Susan and I spent a couple of days in Toronto this week, reversing the trend of coming north during the summer. We stayed downtown for a couple of nights and walked for several miles throughout the city - Kensington, Spadina, Queen Street West, Chinatown and more - enjoying the sights and sounds of a busy, multicultural city. There were two highlights of the trip: the Corktown Ukulele Jam, Wednesday night, and the Terracotta Warriors at the ROM, Thursday.

The Corktown jam is held every Wednesday night at the Dominion Pub, 500 Queen Street East (at Sumach). Starts at 8 and rolls through until at least 11. This week there were perhaps 60 people, at least 40 with ukuleles (maybe more). I brought my Boat Paddle uke for the event.
The evening opened with a group song - I'll be Your Baby Tonight - followed by a workshop led by Steve and Dave (above: Dave is on the left) through several other songs. These included Listen to the Music (Doobie Brothers), Video Killed the Radio Star (by some 80s' group I forget), Besame Mucho (a rather half-hearted effort) and a couple of others. Especially good for novices who want some practice reading chords, working out rhythm patterns and so on. Gave me a lot of ideas for starting a ukulele group here, this fall (along with the adult chess club we're getting going). The songs are shown on the big screen, so everyone can follow along.

After the collective efforts, individuals or small groups can come to the mic and perform. That's really part of the fun and I was surprised at how many people got up and performed. I was a bit unready to solo - maybe next time we attend (practice, practice, practice!). But the atmosphere was great for budding artists - supportive, appreciative and welcoming. No criticisms, no catcalls - just laughter and applause. Makes it a lot easier for people who are nervous about getting up in front of others (like most of us).
Didn't hurt that the pub had a great selection of beers, either. Made for a relaxed, fun atmosphere. I'm not sure any of the local pubs could host this sort of regular event, simply because there isn't the space. Collingwood seriously lacks venues for live music and this sort of interactive event.
Some jam nights, vendors bring ukes and accessories to sell, too. Other nights are themed - next week, for example is Folkfest night. We also learned that the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain is coming to Toronto, November 6. For more info, check out the Toronto Ukes website. You can attend just to watch, to sing along or bring a uke to play along and maybe even do some solo pieces.

The Corktown jam is held every Wednesday night at the Dominion Pub, 500 Queen Street East (at Sumach). Starts at 8 and rolls through until at least 11. This week there were perhaps 60 people, at least 40 with ukuleles (maybe more). I brought my Boat Paddle uke for the event.
The evening opened with a group song - I'll be Your Baby Tonight - followed by a workshop led by Steve and Dave (above: Dave is on the left) through several other songs. These included Listen to the Music (Doobie Brothers), Video Killed the Radio Star (by some 80s' group I forget), Besame Mucho (a rather half-hearted effort) and a couple of others. Especially good for novices who want some practice reading chords, working out rhythm patterns and so on. Gave me a lot of ideas for starting a ukulele group here, this fall (along with the adult chess club we're getting going). The songs are shown on the big screen, so everyone can follow along.

After the collective efforts, individuals or small groups can come to the mic and perform. That's really part of the fun and I was surprised at how many people got up and performed. I was a bit unready to solo - maybe next time we attend (practice, practice, practice!). But the atmosphere was great for budding artists - supportive, appreciative and welcoming. No criticisms, no catcalls - just laughter and applause. Makes it a lot easier for people who are nervous about getting up in front of others (like most of us).
Didn't hurt that the pub had a great selection of beers, either. Made for a relaxed, fun atmosphere. I'm not sure any of the local pubs could host this sort of regular event, simply because there isn't the space. Collingwood seriously lacks venues for live music and this sort of interactive event.
Some jam nights, vendors bring ukes and accessories to sell, too. Other nights are themed - next week, for example is Folkfest night. We also learned that the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain is coming to Toronto, November 6. For more info, check out the Toronto Ukes website. You can attend just to watch, to sing along or bring a uke to play along and maybe even do some solo pieces.













These were York University engineering students showing off some musical instruments they had made that used water and hands to create sounds. The tank at top worked by slapping or splashing the water above sensors, which produced a different note for each hydrophone (for a one-octave, eight whole-tone selection). The bottom device was a sort of organ that created a tone when you stopped the spray from a particular hole (about one and a half octaves, with semitones). While the top device was monophonic, the bottom was polyphonic, and you could create chords by blocking more than one hole. All were connected to a computer and sound board to generate the tones. Lots of fun to try - and a bit wet, too. Wouldn't be allowed to be shown in Collingwood because they'd be treated as amplified buskers.
Street art: a cat sculpture on a chair poised high above the traffic. On Spadina, near College.
A shop at 13 Baldwin Street done up in very un-heritage colours and look. I used to have a bookstore at this address, back in the late 1970s. As I recall it, the stairs then didn't extend across the front and there was a railing instead across the porch.

