Subject: instruments: does appearance matter? From: GUEST,Andy7 Date: 06 Feb 19 - 04:37 PM Does the appearance of an instrument matter? Obviously not on a recording. But in a live performance, does the beauty of the instrument being played add something to the enjoyment of the audience? Or is it irrelevant? |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: GUEST,johnmc Date: 06 Feb 19 - 04:50 PM I saw Glen Campbell in one of his last concerts and the vibrant colour of his strat under the lights really had a magnetic effect. Close up, as in a video, an instrument as beautiful as, say, a bassoon adds to the overall experience of listening for me. Then again, how do you explain the allure of W Nelson's Martin ? |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Jack Campin Date: 07 Feb 19 - 05:30 AM I'm sure accordionists think all that bling and fancy fretwork is a crowd-pleaser but most people these days must just think it's tacky. The "tobacco sunburst" colour scheme on guitars and mandolins really turns me off. Why would anybody want an instrument to look as if it's spent 20 years hanging on the wall in the dayroom of a hostel for elderly alcoholics? |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Dave Hanson Date: 07 Feb 19 - 05:37 AM I give you Bill Monroe's Gibson F5 mandolin and as said above Willie Nelson's Martin, Ricky Scaggs also has a wreck of a mandolin that sounds great, appearance doesn't matter at all, Johnny Cash famously scratched Marty Stuarts brand mandolin on purpose but it just adds to it's fame. Dave H |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: The Sandman Date: 07 Feb 19 - 05:39 AM no what matters is how the instrument is set up and how it plays and sounds and how it allows the player to be as musical as he possibly can be ,my thanks goes to steve dickinson of Wheatstone and co |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: GUEST Date: 07 Feb 19 - 05:48 AM I've often noticed that audiences can "listen with their eyes". Someone with a Martin guitar, say, must ipso facto be a capable musician. Despite audible evidence to the contrary. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: GUEST,Hootenanny Date: 07 Feb 19 - 06:04 AM Just in case it has escaped your understanding. Music is an aural experience not visual. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Acorn4 Date: 07 Feb 19 - 06:58 AM Not for ukuleles! |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: saulgoldie Date: 07 Feb 19 - 08:27 AM To my mind, it matters. And it doesn't. A beautiful and virtually blemish-free instrument *could* tell the audience that it spends most of its time sitting unused. OTOH, it could also tell that the player just takes fanatically good care of it so that it always looks pretty. OTOH OTOH, if an instrument looks like it has been through both world wars and the next one but sounds like a piece of Heaven, that could say that the player is more into function than appearances. And somewhere in the middle...somewhere in the middle. But I would *think* that whatever it looks like, that the player would want top notch sound. Put this in different contexts. Think of...a dwelling, a vehicle, a romantic partner, and so on. I have a bicycle that I used to ride all over. Others would remark on how ugly it was. It was dubbed the most UNstealable bike in town. Underneath the four different colors of paint, primer, and electrical tape lay a bike that was in better mechanical condition than most of the other bikes around. And yes, many of the pretty bikes didn't see much use. But also, some of the pretty bikes DID see use. Just that their owners spent much time and attention on cleaning and waxing them, cause that mattered to them. Basically, I think attitudes go all across the spectrum, and that they are all valid. That is the wonder of the human condition, methinks. Saul |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Tootler Date: 07 Feb 19 - 10:31 AM From: Acorn4 - PM Date: 07 Feb 19 - 06:58 AM Not for ukuleles! I know you're being snarky but, actually, the brighter and flashier looking the ukulele, the crappier it's likely to be. Good ukulele players use fairly plain looking instruments. the qualities that make a good guitar apply to the ukulele and to other string instruments. At the end of the day, regardless of instrument, it's how it sounds that matters. It's interesting that the old flashy glittery style accordions are increasingly being replaced by ones with a plain wood finish which I think, looks better. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Acorn4 Date: 08 Feb 19 - 04:59 AM I seem to remember in the seventies - I think it might have been Ralph McTell but not positive on this - bought a new Martin, took a disc sander and sanded all the lacquer off the front. Most of the tone of the guitar is made by the front and lacquer makes it look nice and sparkly in a shop window but destroys the tone. At least this was the theory at the time I think - not sure if people still do this? |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Will Fly Date: 08 Feb 19 - 05:03 AM I recall the de-lacquerer being Mike Chapman - but I could be wrong! |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: lefthanded guitar Date: 08 Feb 19 - 05:54 AM Did you ever see Willie Nelson's guitar ? |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: GUEST,johnmc Date: 08 Feb 19 - 08:22 AM And yet the varnish on a violin is sacrosanct. Incidentally, the appearance is important to an audience sometimes. Shiny brass in a Big band say. