Archive for 2010

Free Avalanche City

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While we await the beautiful sounds of Christmas (see last week's post), and stage our plans of attack on the local mall, here's a free album download to get you in the summer spirit. Yep, it's a whole album, it's full of toe-tapping singalongs, it's free for all to keep. And who knows, your love for Avalanche City's debut album will hopefully inspire you to donate some cash so they can make more. Definitely check this out. 

Avalanche City : Our New Life Above the Ground

A Merry Little Monster Christmas

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Mr Dave Parker, music producer/engineer extraordinaire, has been working away in his home-based studio on a beautiful Oratia farm for quite a while now. The man behind such increasingly admired recordings of Artisan GunsBear Cat and Great North, has recently been assembling some local favourites for a Christmas album.
 
Auckland Central Library was lucky enough to host a number of the album’s contributors back in NZ Music Month, who have all since released their own EPs and albums to generate some of 2010’s best New Zealand music.
 
Dear Time’s WasteTono (of the Finance Company) and Great North, whose recent releases have all won the admiration of the country’s major critics, appear on the Very Little Christmas compilation. The album includes an impressive line-up of the city’s finest alternative/folk/rock/miscellaneous artists, who are inspired by Christmas time, Christmas Songs, and Christmas Pudding.
 
The best part is the album will be available for free download! You can send the link to your loved ones as a priceless Christmas present! So thank you Mr Parker for getting this amazing project together, and to all the artists for contributing! It’s going to be a sweet sweet Christmas.

Keep your eyes on Little Monster Studio and A Very Little Christmas

 ~ Matthew

30 years of The Chills

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So legendary Dunedin band The Chills have announced a one-off Dunedin show in celebration of their 30th anniversary.  In tribute, please enjoy The House of Love's cover of The Chills' classic, Pink Frost below.

 ~Jerome

Laneways Here We Come

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The 2011 Laneways Festival line-up was just announced.  Being held on Auckland Anniversary Day (31 January 2011) at the re-christened Aotea Square, this year's announced line-up are: Yeasayer - Foals -Ladyhawke - !!! (CHK CHK CHK) - Deerhunter - Blonde Redhead -Children's Hour - Warpaint - Beach House - Ariel Pink's Haunted GraffitiLawrence Arabia - Holy F*** - An Emerald City.
Acts I'm looking forward to seeing:
This an indie heavyweight line-up for sure, but it does omit lots of great artists that are on the Australian leg of the tour.  Why couldn't Auckland get the insanely amazing Les Savy Fav,  Los Angeles upstarts Local Natives, skewed popsters Menomena, and the cutesy duo of Jenny and Johnny?  Yes, I'll end up going and will probably enjoy myself in the sun(fingers crossed) and sonics of Aotea Square. Although one has to ask, when does Auckland begin to not get the short end of the stick when it comes to Laneways?  Just saying.
 ~Jerome

Making Music in Auckland

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With the vast amount of technically brilliant studio albums released today, the result has been the great improvement and ease of home recording. What used to involve a bedroom full of heavy and expensive analogue equipment is now refined into a laptop with Garageband or Protools. It has become so readily available, anyone with a microphone and a bit of computer know-how can record.
 
All you need next are some songs.
 
And plenty of fellow Aucklanders have swooped on these new opportunities to produce their own music. To encourage this creativity, Auckland City Libraries started the Made In Auckland CD collection, for unsigned artists who do not have the funding to professionally record and distribute their works.
 
The cool thing about Made in Auckland is the CDs are free rentals! They’re also an ideal way to share and archive artists’ work, as we all know by now: itunes hardly caters for tangible album artwork, or familiar names in the credits and thanks notes. So if you have an EP or album that you would like to see stored in hard copy on a shelf, send it in to the Music department.
 
Our latest donations to the collection include quality sounds from The Roulettes, Toi Ora Live Art, and Anna Kaye. Check out the collectionhere, or come into Central Library and have a listen.

There's so much coming and going musically through town right now, we're trying to keep up. Coming up soon on the blog: Metallica, Laneways and Super City Summer Anthems!

 ~Matthew

Making Music Part 2!

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WANT TO WRITE THE SONG OF NZMM 2011?

This awesome opportunity just came through on the wire. If you're a student with a song to sing, enter this competition and be the 2011 NZ Music Month anthem!


 ~Matthew

Big Day Out: First Announcement!

