Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Frosty the Snowman Ukulele - 21 Songs in 6 Days: Learn Ukulele the Easy Way

http://ukulele.io/Buy21Songs Learn to play ukulele the easy way with "21 Songs in 6 Days". And visit our website for more great ukulele lessons and tabs http://ukulele.io/frandee-stuff-offer


https://youtu.be/hXBI98hErf0 - Frosty the Snowman Ukulele - 21 Songs in 6 Days: Learn Ukulele the Easy Way

Like Christmas music? Check out our new book "21 Easy Ukulele Songs for Christmas" at ukulele.io/xmasnow

"Frosty the Snowman" (or "Frosty the Snow Man") is a popular song written byWalter "Jack" Rollins and Steve Nelson, and first recorded by Gene Autry and the Cass County Boys in 1950. It was written after the success of Autry's recording of "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" the previous year; Rollins and Nelson shipped the new song to Autry, who recorded "Frosty" in search of another seasonal hit. Like "Rudolph", "Frosty" was subsequently adapted to other media including a popular television special Frosty the Snowman.

The song tells the story of a snowman that is magically brought to life through a silk hat that a group of children find and place on his head. Although Frosty enjoys roaming throughout town with the children who constructed him, he gets on the bad side of a traffic cop and has to leave town. He promises to return someday.  

Although it is generally regarded as a Christmas song, the lyrics make no mention of the holiday. The song supposedly takes place inWhite Plains, New York, or Armonk, New York; Armonk has a parade dedicated to Frosty annually. . In 1954, the United Productions of America studio brought "Frosty" to life in a three-minute animated short which appears regularly on WGN-TV. This production included a bouncy, jazzy a cappella version of the song. The short, filmed entirely in black-and-white, has been a perennial WGN-TV Christmas classic, and was broadcast on December 24 and 25, 1955, and every year since, as part of a WGN-TV children's programming retrospective, along with their two other short Christmas classics, "Suzy Snowflake" and "Hardrock, Coco and Joe." The short had previously been telecast annually on WGN's The Bozo Show, along with its two other companion cartoons. The three cartoons are also a tradition on WJAC-TV in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, which not only broadcasts the cartoons on their station, but also makes them available on their website.


To learn lots more ukulele chords, try our playlist https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL5meDCz5zO-B8UjXstv_2WurNRGJyyWz8. 

To spice up your strumming, try our playlist https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL5meDCz5zO-DD1mcV8_t_tuga9MzOJA46

Want to learn to play the theme music from our intro? Check out https://youtu.be/YznUjC8pnUQ. 

Written in Boston in 1857, this song is not only an American Christmas carol, but a distinctly New England one. Listening to the melody, you can almost hear the clop-clop of the horses' hooves and the ringing of sleigh bells. The composer, James S. Pierpont, wrote Jingle Bells for a Sunday school program, but the song's theme is secular, and in fact it's probably the first secular Christmas song composed in the U.S. Because sheet music versions often reference J. Pierpont as the author, the eighteenth-century Connecticut composer John Pierpont sometimes mistakenly gets credit for writing it.  Even though doesn't contain a single reference to Christmas, "Jingle Bells" is probably the world's most popular Christmas song.

Since you probably know the melody very well, this is a great song to try learning to fingerpick the melody. Playing the chorus (“Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle all the way”) is pretty easy because it stays in the first position.) Playing the verse (“Dashing through the snow) is a lot harder because of the necessary position shifts. Use the dots on the side of your ukulele’s fretboard to help you gauge the distances. Or only fingerpick the chorus and sing the verses. 



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