Banjo, Ukulele, & Harmonica: Sandy Weltman's Musical Journey
Sandy Weltman is in the house, and he's got a harmonica tune or two up his sleeve that would even make Stan Musial nod in approval! Sandy shares his musical journey from banjo to harmonica, revealing how a simple desire to impress a girl led him down the rabbit hole of music that now includes everything from klezmer to blues. We’ll hear about his adventures, some killer harmonica techniques, and even a near “pinch hit” recording call for Musial. So grab your harmonica (or at least your imaginary one), and let’s get ready to jam with Sandy on this episode of Saint Louis In Tune!
Sandy Weltman, a harmonica virtuoso with an impressive backstory, graces the podcast with his lively tales and musical insights. He kicks things off with a delightful connection to St. Louis sports legend Stan Musial, sharing how both he and Musial have a shared love for the harmonica. As the conversation unfolds, we explore the world of his love for musical instruments and their personal significance, especially the harmonica, which Sandy plays passionately.
His journey began at the tender age of 14, initially driven by the desire to impress a girl (spoiler: he didn't get her), but this whimsical pursuit led him down a path of musical exploration that included the banjo, ukulele, and eventually the harmonica. He recounts hilarious anecdotes about learning the banjo incorrectly for two years, as well as his serendipitous meeting with the legendary harmonica player Howard Levy, which changed his life forever. We also touch on the concept of 'playing by ear' and how Sandy’s dedication to mastering the harmonica has led him to achieve international recognition in competitions.
Sandy's sense of humor shines through as he shares the quirks of the harmonica world, like how he can coax out unexpected notes through various techniques. Listeners will be treated to an impromptu performance, showcasing Sandy’s talent and the versatility of the harmonica. The episode wraps up with reflections on the importance of community and creativity in music, reminding us that the journey is just as important as the destination. Sandy's infectious enthusiasm and love for music make this episode an absolute joy to listen to, whether you're a seasoned musician or just a curious listener.
[00:00] Stan Musial Tease
[00:28] Show Welcome
[01:28] Thought to Ponder
[02:41] Meet Sandy Weltman
[03:36] Banjo Beginnings
[04:57] Harmonica Journey
[06:39] How Harmonica Works
[10:51] Teaching Online
[13:39] Albums Nuthouse Series
[15:15] Books and Tablature
[19:47] Sponsor Break
[21:22] Live Harmonica Performance
[26:50] Styles and Techniques
[29:57] Harmonica Goes Classical
[30:43] Cello Range Harmonica
[32:04] Harmonica Ensembles
[34:24] Stan Musial Session Tale
[36:15] Banjo Beginnings
[38:09] Making Music Work
[38:56] Quitting Smoking
[40:54] Car Practice Hustle
[42:11] Sponsor And Foundation Break
[44:38] Ukrainian Tune Performance
[48:04] Roy Clark And Vince Gill
[50:59] Harmonica Links And Holidays
[53:15] Final Sign Off
Takeaways:
- Sandy Weltman shares his fascinating journey from banjo to harmonica, showcasing his musical evolution.
- The harmonica is a surprisingly versatile instrument capable of expressing a range of musical styles, including blues and klezmer.
- Sandy's connection to baseball legend Stan Musial highlights the intersection of sports and music in St. Louis culture.
- The podcast features humorous and insightful discussions that shed light on the harmonica's rich history and techniques.
- Listeners discover the nuances of playing harmonica, including techniques like bending and overblowing for emotive sounds.
- Sandy's experiences at harmonica competitions reveal his dedication and passion for music, inspiring aspiring musicians everywhere.
- Harmonica/Ukulele Lesson Videos with Sandy Weltman | Harmonica/Ukulele Lesson Videos
- YouTube - Sandy Weltman Harmonica & Ukulele Lessons
- Sandy Weltman - Apple Music
- Facebook - Sandy Weltman Online Harmonica Lessons
- SPAH - Society for the Preservation and Advancement of the Harmonica
- 2026 SPAH Convention - Society for the Preservation and Advancement of the Harmonica
- Levyland | Howard Levy - Grammy-Winning Harmonica Virtuoso, Composer & Educator | Discover Music, Events, and Lessons
- Béla Fleck & The Flecktones
- Free Harmonica Lessons - Tomlin Harmonica School
This is Season 9! For more episodes, go to stlintune.com
#harmonica #ukulele #banjo #howardlevy #onlinemusiclessons #stanmusial #SPAHConvention
Thank you for listening. Please take time to rate us on Apple podcasts,
Podchaser, or your favorite podcast platform.
00:00 - Untitled
00:00 - The Value of Professional Legacy
02:44 - Introduction to Harmonicas and Musical Journey
21:40 - Transition to Harmonica Mastery
29:31 - Exploring the Versatility of the Harmonica
40:06 - The Journey of a Harmonist
47:51 - The Joy of Music: Stories and Connections
Arnold
Our guest and Stan Musial have something in common. The item that they used in their professional career is very valuable and important to them. Also, it involves the Triple Crown.Find out on St. Louis in Tune.Welcome to St. Louis in tune and thank you for joining us for fresh perspectives on issues and events with experts, community leaders and everyday people who make a difference in shaping our society and world. I'm Arnold Stricker along with co host Mark Langston. Mark, you're looking very fit over there behind the console over there. Mark?
Mark
Yep. I've started my chair yoga. So
Sandy
how does that chair do yoga?
Mark
It's not as easy as you think.
Arnold
It's made out of wood.
Arnold
How do you bend it like that?
Mark
You don't. Okay, so you have piqued my interest because I'm a big Stan the Man guy and. Yeah, I don't know.Yeah, you've piqued my interest on our guests that we have today.
Arnold
Okay, good. I hope I've piqued the interest of our audience. We are glad that you've joined us today, folks.We want to thank our sponsor, Better Rate Mortgage, for their support of the show. You can listen to previous shows@stlintune.com where you can also follow us. And we've got a thought to ponder here. Mark.
Mark
Okay,
Arnold
we have a thought to ponder. And folks, I moved recently and I've got all of my. My printer's not hooked up, so I'm doing everything electronically. Some people might say.Why don't you always do it electronically? Yeah, it's a little bit more portable.And sometimes we do the show in a variety of places other than the studio and it sometimes doesn't work that way. But here's our thought to ponder. I have but one lamp by which my feet are guided, and that is the lamp of experience.I know no way of judging of the future but by the past. Take a gander at who that may be.
Mark
Okay. A gander is a goose or gander. I don't know. I. Shakespeare.
Arnold
No, not bad. Not bad. Guess I will give you a hint. Give me liberty or give me death.
Mark
What do you think?
Sandy
No, I'm not going to say. I. I know that saying. Is it not Patrick Henry? Oh, Patrick Henry.
