Subject: How did you choose your instrument? From: Roger in Sheffield Date: 03 Jul 00 - 12:34 PM I have just had a quick look at the thread When you first made music And I am intrigued to know how people choose their instruments Was it following in a parents footsteps or an instrument in the house just waiting to be played? My friend bought me a flute when I said I liked the group Flook So I chose the Flute indirectly It is a great instrument but has its drawbacks I can't sing and play the Flute at the same time for instance Is there a joke in there somewhere? Roger |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Liz the Squeak Date: 03 Jul 00 - 12:39 PM I chose my two favourites because they only did recorder lessons at school and I wanted to be better than my sister, and I took up the drums so I could make a loud noise during parades..... The violin I took up because it got me out of maths lessons, and I took up the bowed psaltery because it was there, and wasn't socally unacceptable (unlike the melodeons, accordions and bagpipe that populated the house of the SO when we married and I moved in......). We now have a piano, and I'm getting better with one hand, but still can't do a tune with my right hand (very left handed, me). LTS
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Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Kim C Date: 03 Jul 00 - 12:43 PM I think they chose me instead. |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Rick Fielding Date: 03 Jul 00 - 12:45 PM My mother played accordion (big 120 bass), is it any wonder I took up guitar? Rick |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Willie-O Date: 03 Jul 00 - 12:46 PM As I recall, when I was a young rascal taking piano lessons, I hated having to reposition my fingers all the time. I looked at a guitar and figured "there's only 6 strings, it's gotta be easier than piano." Later on I found out about frets. Duh... Also my brother had acquired a guitar from which in a destructive moment he had snapped the neck clear off the body. I rescued the remnants, and not knowing this was a difficult and precise job, glued it back together (the second time I did this I added some dowelling. Glad I didn't get intimidated about major insturment repairs until later. W-O |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Mbo Date: 03 Jul 00 - 12:50 PM Well, looking back on it now, I really can't remember why I decided I wanted to play guitar. I was always envious of someone who could play an instrument, and I think that's what got the better of me! All I know is I got my very first guitar (classical) on Christmas 1993 when I was 14. At that time I had no idea how to read music, or indeed anything about any other kind of music except country and oldies. But soon that would change, bwa ha ha ha!! My sister is a huge A.C.Doyle buff (she's a member of the Doyle Society of North America), and my parents suggested to her that it might be cool to learn to play the violin like Holmes did. She wasn't interested (she doesn't like music that much), so I said "I'll learn!" So, on Christmas 1994, I received the violin. My guitar training came in handy, as I shocked my teacher by bringing in bluegrass fiddle tune (like The Johnson Boys) and arrangements of classical music--on my 4th violin lesson! And just last Christmas, my parents got me a Great Highland bagpipe practice chanter. That one's not hard to figure out...I've loved bagpipes since I was 3 years old! In fact when I was 3, my Mom asked me "Matt, what instrument would do you want to play?" and I replied without hesitation "Bagpipes!" The dreams of youth!!! --Mbo |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Roger in Sheffield Date: 03 Jul 00 - 12:53 PM Kim that is surreal Which instruments do you play and just how did they choose you? I have a lovely image of voices calling to you in your sleep from the music shop across town! Roger |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Homeless Date: 03 Jul 00 - 12:56 PM Recorder was mandatory in third grade. Started in orchestra in sixth grade and preferred "that big one" and so started on string bass. My dad played organ in a roller rink when he was younger, so we he got one of those I picked it up from watching him play. "Everyone" wants to play guitar, so I picked that up. Hearing an old Steve Martin comedy album as a kid I heard Foggy Mountain Breakdown and decided I needed to learn to play that. Thus I started messing with the banjo later in life. Then learned that there was more to banjo than three finger. So I've been working on clawhammer also. Lap dulcimer I started playing after I made one (that was the easiest stringed instrument to build from scratch). When I became homeless the bass was too much to drag around, so I started on tin whistle. Messed with panpipes - again, when I was building them. Still can't play any of them worth