Here’s the latest song I’ve been working on, I played it out at the PCA Open Mike in Westford on September 8.
[pdf-embedder url=”https://dantappanmusic.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/IAintScared.pdf”]

Dan Tappan – Songs and Music, Old and New
Here’s the latest song I’ve been working on, I played it out at the PCA Open Mike in Westford on September 8.
[pdf-embedder url=”https://dantappanmusic.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/IAintScared.pdf”]
This is an older song, but a new video. Performed March 12, 2017 at the PCA Open Mike, in Westford MA, as part of a special tribute evening to local singer/songwriter/promoter/all-around-good-person Ellen Schmidt.
(Lyrics)
https://youtu.be/Q6Zd9zQLPMQ&w=512
UPDATE 12/15/17: This link describes a simpler method for installing the Google Play store on the lastest Amazon Fire tablets. I’ve tested this on a new Fire HD and it does work. I’m leaving the description below for reference.
Nowadays a variety of applications are available for iOS or Android tablets which are useful for the gigging musician. For example:
But, you may not want to risk taking your expensive iPad or $250 Samsung tablet to a gig and risk having it dropped, or worse having someone walk off with it.
What if there were a good quality tablet which was inexpensive enough that you didn’t have to worry about taking it a gig? It turns out there is: the 7″ Amazon Kindle Fire can be purchased for as little as $49 – less if you buy multiples. And it turns out that the Fire Tablet is quite fast, with an excellent quality display and s responsive touch screen; fully capable of running this sort of app. If you need a larger tablet there are versions with an 8 inch or 10 inch display, still less than the price of a comparable Samsung.
The only issue with the Fire Tablet, and the reason it is so cheap, is that Amazon wants to lock you into using their apps, and the ones you want are probably not available on the Amazon app store. But, for musicians with a bit of a technical bent, it turns out that it is possible to install the Google Play store on a Fire Tablet, which then allows you to install any app which is available for Android.
Unfortunately it’s not a completely straightforward process, but it can be done in less than an hour, and after you’re done you will have a $50 “disposable” table that you can take to a gig without worries.
The following information is collected from various sites on the web. Much of this is from the “Method 2” described here.
First, you will need to have the following hardware available:
Next, you will need to do the following steps to enable the “ADB Debugger” on the Fire Tablet, which will allow the PC to download new software to the Fire.
Next, on the PC, you will have to temporarily disable device driver signing. If you do not do this then step 7 below will fail. Warning: this is the most techy step. If your PC is running Windows 8 or 8.1 follow the instructions here.If it is running Windows 10 follow the instructions for “Solution 1” here.If you are running Windows 7 there may be an equivalent procedure, but I haven’t researched it yet.
Next, you need to download a utility package to the PC to install Google Play on the Fire – click here to download.
Next, run the tool to install Google Play by performing the following steps:

After this, you should find a new “Google Play” app on the main screen of your Fire. Run that, log in with your Google account, and then download whatever apps you need.
And you’re done! Here’s a Fire Tablet running the MailChimp “Subscribe” app:

The other day, I went to the open mike at Club Passim, in Cambridge, and played a couple songs accompanied by the wonderful Jackie Damsky on violin: Only Autumn Knows, and Potatoes in April.
Continuing with my project to make and post demo recordings of my backlog of unrecorded songs.
This is one I wrote last April; thoughts while working in the garden.
(Lyrics)
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