How to Play Songs on the Recorder

How to Play Songs on the Recorder

Recorder Songs - Reading Music

Recorder Songs - Reading Music

Recorder Songs - D Major Scale and Triad

Recorder Songs - D Major Scale and Triad

Recorder Songs - Learn Tue Tue

Recorder Songs - Learn Tue Tue

Recorder Songs - Learn Joe Magarac

Recorder Songs - Learn Joe Magarac

How to Play the Recorder

How to Play the Recorder

How to Play Songs on the Recorder

How to Play Songs on the Recorder

How to Play Songs on the Recorder

How to Play Songs on the Recorder

Recorder Songs - Reading Music

Recorder Songs - Reading Music

Recorder Songs - D Major Scale and Triad

Recorder Songs - D Major Scale and Triad

Recorder Songs - Learn Tue Tue

Recorder Songs - Learn Tue Tue

Recorder Songs - Learn Joe Magarac

Recorder Songs - Learn Joe Magarac

How to Play the Recorder

How to Play the Recorder

Playing the Recorder - Choosing an Instrument

Playing the Recorder - Choosing an Instrument

Playing the Recorder - The Foundation - Breathing, Support, and Posture

Playing the Recorder - The Foundation - Breathing, Support, and Posture

Playing the Recorder - Tone Production

Playing the Recorder - Tone Production

Playing the Recorder - Articulation

Playing the Recorder - Articulation

How to Play the Harmonica

How to Play the Harmonica

How to Play the Recorder

How to Play the Recorder

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Vicki Boeckman is an active and passionate performer of all styles of music and plays all sizes of recorders. Her travels and performances have taken her across the United States as well as Denmark, Norway, Sweden, England, Scotland and Germany. Her various recordings can be heard on the Kontra Punkt, Classico, Da Capo, Horizon, Musical Heritage America, Paula, Kadanza, and Primavera labels. 

 In great demand as a teacher of the recorder and related performance practices, Vicki coaches and teaches at workshops and seminars all over the United States and in British Columbia. She was chosen to be the recorder in-resident at the Sitka Center for Art and Ecology in 2005 and 2010.  She is current Artistic Director for the Port Townsend Early Music Workshop and is the Music Director for the Portland Recorder Society.  Vicki has been on the faculty of the Music Center of the Northwest in Seattle since 2005, and with colleague, Darlene Franz, is the resident recorder teacher for the 3<sup>rd</sup> grade recorder program at West Woodland Elementary.  She is also on the faculty for the newly launched early music program at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle.

Since settling in Seattle in 2004, Vicki has been a featured soloist with the Seattle Baroque Orchestra, the Portland Baroque Orchestra, Portland Opera, Philharmonia Northwest Orchestra and the Skagit Symphony. She is a returning guest with the Medieval Women’s Choir led by Margriet Tindemans and the Gallery Concerts Series. Her Seattle-based chamber trio, Ensemble Electra, with violinist Tekla Cunningham and harpsichordist Jillon Stoppels Dupree, specialize in music of the 17th and 18th centuries as well as newly-composed works. Her duo with recorder maker David Ohannesian is a popular addition to the Early Music Guild’s School Programs, and is often asked to return to the same schools year after year.

Vicki resided in Denmark from 1981-2004.  She taught at the Royal Danish Academy of Music in Copenhagen for 12 years, and at the Ishøj Municipal School of Music for 23 years. She co-founded a regional recorder orchestra for children and teenagers which continues to flourish and grow. She was also co-founder of two Danish-based ensembles, Opus 4, and Wood’N’Flutes, with whom she continues to perform as often as possible in spite of the geography.

For more on Vicki, visit her website www.vickiboeckman.com

 

 

 

Recorder Songs - Learn Tue Tue

Professional recorder player and teacher Vicki Boeckman helps you learn to play 'Tue Tue' on the recorder using five notes D E F# A B.

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Transcripts

[Music playing]Vicki Boeckman: Hi I am Vicki Boeckman with the American Recorder Society. In this series, I am helping you learn how to play simple songs on the recorder. So today, we are going to learn Tue, Tue and we will continue with the same notes that you have learned so far. So the D, F sharp and A that tri-ad, we will use that. In this song, when you learn this, you can be in the world's largest concert. This is a really happy song, it's a Ghana, a Ghanese folk song and it incorporates just a lot of joy and a syncopated figure. So syncopation is when we have a short-long-short kind of a rhythm. So, it's going to sound like this. [Music Playing] And I say Tue-Tue, Tue-Tue, Tue-Tue, Tue-Tue, Tue-Tue-Tue, Tue-Tue-Tue, Tue-Tue, Tue-Tue. [Music Playing] So the first two lines are exactly the same, just repeat it. So once you have done that once, all you have to do is repeat it. Let's do that again. [Music Playing] And then the next little bit has this triad where we are leaping.

[Music Playing]And then you have to rest and wait, and then the whole thing repeats again. So let me play the whole song for you.

[Music Playing] And then wait, wait, wait, wait. [Music Playing] And now you have learned Tue, Tue and you can be in the world's largest concert.

How to Play the Recorder

How to Play the Recorder

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Playing the Recorder - Choosing an Instrument

Playing the Recorder - The Foundation - Breathing, Support, and Posture

Playing the Recorder - The Foundation - Breathing, Support, and Posture

Playing the Recorder - Tone Production

Playing the Recorder - Tone Production

Playing the Recorder - Articulation

Playing the Recorder - Articulation

Home Theater Installation - The DVD Player

Home Theater Installation - The DVD Player

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Advanced World of Warcraft-Player vs Player Content

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Advanced Bass Playing

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How to Play Whole, Half and Quarter Notes on the Bass

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Major Scale Fingerings for the Bass