a damn. Enough to keep myself amused, but I wouldn't want to go on stage. I guess proficiency would follow if I were to ever choose one. |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Roger in Sheffield Date: 03 Jul 00 - 01:00 PM bowed psaltery??? I still have not worked out what an Autoharp is but I believe it involves steam, bellows and mechanical hands Roger |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Roger in Sheffield Date: 03 Jul 00 - 01:11 PM Homeless I think my playing is wonderful but from the faces of others I realise that maybe its not too hot. I like it and thats what counts and it makes me happy My Tin Whistle playing is really awful - but I won't stop One of these days I will find a Whistle that works Roger |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: GUEST Date: 03 Jul 00 - 01:16 PM Drums were my first choice, inspired by "Wipeout," by the Surfaris (I guess that dates me). It also seemed a practical musical instrument for someone who had no talent for music, i.e., melody, notes, etc. (See musician jokes thread some time ago, re: what do you call someone who wants to hang out with musicians? A drummer). Only thing was, drums were bulky and noisy. You couldn't take them to the park very easily to pass the afternoon; neighbors complained; pictures vibrated off the wall. About then my dad came home with a Gretch "Tennesseean" electric guitar (big, orange solid body with painted-on sound holes and Bixby tremolo system) and a Fender amp, and began fingerpicking Chet Atkins style. He showed me a couple of chords, then bought me a cheap box from the pawn shop with quarters he'd saved from quitting smoking. I wish I could remember the name and what happened to that guitar. The rest, as they say, is inconsequential. Wouldn't be without an accoustic guitar, even if I quit playing. |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Peter Kasin Date: 03 Jul 00 - 01:19 PM My mother insisted that I learn electric rock/blues guitar and forced me to take private lessons with Clapton. I had to sneak my violin into the basement, and later started a garage string quartet with some neighborhood buddies. We annoyed the whole block with our pan-Asian classical music, calling ourselves the Buddah Pest String Quartet. But, seriously, I took up violin in high school. My parents never pushed me to take up an instrument. I've always listened to music. In elementary school I took recorder class, in Jr. high I tried french horn, then clarinet, but couldn't tongue the notes properly. You kept hearing air before each note. In high school I started violin. I loved violin music and knew that wind instruments were problematic for me, so it seemed like a natural choice. Didn't practice much, though. I'd rather wake up the next day and be a magically improved player! I quit violin a couple of years after high school, but kept the instrument in my closet. 12 years later I took it out again when I started into traditional music. Discovering trad. Celtic music changed my whole life, and I finally started to practice! |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Willie-O Date: 03 Jul 00 - 01:35 PM Considering the chains of coincidence, misunderstandings and strange notions that seem to have led us to our "choices", I have to vote for Kim's theory. Only thing that never works is "because someone else thought I should play the *******". Of course this hasn't stopped me trying to influence my kids choices, but mostly I just try to make sure they're surrounded by good music. Willie-O |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Uncle_DaveO Date: 03 Jul 00 - 01:51 PM I chose 5-string banjo and guitar 50 years ago because I want to be Pete Seeger when (if) I grow up. Actually only learned banjo about two years ago, though. Dave Oesterreich |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Roger in Sheffield Date: 03 Jul 00 - 02:03 PM I am worried that the Bodhran I bought but can't play will choose me I never meant to buy it just kind of happened I am off to the pub now slightly worried that I will have drunken nightmares of a lonely Bodhran taunting me must stop watching rubbish horror movies Roger |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: sophocleese Date: 03 Jul 00 - 02:51 PM Just what you need Roger, a vision of a lone bodhran singing "Beat me with your rhythm stick!" Recorder was taught, briefly, in elemantary school. My Dad gat a tenor one and my mother got an alto so with two brothers we would sometimes play pieces together. I tried piano but didn't get very far with it as I often lived in houses that didn't have a piano. Every instrument I tried as a teenager was usurped by my older brother so I eventually started singing as he couldn't take that away from me. I started learning guitar on my own a year and a half ago so I could accompany myself. I still sing a lot better than I play.