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One of the most important signs of Spring, along with lambs and blossoms, is the first Big Day Out lineup announcement. And man it is a big one!  ToolRammsteinDeftonesIggy and the Stooges, The Black Keys, MIA, LCD Soundsystem, Lupe Fiasco, Grinderman, Andrew WK, Primal Scream, Crystal Castles CSS, Birds of Tokyo, Airbourne, Plan B, Ratatat, John Butler Trio, Wolfmother, Jim Jones Revue, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, Bloody Beetroots Death Crew 77, Booka Shade, Die Antwoord and Vitalic.

Joining this international colossal contingent are a bunch of NZ youngbloods and heavyweights: Shihad, The Naked and Famous, Six60, I Am Giant, Kids of 88, Die!Die!Die!, Bulletproof and Street Chant. If you have read earlier posts you will know about the success of some of these bands at the APRA Silver Scroll Awards.

With Tool, Rammstein, Deftones, and Airbourne covering the main corners of Metal, it's going to be a loud day. But if you're not going to wear a black t-shirt, there's still plenty to choose from. A perfect day of dancing would involve the psychedelic MIA, punk-funkers LCD Soundsystem, sexy CSS with some Ratatat on the side, and of course, Lupe Fiasco.

As usual with BDO, there are quite a few happy returners, like John Butler Trio, who I'm sure will put many in that summer mood. My pick of the day is Grinderman: a reanimated Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, who will definitely rock your face off should you have the courage to get to their front row. I highly suggest you do.

Check out the Catalogue for these artists to prepare for what will be a very fun day. 

~Matthew

NZ Music Awards

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It’s awards season for New Zealand Music again! While Juice TV moved their celebrations to tie in with the end of May’s NZ Music Month, it’s still a Spring party for the prestigious APRA Silver Scroll Awards and Vodafone Music Awards 2010.
 
Last Wednesday at Auckland’s Town Hall, the Australasian Performing Rights Association awarded the Silver Scroll songwriting award to local kids The Naked & Famous for their anthem “Young Blood”. It was an interesting mix of contenders, including the charming Artisan Guns (who kindly performed a free show for us at Central Library in May), Julia Deans, The Mint Chicks and Anika Moa.
 
One of the most interesting elements of each year’s ceremony are the performances of finalist songs by different bands. This year, fellow Aucklanders Street Chant had a lot of fun turning up the volume on Artisan Guns’ “Autumn”. Which points to another noticeable thing about the 2010 awards: it’s great to see the celebration of so many young Auckland bands. It is a testament to how the current music scene here is thriving.

 ~Matthew

Songs about Superheroes

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It's widely known that musicians are some of the biggest geeks in the world (this is meant to be a compliment). So in honour of comic book month at Auckland City Libraries, I've come up with nine songs that mention superheroes or comic books.

1.  Matter-Eater Lad by Guided by Voices.  A song about an obscure Legion of Super Heroes character.
2.  Superman by R.E.M. I am Superman and I can do anything.
3.  Ghost Rider by Suicide.  Also covered by Henry Rollins for the soundtrack of The Crow.

4.  Can U Dig It?  by Pop Will Eat Itself.  We dig Marvel and D.C., Bruce Wayne auf weidersehn, Alan Moore knows the score.
5.  Waiting for a Superman by The Flaming Lips.  Song about the heavy burden of being Superman.  Also covered by Iron and Wine.
6.  I Am the Law by Anthrax.  Every time I think of Judge Dredd, I think of Sylvester Stallone mumbling "I am the law."
7.  That's Really Super, Supergirl by XTC.  That's really super, supergirl, how you're changing all the world's weather, but you couldn't put us back together.
8. Flash Gordon by Queen.  Theme song to one of the cheesiest and campiest movies ever.
9. DC Comics and Chocolate Milkshake by Art Brut.  Because sometimes nothing is ever as good as a good comic book and a milkshake together.

So go out and buy/borrow some comic books, listen to music and be inspired.

 ~Jerome

A little Big Star

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In a very sad year of losing important musicians, another lesser known musician quietly passed with little fanfare.  Andy Hummel, founding bassist of cult 70s power-pop band Big Star, died on the 19th of July.  Andy Hummel's death followed the March passing of Big Star's lead singer and main songwriter, Alex Chilton. 