Mark
Okay, I couldn't. Yeah, I couldn't have told you that.
Arnold
I have but one lamp by which my feet are guided, and that is the lamp of experience. I know not. No way of judging of the future, but by the past.
Mark
Okay, you've made us all feel dumb.
Arnold
Oh, no. What happened to your History from your.
Sandy
It only gets better from there, though, right?
Arnold
And that other voice is the voice of Sandy Weltman. Sandy, welcome to St. Louis in Tune.
Sandy
Thank you. I'm so glad to be here, you guys. It's a pleasure to be here.
Arnold
Sandy is. Now I'm going to explain this linkage to Stan Musial.
Arnold
Okay?
Mark
Okay.
Arnold
Sandy plays harmonica. Stan Musial played harmonica. Stan used that in his kind of professional shtick.
Sandy
Shtick is right.
Arnold
It wasn't his big shtick. That was the bat. But it.
Sandy
Stanley. The big shit.
Mark
Oh, that was good.
Arnold
Okay.
Sandy
All right.
Arnold
So there we go. And also, Stan, I believe, was a Triple Crown winner. That's batting average, home runs and RBIs, Sandy. He plays banjo and harmonica and ukulele.
Mark
Does that mean he's gonna get a statue in front of Busch Stadium?
Sandy
That. No. But it is the Triple Crown of three instruments that don't make any money.
Mark
But you're having fun.
Sandy
But you're having fun.
Arnold
Yeah.
Arnold
Sandy, tell us a little bit about
Arnold
yourself rather than me just expounding.
Sandy
Yeah. I grew up here in St. Louis. We all here went to U City. And I. I think when I was about 14, I got interested in music.I wanted to impress a girl at my school.
Arnold
Now, we won't ask which one.
Sandy
Mark and I. Yeah, don't ask me which one, but I will tell you. I will tell you that I. I thought I needed to impress her, so I started learning the banjo. Wrong instrument to impress a girl.
Arnold
That's right.
Sandy
Just telling you right now.
Mark
It should have been a guitar.
Sandy
Yeah.
Mark
Yeah, but chicks love a guitar.
Sandy
Yeah, they don't. Banjo wasn't the one, but I. I don't know what it is.
Mark
I like a banjo myself. I think it's.
Sandy
Everybody loves it.
Mark
It's a tough. Is that a tough instrument to play, a banjo?
Sandy
To get good at anything. It's always.
Mark
Doesn't it have a string that's halfway down the neck?
Sandy
Yeah, yeah.
Arnold
Yeah, that's.
Sandy
Yeah. I don't know what they were thinking when they.
Arnold
No, that.
Sandy
That's called a drone string. But there's different types of banjos.
Mark
Okay.
Sandy
Four string, and that's a five string banjo, which is more of the country bluegrass stuff.
Arnold
Who knew?
Sandy
Anyway, I. I never got the girl, but I did. I did fall in love with the banjo, so. So that was a good thing. And I just had so much fun in high school playing. Playing that and skipping class.No, I'm just kidding.
Mark
He's not kidding at all.
Sandy
There's a lot of Half truth there. There was a little half truth there. But I did. I just really enjoyed the banjo and. And then from there I went to other string instruments and.And I ended up playing the four string banjo on some riverboats and five string and bluegrass stuff and I learned bass and guitar. And then eventually I had some finger issues and I had to give up banjo after many years and picked up ukulele.And in between all that time I picked up harmonica.And I was fortunate enough to study harmonica with one of the best harmonica players, if not the best in the world, a guy named Howard Levy, who used to play with Bay La Fleck and the Fleck Tones.
Arnold
Wow.
Sandy
And I've been real fortunate to meet some great musicians that have inspired me and taken me in a lot of different directions.
Arnold
And you've gained some international recognition at harmonica competitions too. Also. Don't hold back here.
Sandy
Many years ago I would do some competitions and things like that. Yeah. And we have a. Actually an organization called spa, the Society for the Preservation and Advancement of the Harmonica.It's a big international harmonica organization and it's here in St. Louis this year and it's usually here every maybe three, four, five years. And so I used to attend a lot of those conventions and they. They used to have contests and then there's world harmonica competitions.And I've entered some of those and did pretty well at a few of them.
Arnold
Yeah. Now I know what musical competitions are like. What do you play on the harmonica? Do you play like Flight of the Bumblebee or Toccata and Fugue?
Sandy
It's funny you should ask that. Oh, I heard that was good little. I like those sound effects.
Arnold
That's the pistachio gallery.
Sandy
I'm gonna can. I was telling somebody I'm gonna. I like their laughter. I'm gonna can and take with me to all my gigs.If I ever say anything funny, then I'll just press. There you go. There you go. Man, I love that. Oh, wow. Anyway, what was the question? Totally forgot. I was really enjoying that.Applause and I forgot what you play.
Arnold
Flight of the Bumblebee on horror. What kind of music do you put out?
Sandy
So here's the thing. I love to play all kinds of music. Of course we think of the harmonica. Originally it was designed to play German folk songs. Really? It was really.The modern day harmonica was first invented in Germany and that's what they used it to play. And it's a really unbelievably interesting instrument. How it has evolved and how people have discovered different techniques on it. But then it.As it came to America and people discovered some of these blues voicings on it. They developed that over the years. And nowadays, oh, my gosh. When there's different types of harmonicas.But there's some amazing classical harmonica players and jazz players. And I. I like to play a lot of Jewish stuff music on it also. And I like to play everything on, to be honest with you.
Arnold
Now, there's different. I remember as a kid, we had. That was a two.
Arnold
Two row.
Sandy
Yeah.
Arnold
Harmonica. A little small one. But there's bass harmonica and there's triple rows.
Sandy
Yeah, yeah. And I brought. I should have brought a few others in, but I'm actually having a few harmonicas repair at the moment.But I use pretty good custom harmonicas. But there are. There's a chromatic harmonica, which is the kind that. That I know the audience can't see it, but I'll show you guys. It's a.
Mark
Well, we have a camera here.
Sandy
Oh, you do have a camera. Yeah, there it is. And it's got a little push button slide.
Arnold
Okay.
Sandy
And. And this, like, Stevie Wonder plays. Okay, that. That kind of inflection. Yeah, that little button.
Arnold
Cool.
Sandy
And then there's the diatonic harmonicas, which are the ten hole kind. And these are the kind that, like I said, that's how it was designed to be played.But then people came along and discovered that there's these things called bet notes, where you can make notes inflect down to other pitches. And so then this very simple folk instrument became a very emotive instrument where you could then create all these different cool emotions.And for blues, obviously, that was. Yeah, it was great.
Arnold
Yeah, yeah.
Sandy
And then there's a lot of music in between.
Arnold
So blowing into one of the openings there, that's a 10.