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Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Melani Date: 03 Jul 00 - 02:56 PM At the start of the '60's folk revival, my mom informed my dad that she'd always wanted a guitar. So he got her a cheap one that he thought would look good hanging on the wall, and ahe astonished him by taking lessons. He then began wondering why cheap guitars sound bad and are hard to play, so he got her a better guitar and himself a book called "How to be a Luthier", and proceeded to become one.(He was always an amateur woodworker.) He ripped the top off the Sears Silvertone and replaced it with white spruce (I think it was solid maple), and the tone improved about 100 per cent. Soon the house was full of guitars, and one was mine. He also did banjos and one mountain dulcimer, which is also mine, though I can just barely play it. Then I discovered pennywhistles are cheap and highly portable, not to mention pretty indestructable. Also real easy to play on a basic level. Then I bought a bamboo flute at the Renaissance Faire, and immediately saw an ad for lessons from a guy who lived 5 minutes from me. Now flutes and whistles do indeed call to me from music stores, though I try to stick my fingers in my ears. But now there's this flute I just met last week... |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Kim C Date: 03 Jul 00 - 03:14 PM Roger, et.al. ----- The piano and voice chose me when I was just a little schoolkid. The fiddle chose me at the age of 31. And I mean the fiddle really did choose me, because I never EVER had any inclinations to play it, ever. Never thought about it or anything. Now it's my baby. I also play the guitar a little, and a few percussion things (bones & spoons). I have a bodhran but I haven't made much time to practice since I'm always fiddling around!!! |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Jon Freeman Date: 03 Jul 00 - 03:15 PM I have dabbled with many instruments but here are the 3 I play the most. The guitar started as the result of one of my brothers being given a toy ukele for a birthday present. A frien of my mothers tuned it up, played it and lent her a book. I had a go and quite enjoyed it so when it came round to my birthday, I was given a guitar. I took up the tenor banjo mainly as a result of listening to the playing of Barney McKenna. I also liked other banjo tunes and in fact made the mistake of buying a 5 string banjo long before I discovered that I needed the tenor. It was getting Sully's banjo book that finally set me straight on the instrument and the tuning used - by the time I had got all this info and the right instrument, I was 27. I was asked to play the melodeon by a couple of people who belonged to a morris dance side. They were short of musicians and I was known for being able to get a tune out of a number of instruments very quickly so I made me an offer that I found too tempting to turn down. They bought the melodeon and I agreed to pay them back at a rate of something like £5 a week. Jon |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: GUEST,BLeeV Date: 03 Jul 00 - 03:20 PM During the folk scare, the acoustic guitar was IT. I already played piano and cornet, so I could read music. Learning guitar seemed easy at the time. Thirty-six years later, I am still learning. Music heals. |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Little Neophyte Date: 03 Jul 00 - 03:23 PM Well Roger, I feel the same way as Kim, my instrument kind of chose me. I have always been attracted to the sound of the banjo and to the feel of the instrument. There is some unspoken affinity I have for this instrument that is impossible to put into words. I feel very connected to the banjo and am thrilled that I am finally allowing myself to explore this bond. Bonnie |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Willie-O Date: 03 Jul 00 - 03:37 PM ...and mostly recently, thirty years after that first guitar, I certainly did not "choose" Rick's Lowden. There was no process of selection whatsoever. I of course like to think that I know how to shop for a guitar selectively and carefully now. In this case, I was enjoying the cool of Fielding's basement studio, and noticed a battered dreadnought with no apparent maker markings, one of many nice instruments adorning the walls there. "What's this?" I inquired, casually but avariciously reaching for it. "That's a Lowden," he replied to my astonishment (I have a thing for them and never thought I could afford one). I didn't look inside the soundhole, didn't even cannily sight down the neck. Just hung on for dear life and played like I was getting paid by the lick. Doubt Rick could have pried it from my cold, dead fingers, so we made a