Never achieving mainstream success, Big Star, in the words of Rolling Stone, released "a seminal body of work that never stopped inspiring succeeding generations".  Combining catchy pop with dark themes,  Big Star would directly influence and make fans of important 80s and 90s indie alternative bands such as REM, Teenage Fanclub, The Lemonheads, and The Replacements. 
 
Although critically acclaimed, Big Star's three records: #1 Record, Radio City, and Third/Sister Lovers were commercially unsuccesful.  It is only through word of mouth by these bands and their loyal fans that renewed interest in the 1980s and 1990s would follow in reissues of the band's catalogue.    Such devoted fans were The Replacements that they wrote and released a song called "Alex Chilton".  This is how I discovered Big Star.  Paul Westerberg sang that he "never travelled far, without a little Big Star".  Thank you Paul, because of you I don't ever travel far without Big Star on my iPod.

Although I own all of their records, you might want to take my advice and borrow Big Star's albums:

They may not change your life but they may change how you listen to music.

~Jerome

NZ Music Month in pictures

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NZ Music Month is over for 2010, so I thought it was time to have a look back at some of our events. If you're anything like me you didn't have time to make it along to everything we had going on. Lucky for us Matthew was on hand throughout the month with a camera. Click the image to enlarge.

New Zealand Music Month - Greg Fleming New Zealand Music Month - Greg Fleming New Zealand Music Month - Tono New Zealand Music Month - Record Club

A massive thanks to everyone who played, and to everyone who came along to listen.

~Ashley

Káren Hunter live at the library

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Karen Hunter. photo care of Karen Hunter.comOn the Saturday 29th May at midday singer songwriter Káren Hunter will perform a solo set at the Central City library.

Káren has been touring round the country this summer to promote her latest album Words & Groove.

Káren has released an incredible eight albums since 1993 and is a prominent figure in the folk/jazz scene in New Zealand. Káren takes song writing workshops and teaches at the University of Auckland on the Popular Music Major of the Bachelor of Music programme where she mentors young performers. Check out the School of Music at the University of Auckland or the Music and Audio Institute of NZ if you're keen to study music. 

This will be the last performance for NZ Music Month at the library, so get down to the library to support New Zealand Music!

Photo Credit http://www.karenhunter.com/

Listen to music online via Naxos

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The library doesn't just offer physical things like manuscripts and CDs to music fans, we also have a solid collection of Music eResources in our Digital Library. During NZ Music Month we're running a special class in one of these resources, the Naxos Music Library. Unfortunately this class is all booked up already, but I'll give you a run down so you can have a browse yourself.

The Naxos Music Library is a collection of music that Auckland City Libraries members can listen to online for free. Just login with your barcode number and PIN and you're hooked up to more than 600,000 tracks streaming in CD or near CD quality.

Naxos, with its excellent classical music content, is perfect for listening to pieces you might need to learn for music lessons or theory tests. The recordings come from all the big classical labels like Chandos Records and Hungaroton, so you know that the recordings are of the top quality.

I don't tend to spin up classical music for much more than soothing background sounds, but one thing that caught my attention was the Pop & Rock section. "Listen to an impressive array of Scandinavian rock and pop music, jazz, indie-pop and folk/acoustic pop," says the catalogue listing, so of course I had to check it out. A quick trawl turned up what seems to be a mash-up of the scores from The Two Towers and Requiem for a DreamRequiem for a Tower by Clint Mansell of Pop Will Eat Itself. Totally LOL-worthy, and not at all bad.

I also stumbled across some pretty sweet electronic pop by Nashville-ites Venus Hum. Check out 'Pink Champagne', but steer well clear of the remix. You have been warned.

Naxos also has classic and contemporary jazz, folk, blues, world, nostalgia, and even Chinese collection. Jazz, in fact, gets its ownNaxos Jazz Music Library. It's possible to search by country, and yeah, there are some kiwi tracks on there. Have a dig.

If you're already set up to log in to the library website then you have all you need to get on to Naxos. Chuck on some strings while you study, bone up on some classic jazz to match your new beret, or get ready for your next Young Workers' meeting by singing along to some Pete Seeger. It's free music on the internet, imagine that!

~Ashley

Street Dreams CD release in Onehunga

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Street Dreams.
Onehunga is an amazing place. From the buskers outside Countdown, to cars passing you in the street, to the kids with the ukulele that hang out in the library during school holiday, the place is filled with music. The Street Dreams programme is a local initiative that has given these kids the skills to take their music wider than the four walls of our teenage section - and I love the fact that stuff like this goes on in communities like mine.


