Ken Lelen

Ken Lelen
Ken Lelen sings great American ragtime, jazz, swing and pop tunes in his concerts and plays vintage acoustic guitars for an authentic, back-in-the day sound.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011


                                   Elderweek Concert
Delaware County Community College
Media, PA
Tuesday, 22 March 2011
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I sang two 30-minute sets for 60 people and played four guitars:
1938 B&D Groton 1; 1926 Maurer Style 493; 1933 Martin
OM-18 (Sandburg); and 1937 Gibson KG-21 (Riggs).

This concert — the second for the Ken Lelen Combo at DCCC — was a pleasure to play. We had a good-sized crowd that was spread across two 30-minute sets. We played in a fabulous room. Best of all, the audience was involved in the music and the vintage guitars. Everyone seemed to enjoy the fun anecdotes or wry asides I used to introduce the songs and carry the program.
     Our sponsor was Elderweek, an adult-education series hosted by Delaware County Community College in Media, PA. Two or three hundred people attended the event, which offers classes on health, finances and lifestyles for seniors.
     Our concert was held in the tall, sun-lit Aerobics Room, a great space for a concert at DCCC's STEM Center. It attracted more than 60 people to the concert, which was held during the program's 90-minute lunch period.
     For this concert I brought and played three vintage guitars: 1938 B&D Groton 1, which originally sold for $15; 1937 Kalamazoo KG-21, which previously was owned by Floyd Riggs (1923 - 2001) of Vienna, WV; and 1926 Maurer Style 493, a mahogany-bodied, auditorium-sized guitar made by Carl and August Larson.
     I sang 18 love songs and jazz tunes from the 1930s and 1940s. I told several stories of stage door johnnies, drugstore cowboys and Tin Pan Alley artists. And our audience was interested in the songs and stories. In short, a good time was had by all.
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© 2011 Kenneth Lelen - All Rights Reserved

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

My first real guitar
1964 Gibson Southern Jumbo

Prior to buying my first vintage guitar (1938 B&D Groton 1; see posting of January 15, 2011), I only played new guitars — classicals and dreadnoughts. I learned to read music and play classical flute in the late 1950s, but caught up in the Folk Music Scare of the 1960s I decided to buy and learn to play the guitar.
     So, in the summer of 1963 I paid $50 for my first guitar — a brand-new, no-name, nylon-string classical at Sears, Roebuck. Within minutes of bringing it into my home in Northport, NY on Long Island, I'd installed white plastic pickguards on both sides of the sound hole and taught myself to play. I even took lessons at a local music store, but because I already knew a lot of songs, I spent much class time teaching my teacher the words and chords to popular folk songs.
                            Photo: Duane Webb
Ken Lelen and 1964 Gibson SJ
     Then, 18 months later I sold the classical for $50 to a schoolmate I'd finessed into thinking he got a good deal. With this cash in hand and some savings, I bought my first good guitar — a 1964 Gibson SJ, or Southern Jumbo, dreadnought — for $250.
     At the time I thought I wanted a 1964 Martin D-18, which cost about $300, but my parents wouldn't cover my shortfall in funds. No matter. Now I had my first real guitar, which was what you needed to make music and write songs.
     Within a week I played Bob Dylan's "Don't Think Twice, It's Alright" at a high school hootenanny in nearby Cold Spring Harbor, NY. Like many teenage musicians in the 1960s, I thought playing a big dreadnought guitar was how you made music and improved your popularity with girls. Only later did I learn not all guitars had to be that big. And, as important, it was rock-n-rollers and drummers who got the girls.
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            © 2011 Kenneth Lelen — All Rights Reserved