doogieman wrote:Hey Matt_Paris - Have you had your soprano refered to as you "Kenny G" saxophone?
grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
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"I fail to see why doing the same thing over and over and getting the
same results every time is insanity: I've almost proved it isn't;
only a few more tests now and I'm sure results will differ this time ... "
Regarding Andre R, my folks (who are moderately musically educated) enjoy the begeezus out of watching him. Of course, they've been known to indulge in an occasional Lawrence Welk rerun too -- we all used to watch the originals together when I was a kid and my grandmother lived in the house. It was a hoot. What I say is, anything that gets folks listening to music is great, and anything that helps entertain the older and frailer, so much the better.
Last time I was visiting, I caught sight of one of the wooden flutes in the background, and never did get a chance to figure what sort of system it was. Maybe I'll have to look more carefully!
Linda
(No oboes were harmed in the writing of this posting!)
withak wrote:My mandolin has been accused of being a banjo before.
I HATE that. Ukulele is worse tho.
You won't believe this: I actually had a fellow with no musical studies to him come up and ask if I was playing a cittern! I gaped at him, just about had a coronary from the novelty of it all, and bought him a drink. He was my bestest friend for the evening.
"If you take music out of this world, you will have nothing but a ball of fire." - Balochi musician
Aerowhip wrote:
Last time I was visiting, I caught sight of one of the wooden flutes in the background, and never did get a chance to figure what sort of system it was. Maybe I'll have to look more carefully!
Linda
(No oboes were harmed in the writing of this posting!)
Both flutists play wooden Boehm flutes. It's not always easy to tell but you get a hint from this picture:
dpmccabe wrote:At a gig once, this was overheard regarding someone's bodhrán playing:
Kid: "Dad, how is he playing that drum?"
Dad: "See, what he's doing there is actually dislocating his wrist."
The bodhrán player was, in fact, using a stick as you'd expect.
The Dad above was actually close to the truth. At one time I thought that I wanted to play the bodhran. However, I couldn't play the thing without getting pain and numbness in my wrist, so I sold the drum to another neophyte bodhran player. I now have a similar goat skin frame drum that I play with my fingers and thumb. It doesn't hurt my wrist like the bodhran, which is traditionally played with a beater stick.
dpmccabe wrote:At a gig once, this was overheard regarding someone's bodhrán playing:
Kid: "Dad, how is he playing that drum?"
Dad: "See, what he's doing there is actually dislocating his wrist."
The bodhrán player was, in fact, using a stick as you'd expect.
The Dad above was actually close to the truth. At one time I thought that I wanted to play the bodhran. However, I couldn't play the thing without getting pain and numbness in my wrist, so I sold the drum to another neophyte bodhran player. I now have a similar goat skin frame drum that I play with my fingers and thumb. It doesn't hurt my wrist like the bodhran, which is traditionally played with a beater stick.
You'll be interested to know, Doug, that using a tipper/pin/cipín/beaterthingy on the bodhrán is quite optional. It's just as traditional, if less common, to use one's hand: you bend your wrist and loosely strike the head with the somewhat bent surface of the first and middle fingers which are supported in back by the thumb (I'm sure there are variations on this), but despite the absence of the tipper, the overall back-and-forth technique is very similar. Building up calluses is recommended. A bloodstained bodhrán, while arguably somehow appropriate, is not for polite company.
I know two local boys who play only by hand, and of one such in Chicago.
"If you take music out of this world, you will have nothing but a ball of fire." - Balochi musician
I've gotta be revealing something here... but this thread hit a lot of nerves, I must admit, I play the "golden clarinet" (and have explained as much to Kenny G fans) ... also love the polkas... AND it's great North American Hero, Lawrence Welk) everybody, jump! but sort of self-consciously!
...and I'd like to also submit that "if you like-a ukulele lady... ukulele lady like-a you!"
Chinese proverb: “If thy neighbour offends thee, give his children gifts of drums.”