Street Dreams was introduced in 2009 after Lady Sheeq held a one-day music workshop at ‘Common Ground’, an annual youth event run by local youth and community organisations. It was so successful that they decided to turn it into a 12-week programme of workshops in 2010 and show the participants how to produce an EP.


In early February over 50 young people from Onehunga and surrounding areas auditioned for the programme with 15 being given the opportunity to record, mix and master their own track which would be compiled into an EP for release in May. The group has been meeting on Tuesday nights at the local community centre and we have seen the students grow from budding singer/songwriters to fully-fledged recording artists in a matter of months under the tutorage of local icons Lady Sheeq and Dei Hamo. They have been offered some serious skill building and been given advice around writing, recording and performing, as well as getting the chance to talk to sound engineers and producers from radio stations Flavaand Mai FM.


Perfectly situated at the end of Youth Week and New Zealand Music Month, the Street Dreams Launch is being held at theYMCA Jordan Recreation Centre on 28 May. These guys have done the work, recorded the tracks, had the photo shoots and now we are lucky enough to be able to get our hands on the EP.


The participants will be performing their songs for the first time on stage, with your MCs Dei Hamo and Lady Sheeq with performances by Erakah and DJ TDK. I suggest you take this opportunity to see them now before these talented youth become seriously huge.


Tickets are available at the Onehunga Community Centre office from 24 May, and are $15 for entry and copy of the E.P, or just $10 for a copy of the EP.


You can also follow their progress in the Onehunga Community News.


Thanks go to Auckland City Council and the Onehunga Business Association for the funding and support for this worthwhile initiative.

~Rachael

Basement music tours

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The Central City Library basement, traditionally hidden from the public eye, with more secrets than the Da Vinci Code, is open for investigation this NZ Music Month. Rumoured to be home to over 600,000 items, a significant corner of the basement holds more sheet music, scores, orchestral and choral sets than you can comprehend. Covering all genres of music, the collection also contains song anthologies, vocal scores and librettos for opera and musicals miniature and full scores, instrumental tutors, a strong New Zealand music collection, prints and manuscripts.

And this is the tip of iceberg.

If you’re a treasure-hunter, an archive-dreamer, or simply into underground music, make a booking today. Book online at the first floor enquiries in the Central City Library, or phone us on 307 7780.

~Matthew

Tony Paki song workshop at Glen Innes

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New Zealand Music Month isn't just an opportunity for the library to show off its sweet collections, and brag about all our influential friends. It's also an opportunity for us to do something that a lot of people don't instantly think of when they think about libraries: teach.

At community libraries around Auckland City we run Akozone homework centres, where school children can come and work on their homework and have a librarian on hand to help them out. On Wednesday 19 May local musician Tony Paki is stopping by the Glen Innes library to teach some of his songs, including a song he's written for Glen Innes.

Tony's a local, a father of three, and a member of the Tu Wharetoa, Te Arawa and Tuhoe tribes. He's been involved in music since he was young, getting started in a a Kapa Haka Group called Nga Tapuwae Junior Maori Club. We were lucky enough to get Tony along to share his love of music and Glen Innes with the Akozone kids. The workshop starts at 3pm on Wednesday 19 May, and is for under-13s.

If you've got the learning itch and can't be part of Tony's workshop, don't forget we've still got beginner's ukulele lessons at Central, and soon I'll be posting some information on our class on how to use the Naxos Music database.

~ Ashley

No excuse to stay home

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Great North. There’s plenty coming up throughout the Auckland City Libraries for Music Month. If you like tight, fresh rhythms and harmonies, get to Panmure Community Librarythis Sunday 16 May at 2pm, for Before It Melts, a group of nine Aucklanders who love to sing a cappella. They will perform an eclectic mix of both popular and less well-known numbers to clever new arrangements by Wendy Moore.

If you want to tap your toes to some jazz favourites and Latin dance tunes, make your way to Onehunga Community Library on Saturday 15 May at 11am for trumpet diva Edwina Thorne, an international recording artist with five albums to her credit.

Friday 14 May is all about dusty boots and broken hearts, with Cyril & Friends singing country favourites at Glen Innes Community Library at 11am. Not much later at Central, the city’s latest young talents, Great North will keep your feet dancing and put a tear in your beer. Great North gets started at 4pm.