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: GUEST,Ed Date: 08 Feb 19 - 12:55 PM Going back to Acorn4's comment regarding sanding laquer off, Ian MacDonald in is his excellent book Revolution In The Head, comments that: "Lennon bought his own [Epiphone Casino] in 1966. In 1968, he stripped the instrument of its veneer on the then-vogueish assumption that this would improve its resonance; the fact that the unvarnished wood also gave it a look of deglamourised frankness presumably had its appeal." |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Jim Carroll Date: 08 Feb 19 - 01:12 PM There's a story told by Irish Travellers of a fiddle player who turned up at Puck Fair with a very expensive shiny fiddle in a crocodile case, set up a music stand in the middle of the fair, took out his sheet music, carefully rozzined his bow and began to play - he was ****** awful ! Shortly afterwards, an old Travelling man turned up on a battered old bike, carrying a battered dirty old fiddle wrapped in torn newspaper He set his bike down, scrunched up the newspaper, threw it on the floor and began to play He was s**** too! Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Big Al Whittle Date: 08 Feb 19 - 01:18 PM I think everybody gets bored by a crap player - however nice their instrument is. Some people can make wonderful instruments sound awful. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Acorn4 Date: 08 Feb 19 - 01:42 PM Jim's post put me in mind of this:- "The Old Fiddler" |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Jack Campin Date: 08 Feb 19 - 03:52 PM I once read an explanation of why silver-mounted bagpipes always sound better than most. It isn't because the silver makes them sound any better. It's because you're not going to waste silver on an instrument unless it's a good one. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Andy7 Date: 08 Feb 19 - 06:31 PM "There's a story told by Irish Travellers of a fiddle player who turned up at Puck Fair ..." Hahaha, nice joke! I must try to remember it, to retell at some appropriate time! |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Tattie Bogle Date: 08 Feb 19 - 08:25 PM Now I know a lot of you folk don't like bodhrans per se, but I was rather dismayed to see a member of an Irish group playing one with a torn skin patched up with gafa tape! (OK, I've heard the Stanley knife joke umpteen times, so no need to repeat it). It sounded dreadful too. (OK, some wag will say they always sound awful!) Surely, for what they werre getting paid for that and other gigs, a new bodhran might have been a good idea, but of course you have to beat a new one in for months....! |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Jack Campin Date: 09 Feb 19 - 05:34 AM If you're ever near Cathal McConnell when he's playing, get a look at his flute. I'd want to put rubber gloves on before handling it. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: gillymor Date: 09 Feb 19 - 07:01 AM Re sanding off finishes, I played at a regular bluegrass jam back in the late'80's-early '90's and some of the guys took to sanding off the top, back and sides of their old Martins and then applying sanding sealer and it really opened up the sound as I recall. I was playing a fairly new D-28H and didn't have the heart to take a sander to it, especially not in the Florida humidity. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Jack Campin Date: 09 Feb 19 - 08:32 AM One with an odd story: ocarinas. These have a range of functions, as toys, fake educational aids, bird lures, gaming props, sculptures, and instruments of ritual, as well as normal musical instruments. In the last category, the best value for money are usually the Austrian ones made a few decades each side of 1900. They weren't made with perfect quality control and were mostly painted black. If you're buying on EBay, you do NOT want one with a shiny intact paint finish - that means it was never seriously played. If the paint has rubbed off around the fingerholes, you know somebody used it for a real musical purpose for years, so you can count on it being one of the better ones. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: punkfolkrocker Date: 09 Feb 19 - 11:11 AM |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Big Al Whittle Date: 09 Feb 19 - 12:20 PM i love bodhrans. i was just thinking though...the profusion of wonderful instruments available to club players nowadays - must surely at some point lead to an improvement in the general standards, you'd think. the trouble seems to me - there are all sorts of tuition available to do all the fancy stuff that you need to be a contortionist to attempt. but you don't see many attempts to explain the basics of not being boring when you do a folk accompaniment on guitar. - |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Jim Carroll Date: 09 Feb 19 - 12:57 PM "i love bodhrans." Me too - great for scaring the crows of the grass seed if you drill holes through them and hang a couple of them on a line on a length of string The sound of the wind whistling through them send them flying Misnamed 'the heartbeat of Irish music they tend to be regarded as its death-watch beetle here in the home of Irish Music, West Clare (except in Doolin, of course - but that's where we direct bodhran players to) Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Big Al Whittle Date: 09 Feb 19 - 01:21 PM i love ukuleles as well. we need more ukuleles and bodhrans in folk music to keep the revival on track. