Fabric of Life

helping traditional skills flourish in our modern world

Category: Music

Singing Ukulele Retreat

On Sunday, September 10th, Fabric of Life held a “Singing Ukulele Retreat”. The event was a gathering of 30 ukulele players who, for one day, became a community of musicians dedicated to improving their skills and making music together.

We are excited for the opportunity to offer this musical program as part of our ongoing efforts to preserve and promote traditional skills that enrich our daily lives.  People have always made music, but in our modern world most people are passive listeners rather than active music makers.  Both singing and playing ukulele are easy and accessible to anyone who wishes to discover how enjoyable and rewarding it is to be a musician.

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Most ukulele workshops offer the chance to learn new songs and skills to improve playing technique, and this was no exception.  But even though the ukulele is most often used to accompany singing, attention to vocal technique is often overlooked in group settings to ukulele players. In this retreat, we paired the two together to produce a fun-filled afternoon .

Stu Fuchs opened the day with a session on mindfulness and musicmaking. This introductory session combined some playing, singing and mindfulness practice to get everyone in the mood. Then the group was split into two groups to practice each set of skills separately. Stu led participants in improving their playing technique using easy and fun songs while Justina Golden focused on vocal technique and understanding how the voice works with the power of one’s breath.

In the evening, the group came together for a delicious supper prepared by our host Becky Ashenden. We enjoyed a mini concert where Stu and Justina each did a short performance, followed by the group singing and strumming the tunes they learned during the day.

This workshop enabled musicians of varying skill levels to work with professional teachers and performers at the beautiful Bassett Homestead in Shelburne, MA. During the Singing Ukulele Retreat, we received many favorable comments from participants who learned new techniques, made new connections with other musicians, and enjoyed this very special day.


Meet our Singing Ukulele Instructors

Stu Fuchs is a lifelong musician, award-winning teaching artist blending mindfulness practice and creative play.  He has presented his ukulele workshops and concerts at ukulele festivals around the world and has performed classical and gypsy jazz guitar with symphony orchestras.  Stu blends accessible mindfulness practices with playful holistic music instruction at his “ukulele zen” workshops and retreats.  He was awarded a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts for his work bringing healing music to cancer patients.  Stu recorded and toured with renowned sacred chant artist Snatam Kaur, playing on her  “Best New Age” Grammy award nominated album “Beloved”.  Stu continues to offer weekly lessons and music inspiration at his YouTube channel Ukulele Zen.

Justina Golden is a singer and vocal teacher since 1986.  She fell madly in love with teaching, trying to explain how to wield something invisible that has the power to transform lives.  She has taught individuals, small groups, and choirs, turning good singers into professional singers.  Justina also toured for 12 years in a singer/songwriter duo, taught voice at the Dar Williams “Writing a Song That Matters” workshop, and has taught at the Northampton Community Music Center and Smith College.  She now teaches in Florence, MA at her Profound Sound Voice Studio.


About Fabric of Life

Fabric of Life is a 501(c)3 not for profit educational organization dedicated to the preservation and passing on of knowledge and skills that enrich our daily lives. We strive to see traditional skills flourish in our modern world and make these educational opportunities available to future generations. Working together creating practical things of beauty not only improves quality of life, but also strengthens communities.

We hope our work brings joy to your life!

Should you feel moved to do so, we always welcome tax-deductible donations toward our mission.

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Musician in Residence: Aaron Kisslinger

Musician Aaron Kisslinger at Fabric of Life

Aaron Kisslinger (they/them/their) was a Musician-in-Residence at Fabric of Life, in partnership with Bassett Road Homestead LLC. They stayed on the land at Bassett Road for most of February and the early part of March, taking time and space away to organize their next steps after the pandemic unraveled their travel and performance plans for the past year.

Aaron grew up in New York City in the Bronx – Riverdale, to be exact, and has been playing music for as long as they can remember. Their childhood was filled with opportunities to be connected to music from Eastern Europe, including Balkan music, as well as the Jewish music scene. For them, music and community have always been an intertwined experience. 

From there they went to Oberlin College in Ohio and studied music as communal social change, exploring how music is connected to transmission of identity through various oral history interviews. These days they write, sing, produce, create original pop music, and play in brass both in the Roman/Balkan style and in the New Orleans Second Lines style. They are constantly trying to find the bridges between different cultures in their music, regardless of the style they are playing in, noting that other styles and traditions always inform their work. 

Musician Aaron Kisslinger at Fabric of Life

Aaron grew up Jewish Reconstructionist, which was largely about individual interpretation with the essence of asking questions without the hierarchical infrastructure. The biggest draw for them in this religion, as a young adult, was the music. Their father drummed for chanting and it was there that they learned how to blow the shofar – an experience that later became the basis of building relationships to the horns that they now play. This was Aaron’s ancestral lineage, but it didn’t become meaningful until they became older and were able to recognize it for themself and begin to own it within their own musical endeavors. 

When asked about folk traditions and their time at Fabric of Life, Aaron talked about the parallels they see between their music and the folk traditions that we teach here. For them, the parallel is found within the transmission of collective folk traditions and how to reinterpret them and express yourselves within them; this is similar to what they see in their explorations in music-making.

In their own practice, Aaron sees music as an act of self-liberation – as a queer person, as someone who is not taking any of the practices of the collective culture at face value and is able and happy to take a step back to think about how they want to embody this. They view creating as an act of freeing themselves regardless of what is being made or if it is being shown to others. Music is intangible and powerful in their experience, holding an enormous power that can’t be taken away, something that can both be deeply personal and hold emotional resonance that also feeds the collective. 

Musician Aaron Kisslinger at Fabric of Life

Aaron named being able to be a Musician-in-Residence for Fabric of Life as a privilege; having grown up in a city and spent most of their life making music in an apartment, being able to walk out into the field and play their horn, or take a walk in the woods and then return to the cabin and records what has been written, was both enjoyable and filled with freedom. And being surrounded by the patterning, geometry and symmetry of Scandinavian textiles inside of the cabin, created with such care, also served to inspire them in their time in the residency. It was also an opportunity to drive home the reality of what it takes to sustain life, as they took on learning how to chop wood for the woodstove that kept the cabin warm and other similar life skills to support caring for themselves while staying at Bassett Road. 

We considered it a tremendous opportunity to be able to host Aaron for a residency this winter, feeling strongly that the future of many traditions are in the hands of the younger generations. Aaron’s commitment to their craft, to exploring the cultures and supporting the origins of these traditions, and to reinterpreting it to create a collective experience, lie at the heart of our mission for Fabric of Life. We are thankful that they were able to have the space and time to reflect on their next steps and to once again fill the world with their music and we look forward to seeing what comes next for this young and talented musician.

Video interview with Musician-in-Residence, Aaron Kisslinger:

Connect with Aaron:
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A few of the pieces Aaron created or released during their time at Fabric of Life:

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