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Winter Wonderland began as a poem written in 1934 by Richard Smith in Honesdale, PA, who was at the time a patient in a sanitarium. To pass the time, Smith entered contests for jingles and ads, and showed his winter-inspired poem to a musician friend, Felix Bernhard who wrote the melody to go with Smith's poem. The rest is history as Winter Wonderland became a perennially popular Christmas song; Guy lombardo being one of the first major performers to use it in his performances. I think this perennially favorite song, like "Sleighride" can be played and enjoyed any time at all, and I have tried to produce appropriate tonalities on a Hammond organ which seem to go well with its character. I don't have enough room to write a full description, but by extracting various portions of the audio from other places besides the two G terminals in a Hammond console, this allows processing and changing the characteristics to make a wealth of additional effects. If you will turn on subtitles on YouTube and read those as you watch, this will give you a "play-by-play" synopsis of what I am doing in different parts of the song, and here is a list from which you can quickly access particular sections. You can also do this with the "scrub bar" (usually in red) below the video to go quickly to particular sections. Thank you for watching, I am most grateful, and if you like what I do on a Hammond, please consider subscribing to this channel. Thank You! For a detailed explanation of what the subtle "Pluck effect is and who developed it, clcik on the small i in the circle at the upper right of the video. It willd take you to a video of Ken Griffin's "Kringle's Jingle" where at the end of the video there's a details explanation of the "pluck" effect and how to do it, what equipment you'll need and who invented it. ~ The HAMMOND Guy~ Here's a timeline of key points in this video 00:00 Intro. 00:23 Bridge, 1st verse. 00:35 Final part of first verse. 00:46 Begin 2nd verse, LH countermelody accented with percussion. 01:09 Swap hands, bridge of second verse. 01:21 Swap hands, final part of second verse. 01:34 Repeated polychords to introduce key change to Db. 01:38 Add subtle initial "pluck" effect to melody and LH chords. 02:01 different sound for third verse bridge. 02:13 key change to D, add synthetic bell sound to melody. 02:27 Outro, promote other Hammond Guy videos.