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Dave Hanson Date: 09 Feb 19 - 02:53 PM Definition of a bodhran player ? someone who likes to hang around with folk musicians. Dave H |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: John P Date: 09 Feb 19 - 04:34 PM Does the appearance of an instrument matter? This one has a very easy and obvious answer: Yes for some, no for some, somewhat for some. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Tattie Bogle Date: 09 Feb 19 - 05:07 PM Ok, bait taken, Dave H: I am a musician who happens to play percussion as well as a range of other (melody) instruments. I was a timpanist before I took up bodhran: easier to carry around! |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: JennieG Date: 09 Feb 19 - 05:09 PM Yes and no. A well-kept and maintained instrument says that its owner cares about the music and the instrument, so is likely to play well - or as well as their ability allows. A battered, bent and bruised instrument, on the other hand, can send the message that its owner doesn't care about looking after what can be an expensive investment......and if they don't care about their instrument, what else don't they care about? Playing well? Annoying or boring an audience with a crap performance? Even ukuleles. I have two hand-made ukes which play beautifully (even for a mug like me) and look gorgeous, even though they don't dazzle with sequins and glitter. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Tony Rees Date: 09 Feb 19 - 05:57 PM In the vintage / higher end instrument world (e.g. Gruhn Guitars), the following gradings are used: M = Mint; NM = Near Mint; EXF = Exceptionally Fine; EXC = Excellent; VG = Very Good. Obviously this has a significant effect on the price and eventual potential resale value. On the other hand, an otherwise top flight instrument in only VG condition might bring it into the price range of a player rather than a collector, and sound wise it could be just as good. For the record, "VG" is hyperbole. Most examples I have seen look heavily worn - I would call them "poor". Gruhn used to have another category, just "Good", now deprecated (I would equate this to "renovator's special" in another well known arena). So, yes, appearance does matter, but mainly when you are buying or selling; and poor appearance can work in your favour if it allows you to get an instrument you could not otherwise afford... on the other hand, poor appearance could also go along with more significant structural problems as well which can mean money is required to be spent to rectify these, at least. Of course, one can make as fine music (or as bad) on an instrument that is cosmetically poor as one that is perfect, provided that the structural basics (affecting playability and tone) of the instrument remain unaffected. On the other hand, a beautiful instrument may inspire the player to greater heights as well, maybe... just some food for thought there. Regards - Tony |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Tony Rees Date: 09 Feb 19 - 10:12 PM On another note, if appearance was the final arbiter, a refinished (i.e., shiny) vintage instrument would be worth more than one with an original, worn finish. However, the opposite is true - in that market, at least :) Best - Tony |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Seamus Kennedy Date: 10 Feb 19 - 01:33 AM I was once turned down for a folk club booking because of my guitar which is finished in the colors of the Irish flag, green white and orange. The booker said it would detract from the “gravitas” of my performance in her club. I responded that blind members of the audience wouldn’t be able to hear the colors, but no joy. 35 years on, I still get asked why I have Mexican flag painted on my guitar. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Nigel Paterson Date: 10 Feb 19 - 05:05 AM I took a guitar to have some work done...new machines, re-fretting. I asked the luthier if he would also strip & revarnish a rather 'tired' looking instrument. He refused, point blank, saying that the visible wear was like a patina, evidence of a loved, long-played instrument. He agreed to a gentle clean, but nothing more. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Tunesmith Date: 10 Feb 19 - 05:13 AM I remember an interview with Martin Simpson where the interviewer asked Martin if he thought that the decoration on his ( Martin's) guitar was a bit over the top. Unfazed, Martin said he loved the guitar's appearance and couldn't wait to pick it up and play. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Gordon Jackson Date: 10 Feb 19 - 06:34 AM I wouldn’t buy a settee solely on how comfortable it was – I’d also want it to look good. By the same token, when I buy a mandolin or octave mandola I want it to both sound and look good: Hathway for me, then. