Tenor Guitar

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Bretton
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Tenor Guitar

Post by Bretton »

Does anyone use tenor guitar for trad. Irish music melody playing?

Just curious...

-Brett

http://www.tenorguitar.com

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenor_guitar
Last edited by Bretton on Sat Feb 24, 2007 8:19 am, edited 2 times in total.
Uilleann915
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Post by Uilleann915 »

I've been a guitar player for 13 years. What is a tenor guitar? I know what a bass guitar is....is a tenor just a fancy name for a standard axe?
"....if I had known then, what I know now...." e.v.
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rh
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Post by rh »

John Carty plays a fine tenor guitar; his latest cd has several cuts on TG. Dan Beimborn has at least one cut on a National tenor on his "Shatter the Calm" cd as well.
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s1m0n
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Post by s1m0n »

Uilleann915 wrote:I've been a guitar player for 13 years. What is a tenor guitar? I know what a bass guitar is....is a tenor just a fancy name for a standard axe?
No, it's not.

Back before steel strings, guitars were strung with gut, and were therfore a good deal quiter than thay are now.

The popular choice for the 'strummer' role in the early days of recording was a tenor banjo. This was a four-string banjo tuned in fifths, just like a mandolin or violin.

After the invention of steel strings guitars began to replace tenor banjos as the more popular instrument. During the transition, one hybrid (a four string guitar, ie a tenor banjo nect ona guitar body) gained brief popularity as an instrument that gave tenor banjo players access to the new sound without having to learn the fretboard all over again.

Because of this instrument's affinity with Mando/TB/Violin, most irish music falls easily under your fingers, particularly if you change the 'original' CGDA tuning to GDAE.
And now there was no doubt that the trees were really moving - moving in and out through one another as if in a complicated country dance. ('And I suppose,' thought Lucy, 'when trees dance, it must be a very, very country dance indeed.')

C.S. Lewis
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rh
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Post by rh »

rh wrote: Dan Beimborn has at least one cut on a National tenor on his "Shatter the Calm" cd as well.
and here's Dan and his National on Youtube
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boj9
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Post by boj9 »

My first banjo was a guitar.
Some years ago, I found a beat up Old Kraftsman Tenor Guitar on ebay for $90. I got a tenor banjo instruction book and started practicing. I dragged it to session for a year or two but got frustrated because I couldn't hear myself. It has a great sound, it just really can't compete with fiddles, sqeezeboxes and pipes. So I broke down and bought a banjo. I still use the guitar for practice at home.
It's funny, but at the sessions most folks just assumed it was a 6 string. I kept getting suggestions about what chords to play. And on a couple of occasions, someone would lean over and tell me "that guitar only has four strings!". Like I was careless and losing them or something.
Bretton
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Post by Bretton »

Actually, I've given up on finding a tenor guitar for now and purchased a baritone ukulele instead. I'm going to try tuning it GDAE...we'll see how that works out. I am getting different strings for it, not tuning it to GDAE with the stock strings.

But, after I'd already ordered the uke, I did find this:

Image
http://www.infolinkmiami.com/soaresy/catalog.html

...which I may try out at some point (looks almost just like a bari uke though).

:)

-Brett
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Ro3b
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Post by Ro3b »

Oooh. Those electric tenors are the BOMB.

Image
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Unseen122
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Post by Unseen122 »

rh wrote:Dan Beimborn has at least one cut on a National tenor on his "Shatter the Calm" cd as well.
I know he has atleast one with a TG on "Torch and Fire" also.

I was at a CD store last week and saw a new CD with two musicians (can't remember who) on had a Tenor Banjo the other a TG it was released on Compass and was in the Celtic section. I think one of the musicians was Eamon Coyne I don't know if it is the same one who makes Flutes.
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rh
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Post by rh »

Unseen122 wrote: I was at a CD store last week and saw a new CD with two musicians (can't remember who) on had a Tenor Banjo the other a TG it was released on Compass and was in the Celtic section. I think one of the musicians was Eamon Coyne I don't know if it is the same one who makes Flutes.
http://www.eamonncoyne.com/hts.htm

Eamonn Coyne is a fine tenor banjo player from Dublin; i have his earlier cd (which features some tracks with McGoldrick, Dermot Byrne and others). I dunno about the flutes; maybe you're thinking of Eamonn Cotter? Anyway the new one looks interesting, there are some samples at the link above.
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Unseen122
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Post by Unseen122 »

I must have been thinking about Cotter.
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Dr Funkenstein
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Post by Dr Funkenstein »

Eamonn Coyne's new duo CD w/Kris Drever indeed has a couple tracks with tenor guitar on it--good stuff!

While you're at it, check out Drever's band, Lau: http://www.lau-music.co.uk/
rh wrote:
Unseen122 wrote: I was at a CD store last week and saw a new CD with two musicians (can't remember who) on had a Tenor Banjo the other a TG it was released on Compass and was in the Celtic section. I think one of the musicians was Eamon Coyne I don't know if it is the same one who makes Flutes.
http://www.eamonncoyne.com/hts.htm

Eamonn Coyne is a fine tenor banjo player from Dublin; i have his earlier cd (which features some tracks with McGoldrick, Dermot Byrne and others). I dunno about the flutes; maybe you're thinking of Eamonn Cotter? Anyway the new one looks interesting, there are some samples at the link above.
Wizzer
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Catskills Irish Arts Week had 4 Teachers schedueld for Tenor

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