• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Elaine Ambrose

Bestselling Author, Ventriloquist, & Humorist

  • Home
  • About Elaine
    • Privacy Policy
  • ALL BOOKS
  • Blog
  • Books
  • Contact
  • Storyteller
You are here: Home / Archives for #piano

#piano

Finding Rhythm: 80 Songs in 80 Days

October 22, 2021 By Elaine Ambrose

I was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy heart disease after suffering a heart attack in June. Surgery in July plus several prescribed medications have improved the function of my heart, but I continue to experience shortness of breath. I can’t walk or talk very long, and I’ve had to cancel speaking gigs and postpone a few scheduled webinars for my writing workshops. I can do one thing: play piano.

 

I started playing piano music to stimulate regular heartbeats and to share music. My elaborate recording studio consists of my iPad on a stool on a bench. I played the first song on August 1 and posted it to my Facebook account.

Requests started to come, and I kept playing. Most of the songs were my favorites, but there were a few new ones: I had never heard “One Little Candle,” but now I love the song. The most difficult requests to play were “Stairway to Heaven,” “You Must Love Me,” and “Bohemian Rhapsody.”

I wrote a synopsis for each request and enjoyed using various props, artwork, and outfits to go with each song. My hair changed color three times since August, going from brunette to blonde to “pewter.” Pewter sounds so much better than “gray.”

 

As I played each song, I imagined the person sitting in my piano room and listening to me play the requested song. I’m alone most of the time, so the experience was welcomed. My breathing has improved with the regular practicing and playing, and my weak heart is healing and full of joy.

I’m taking a break after playing 80 songs in 80 days. I’ll play and post more songs as Christmas gets closer. Who can resist some festive holiday music? I intend to keep the music playing as long as possible and share the healing harmony.

Here is the list of 80 songs:

August 1 – “If I Loved You”

August 2 – “His Eye Is On the Sparrow”

August 3 – “Born Free”

August 5 – “Hallelujah Chorus”

August 6 – “Moonlight Sonata”

August 10 – “Danny Boy”

August 11 – “Ode to Joy”

August 12 – “The Yellow Rose of Texas”

August 13 – “Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus”

August 14 – “River Flows in You”

August 15 – “The Old Rugged Cross”

August 16 – “Bushel and a Peck”

August 17 – “Unchained Melody”

August 18 – “God Bless the USA”

August 19 – “Waltz Across Texas”

August 20 – “In the Garden”

August 21 – “Somewhere Over the Rainbow”

August 21 – “Morning has Broken”

August 22 – “How Great Thou Art”

August 23 – “You’ve Got a Friend”

August 24 – “When Blue Moon Turns to Gold Again”

August 25 – “What a Wonderful World”

August 26 – “Let it Be”

August 27 – “The Marine’s Hymn”

August 28 – “Blessed Assurance”

August 29 – “You’ll Never Walk Alone”

August 30 – “The Entertainer”

August 31 – “Stairway to Heaven”

September 1 – “The Highwayman”

September 2 – “It is Well with my Soul”

September 3 – “For You”

September 4 – “Walk Away Renee”

September 5 – “All Things Bright and Beautiful”

September 6 – “Shallow”

September 7 – “Golden Slumbers”

September 8 – “Happy Birthday” (Not counted in total)

September 8 – “Moon River”

September 9 – “Somewhere Out There”

September 10 – “Moonlight in Vermont”

September 11 – “Watermark”

September 12 – “What a Friend We Have in Jesus”

September 13 – Theme Song from “The Midnight Cowboy”

September 14 – “The Falling Leaves”

September 15 – “The 12th of Never”

September 16 – “You Must Love Me”

September 17 – “The Star-Spangled Banner”

September 18 – “Could it Be Magic?”