Sandy
This is a tent hole. Diatonic is the.
Arnold
I'm just trying to think of the insides. What it looks like, are you getting a chord out of each single hole
Sandy
you're getting Inside the harmonica are these little thin strips of metal called reeds, like a reed on a clarinet or something. And there. There's one for the blow, for blowing. And then in that same chamber, there's one for a draw.So there's a reed, a little metal reed on top and one on the bottom. Blow and draw. And here's the wackiest thing you've ever heard of.So if you blow into a certain hole and you shape your mouth and tongue just right and draw or blow a certain way, those two reeds interact physically. And we'll create Another note or sometimes two or three other notes. And that's where we get these emotive bent notes.
Arnold
Interesting.
Sandy
And it was never designed to do that. It's a really fascinating instrument. Now that everybody's asleep, we don't know that's the case.
Mark
I can't imagine blowing.
Sandy
And so here's an example. Can I show you guys a. Let me grab a. So here's that chromatic harmonica I was telling you about. So to get all the notes in a. In music, like 12.We have 12 notes. In music, you would use a combination of blow and draw, brass blowing out, breathing in.And then use this little button to get some of the missing notes. And you could get all 12 notes. That's 12 notes, which is called the chromatic scale. This harmonic is not designed to do that. Wait a minute.I just did it.
Mark
Tricked you.
Sandy
So even though there's only 10 holes here, you can actually get 36, 37 notes by using a combination of all these techniques, like bent notes and other overblows that weren't ever designed to be on this instrument.
Arnold
Wow.
Arnold
So it's no wonder I could never play around.
Sandy
It's a pretty fascinating instrument. The history and the. Just the evolution of how it's things people discovered and how they took it to different areas.And now it's just all kinds of great music is being played on it.
Arnold
Wow, that's crazy.
Sandy
Yeah. Yeah. It's a really cool instrument to learn all that stuff.
Arnold
So you were playing. You were gigging around town. Yeah, with banjo and then ukulele, then finally harmonica. And now you are.You have a great website where you teach harmonica online.
Sandy
Yeah, So I work. Yeah, I work for a big international teaching school called the Tomlin Harmonica School. And a fellow named Tomlin, he's from. He lives in Scotland.He started it. And Tom Lin Lecky, and I'm one of the instructors. We. I create content and I grade people's performances.They'll post something and then I'll do workshops on there. There's. There's four. Four of us instructors on there, but it's. He's got, oh, I don't know, maybe a thousand people on that school.It's one of the world's largest harmonica schools. And it's. It's really a great place to learn whether you're a great, very beginner, advanced, intermediate.We have so much fabulous information on there and tons of resources. And so I love doing that. It's. I do it from home and online learning. Everything has changed, so. And I still occasionally Will teach.Teach a person in somebody in person or online as well, too.
Arnold
So these are zoom lessons or something like that.
Sandy
What they are there, there's a set of instructions and you go at your own pace.
Arnold
Okay.
Sandy
But then you have instructor feedback. Okay. And then you'll get to interact with the instructor sometimes in a workshop, a live workshop as well.And there's just thousands of videos and you can interact with. It's got something for everybody. And so there's a little combination of all of that.
Arnold
This is starting from basic. No knowledge of music or no knowledge of the instrument. No.
Sandy
No knowledge of anything even. No knowledge of how to make cereal. Whoever it is, you know, they basically, you. We. In fact, we have a course.I put together a course on there for music theory, beginning music theory or the harmonica as it relates to that specifically. So you don't have to know anything. And it's. It's really reasonable price as opposed to private instruction.
Arnold
Oh, yeah.
Sandy
But. So I love doing that. And the other thing I was doing, up until the Pandemic, I was teaching a lot in schools.I had a lot of school programs and I did a number of shows at the Sheldon through a great organization called Springboard to Learn, used to be called Young Audiences. And then I did a lot of other programs through the schools. And when the pandemic hit, guess what? All that stopped. And so I kind of shifted my own.I'd been doing that for years. Years. And so I took some time off and just really kind of the last few years went into a lot of composing.I love to compose beats decomposing, as they say. Yeah, that's right, Mark.
Arnold
And I say, good to see you. I said, glad to be seen.
Sandy
Yeah, exactly. And this year I'm getting back out and starting to play again a little more.
Arnold
So some of these songs we may hear here. This is Arnold Stricker with Mark Langston of St. Louis in Tune. We're talking to Sandy Weltman.
Arnold
This.
Arnold
Is this your latest CD release?
Sandy
Yeah, but that's. It's. I haven't done anything in a while. That's still. That's.
Arnold
It's called Ukulele Nut House. Yeah, Ukulele Nut House. So did you write all these songs on here?
Sandy
No, I wrote some of them and I have another. I'm doing a whole Nuthouse series and I haven't done the harmonica one yet. I do have some harmonica.Harmonica, jazz, CD that I've done with the Carol Beth True and some other great local musicians. But I. I have a Klezmer Nuthouse and Klezmer, for those that aren't familiar with it, is like a gypsy, Jewish kind of a music.Comes from Eastern Europe.
Arnold
Right.
Sandy
And I do. I interpret a lot of those songs through the harmonic and the banjo. And it's a lot of local. Great local musicians are on that one as well.Then I've got the Ukulele Nuthouse.
Arnold
Okay.
Sandy
So the only one left I need to do is the Harmonica Nuthouse. So I. That's one of my projects.
Arnold
And you've got a. You're on Apple Music.
Sandy
Yeah.
Arnold
I also want to mention that Sandy's got a YouTube site and you can check all these things.Go to sandy weltman music.com w e l t m a n music.com and you can find all about the Ukulele Nut House, the Banjo Nuthouse, the Klusburn Klezmer Nuthouse.
Sandy
It has banjo on it and it's pretty nutty.
Arnold
I love this 101 harmonica licks.
Sandy
Yes. That's actually, that's just about to be released. Tomlin is releasing that through. Through.Is gonna publish it and then also put that on Amazon, I believe. And that. That was a book I did. Oh, I don't know, maybe five, six years ago.
Arnold
Okay, now let me ask you this. So you've got a book on harmonica licks.Is there pictures on, like, you put it this way, or you go into this, you got to use this harmonica and you have to blow in or.
Sandy
Well, okay.
Arnold
You called it something else. I was calling it Suck In.
Sandy
Yeah. Yeah. We like to say harmonica players really suck.
Mark
Draw.
Arnold
That's why we use Draw.
Mark
This is a family. Can we keep it that way?
Sandy
Yeah. There's certain harmonica lingo that is acceptable and not acceptable.There's a lot of good harmonica jokes we can't tell here, I guess, is what I'm saying.
Arnold
This is going to be great, Mark.
Mark
I don't know about that.