With all these different performances over the city there are no excuses, people! Get out there and enjoy the music. Check What’s On: NZ Music Month for more and more events.

~Matthew

Nick Bollinger and the essentials of music lists

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A lot of the talk around Nick Bollinger's latest book, 100 Essential New Zealand Albums, seems to focus around how music lovers love to love lists, and how it's the hardest thing in the world to compare albums across time, genre and popularity. This is all true, but this all falls second to something I think we've all overlooked: music criticism and appreciation as conversation.

Each new album in Bollinger's book is introduced by an iTunes-style transport bar at the top of the page; a play button, back and forward, the volume on full. It's this reference to an album as a digital artifact that reminded me that most of the lists I see these days are online. Blogs, music sites, Facebook pages, this is the home of the top ten list for me. You can even make your own lists on this website, like this one called 'Kiwi music.' The best part about this is that allows for reply, for discussion, for defence and for outright flaming. We all come off being a hell of a lot more invested in the list, even if we still hate it.

Even print magazines like Rolling Stone and Q publish their lists online, and when they don't a reader will do it for them. That's because we want to discuss this stuff. Music listening is a relationship for us nerds, it's not a one-way street. And while yelling at a record won't change that record, yelling about a record can change how you relate to it.

When Bollinger talks at the Central City Libray on Thurdsay 13 May I hope it's more of a conversation than a lecture. It's all kicking off with a complimentary glass of wine, which I hope proves conducive to a little bit of back and forth on the subject. Bollinger is a pro, but he's not staying on the mountaintop. I'm not saying that he needs to be shouted down, but a little bit of back and forth can be a good thing. You might not change his mind on anything, but you might just make up yours.

Nick Bollinger is in the Central City Library this Thursday 13 May from 6pm. Bookings are recommended, phone 377 0209.

~Ashley

Sound Opinions Record Club

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"beginning of a Music" by Taras Kalapun (Flickr). "Before the days of digital downloads, there was the record store: a place where music lovers could go to indulge their passion, where friendships and romances began, where bands formed, and where information was shared. It was a place that nourished the heart and soul of every music lover – a haven for creative people of all stripes…"
Introduction to Record Store Days, by Gary Calamar & Phil Gallo. 

So many songs we hear are connected to memories, and for us collectors, so many memories we have are connected to songs. Not just a tune, but album artwork, names in the credits, the weight in our hands, the smell of new vinyl or the dusty fingers from hours in the Second-Hand bin. 

The havens that were record stores may have dwindled in the face of iTunes, but the record clubs and vinyl appreciators have lived on. And today, black is back. Real Groovy is selling more vinyl than ever before, and more record players. JB Hifi is growing a healthy stock of new LPs, and independents like The High Seas have started to regain some territory. 

And all the while, hidden in the Central Library’s basement & Heritage shelves, our own extensive collection of rare and interesting records have been waiting for a chance to spin again. 

So come along to Auckland’s Central Library at 6pm on Wednesday 12 May to see the jewels of our vinyl collection, listen to some classic tunes, and share some sound opinions, memories and stories of our audible history. 

~Matthew

Photo by http://www.flickr.com/photos/ xslim/ / CC BY 2.0

Lisa Crawley & the Conversations

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Lisa Crawley. Over the last few months she's played the Auckland Town Hall, Aotea Centre, the Zoo and Vector Arena, supporting the likes of Jools Holland & John Mayer. And this Saturday, ladies & gentlemen… Lisa Crawley will be performing a free concert at the Central Library!

With the help of her friends the Conversations, Lisa commands a near-orchestra of instruments, including keys, guitar, drums, bass, glockenspiel, omnichord, recorder, keytar, melodica, trombone, ukulele and pedal steel. But the best thing is the sound of her voice, dancing over the doo-wops of her backing vocalists.

Critics have placed her in many genres, but she continues to defy them. Let's just say she's somewhere between cabaret & country.

Don't miss this unique, free show. Come witness one of our most elegant, amazingly talented artists, buy her EP, and support local music!




Made in Auckland tour

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Made in Auckland CD - Dr Colossus.
This month we're packing up a stack of Auckland bands both past and present and sending them on a tour of some of Auckland's hottest venues - our community libraries.

