American Idol In Training

We always knew she was musical, but on Labor Day, it took on a whole new meaning.

Witness what Julianna thinks her great-uncle’s cane is meant to be used for:

(Obviously, I should have dressed her for cuteness instead of for combine riding.)

Croon, baby girl, croon.

Now, don’t you wish we had a video camera to catch this moment? Guess what–we did!

http://www.youtube.com/user/basifamily?feature=mhee

In all seriousness, Julianna often doesn’t have a strong look of Down syndrome. And for this reason we sometimes hesitate to share the moments when her mental retardation manifests. (It still hurts to use that phrase.)  But is that a measure of respect for her, or of our own discomfort? The fact is, however it sounds, she is singing–the pitch goes up and down in approximately the right places, the rhythms stop and start with the melody, the inflections follow the music. And besides, since I’ve been talking about this phenomenon for weeks, I think it’s time to share, now that we’ve managed to capture it. I hope you enjoy!

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Shared with Wordful Wednesday and

special needs wordless wednesday

11 Responses

  1. Get her to a piano teacher soon. Singers are better when they have the musical education that goes with playing the piano, in the standard-practice tradition, of course. My wife and I are both singers, but my wife has played the piano since childhood, and she learns a lot more music than I do in shorter time.

    1. Her big brother (who’s 6) started piano right around his 6th birthday. His daddy teaches piano. We haven’t thought that far ahead with her…figure she needs to talk first! LOL

  2. OH darn. I went to go watch it and then remembered that my speakers don’t work, but I LOVE that she thought it would make a good microphone. It actually is the perfect height and angle for one. She’s a hoot!

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