Sandy
Anyway, so how's this book work? So you open it up and you.
Arnold
So take harmonica out of box.
Sandy
Right. Kind of selfish. No. So that particular book is an ebook. Was originally an E book.And it basically it has harmonica tablature, which is like real easy to read harmonica music notation. And then I also include on that an MP3 of each lick so you can hear it. And then you have see it written out.
Arnold
And see, this is new to me. I've got two degrees in music and it's the first time I've ever heard this harmonic tablature.
Sandy
Oh, is that right?
Arnold
I've never Heard that.
Sandy
So that look like there's a lot of. Everybody uses their own harmonica tablature. It's. And does it a little differently. It's really easy to read.It's basically the whole number, like hole two.
Arnold
Okay.
Sandy
If you. The way I do it. If you draw. If you need a draw, you put a line under it. If you want to blow, you put a line over it.
Arnold
Okay.
Sandy
And then there's different things for draw bends and blow bends and other techniques over blows. But it's based. That's the basic system. It doesn't include any rhythmic content, a quarter note or eighth note, whatever.Because, honestly, most harmonica players that start out don't read music, but they want to learn harmonica. So that's why we include the recording of it so that you can hear how long.
Arnold
But it's possible to go ahead and put, like, a time signature and put that tablature over the top of that.
Sandy
Absolutely, yeah. In fact, a lot of harmonica tablature will also include music notation.
Arnold
Okay.
Sandy
Over the top of that. And I also did a book. I also wrote a book called Learn to Play Harmonica. I'll tell you about this book. A company approached me.They saw some of my YouTube videos, and it was a company in England. I'm not going to name names. And they said, would you write a. And they were pretty well established.They did lessons for different instruments, and they were pretty established. They said, would you be interested in doing a harmonica book? We saw your YouTube videos. I said, sure. So I had this idea. I'd seen. I'd seen.I looked through different harmonic instructions, and I was trying to do something a little different to bring to the table. And there was one book I saw that was really funny. A guy did. The book wasn't. That wasn't good for our Monica, but it was really fun to read.And so I thought, I want to put a good book together for beginners that's also funny and enjoyable. That's not just so dry. So you were asking about diagrams in that book. I put diagrams.In fact, my wife was the one that kind of stenciled out the diagrams and how to hold it and things like that. And then I put.I told stories, like, based on analogies having to do with Gilligan's island or just silly things like that, just to make it enjoyable. So here's the story behind it. That book, I thought, turned out great. They wanted to include a harmonica with the book.
Arnold
Okay.
Sandy
And whenever I've seen that it's the worst harmonica and it's just real uninspiring. So I said, I don't think that's a good idea. And they said, no, we need to do it. The marketing people said we need to include a harmonica.So they ended up picking up a really cheap company that put this harmonica in there that was literally unplayable.
Arnold
Oh, my gosh.
Sandy
This was 10 years ago and literally it wasn't even tuned to anything. So to this day, I still get people rioting at me or mad at me because they can't use this harmonica. So anyway, be careful what you sign up for.That's the moral of this lesson.
Arnold
That's interesting. That's interesting. We're going to talk about more about Harmonica's and Sandy's illustrious career after this break.This is Arnold Stricker with Mark Langson
Arnold
of St. Louis and Tune.
Arnold
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Arnold
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Arnold
Yeah. Serno Stricker with Mark Langston of St. Louis in Tune. Welcome back, folks. Welcome back. We have Sandy, weltman here in studio. He is going to.He's picking out his harmonica. He's going to do a performance for us.
Mark
Can I ask before you go, Last hour we were talking, you went from the banjo to the ukulele?
Sandy
No, I actually, I went from the banjo. So I played string instruments like banjo, bass guitar.
Mark
And your fingers got bad. What happened?
Sandy
About 15, about 12 years ago, I started getting some arthritis in a few fingers. So it was getting harder and harder to play the banjo using that style and everything. And so I discovered the ukulele worked for me.And if I play it slowly and I love arranging stuff on it. But in the meantime, when I was in my 30, early 30s, I discovered this guy. How? I didn't discover it, but he became known to me.A guy named Howard Levy, who I loved his harmonica playing, and I was, like, very inspired by it. So I went and took some workshops with him and then studied with them. Okay. And I got really into the harmonica.
Arnold
Yeah. Okay. Yeah.Mark, that shows you the skill and the level of professionalism that Sandy has when you can play certain instruments and go, okay, I can't do. I don't really want to do this anymore because it's not where the performance should be.I'm going to take up this other instrument and to get to the level that he's at now, that is really focus. Yeah, that is real focus. So kudos to you, man.
Sandy
Or insanity, One of the two.
Mark
We wanted to be nice. We didn't want to say, you're nuts.
Arnold
By the way, he's got the ukulele nuthouse right here. Folks. Get that.
Sandy
I do have an old friend that actually he was learning. He was a fiddle player, and then he wanted to study jazz guitar at Webster University. And his. Which hand? I forgot. One hand started going really bad.So he switched to the opposite hand on both instruments. And he did that for a while, but then that started going hands over. But he was an inspiration to me.Just people you've known from your past that are so dedicated and tenacious.
Mark
I would think playing like that would keep your fingers from getting arthritis by the exercise.
Sandy
I think it can do either the overuse a lot of musicians have had to deal with, especially violinists, people that arch their head or their hand or their arms a certain way. I was having issues right here because of having my hand here was resting against the instrument right here. I'm talking about my forearm.And so just doing anything that the same motion repetitively can affect your playing. So you have to be careful about
Arnold
that kind of like carpal tunnel syndrome.
Sandy
Yeah, exactly. Exactly.
Mark
I had no idea. I never thought about that.
Sandy
Luckily, I haven't had any lip arthritis yet, so I'm still going with that. I tried stretching my mouth.
Arnold
What are you going to play?
Arnold
Play for us.
Sandy
I'll tell you what, why don't I start by just playing a little blues? Something rather.
Arnold
Okay. And.
Sandy
And I'll put some. I'll put some. I'll put some bends and over blows in there. You won't know what's happening. You won't know what they are. I'll just do it for.
Mark
He still doesn't know what's happening.
Arnold
And this is the 10. This is the 10.
Sandy
This is the ten hole harmonic.
Arnold
It's not the one you can buy at Walgreens.
Mark
Those are very nice, too. I don't know if the folks can see him on our YouTube channel, but, boy, the harmonicas he's pulled out of there, they have to be expensive, the ones.
Sandy
I get mine customized. And that's a whole other topic we could get into at some point. But they're making a lot of harmonicas better now than they used to.And there's more companies and more competition, so that they've upped the game, too. That's great. That's good.
Mark
That is.
Sandy
Why don't you guys help me out? Snap along. Give me a little groove going there. We'll see if these guys have rhythm. Yeah, sounds like they. Wow.
