Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I have been thinking for a while of starting an informal singing group for mothers. It would be a small group held in my house, and we would sing rounds, lullabies, traditional songs etc unaccompanied. Mothers would be welcome to bring any children that they are looking after along with them, though they would be responsible for them of course. The weekly session would last about an hour, including a tea (and cake?!) break. You wouldn't have to be an experienced singer to join as we would start with simple pieces and slowly work our way up.


If you are interested please comment below - I want to know if there is enough interest before committing to this.


Thanks

  • 2 weeks later...
  • 1 year later...

Dear mothers, I'd like to wish you happy (upcoming) Mother's Day and ask some random questions. I made a mobile game aiming to facilitate singing along with a 2~4 yo child. I made it for fun and for my son, but it's getting popular and I'd like to improve it. Could you give me some feedback? Is it able to inspire your children to meow, hum or sing? Isn't is too hard for kids to play on their own? More importantly, please, please suggest me some popular songs. Western Europe, when it comes to baby songs, is an unknown land to me. Best I can do is to add my native songs and try to translate the text. The app is available here, Android version only: https://goo.gl/plbuEL

Thank you in advance!

Jarek

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I am looking for somebody that can attach curtain tape to the top. It’s the part that the hooks go into. I need it stitched on willing to pay if anybody can do it please message me thank you.
    • Agree with @Sue the Dog is awful-nice building awful food. We like The Rossendale and Watsons
    • There are so many variables. Good chefs can having bad nights, post-Brexit staff shortages, your dish might be brilliant, your friend might order something that's inedible. In the end I think the best option is just to go to the restaurant which has the best overall reviews. If all the reviews are bad then avoid, but even if all the reviews are good that's not a cast iron gaurantee. 
    • The trouble is that pub management and chefs are constantly changing, so what might be fantastic on one occasion  becomes terrible a short time later, and vice versa. Two of the worst pub lunches I've had locally were at the Dog in the village and the Plough, but both those were some time ago. We had an absolutely appalling Christmas lunch on Christmas Day at The Cherry Tree, which was also exorbitantly expensive, so unless their chef (I use the term loosely) has changed, I wouldn't advise eating there. The menu looked amazing. We thought we would treat ourselves. Never again 😭
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...