2,292 reputation
727
bio website music.stackexchange.com
location St. Louis, MO
age 15
visits member for 1 year, 6 months
seen 16 hours ago
stats profile views 64

♦Mod on GFH.SE

I have a wide range of interests, including music, history, and math. I have been playing music for three of four years now and play the cornet, recorder, and piano. 100% of the music on my computer is classical, so you should know what genres I prefer ;). I enjoy studying any history and researching my genealogy. American English is my first language, pero tambien hablo Español. I am also currently taking Calculus 1.

If you are interested in or are an avid genealogist, please consider joining the below site:

Stack Exchange Q&A site proposal: Genealogy & Family History

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profile for Luke on Stack Exchange, a network of free, community-driven Q&A sites


Feb
27
suggested suggested edit on
Feb
27
wiki
Feb
27
revised How do I double tongue on a recorder?
added detail
Feb
27
revised Creating a perfect “practice corner”
improved answer
Feb
27
accepted Why do marches usually end with a repetition of the last note?
Feb
27
comment Lead sheets / fake sheets without score
Notepad++ would work. It's not very fancy, though.
Feb
26
asked Why do marches usually end with a repetition of the last note?
Feb
26
revised scales wiki excerpt
added 129 characters in body
Feb
26
revised chromatic wiki excerpt
added 97 characters in body
Feb
26
revised chromatic wiki description
added 174 characters in body
Feb
26
suggested suggested edit on chromatic tag wiki excerpt
Feb
26
suggested suggested edit on chromatic tag wiki
Feb
26
wiki created chromatic description
Feb
26
wiki created chromatic excerpt
Feb
26
comment Can a scale contain both a sharp and a flat note?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G_minor states that F# sharp is the correct way to write it. However, the key signature is still written with two flats.
Feb
26
comment Can a scale contain both a sharp and a flat note?
You beat me to the answer...
Feb
26
suggested suggested edit on scales tag wiki excerpt
Feb
26
wiki created scales excerpt
Feb
25
comment When I play the C chord, why does the electronic tuner indicate that it is a G chord?
Why the down vote?
Feb
25
revised When I play the C chord, why does the electronic tuner indicate that it is a G chord?
fixed grammar