Arnold
Wow. There you go.
Mark
That's really good stuff.
Arnold
You only expect 10 notes?
Sandy
Yeah, yeah.
Arnold
Maybe 12. And then all of a sudden we dreamt an octave, then we jumped another octave.
Sandy
You heard that, man? That. Did you hear that? That one note? I did really high. Yeah, that's not on the harmonica. Oh, that's one of. That's called an overdraw note.And so it's a note that. Again, those two reeds that blow in the drawer, interacting. After you shape your tongue, just that note pops out.
Arnold
You get the harmonics.
Sandy
You get the harmonics, exactly.
Arnold
So that was bluesy style. When did you first get in the blues?
Sandy
Oh, I think I first got into that when I started learning harmonica because up till then I was just like a bluegrassy, kind of skinny Jewish kid. I was the only bluegrass banjo, Jewish bluegrass banjo player on my block. Yeah.
Mark
Over big A temple.
Arnold
So talk about all these styles that you play. You play a variety of styles. And can you play that same or what would you play the same thing in classical style?
Sandy
That was. That was. I'm using an A Harmonica. Okay, so these, all these harmonicas are tuned to a different one of 12 keys.But in order to play blues on an A harmonica, one of the things you want to do is play it in a different key to accentuate those, some of those bet notes. I was playing the key of E on an A harmonica. This I won't test you afterwards, but so every time you change a style or a key, you're.You get to embellish these bends in a different way. So I'll stay on this A harmonica.
Arnold
Okay.
Sandy
And I'll still play in the key of E. We call that cross harp. But I'm going to play a little different sounding type of music. Now play a little klezmer Jewish music.
Arnold
Okay.
Sandy
Okay. Same harmonica. But now something that sounds a little different. Let's see. Actually, I'm going to use my little harmonica mute.This is a, this is a harp one. It's a harpoir. It just mutes the harmonic and gives you a little wah, wah, wah kind of sound.
Arnold
Cool.
Sandy
So if I'm gonna do that just so I don't.
Mark
Wow.
Sandy
I can embellish these notes a little. Ram.
Arnold
Wow.
Sandy
So that's again the same harmonica. It's the. It's not. But you can coax these bluesy kind of notes into a Jewish kind of a right feel to get this exotic sound. Right.Which is to me, that's like so attractive, that kind of sound on the harmonica.
Arnold
So you're playing different mode on a different harmonica. That's what you're doing. Same harmonica on same harmonica, playing a different mode.
Sandy
Yeah.
Arnold
Okay.
Sandy
Yeah.
Arnold
All right. Cool. Cool.
Sandy
Yeah. So there's, there's no limit.One of the things when you start learning, all these people look at the harmonic and they think, oh, that's a cute little 5 inch, 6 inch instrument. And oh, that's great. That's cute. I'll play a few folk songs, maybe a bluesy song, and they stop there.But it's really, when you get in and understand it, it's capable of everything that you can play on any other instrument. And when you explore that, then you find out, oh, that I can do that. But it's going to have a little different unique sound.So it's really a mindset to take this instrument to a new territory.
Arnold
Matter of fact, when we were talking. Go ahead. You were going to ask a question.
Mark
Go ahead.
Arnold
When we were talking and going back and forth, I was thinking to myself, I wonder if there's a concerto for harmonica and orchestra. And no doubt. Oh, absolutely, there are There are, oh gosh, I'm going to say probably two dozen composers and many people will recognize us.These composers. Malcolm Arnold, Robert Russell Bennett, Norman Del Joyo, Alan Havanas. Let's see here.
Mark
I haven't heard of any of these
Arnold
people in the music world. You would know those people. Hector Villalobos.
Sandy
Yeah.
Arnold
And then there's Howard Levy.
Sandy
Yeah, the guy. Yeah. He's written a contrari. I've actually written a few classical pieces. I don't have. I don't have my music here, but I would play some.But I've written some and I've worked on some Bach stuff. I, I actually have a cello, harmonica. Cello. You know what that is? No, it's a. It's like this. Let's see. Where's all my heart?
Arnold
This way.
Sandy
Yeah. You take a bow and cross the holes.
Arnold
You've always wanted to see a cello march and marching band.
Mark
Okay.
Sandy
That would be good on wheels. You take, you take. The one I have is like this, a 12 hole chromatic harmonica, but it's tuned down in the range of a cello, so it's really low.So I've been working on some, some Bach cello suites with it and it sounds really good. Except the reeds. Remember we're talking about the reeds. The reeds in there are really long and they.Because they vibrate at the length they're at, they can tend to be very buzzy.
Arnold
Okay.
Sandy
Yeah. So you have to play it with enough force but not too much force. So we're making buzz. So it's a, it's a very delicate instrument to play.
Arnold
Gotta know the sweet spot.
Sandy
You gotta know the sweet spot.
Arnold
Now as you're talking about that, it makes me think this goes back and Mark, music people would know those composers and maybe some other people. But I was kind of maybe talking to music people. Those are musical.
Mark
But I know a lot about music, I think. Yeah, you do, but I don't. I've never heard of these harmonica folks. I've heard of a lot.
Arnold
And these are.
Arnold
I know them from playing band instrument, instrumental music.
Mark
Well known in the.
Sandy
What instrument do you play on?
Arnold
Clarinet.
Sandy
Oh, you play clarinet? I love clarinet. The old licorice stick, right?
Arnold
The licorice stick, yeah, man. When you were talking about the different harmonicas, is there like a quartet? A harmonica quartet. So you have a soprano, alto, tenor?
Sandy
Absolutely, yeah. The old trios actually they used to have. Now there are quartets and stuff.But the old harmonica trios was real common and in the harmonica world they're still common. But do you remember a group called the Harmonicats?
Arnold
I remember the name.
Sandy
They had a big hit, Peg in My Heart.
Arnold
Yeah.
Sandy
Forgot how to play it. But anyway, that was usually done on a chromatic harmonica, but so they. They had a big hit with that in. What was it, 47, 48? Something like that.And that kind of spurred on more groups doing that kind of stuff. So you have a bass harmonica and then you have the chord harmonica, which is that big one. It's double tiered. It's maybe. How wide am I? Maybe two feet?Yeah, two to three feet, maybe.
Arnold
Wow.
Sandy
And.
Mark
And that's a harmonica that big.
Sandy
Yes, and it's double tiered, so there's two rows of it and each little section is a chord.
Mark
I would love to see someone play that.
Sandy
Oh, you guys should come. So come to the harmonica convention in August at the Westport Chalet, I think it's at. And it's for five days. It's.You'll see all kinds of great stuff like that. Yeah.
Mark
And a lot of performances.
