Make Music Partners of the Week: Alfred Music and D’Addario

Make Music Day

Alfred Music and D’Addario, partners on the new String Together program, are no strangers to Make Music Day.

Since 2015, Alfred has provided thousands of free ukulele and guitar books for June 21st events from coast to coast. Their mission, like that of Make Music Day itself, is to get the world to learn music, to teach music, and to play music.

D’Addario, another longstanding partner, has donated Promark drumsticks for bucket drumming sessions in some years, and provided Venn reeds for Sousapalooza players in others. String Together is the first time they have joined Make Music Day with their guitar strings, the original specialty of the D’Addario family since the 1680s.

Thank you to Alfred and D’Addario!

One of the best and easiest ways to improve the sound of your guitar is putting on a fresh set of strings.

Come to one of the 22 participating String Together guitar shops on Make Music Day, and attend a free string changing session that comes with a free set of acoustic guitar strings from D’Addario. All are welcome, from complete newbies who have never changed their strings, to more experienced players looking for a few tips from a pro guitar tech.

Plus, the first 20 participants at each store will also receive a free guitar chord chart from Alfred Music, and a free guitar lesson from a local teacher!

Find one near you and reserve your spot!

For the first time ever, five Alabama cities – Decatur, Florence, Gadsden, Gulf Shores, and Huntsville – are joining Make Music Day this year!

Lots of Make Music Alabama events are geared towards children, from a found object guitar building workshop in Gadsden, to youth percussion classes in Decatur. But like any Make Music Day, there is truly something for everyone. Huntsville will feature a 10-piece jazz band at their library, and Gulf Shores will give away egg shakers and tambourines in Meyer Park, for the public to use to accompany Grammy-nominated songwriter Rhonda Hart and Smokey Otis.

We welcome Alabama into the Make Music community, and thank the Alabama Arts Alliance for helping coordinate the state!

Mass Appeal would not be the same without two of our longstanding partners, Hohner and Rhythm Band Instruments (RBI).

Hohner, the world’s leading harmonica brand, is providing over 2,000 free harmonicas to 40 U.S. cities for Make Music Day, allowing countless first-time players to start developing the skills to make music throughout the year. This is the 11th straight year of Hohner’s generous involvement in Make Music Day.

Meanwhile, Rhythm Band Instruments, makers of the pitched hollow plastic tubes called Boomwhackers®, is donating percussion kits to 31 cities for participatory Mass Appeal events – over 1,100 instruments in all, with a variety of Boomwhackers, egg shakers, and rhythm sticks to make music accessible to everyone.

Thank you to Hohner and to RBI!

Do you want to play for Make Music Day, but your bandmate is out of town that day? (Or maybe you don’t have a band in the first place?)

Not to worry – in 56 cities around the United States, Mass Appeal events are taking place on June 21. Not quite music lessons, not quite jam sessions, Mass Appeals are a special kind of musical happening of their own. And anyone can take part – in many cases, you don’t even need to bring an instrument!

Just show up to one of these 103 Mass Appeals to get a free Hohner harmonica and join a harmonica band, pick up a pair of Vic Firth drumsticks and start bucket drumming, use RBI percussion instruments at a drum circle, or strum along on a ukulele or guitar. It couldn’t be simpler.

Full Mass Appeal listings

Make Music Day is growing across Texas this year, with the established Houston and Laredo events now joined by Corsicana, Round Rock, Waxahachie… and this week’s Make Music City of the Week, Frisco!

For the inaugural Make Music Frisco, you can join a kazoo parade around the water park at the Frisco Athletic Center, take a harmonica lesson at the Heritage Museum, learn to play Flowerpot Music at The Harvest at Frisco Commons, or catch Russell Stoneback’s experimental “light guitar” that uses light like sound to create music in the Frisco Discovery Center’s Black Box Theater. Not to mention pop up singer-songwriter performances all over town!

Visit the Make Music Frisco website

Makey Makey joins Make Music Day for the second time in 2023. Using this circuit board, plugged into a computer, performers of all levels can turn everyday objects (like brat and cheese) into touchpads and use them to make music.

This year, Makey Makey will supply kits to selected Make Music Day chapters, and work with them closely to devise new, fun ways to incorporate this technology into collaborative music making and learning through play. Thank you, Makey Makey!

See some inspiring Makey Makey projects from Make Music Day 2022

In a new global collaboration, Make Music, Make Friends is connecting school children aged 7-13 from Australia, China, India, Italy, Pakistan, Thailand, the U.K., and the U.S. on Make Music Day this year.

Ten classes from each country, coordinated by the Make Music Alliance and Make Music Day UK, are creating musical greeting videos (with traditional or modern songs), sharing them with schools from other countries, and having their students watch these musical messages on June 21.

Through this virtual exchange, Make Music, Make Friends exposes children to different regions and cultures, while providing an authentic audience for their own performance.

Read more

For the first time since the pandemic, Make Music Boston is back!

Under the new leadership of the Boston Music Project, Make Music Boston will feature an “ultimate jam session” outside of eight food trucks at the Rose Kennedy Greenway, a found sound beatmaking battle, a summer solstice festival with the Boston BID, and countless other creative events for and by the huge community of Boston musicians.

Visit the Make Music Boston website

Steelpans are the only family of chromatic, acoustic instruments developed in the last century. Invented in Trinidad around the Second World War, they are traditionally handmade from oil drums, and hand-tuned by a small number of master pan tuners.

Although historically hard to come by, steelpans will be found in 11 cities around the U.S. in participatory events for Make Music Day 2023, thanks to Panyard’s Jumbie Jams, an entry level steel pan designed to be easily playable by anyone.

Many thanks to Panyard!