Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

Yank

Member
  • Posts

    373
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Yank

  1. Thanks guys. There's a few different tunings that folks use, the main one being C G D A, like a tenor banjo which it was designed to give them a second instrument when Dixieland was on the wain and big band jazz was on the rise. Viola and mandola also use this tuning which if you capoed at the seventh fret is the same as a mandolin. Some tune them like the four high strings of a guitar, known as Chicago tuning.

  2. Just picked up a new 4 string for my wife who plays tenor guitar. A 1956 Gibson TG-50. Straightened the neck, adjusted the bridge for intonation. This thing just oozes mojo. One of the last of the big bodied f-hole acoustics. We can't seem to put it down.

  3. When I was growing up in the Northern US, the confederate flag had (to my peer group), lost it's connotation as being racist. It had been appropriated by southern rock musicians to show pride of place and music preferences. It has been re-appropriated now and is deemed racist. It's all about context. Someone flying the Union Jack in London is probably seen as patriotic. Fly it in the carribean islands where the British installed slavery to get cheap sugar, or in Ireland or India and there would be different connotations. For all I know, the logo for the New England Pat's or the Boston Celtics, might be offensive on your side of the pond. Maybe I'll just fly the Jolly Roger...... oh, wait, are we allowed to say Roger or to be jolly about it?

  4. I teach music on the side. When working with students learning to read, sometimes they play the notes in the right place but something is missing. When, for example, playing Bach's "Minuet in G Major" , a beautiful piece, it helps to think of the people of that time in their huge dresses. When dancing, they made small, stately movements. You have to let the piece breathe properly, instead of rushing through the notes. Sometimes a synth doing, say, a flute sound, won't sound right unless the keyboardist breathes like a flute player would. I guess what I'm trying to say is that there's more to playing a part than just the note in the right place, or maybe I'm being too esoteric. Would a punk bass sound right if you play like you're happy instead of angry?

  5. Hey, Blue. Not "Teen Town". Genre is "red dirt Americana", some 1-4-5, but a lot with w***y chord structure, so not "mustang sally" either. Beyond chord structure, you have to keep your antennae up for things in the arrangement like dropping down dynamically or dropping out in spots, double turn arounds, punching certain notes, etc.

×
×
  • Create New...