business transaction instead. (Some transaction--he just named a figure which I thought so reasonable that I plumb forgot to dicker! I always dicker.) After considering this matter, I am positive that this guitar was getting bored with semi-retirement and (possibly afraid that Rick might lend it to Ani DiFranco again) decided to hitch a ride out of Toronto with me. Just call me lucky. Willie-O |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Sailor Dan working?? Date: 03 Jul 00 - 04:26 PM I was in Key West at a joint called Sloppy Joes, where Hemingway was supposed to have hung out. While my wife, and friends sat there and poured some beer, I listened to a guy on stage who was playing the guitar and then would switch to the Banjo and play. I always had loved the sound of a banjo and listened with rapt (beer soaked) attention. AFter about an hour, I made the profound statement, "I am going to learn to play the Banjo" With a wistul sigh I sometimes say, Dan you should have had two more beers before you opened your mouth. Anyway that was two years ago and I am diligently working my fingers off trying to learn the banjo. If I live to be a hundred I might even get good enough to play it properly. Pickin along Sailor Dan
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Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Mbo Date: 03 Jul 00 - 04:33 PM Right now I'm being lured by the siren song of the cello.... --Mbo |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: GUEST,JohnB Date: 03 Jul 00 - 10:16 PM I got my first guitar at about 14, a real egg slicer. It was THE instrument back then. I now have several, most are cheap and nasty. OK so that matches my playing abilities. I have been looking for a new guitar for years but still not made the plunge. Maybe I WOULD practise more if I had a dececnt one. This could be the year as I am having one of those SIGNIFICANT birthdays. I got into recorders one time when I decided to learn more about those funny little black dots. Ended up with a soprano and a really nice Tenor of Pear with an ivory mothpiece. Along the way I have also picked up Two bagpipe chanters, several whistles, a 5 string banjo, a ukeklele, a mandolin, a piano, a concertina (needs more work to be playable) a mouth organ, a hammer dulcimer (also needs work), an accordion, a dumbec, a bodhran, many percussiony things. I can bash out at least one tune on most of the above. Auctions can be great places for cheap instruments unfortunately they can be worth every penny The thing I do the MOST is of course "Singing a cappella" with seven friends. We can even get paid to do that, which I probably never will for playing any of the instruments. So my most used best appreciated and cheapest instrument is the one which my parents gave me, you might say "I just found it in my Genes" JohnB |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: catspaw49 Date: 03 Jul 00 - 10:24 PM You found it in your genes? So, uh, what instrument are you referring to? I mean, I got one genetically too and it is in my jeans on most occasions, but it ain't too musical............... Spaw |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: bbelle Date: 03 Jul 00 - 10:37 PM I had nothing to do with the voice ... g-d chose me to have it and I give thanks very single day of my life. The external instrument ... well ... first my folks decided I should play the accordion ... I was 5 ... looked like I was 3 ... and it was a full-sized accordion ... I stood on the floor and the accordion sat on a chair. Not a good look for me. Then, at 6, it was the piano. My hands were so small, to took three passes and intricate finger placements to play scales. I was a tiny little girl with kinky, curly "everyday is a bad hair day" hair and I couldn't stand the regiment of taking lessons. (I also attended various dance schools, until Mother figured out I just didn't like to HAVE to go to lessions!) When I decided that I wanted to perform, I sang in bands, but wanted the autonomy of accompanying myself, so I learned to play guitar. My first guitar was a Gibson LG-1 and my current guitar is a Gibson B-25. I'm currently looking for another guitar, or rather kim sherman at Cotten's Music in Nashville, is looking for me. If you've been around here long enough and read my posts, you know I don't consider myself a good guitar player, but it has served my purpose and served it well. With the help of the Edgar Cayce Method of Guitar Instruction and "with a little help from my friends," I might just turn out to be a decent guitar player one of these days ... moonchild
