#1
|
|||
|
|||
Sing along songs for and elderly audience - suggestions?
Sing along songs for an elderly audience - suggestions?
My family and I have been asked to do a musical performance at an apartment complex owned and run by our church. These are sort of retirement/assisted living apartments, and so most of the audience will be quite old. I'm primarily a fingerstyle guitar player and banjo player, and I could easily fill an hour with original fingerstyle guitar stuff (on my classical and on my Goodall), along with some more familiar pieces like Classical Gas, I Can't Help Falling in Love with You, Shenandoah, etc (and on banjo, the Beverly Hillbillies theme, and a few other more traditional pieces). I could also add in a flatpicking arrangement or two ...e.g. Whiskey Before Breakfast. An hour of just guitar (and banjo) will probably not be as interesting to the audience as it would be to me though, so at least half of the time will include my wife and daughter. They'll play a few flute duets, and we'll all play some stuff together (guitar + two flutes, or guitar + flute + violin) ...traditional walzes (e.g. Star of the County Down, some traditional Finnish walzes, etc) and some Irish fiddle tune type stuff. But I suspect what this audience would enjoy more than anything might be some sing along stuff. When the middle school and high school kids in the church put together an event for for the folks in these apartments a while back there was some fantastic classical violin playing that got only modest applause, but then my daughter played Danny Boy on trumpet - a much simpler piece - and the audience started singing along, and she got a standing ovation. SO, do any of you have any suggestions for good sing-along music that might be fun for an elderly audience like this (and that would not be too hard for me/us to learn some simple accompaniment for quickly)? Last edited by wcap; 03-11-2010 at 11:02 AM. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
And....
Do you have any suggestions for choice of keys for sing-along music? I guess this would depend in part on the song. I'm sort of clueless about this sort of thing, though my wife would probably have some good insights. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Choices
Today Randy Sparks/John Denver
You Are My Sunshine traditional Sunshine On My Shoulders John Denver I Can't Help Falling In Love With You Elvis Greensleeves traditional Take Me Home, Country Roads John Denver Leaving On A Jet Plane John Denver/PP&M On The Road Again Willie Nelson Dueling Banjos Eric Weissberg Song Sung Blue Neil Diamond Time In A Bottle Jim Croce Amazing Grace gospel America The Beautiful traditional |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
The above recommendations are all good. Since it's church-owned, you could throw in some more gospel songs:
I'll Fly Away The Old Rugged Cross Just a Closer Walk With Thee etc. |
#5
|
||||
|
||||
Go back further!
Try some Stephen Foster tunes. Easy chord patterns and good sing-a-long classics (without needing lyrics sheets). http://www.pitt.edu/~amerimus/songs.htm |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Great suggestions so far. I think the Stephen Foster suggestion is particularly good - really familiar songs and lots of people (especially older people) know the words.
For this event, I just wish I was more of this sort of musician. I don't have a lot of experience performing in front of others in general, and this guitar+singing thing is not my thing. But, I think this is a very appreciative and forgiving audience. I think, one way or another, we'll brighten their day a bit. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Check out songs from the 1920s, 30s, and 40s. Maybe 50s. This was a golden age of song; you will find hundreds of great songs.
A few ideas: I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles Love Letters in the Sand April Showers Blue Skies Side by Side You Are My Sunshine Oh, What a Beautiful Morning Moon River As for the key, just remember that older people lose their singing range, especially the upper notes. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
-This Land is Your Land
-WildFire -Big Rock Candy Mountain (my grandmother used to play guitar and sing this to me) Last edited by Guitardedboy; 03-11-2010 at 11:37 AM. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
I played at a HS reunion once, and the honor classes were from the '50s and the '20s. We played True Love Ways by Buddy Holly, a medley of You Send Me and Bring It On Home To Me by Sam Cooke (Rod Stewart did the same combination on one of his albums), and for the older folks, Moonlight and Roses.
|
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
|
#11
|
|||
|
|||
Remember that "quite old" is also quite relative.
I was just thinking about my generation. We're in our 60's now (quite old to our children), and when we get in that situation, we'd probably best respond to songs from the late 50's up into the 70's. As a guess then, those in their 70's -- late 40's to 60's 80's -- late 30's to 50's etc. There are always some people who would also respond to much older songs, but I'm not sure most people would. Not a hard and fast rule, but something to think about.
__________________
Robert Taylor Taylor DN3 (6 string Dreadnought) Taylor 356e (12 string Grand Symphony) Taylor 326ce (8 string Baritone Grand Symphony) Gold Star GF-85 (banjo) McSpadden 4FHCC-S (Mountain Dulcimer) Kamaka HF-1 (Centennial Edition Ukulele) Sometimes I sits and thinks, but mostly I just sits. |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
Que Sera Sera is an absolute winner.
Other suggestions: Let the Rest of the World Go By One Day At a Time Make the World Go Away Back Home Again Tennessee Waltz Amazing Grace Edelweiss Too Ra Loo Ra Loo Ra When Irish Eyes Are Smiling |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
Sligthtly off topic, I have a recording of Harry Nilsson singing at a retirement home in England and the song they are all singing along with has the line "I'd rather be dead than wet my bed". Kind of amusing but not something to do unless it was worked out with the audience ahead of time.
|
#14
|
|||
|
|||
I worked at a nursing home for over a year and played my guitar for them a few times. We also had some outside entertainment come in once in a while, and the songs they could sing along to always went over well. They played a lot of examples on this list. Good luck!
|
#15
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
Oh! Boys Carry Me 'Long (1851) words and music by Foster Oh! Lemuel! (1850) words and music by Foster Oh! Susanna (1848) words and music by Foster Oh! Tell Me of My Mother (1861) words and music by Foster Oh! There's No Such Girl as Mine (1863) words: Samuel Lover; music: Foster Oh! 'tis Glorious (1863) words: Edward Nevin; music: Foster Oh! Why Am I so Happy? (1863) words: Francis D. Murtha; music: Foster |