Sandy
Oh, tons. And workshops, too. I'll be playing. I don't know which night I'm playing, but I'll be doing some workshops too.
Mark
Yeah. Now that sounds like fun. It is, actually does.
Arnold
Yeah.
Sandy
Yeah, it's a lot of fun. You'll see some amazing performers.
Mark
Oh, I bet.
Sandy
Yeah. Yeah. And then. So those harmonica trios. And then there are harmonica orchestras. And now there. There are so many different types of harmonicas now.People are making things and just pioneering this instrument like crazy.
Arnold
Yeah. How do you play? So a double row. You're going to cut off one of the bottom rows or.
Sandy
No, it's just like. They're two completely different harmonicas, but they're on a little thing that you can flex each row. You could. Okay.
Arnold
So you go up or down like this when you're playing it.
Sandy
Yeah, yeah. And so you can go to the top row or the bottom row, and then each of those rows is. Got little sections that are.Got a number of holes that produces a chord.
Arnold
So Stan's got nothing on you. With me out to the ball.
Mark
Crazy.
Sandy
I've got a Stan story.
Arnold
Okay.
Sandy
Of course. Everybody loves Stan Musial. What a great guy. And he loved the harmonica. He came out and saw me play a few times and. Yeah.And so he was supposed to call me. He was supposed to who? Somebody said he wanted to take some lessons with me. I said, oh, man, I'd be honored. So I never. He never called me about it.But I did get a call one day From a studio. And they said, hey Sandy, what are you doing today? I said nothing. I go, why? He goes, we got Stan Musial down here. Him and Mel Bay.And do you remember John Becker?
Arnold
No.
Sandy
John was a really great tenor banjo player here in St. Louis. I think he worked at KSDK5 also. And so John and Stan and Mel had a little group. John played banjo, Mel I think played guitar.And then Stan played harmonica. And they do just whatever Stan could do, basically.
Arnold
Yeah.
Sandy
And Stan was. How can I put this? He wasn't not a great harmonica player, but he was Stan Musial.
Arnold
Yeah.
Sandy
And he could make it play simple songs.
Arnold
He played other songs, right?
Sandy
Yeah. But so for whatever reason he called this producer called me and said anyway, we got musical down here. I'm not sure he can get through all the tunes.We might need you if you're free to come down and play some ghost. So I said are you asking me to pinch hit for Stan Musa? Yeah, that's it.
Arnold
I love that.
Sandy
And that was my best line ever.
Mark
Wow.
Sandy
Anyway, so it never materialized.
Arnold
He got through subbing for Stan Musial, Sandy Weltman.
Mark
Stan was going to lip sync it.
Sandy
I was going to bring my 32 ounce harmonica.
Mark
Just going to lip draw it.
Sandy
I was on the on deck circle. But I never got in again.
Mark
That's okay. Never brought you up from aaa, Brian.
Sandy
That was my chance. I could have been somebody.
Mark
Could have got the big bucks finally.
Arnold
So what'd you want to do before
Arnold
you were 15 and wanted to chase this girl and you took up the banjo? Had you had any aspirations about a career?
Sandy
No, not really. My dad was a Jewish wholesaler down in Washington. Sold dry goods and underwear and socks and all that stuff.So I was going to take over the business of course and I. And I worked for him for a while and I'm like the underwear business has a lot of ups and downs. I'm sorry.
Arnold
No, that's good. I just right in.
Sandy
I just wanted to keep Mark busy over there.
Mark
Holy smokes. Get that horse out of here.
Arnold
We're on Wash Avenue.
Sandy
Oh, he had it. It was like between 24th and 12th Street. Yeah. Businesses and it was really. It was a great time. That was such a special right time down in that there.And we used to go watch all the fail profit parades pass by for the storefront. And it was the International Shoe.
Arnold
Yeah.
Sandy
Company which is now was the last hotel. Yeah. It was always across from there. And yeah, that was such a cool area at that time.But not that it's not now, but anyway, so I never saw myself in that business, but my parents wanted. Were interested in wanting having one of us kids go into that. And I, when I got the banjo, I was like, this is fun, man.And I honestly, I played it completely wrong. For two years or so I didn't know what I was doing. I wasn't doing the right hand banjo picking patterns correctly.And so I finally, I was having fun though, right. So I finally went to what's the store in the Del Mar. Lou. Baton music.
Arnold
Baton music.
Sandy
Remember baton, right? I do. And they had a. Got banjo teacher there and I took two or three lessons and he got me going on the right path and I'm like, man, now I get it.
Arnold
Yeah.
Sandy
And yeah, I never looked back.
Arnold
No kidding.
Arnold
That's great.
Arnold
And to do a musical career, to play as a performer is really difficult.
Sandy
Yeah, very difficult.
Arnold
How'd you land the gigs? Did you by just being heard or was it reaching out to other musicians that you were playing with at the time or.
Sandy
Yes, all of the above and then some. So I think most professional musicians at one time or another have to expand their horizons a bit. Teach.There's very few people, unless they're playing with the symphony or something like that. Don't also teach. Book side gigs, maybe work at a music store. Things in the music industry. Produce record engineer.I was interested in doing all of that. And it's all got a creative niche to it and it all goes into final product of that song or whatever.
Mark
So I guess your lungs are strong. You have to have strong lungs to play. So I quit smoking finally.
Sandy
Smoking? Yeah, yeah, I smoked in my. I smoked in my 20s.
Mark
Oh yeah, we all did.
Sandy
Yeah. Did you smoke too?
Mark
Yeah, it was okay to do it then.
Sandy
Yeah. It didn't hurt you then?
Mark
Yeah, everybody smoked. They had ashtrays everywhere.
Sandy
They did, yeah. Oh man, I'm crazy. How did you quit?
Mark
I took a freedom from smoking class from the. From the lung. The National Lung Association. It was like a month long class and it taught me how to what was going on.And you'd get out of the shower, you'd light a cigarette. You get on the highway, you'd light a cigarette. So we kind of learned what the.What it was all about and then finally got a buddy and they had the buddy program.
Sandy
Oh, no kidding.
Mark
Yeah, and we. Yeah, it was quite a deal. And I quit. I was doing two packs a day.
Sandy
How old were you?
Mark
I was in my 30s.
Sandy
Okay. Yeah.
Mark
When I finally quit, I still hack
Sandy
from that yeah, yeah, yeah. I know there's still things in me that I can tell or not that has taken away especially.
Mark
But you're better off.
Sandy
I'm better off. But I'm pretty sensitive to when I'm having a day where I'm like, I don't quite have my full breath there. I actually, I started playing harmonica.Oh, was I about 30, 31. And I was smoking up to that point. I was like, I just fell in love with this instrument and I, that's what motivated me.And then I started swimming and I was just like, I need to quit because I want to play this instrument. And in fact, going back to what you were saying, Arnold, about the things you have to do as a musician, here's what I did.When I first started playing harmonica, the first few years I was just so fascinated with this instrument. All those things I was telling you about with the bends and overblows and.