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Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Big Mick Date: 04 Jul 00 - 01:52 AM I walked by this gorgeous blonde lady with curves to die for. "Hey sailor, you in town long?", she sez as I go by. Said her name was Guild, but I just called her beautiful. Then she showed me her voice. That was that. I have been through a wife since then. She took everything but my BVD's and the Guild. I had it coming, but thank God I didna have to argue about the Guild. I would have gone to jail..............LOL. Big Mick |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: MMario Date: 04 Jul 00 - 01:56 AM since I can't seem to keep time even just clapping, and have failed miserably on any instrument I have ever tried, I stick to the one I was born with, voice. |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: bbelle Date: 04 Jul 00 - 01:58 AM On October 5, 1995, we had a 6.4 earthquake that ran right under my house in Fairbanks. When it started, I looked at my two cats ... looked at my Gibson ... and said "best of luck" to the cats. As it turns out ... we all survived. Lucky for the cats ... moonchild |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Seamus Kennedy Date: 04 Jul 00 - 02:27 AM Jon Freeman, funny you should mention Barney McKenna. I first heard Barney and John Sheehan of the Dubliners play Róisín Dubh and the Cúilin on twin bowl-back mandolins, and I said to myself "Self, that's the instrument for you." So my late Dad and I hunted high and low for a used bowl back, which he purchased for me, and away I went. Then I got an urge to copy Barney on the tenor banjo, and we repeated the process. I took up the guitar (my main instrument these days) by a different route. My sister wanted a guitar for Christmas one year, (she had just heard the singing nun, and wanted to be the next one); my parents could not afford one, but she wailed and moaned, and finally they scraped enough together to get one for her - a little Italian-made EKO - which she tried once, complained that the string hurt her fingers, and never played again. I took it up, so it wasn't wasted. All the best. Seamus |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Callie Date: 04 Jul 00 - 02:43 AM First 'learnt' the recorder in 3rd grade. Couldn't play and cried with frustration. Was put in the 'canaries' group in the school choir with the girls who coudln't sing. My father forced me to learn guitar a year later. It wasn't until I heard Norwegian Wood on the radio when I was 12 that it all clicked, like a revelation. Chords started to come naturally. Then a school friend was playing the clarinet, so I learnt too. Later at Uni, I palyed in bands and couldn't be heard above the drums, so I swapped for tenor sax and never looked back. I always liked a good 'song'. I listened to the Manhattan Transfer when I was quite young and thought they were the best. So now I sing in and arrange for several a cappella groups and conduct one. So "up your nose" to my 3rd grade music teacher, who decided I was a musical failure, at age 8. I'd like to learn the fiddle now, but I think it might be too late. |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: alison Date: 04 Jul 00 - 04:08 AM Learned to play the recorder at school... got picked out of a class of 9 years olds.. and told that I had the right fingers for a flute!! Was handed a flute and put in the school orchestra.. Piano was Mum's fault.. she made us learn, (good move on her part even if we didn't know it then)...... all the instruments since then have usually yelled "Buy Me!!" from the far side of a shop...... and they're just too cute to resist.... the harp I heard about from a friend.. and just "knew" that is the one for me.... so I ordered it sight unseen..... great little harp it is too... felt right from the moment I picked it up..... slainte alison |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Bagpuss Date: 04 Jul 00 - 06:08 AM I can't remember a time when I haven't been singing. At 11 I took up the 'cello (because my music teacher asked me, and I quite fancied being a Du Pre type!!), and the guitar, cos it was the cool thing to play, and we had a guitar at home. It also had the advantage that I could sing with it. I never got up as much enthusism for the guitar as I have for singing, so my guitar playing isn't all that good. Now looking to try the concertina, cos it looks like fun, and again, you can sing with it. Bagpuss |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: gatyamgal Date: 04 Jul 00 - 06:25 AM When I was 6 years old I would always play the old piano in my best friend's front room. My parents finally bought me my own piano. When I was 10 years old, my dad handed me my mother's gibson guitar, (which I still have and it is 60 years old now) He also handed me an Eddy Arnold Music Book. Dad said I could either sit and learn how to