own music. |
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