September 19 – “Time in a Bottle”

September 20- “Last Date”

September 21 – “Here We Have Idaho”

September 22 – “Tapestry”

September 23 – “In the Mood”

September 24 – Theme Song from “The Summer of ‘42”

September 25 – “One Little Candle”

September 26 – “Bringing in the Sheaves”

September 27 – “Sittin’ On the Dock of the Bay”

September 28 – “Danger Zone”

September 29 – “Piano Man”

September 30 – “Take My Breath Away”

October 1 – “Battle Hymn of the Republic”

October 2 – “As Time Goes By”

October 3 – “Amazing Grace”

October 4 – “A Woman in Love”

October 5 – “Born to be Wild”

October 6 – “Some Enchanted Evening”

October 7 – “Nocturne” from “Secret Garden”

October 8 – “In the Garden”

October 9 – “I Dreamed a Dream”

October 10 – “His Eye Is on the Sparrow”

October 11 – “Fields of Gold”

October 12 – “Berceuse”

October 13 – “In the Arms of the Angel”

October 14 – “Mrs. Brown, You’ve Got a Lovely Daughter”

October 15 – “I Talk to the Trees”

October 16 – “Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah”

October 17 – “He’s Got the Whole World”

October 18 – “Bohemian Rhapsody”

October 19 – “The Enchanted Garden”

October 20 – “The Music of the Night”

October 21 – “You’re My Home”

October 22 – “All I Ask of You”

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: #cardiomyopathy, #facebook, #heart, #music, #piano, #therapy

When the Soloist Can’t Sing

August 31, 2021 By Elaine Ambrose

 

Singing at my cousin’s wedding with my best peasant dress, a guitar from Sears, and hair teased enough to hide packages of candy.

During my twenties and thirties, I sang at weddings, funerals, and assorted karaoke events with equal enthusiasm. My most requested song was “The Lord’s Prayer,” and I finessed the perfect ending:

The last line of the song is, For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory forever. Amen. I sang the words in a crescendo until I reached the high note on the second syllable of “forever” and held the note long and loud until the audience squirmed. Then using the same breath, I slid down the scale to hit the note on the third syllable, saying “vah” instead of the hard “r” sound. I took a breath and sang “Amen” using vibrato with the passion of a celestial choir.

My imaginary celestial choir.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I can’t do that anymore.


I was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy heart disease after a heart attack in June resulted in an echocardiogram followed with angiogram surgery in July. I’m taking eight medications, but I still can’t catch my breath, so a myocardial MRI is scheduled in a few weeks. Because of my broken heart, I can’t sing four words without stopping.

I loved to sing. At the University of Idaho, I was selected for the Jazz Choir and the Vandaleer Concert Choir. In 1971, the Vandaleers toured Europe and sang in old cathedrals in six countries. Most of the students had never been out of the USA, and a few hadn’t left the state. When the airplane took off from Heathrow Airport in London to return home, I began sobbing and couldn’t stop. The adventure changed my life, and my goal was to travel the world with a song in my heart.

I was fortunate to travel through the next few decades, and I kept singing. When my two children were born, my repertoire included favorite lullabies such as “I Love You a Bushel and a Peck” and “Momma’s Gonna Buy You a Mocking Bird.” I made up several songs, and their favorites were “Teeny Tiny Baby Boo” and “Two Kids on My Lap.” I sang around the house, and my five-year-old son would sing along with me for part of the Hallelujah Chorus from Handel’s Messiah.

And the glory, the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all nations shall see it together: for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it.

Because I played and sang the soundtrack from “Les Miserables” so many times, my daughter could sing the entire score by the time she was 11 years old. The touring company was years away from traveling to Idaho, so I took her to Chicago to see a live performance. That was the first of many journeys to see various musical productions.

Over the last few years, my singing was limited to lullabies with my grandchildren. I also sang in the shower and when driving alone. I couldn’t reach the high notes but managed to fake the melodies. The heart attack has taken away an important part of my life, and I don’t know if I’ll ever sing again.

To keep the music playing, I started to play songs on the piano and asked for requests on my Facebook account. So far, I’ve played more than 25 requests, adding costumes and decorations for each song. Requests range from patriotic to  spiritual to silly to entertaining. I believe I’m helping to heal my broken heart by giving music to others. This is a harmonious strategy to keep my heart beating in rhythm while sharing songs. And the people said, “Amen,” with vibrato.

Hymns are the most requested songs.
Playing “The Entertainer” because I am.
Playing requests for patriotic songs.
Playing “I Love You a Bushel and a Peck” for the kids and grandkids.

 

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: #cardiomyopathy, #chorus, #facebook, #heart, #lullabies, #musicals, #piano, sing

Footer

Awards

awards

Badges

badges from other sites

Awards

awards

©2022 Elaine Ambrose | Designed & Maintained by Technology-Therapist

 

Loading Comments...