play the guitar or go outside and mow the yard. I chose to sit there in the nice central airconditioning and I taught myself the 3 basic chords of C F and G7 and I played Bouquet of Roses. When I was 12 I chose the clarinet for my band instrument. I remember the remark that it was a good instrument because my teeth were crooked in front. Later I wanted to play the oboe. The band director talked me into playing the bassoon. "It is just like an oboe" he told me. Yeah... right. I had to learn to read bass clef and I also had to lug that big thing around. But i am glad I chose to play it. Bassoons stand out in a crowd. I always seemed to get more attention. Especially when we were sight reading one day at contest and I added a note at the end. ooops. |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: GUEST,andy mööer Date: 04 Jul 00 - 07:46 AM ...Dont know...,was all a blur,but one day there was a mandolin in place of my guitar. |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Art Thieme Date: 04 Jul 00 - 10:48 AM I didn't. I won it in a raffle. Dat's de truth. It was a 1976 D-76 model Martin dreadnaught bicentennial (1776-1976) commemorative guitar. It was (at that time) too expensive to sell--$1,976.00---so the Old Town School Of Folk Music in Chicago raffled it off. Cost me $3.00 for one ticket. Art Thieme |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Jon Freeman Date: 04 Jul 00 - 11:09 AM Seamus, I am sure that it wasn't just us who were influenced by Barney McKenna. I see that the actual instruments have been mentioned. Here is how I came to my current favourited. My Guitar is a Fylde Falstaff. I fell in love with it's tone the first time I heard it being played and asked the owner for first refusal if he ever wanted to sell it. About 3/4 years later he asked me if I would give him £350 for it and I jumped at the chance. The previous owner has regretted his discision ever since and having gone through Martins and a Santa Cruz? , went back to a Fylde but still prefers mine. My banjo is a Kildare banjo sold by Sully's. This was a once in a lifetime offer. My mother decided out of the blue that she wanted to by me a good banjo and I accepted her incredibly generous offer. We went up to Sully's shop in Maccelsfield and this one just hit me the minute I walked it the door. I tried it and loved it and then tried a few others but I sort of felt that the first one was the one I was meant to have. The Melodeon is the same old D/G Hohner Erica that Conwy Morris Dancers helped me get. Jon |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: kendall Date: 04 Jul 00 - 11:27 AM I came from a very poor family, and on an old battery powered radio I used to hear WWVA in Wheeling West by god Virginia, and a few Canadian stations. Being exposed mostly to "Hill billy" music, and Old timey stuff, I was drawn to the guitar. When I was 16, I got a used Gene Autry guitar for Christmas, and, it's been all downhill since. The intonation was impossible, so, I smashed it on the bed post. (fool that I am) I hear they are collectors items now. |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Bill D Date: 04 Jul 00 - 12:29 PM took up the clarinet in 6th grade and played it till I started college, when the great 'folk scare' of the '60s hit the USA...not being a singer, I took up the recorder (easy transition) and tootled away..till my ex-wife bought an autoharp from Sears and then abandoned it...I tuned it up and messed with it. I had ONE notion to try the guitar, but....a 'friend' said he'd show me...he showed me a barred 'F' and said to practice that and he'd show me some more...so I play autoharp! Also have a dulcimer the needs a peg replaced and and old melodeon that I got in a shop for $20 ...it just needed home |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: GUEST,TR Date: 04 Jul 00 - 12:40 PM Never being able to play more than the steering wheel in the car,I was truly amazed when I discovered the Taponaxtle. Although meant to be played with small mallets, I found it to be much more expressive when just played with fingertips. Now, you are asking, what the heck is a Taponaxtle? Stop by our web site and give a listen . It is most prevalent on "Little Sister" and "Wildflower Mornings and Hummingbird Days". |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Roger in Sheffield Date: 04 Jul 00 - 02:59 PM recently I saw some great musicians The result being that I now want to play Bassoon, Cello and Alto Flute as well as they did Money, Time and laziness mean I may only ever achieve the alto I misread John Freemans reply thought it said - ..here are the 31 I play the most How bad that made me feel Having looked through the replies I understand that everyone chooses an instrument