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Roger the Skiffler Date: 10 Feb 19 - 06:43 AM I have noticed that some jazz players let their saxes, trumpets etc. aquire a dull "patina", others keep them shiny. Dopesn't seem to affect the sound. I did varnish the frame of my washboard, we wouldn't want it to rot? (responses on a postcard...) RtS |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: GUEST,kenny Date: 10 Feb 19 - 06:55 AM https://youtu.be/UeyJ_bUMISk |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: gillymor Date: 10 Feb 19 - 07:44 AM Cool, you can actually see the bracing in Cooney's guitar. I have an old Lowden and a Davy Stuart Octave mando that would also have advanced Willie Nelson syndrome if I hadn't added some extra pickguard to the affected area. If I see a good player that plays a good-sounding but ratty-looking instrument it says to me that the music comes first. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: GUEST,Jim Knowledge Date: 10 Feb 19 - 08:00 AM I `ad that Kenny in my cab the other day. It was quite `andy because I wanted to `ave a word with `im. I said, "Morning Ken. I see you`ve `ad your three-penny worth on that Mudcat. That guitar the fellah is playing in Frankie Gavin`s band, do you think that`s a result of thrashing around with all those Irish jigs and reels?" `e said, "No Jim, they`re personalised now. All the guitar makers offer this service. You state where you want it and they bash a blooming great `ole in it with a club `ammer." I said, " Blimey, hat`s a new one on me." `e said, "No Jim. It`s just progression. `aven`t you seen denims some of the kids are wearing now. They come out of the factories torn to shred but they are nice little earners!!" Whaddam I Like?? |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Tony Rees Date: 10 Feb 19 - 01:51 PM Actually Jim's message is exactly right, although the situation is presently more common with electric guitars than acoustics (e.g. Fender's "relic" series). However to my knowledge at least one acoustic guitar company makes a selling point of offering a range of "distress levels" for its newly made instruments - here: https://www.pre-warguitars.com/distress-levels/ . Ugh. Regards - Tony |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Gordon Jackson Date: 11 Feb 19 - 02:14 AM Yes, and anyone who goes out of their way to buy a 'distressed' instrument is at as concerned with appearance than anyone else. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: GUEST,johnmc Date: 11 Feb 19 - 09:49 AM Some of us will remember when better-off tourists would offer someone a small fortune for a pair of patched jeans, possibly with home-made flares. I always assumed this was driven by a desire to vicariously live the hippie/bohemian life. Buying a distressed instrument seems to me to answer the same need. It says the person is a bit of a "character" with an interesting past. Buying a second-hand one with signs of wear, I would regard as being in a different category. Here the instrument is the one with character. And let us not forget the canny purchaser of future collectibles, again belonging to a third category. By the way, I can't see any redeeming quality in a rusty cone on a resonator. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: leeneia Date: 11 Feb 19 - 12:40 PM I don't want to read this whole thread and enter into the spirit of it. I have three observations about the appearance of instruments. 1. Would people put up with pipe organs if they didn't come with impressive displays of gleaming pipes in beautiful woodwork? If a pipe organ were as prosaic as a radiator, would people still be using them? 2. I've heard of people who didn't want a nice, free piano because somebody had painted it. I think that's stupid. If it sounds good, play it. 3. When I see a picture of Willie Nelson holding his guitar with the chunks broken out of the soundhole, I feel the same way I do when I see a picture of an abused animal - sad, sickened, angry. (The emotions are the same but not as strong as for the living animal.) |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Acorn4 Date: 11 Feb 19 - 01:03 PM Just on the question of holes in jeans - in Primark the ones with the holes are more expensive than the ones without so you are paying for air. |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Tony Rees Date: 11 Feb 19 - 01:13 PM I do remember from 40 years ago the journalistic cliche of the "folksinger with his dusty clothes and battered Martin guitar", and thinking maybe there was a department at Martin whose job was to batter them before sale. Now it seems I am not too far wrong (with a different company, not Martin, but still they are entirely emulating the Martin product, and patting themselves on the head for doing so). And yes, just like the pre-slashed or faded or patched jeans, some reverse snobbery going on here methinks "old/worn=good, new/shiny=bad"). Just fashion, maybe. Cheers - Tony |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Tony Rees Date: 11 Feb 19 - 01:17 PM It's funny, though; with vintage cars, the opposite seems to apply - the shinier the better... |
Subject: RE: instruments: does appearance matter? From: Jack Campin Date: 11 Feb 19 - 01:30 PM There is a variant of this with the Turkish ney (endblown cane flute). There are three schools of thought: 1. Oil it regularly, dry it out after use and keep it looking pristine. This is hard work since to bore is so irregular. 2. Let it go damp so the inside gets covered in black mould - mould improves the tone. But the real hardcore take on it is: 3. Who cares? Go down to the lakeside with a sharp knife and make yourself a few new ones every year. |
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