During May we're sending selections from our Made in Auckland collection collection to a few of the community libraries to let everyone all about it. Normally housed in the Central City Library, the Made in Auckland collections makes CDs produced by local artists available to library users for absolutely no charge.

A sad fact about local music scenes is that no matter how vital and amazing things are, sometimes things get missed. Not everyone gets a record contract, and not everything gets kept for future listeners.

That's what makes the Made in Auckland collection so awesome. Any Auckland band that makes a CD can submit it to our collection and have it made available for our library members. Not only that, like everything else in our library we preserve it for future listeners. Even when the shoebox of 50 CD-Rs under the drummer's bed is long out of stock we keep local music available for all Aucklanders.

Check out the full list of Made in Auckland CDs, and don't forget to catch the collection on tour near you.

Panmure (Mt Wellington) - now until the 14th May
Mt Roskill (Three Kings) - 15th May - 30th May
Epsom - Now until 7th May
St Heliers - 8th May until 14th May
Mt Albert (St Lukes) - 15th May until 30th May

Ukulele lessons

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Thanks to groups like the Wellington International Ukulele Orchestraand the Play It Strange Trust the ukulele is becoming more and more prevalent in New Zealand. It's easy to see why, as ukes are lightweight, small, and pretty easy to learn quickly. Unlike recorder lessons in primary school, songs learnt on the ukulele are worth remembering and fun to play.

It really is super easy to play the uke, and websites like Ukulele Huntmake it easy to find the music for songs you want to play (yes, they've got 'Hey Ya').
It's not just here in New Zealand, either. Amanda Palmer (Dresden Dolls) has been touring round the world these last two years doing Ninja gigs on her days off which she announces on Twitter. She just shows up with her uke and does songs for whoever showed up for as long as they feel like it. A ukulele is perfect for this kind of thing, because it's small enough and light enough to take it with you.





Play It Strange have come to the party once again this year, allowing Auckland City Libraries to offer free ukulele lessons during NZ Music Month. These are popular events, so it's pretty essential that you book in for the lesson. Just phone us on 307 7780, or email Steven.Harley@aucklandcity.govt.nz to make a booking.

Ukuleles. Flickr photo by ian_ransley. I you can't make it to any of the lessons don't fear. We've got a stash of ukulele books here at the library. We've got lesson books likePlay ukulele today! to get you started. Then you can start branching out. You could try a little Blues ukulele, or go local with Kiwi ukulele, featuring both our national anthem and The Verlaines' 'Death and the Maiden.' 

Did I mention how easy and fun this instrument is? I keep forgetting because I am having so much fun.

Ukulele lessons:
Tuesday 4, 18 and 25 May, 1:15pm, Central City Library

Other ukulele events:

Blockhouse Bay Community Library:
2 May, 2.30pm – The Grey Lynn Ukuladies

Grey Lynn Community Library
7 May, 7pm-9pm – Great Grey Lynn Uke Jam
21 May, 4pm – Grey Lynn Ukuladies 

Mt Roskill Community Library
26 May, 1.30pm – Mt Roskill Primary Ukulele Band

Remuera Community Library
13 May, 11.30am – Meadowbank School Ukulele Group

~Ashley

Photo by http://www.flickr.com/ph otos/design-dog/ / CC BY 2.0

Greg Fleming live at the library

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Greg Fleming. New Zealand Music Month 2010 is all about looking back and looking forward. It’s the 10th Birthday! Ten years of spreading the word on our vast musical talent to all corners of the country. And what better way to kick it off at Auckland Central Library than with Greg Fleming, a figurehead of local songwriting for the last 20 years and pioneer of NZ alternative country.

Fleming, with his band The Trains (including members of Straitjacket Fits, Don McGlashan & The Seven Sisters) supported many international artists in the ‘90s, such as Townes Van Zandt, Paul Kelly, Bryan Adams and Heather Nova. And this Saturday 1 May, at 12pm in Auckland Central Library, they will be performing new material from Fleming’s much-anticipated new album. It is going to be a special event for sure.

Check out Greg's MySpace page for more info.

This is the first of many performances held throughout Auckland City Libraries during May. As the month rolls on, we’ll update you with the latest and greatest of happenings around the city. Every Friday (4pm) and Saturday (12pm) at Central Library, there will be FREE! live performances by prominent local musicians, including Artisan Guns, Lisa Crawley, Tono and more. Check out the full events listing  for events at all the Auckland City Libraries, and stay listening!

~ Matthew