that produces a tone that they like The thing that occurs to me is that I heard a piece of Flute music and was hooked Now I have listened to more instruments I think if I had heard one of those first... I heard a radio programme this morning talking about the lack of youngters taking up the French Horn A boy who plays one was asked why he chose such a difficult instrument Because it is Shiny!!! What a great answer I have often been asked why I did not take up Guitar and I think the answer is that lots of other people do I love the sound of Guitars & Violins yet I think I needed to succeed or fail with something else and Chords sound very comlicated indeed I really envy Harp players too, I love the sound Just clear one thing up for me Mel where did your baby come from? was it always in the house waiting to be loved or did you take it home from the music store orphanage when it looked so in need of Love I am sure my Bodhran is of the pre-pubecent male variety,high pitched and whiney and though I try and love it....I don't I know. Try before you buy and in future I will I have seen the Bodhran threads and I think I might paint a Shamrock on the skin hang the thing on the wall The penny has just dropped It could be very embarrassing telling anyone that you were at home practicing on your shiny french horn no wonder it is unpopular Roger |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: rangeroger Date: 05 Jul 00 - 01:44 AM When I was 8 years old I was watching a Fiesta de La Luna parade in Chula Vista, CA.A float came by with a Mariachi band on it and I fell in love with the sound of that violin.My parents bought me one which I still have.Took lessons for many years, but when I was 15 decided I wanted to play guitar. I lived in London at the time and went to a guitar shop there and bought an archtop acoustic for $25 (less than 10 pounds at the time).I saw an ad in the paper for guitar lessons for 10 schillings per half hour at an address just down the street from where we lived.When I went for my first lesson I was told that my guitar was totally unacceptable as the teacher taught classical guitar and I would have to buy another guitar. Well, I wanted to learn rock and roll, so I got some chord books and started listening to records and trying to play along. Now 40 years later that is still how I learn new songs,although I've always wondered where I would have gone with my music if I had taken those classical lessons. That old archtop is still hanging on my wall and does get played occaisionally when I'm looking for that particular sound it has. rr |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: A Wandering Minstrel Date: 05 Jul 00 - 10:09 AM I made my first bodhran out of a discarded garden riddle decades back! and it still has a pretty good sound to it! I've bought a couple since then but the first is always the best. Last time I looked in the corner of the study there was a 12 string Eros guitar (you can't get them now!), a ukelele, three bodhrans of varying sizes, a concertina (bought for my wife who has never played it), some penny whistles (and they are destructible if you put them in your back trousers pocket and then sit down suddenly!) a digeridoo that certainly called out in a shop, in fact screamed, looking at the colour scheme and the family keyboard which i didn't choose but did pay for. I'd really like to be able to afford the concert Ovation guitar thats been calling to me from the window of Rose-Martin for some months now |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Jim Krause Date: 05 Jul 00 - 02:14 PM I've always thought of the human voice as another instrument. I can't remember a time when I didn't sing. In fact, I come from a long line of singers. Later on, in high school, I started going to choir practice with my parents every Wednesday night. Started piano lessons about the age of ten. That was my idea, not Mom's. Lost insrpiration about the time I started playing guitar. Began guitar Christmas Day, 1969. By the time the pumpkin pie was served, I had Bob Dylan's "Blowin' In The Wind" down pat in the key of A. Left home for college at age 18, finally settled on a major in music, and voice seemed like the best thing, since I had let my piano slide, and they didn't have a guitar studies program at my school. A little later, I heard this guy playing frailing style banjo. I thought that was pretty interesting sounding. I remember thinking one evening as I heard him play "If ever I decide to learn to play the banjo, I think I'd like to learn to play like he does." Some years later, in the early '80s, I had this bar gig every Saturday night. I was doing OK with the crowd, but I felt that my act need a little spicing up. That's when I decided to