6.0 Love Your Axe
Loving your instrument and music is important to be able to play well with feeling. Practice your "axe" is a slang term that came from the 1930's. When a saxophone was practiced in a house with paper thin walls, the player went to the wood shed to practice, and sometimes would say "I'm going "shedding". Later the slang term "axe" came to mean any instrument. When my daughter was age 6, and was in a clinic masterclass with a somewhat famous violinist, the teacher said to "Love Your Violin".
This Print comes as 4 by 6 Note Cards with envelopes 16 in. by 20 in. matted prints.
Loving your instrument and music is important to be able to play well with feeling. Practice your "axe" is a slang term that came from the 1930's. When a saxophone was practiced in a house with paper thin walls, the player went to the wood shed to practice, and sometimes would say "I'm going "shedding". Later the slang term "axe" came to mean any instrument. When my daughter was age 6, and was in a clinic masterclass with a somewhat famous violinist, the teacher said to "Love Your Violin".
This Print comes as 4 by 6 Note Cards with envelopes 16 in. by 20 in. matted prints.
Loving your instrument and music is important to be able to play well with feeling. Practice your "axe" is a slang term that came from the 1930's. When a saxophone was practiced in a house with paper thin walls, the player went to the wood shed to practice, and sometimes would say "I'm going "shedding". Later the slang term "axe" came to mean any instrument. When my daughter was age 6, and was in a clinic masterclass with a somewhat famous violinist, the teacher said to "Love Your Violin".
This Print comes as 4 by 6 Note Cards with envelopes 16 in. by 20 in. matted prints.