Musician Journey
From Ukulele to Berklee: A Sixteen-Year Journey
How a Christmas gift at age six set one musician on a path through garages, coffeehouses, and concert halls — and what every step taught him.
Every musician remembers the first time sound felt personal — the moment a noise you made stopped being an accident and started being a choice. For Marcus Delgado, that moment happened on a red soprano ukulele, age six, on a cold December morning in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
What followed was sixteen years of incremental, sometimes painful, always rewarding progress through instruments, bands, heartbreaks, and breakthroughs. This is that story.
The Journey
6 to 22 — milestone by milestone
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6 age
First Strings — The Ukulele
UkuleleChristmas morning, age six. Under the tree: a red soprano ukulele with a bow tied around the neck. Within a week Marcus had worked out the melody to "You Are My Sunshine" by ear, pressing the wrong frets until his fingertips ached and the notes finally locked in. His parents had no idea what they had started.
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8 age
Music Theory Clicks
Piano / TheoryA retired schoolteacher named Mrs. Pereira lived three houses down and gave piano lessons for ten dollars a week. Marcus lasted one semester before he admitted he hated scales — but he left knowing how to read notation, how chords were built, and why the IV chord felt like coming home. That knowledge would pay dividends for the rest of his life.
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10 age
Switch to Six Strings
Acoustic GuitarA battered Yamaha FG-180 acoustic arrived from eBay, its action high enough to blister fingers in the first ten minutes. Marcus spent the entire summer in the garage running through every open chord he could find on the internet. By September he could play "Blackbird" end to end — slowly — and had started writing his first original riffs, recording them into a portable cassette recorder he found at a garage sale.
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13 age
Going Electric
Electric GuitarHis uncle gifted a beat-up Squier Stratocaster and a tiny practice amp that buzzed at anything above three. Marcus did not care. The first time he hit a distorted power chord he felt the sound in his sternum, and something shifted permanently. He spent four months learning every Nirvana song he could find tabs for, then moved on to SRV, Hendrix, and finally jazz chord voicings that kept his fingers guessing.
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14 age
First Band — The Garage Years
Electric Guitar (band)Three kids from his high school — drummer Cody, bassist Priya, and singer DeShawn — formed The Static Owls in Cody's parents' two-car garage. Rehearsals were chaotic, loud, and completely joyful. They played covers mostly: Foo Fighters, Arctic Monkeys, a few Radiohead songs that were slightly beyond their reach. Every weekend for two years, regardless of homework or weather, they showed up and got a little better.
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17 age
First Real Gig
Electric Guitar (live)A local coffeehouse called The Daily Grind paid $50 plus free drinks for a Friday night set. The Static Owls arrived two hours early, set up wrong, tore it down and set up again, then stood outside arguing about the setlist order until five minutes before showtime. The room held maybe forty people. They played eleven songs. Marcus broke a string on the seventh and finished the show on five strings without missing a beat. The owner booked them back the following month.
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18 age
College Music Program
Guitar / CompositionBerklee College of Music, Boston. Marcus arrived having never read a real lead sheet, never played in a truly locked rhythm section, never been told in precise technical terms why his phrasing was lazy. The first semester was humbling — surrounded by players who had been in youth orchestras and conservatories since age five. He showed up earlier than anyone and stayed later. By spring he had landed a spot in the student jazz ensemble and was writing arrangements for the first time.
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22 age
Graduation and the Road Ahead
Guitar / SongwriterDegree in hand, Marcus graduated with a co-write credit on a song that placed in a sync licensing competition, three original EPs self-released on Bandcamp, and a touring offer from a regional act he had met at a campus showcase. Sixteen years after that Christmas ukulele, the music had become a career. Not famous, not rich — but working, growing, and wholly committed. The garage never really closed; it just got bigger.