take up banjo. Clawhammer seemed like the perfect style for the soloist. Then, word got around, and I met a fiddler who was into Old-Time music, and I learned a bunch of the tunes he played. Eventually I thought to myself, "Since I know all of this guy's repertoire on banjo, I may as well learn them on the instrument they were made for." So I took up the fiddle. Been playing fiddle since the early '80s. Messed around with recorder some, pennywhistle some. However I never got very good at them. Lost some interest and only take out the recorder about every Christmas time to play a few carols with a friend of two. The most recent instrument I have taken up is an 18th century parlor instrument called the English Guittar[sic]. It is a sort of cross between a lute and a cittern. Tons of fun to play, easier than just about anything else. And practically no one has one. Rather than take up a bunch of space here, you can read about the English Guittar here |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: black walnut Date: 05 Jul 00 - 02:49 PM I chose piano when I was really little, begging my parents to buy me one, which they did, when I was about 9 years old. It's the same piano I have in my living room right now.... I chose classical guitar in high school because everybody plays guitar and because playing classical guitar didn't hurt your fingers if you didn't have time to build callouses, and somebody was selling their decent Yamaha for $100 so I bought it. I learned the basic chords, which I still can find to this very day. I chose clarinet in high school because the teacher said they already had too many flute players. I chose flute after high school, because the sound lured me in like a hungry fish, and by studying fast and furiously, I was able to enter a university music programme as a flute major. I chose recorder and studied with Alison Melville (of Tafelmusik) after I had to quit flute (after 20 years of playing) due to a serious jaw disorder. Recorder was beneficial to my condition. I chose fretted dulcimer when I realized that it's really hard to play recorder as a folk instrument with a mixed ensemble of other folk instruments, after taking a few beginner lessons with the amazing Lorraine Hammond. I chose celtic harp when the strong desire to tune more than 4 strings overtook me. I study with the amazing Sharlene Wallace, if ever we are able to find time in our schedules that co-ordinate. My next lesson is the first week of September. I chose guitar when the strong desire to tune fewer strings for the bang overtook me. My friend Jeff introduced me to DADGAD. I like DADGAD and DADGAD likes me. I am borrowing a friend's steel-string guitar, and am ever on the lookout for a perfect and beautiful guitar for under $5 Canadian. I also play the CD player and the radio quite well. ~black walnut
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Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: MMario Date: 05 Jul 00 - 02:55 PM Playing CD's confuses me, but I can mange the radio... |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Davey Date: 05 Jul 00 - 03:05 PM Back in '63 I was fresh out of school and into my first job. A pool-playing buddy introduced me to Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, and I was hooked on folk music. Then he showed me his guitar, a basic 6-string with strings a mile above the fret board. I borrowed his guitar and a book of simple songs and went to work learning to play. When he asked for his guitar back a month later I had to get my own. Around this time Oscar Brand was hosting Let's Sing Out on TV, and I fell in love with the sound of his Goya 12-string, so I went out and bought my own. That's the only type of guitar I played for the next 30-odd years, progressing through several until I was lucky enough to find an almost new Laskin 12-string at a great price. Along the way I also picked up a tenor banjo, harmonica (I now have one in every key), a bouzouki, a couple of mandolins, a Larrivee 6-string about 3 years ago, and a mandocello that I liberated from Rick Fielding. I'm still learning to play them all, and at times it seems I'll never get to where I want to be (don't we all say that fairly often?) Interesting thread, and many similar experiences from you mudcatters. |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: Hardiman the Fiddler Date: 05 Jul 00 - 03:12 PM The first time I held a fiddle in my hot, grubby little hands I felt like a catfish rising to dough-bait, and then I knew it was the instrument for me. Hardiman |
Subject: RE: How did you choose your instrument? From: A Wandering Minstrel Date: 06 Jul 00 - 11:03 AM is that the A-flat Radio mmario? :-) |
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