Mark
But it wasn't a chick magnet, right?
Sandy
It wasn't a chick magnet.
Mark
Okay.
Sandy
Not yet.
Arnold
But later in life, the 85 year old chicks.
Sandy
Yeah, that's right.
Mark
Oh my gosh.
Sandy
I wasn't gonna go there. But anyway, but the, the. So because I wanted, I, when I got the harmonica, I wanted to play all the, the time. And it's pretty Portal portable.Oh yeah. That's one of the other great things. So I took a job as a delivery driver for a photo lab and, and I did that for two years.And I would practice all day in my car. Never had. I don't recommend this.
Arnold
Driving with his knee.
Sandy
I don't recommend this. But I would practice all day in the car and I never had an accident. I did a few times, I think twice.I ended up, I was supposed to be like downtown at the Globe Democrat dropping something off and I looked up and I'm in Chesterfield, you know, like, where am I going? Had a few moments like that.But, but by and large I really learned a lot in those two years because I was just, I was playing 12 hours a day, eight hours and then at home too. It was crazy. It was crazy.
Mark
That's good.
Sandy
But you do what you got to do and what your, what your. Where your passion is.
Arnold
You do, you do.
Mark
I know how that is.
Arnold
We're going to take another quick break and we'll be right back. We're going to, we're going to close this out. We're going to ask Sandy to play one more song and then we'll tell you what we're going to do.What's on deck after that. This is Arnold Stricker with Mark Langston
Arnold
of St. Luis in Tunes.
Arnold
Stay with us.
Arnold
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Arnold
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Arnold
This is Arnold Stricker of St. Louis in tune on behalf of the Dred Scott Heritage Foundation. In 1857, the Dred Scott decision was a major legal event and catalyst that contributed to the Civil War.The decision declared that Dred Scott could not be free because he was not a citizen.The 14th Amendment, also called the Dred Scott Amendment, granted citizenship to all born or naturalized here in our country and was intended to overturn the US Supreme Court decision on July 9, 1868.The Dred Scott Heritage foundation is requesting a commemorative stamp to be issued from the US Postal Service to recognize and remember the heritage of this amendment by issuing a stamp with the likeness of the man, Dred Scott. But we need your support and the support of thousands of people who would like to see this happen. To achieve this goal, we ask you
Sandy
to download, sign and share the one
Arnold
page petition with others.
Arnold
To find the petition, please go to
Arnold
dredscottlives.org and click on the Dred Scott petition drive on the right side of the page. On behalf of the Dred Scott Heritage foundation, this has been Arnold Stricker of St. Louis in tune.
Mark
Foreign
Sandy
we are back, folks.
Arnold
This is Arnold Stricker with Mark Langston
Arnold
of St. Louis in Tune.
Arnold
Sandy Weltman has been with us. Having a great time with Sandy Mark, aren't we?
Mark
Yep. Gotta turn my microphone on. Yes.
Arnold
Just a wonderful time. And I just learned something off air that he referred to the harmonica as a harmonica.
Sandy
Oh, you mean Obian harmonica player.
Arnold
No, the heart. He called it a harp.
Sandy
Oh, the harp. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Yes.
Arnold
And as opposed to the.
Sandy
Yeah, you know, string harp.
Arnold
The string harp, Right.
Sandy
Oh, yeah, we call them harps or the mouth harp. Yeah, yeah.
Arnold
And then the Sandy referred to a Harmonica player is a harmonicist. They dispense harmonicus.
Sandy
Like a pharmacist.
Arnold
Yeah.
Sandy
And sometimes drugs and harmonica. Yeah.
Mark
Wow.
Arnold
Harmonicist.
Sandy
Yeah. Yeah. I like that, Harper.
Arnold
Wow.
Mark
Okay.
Arnold
What are you gonna play for Sandy?
Sandy
I thought I'd end with it. This is a real pretty tune. I don't know. I learned this at a workshop. Somebody had dropped off this sheet music, and I just took it with me.And it ended up being a klezmer tune, but it was. I think it was a Ukrainian tune. And I. And it's called the Ukrainian Etude.And I thought, I love playing this with a. I have a pianist sometimes that I play this tune with Beth Tuttle, who's another local musician around town here. And I. I love the melody here. It's very poignant, sad. I thought it's appropriate with everything that's been going on in Ukraine.
Arnold
Right.
Sandy
The last few years. So I like to play this every chance I get. I don't have any company right now. Company, us. But I'll just do it solo.
Arnold
Sounds great. Looking forward to it.
Sandy
Here it is. It's called the Ukrainian Etud,
Arnold
Sam. So folks don't go thinking that simple kind of looking. Instruments are simple to play.
Mark
I picked it up, tried it and put it down myself.
Arnold
I did.
Sandy
Oh, I think it's cute.
Mark
I can't do it justice. I just didn't.
Sandy
Give me. Give me a holler. Give me a holler. I would.
Mark
I think it'd be fun to have.
Arnold
I think so, too.
Mark
Yeah. Sitting around Christmas time to Christmas music.
Sandy
Oh, Christmas music's great on the harmonica.
Mark
I bet it is.
Sandy
It's really fun.
Mark
I know that's. That's what kind of what hit me. I went, yeah.
Sandy
Yeah.
Mark
I could do Jingle Bells on the harmonica.
Sandy
Yes. Yes. That's a good one.
Mark
Yeah. See?
Sandy
It's a good one. That was one of the first songs I learned.
Mark
Is that a fact?
Sandy
I think it was.
Mark
I'll be there.
Sandy
Yeah.
Arnold
But there's. There's, like, simple harmonica songs, and then you work your way up.
Sandy
Yeah. I thought, you know, what's a good first song for a nice little Jewish boy?
Mark
And of course, that's it.
Sandy
What else would come to my mind?
Mark
Yeah, that's right.
Arnold
It has been an honor and pleasure to have you on the show.
Sandy
Been an honor and pleasure to be here. Good to see you guys.
Arnold
Mark, we worked on this for over a year, and you were moving. The last time I was trying to
Sandy
get you out, we got moved. Yeah.
Arnold
Yeah. And then we had our reunion of Sorts.
Sandy
Yeah. Yeah.
Arnold
And we had reconnected before that and set. And then set this up.
Mark
We're glad you came back.
Sandy
Why have me on any other time, man? I love it.
Mark
That's great.
Sandy
We'll do a ukulele next time.
Mark
The time just flew by, really. I know. I love stringed instruments.
Sandy
Oh, they're great.
Mark
Roy Clark was always my favorite.
Sandy
Yeah, he was fabulous.
Mark
I don't think anybody could play like Roy Clark myself.
Sandy
But I want a guitar from Roy Clark once.
Mark
No way.
Sandy
Remember Northwest Plaza?
Arnold
Yeah.
Sandy
And then he was up there at the. What? I forgot. The music store up there. And they were giving away a guitar, and Roy Clark was going to sign it, and it was a classical guitar.I put my name in the hat and I won this guitar.
Mark
Did he sign it?
Sandy
He signed it, yeah.
Mark
Do you still have.
Sandy
I don't still.
Mark
What did you.
Sandy
I know I have. No, it's just.
Mark
Shame on you.
Sandy
I don't even want to talk about all the things I don't have anymore. Wow.
Arnold
I like to talk about things I want to get.
Sandy
Yeah, exactly.
Mark
He could play, and he could play any stringed instrument.
Sandy
Oh, he was fabulous.
Mark
Yeah, it's just amazing.
Sandy
Yeah, he was fabulous musician and good at it. He was a good entertainer. He was entertainer of the year, I think.
Arnold
Wow.
Mark
See, this guy's a wealth of information.
Arnold
Glenn Campbell was another one.
Mark
Oh, Glenn.
Sandy
Yeah. He's a fabulous guitar player.
Arnold
Yeah, Him. What's Vince Gill?
Mark
Oh, Vince Gil. I love Vince Gill.
Sandy
I've got a Vince Gill story, too, but I'll tell you that. Save that for next time.
Mark
Have you gone to a Vince Gill concert ever?
Sandy
I never have, but I went to lunch with Vince Gil when he was 20 years old.
Mark
I love.
Sandy
And I'll tell you that story some other time.
Mark
No, I've known Vince Gill when I was in country music.
Sandy
Oh, that's right. Yeah.
Mark
So for a long time. And his. When he does a concert after he gets done doing the show, the song that he's doing, he just jams for 10 minutes after that.And he plays that guitar like crazy.
Sandy
Yeah, he plays a number of instruments really well, too.
Arnold
Yes.
Mark
Yes.
Sandy
And he's. He plays banjo.
Mark
Yeah. Yeah. Is it a long story? We have about five minutes.
Sandy
It was. It's a long story. A friend of mine, a great musician here in town, Thane Bradford, who's a great bluegrass fiddle bandolin everything.He was going to audition for a group, a very famous bluegrass group in. In Louisville called the Bluegrass Lions. And Vince Gill was in that group. And he was taking Vince Gill's place in this group.And if I get this right, I might be a little off on. But anyway, so we all went out to lunch. Vince Gill was 20 years old, just this star studded, could sing like a bird and played all his instruments.At 20 he might have been 19. Actually, I can't remember exactly, but we all went out and had stromboli sandwiches with him.
Mark
Stromboli.
Sandy
That's what I. That's what I remember.
Mark
Oh, wow. That's a good story. Yeah, yeah, yeah. His very beginning.
Sandy
I'm sure he'd remember me.
Mark
His very beginning.
Arnold
Remember when we ate?
Mark
You might be surprised. You might remember. He remembers quite a lot of things. That's my recollection of what he is. Yeah, that's cool. He remembers a lot of things.He might just remember.
Sandy
Oh, that would be cool.
Mark
You never know. Yep.
Sandy
It was great being off, you guys.
Arnold
Yeah.
Sandy
Like I said.
Mark
Thanks for having me.
Arnold
Yeah. Come back.
Sandy
Okay.
Arnold
We'll do invitation. Doors always open.
Sandy
Awesome.
Arnold
Okay, Mark, you have some. Is it like National Harmonica Day?
Mark
I wish it were. Let me see if I've got. I had something here.
Arnold
I wonder if there.
Arnold
I'm sure there is.
Sandy
There isn't. I think there is.
Mark
Is that right?
Sandy
I'm not. Real stupid information, but I think there is.
Mark
Yeah, go ahead.
Sandy
I don't remember. But I will remind you again about the Tomlin Harmonica School. Yeah, I'm gonna push that.And T O M L I N. And then also the spa convention here in St. Louis in August.
Mark
And what. And your website. What is your website? You have a website?
Sandy
Sandywaltmanmusic.com.
Mark
you better spell it.
Sandy
S A N D Y W E L T m a n music dot com. And then I've got, gosh, hundreds of YouTube videos. If you go to my YouTube channel
Arnold
and we'll post those on the podcast.
Mark
Okay, That'll be fantastic to see. Yeah.
Arnold
And there is National Harmonica Day is celebrated annually on April 18th.
Sandy
Oh man, I should know that.
Arnold
April 18th.
Sandy
Okay.
Arnold
Yeah, what do you got, Mark?
Mark
Just real quick. We only have a couple little, let's see. National if Pet Hats. If Pets Had Thumbs Day. That's all my cat needs is thumbs. World Wildlife Day is today.
Arnold
Okay.
Mark
Canadian Bacon Day. Do you like Canadian bacon?
Arnold
I love Canadian bacon.
Sandy
Oh, yeah.
Mark
Is that right? You guys are right.
Arnold
Yeah.
Mark
International Irish Whiskey Day.
Sandy
Hello.
Mark
Thank you very much.
Sandy
I love Irish whiskey with bacon, in fact.
Mark
Oh, okay. I'd have to read more about this one. Missouri Compromise Day. That would be. Yeah, it's Mother's Day in Georgia. National Cold Cuts Day.This is all today.
Sandy
Wow.
Mark
National Sportsman's Day, Peach Blossom Day, Navy Reserves birthday today. Okay, that's just a few of the many.
Arnold
And a couple quick things. These are words that have floated over from. From England to. From the island over here to the States. Here's the words.Bonkers, snarky, cheers, bloody dodgy, cheeky, gobsmacked.
Sandy
Oh, that's good.
Arnold
And my joke of the day here. Since we're running out of time, this is breaking news. The CEO of IKEA has just been elected prime minister of Sweden.He should have his cabinet together by the end of the weekend.
Sandy
I like that.
Mark
You could pay to have it put.
Arnold
Well, that's all for this hour, folks. Thanks for listening. If you've enjoyed this episode, you can listen to additional shows@stlintune.com where you can also follow us. Please do that.Thanks to Bob Berthicel for our theme music, our sponsor, Better 8 Mortgage, our guest, Sandy Weltman and co host, Mark Langston. And we thank you for being a part of our community of curious minds.
Arnold
St. Louis in tune is a production of Motif Media Group and the US Radio Network. Remember to keep seeking, keep learning, walk
Arnold
worthy, and let your light shine. For St. Louis in tune, I'm Arnold Stricker.
Sandy
Sam.
Mark
J.






































