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The tyranny of D and G at sessions

Will Fly 20 May 13 - 07:17 AM
GUEST,Tattie Bogle 20 May 13 - 07:17 AM
Jack Campin 20 May 13 - 07:22 AM
Will Fly 20 May 13 - 07:32 AM
Jack Campin 20 May 13 - 07:42 AM
Steve Shaw 20 May 13 - 07:48 AM
Alan Day 20 May 13 - 08:39 AM
The Sandman 20 May 13 - 08:40 AM
The Sandman 20 May 13 - 08:40 AM
GUEST,Grishka 20 May 13 - 08:45 AM
TheSnail 20 May 13 - 09:10 AM
Howard Jones 20 May 13 - 10:36 AM
Chris Partington 20 May 13 - 11:42 AM
GUEST 20 May 13 - 11:42 AM
Harmonium Hero 20 May 13 - 11:56 AM
Harmonium Hero 20 May 13 - 11:59 AM
McGrath of Harlow 20 May 13 - 01:37 PM
bubblyrat 20 May 13 - 02:13 PM
Jack Campin 20 May 13 - 02:32 PM
Chris Partington 21 May 13 - 05:00 AM
kendall 21 May 13 - 06:47 AM
Will Fly 21 May 13 - 07:08 AM
GUEST,rob naylor 21 May 13 - 05:44 PM
kendall 21 May 13 - 07:44 PM
Will Fly 22 May 13 - 04:03 AM
treewind 22 May 13 - 05:29 AM
Rob Naylor 22 May 13 - 06:04 AM
Jack Campin 22 May 13 - 06:56 AM
Will Fly 22 May 13 - 10:08 AM
Rob Naylor 22 May 13 - 10:26 AM
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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Will Fly
Date: 20 May 13 - 07:17 AM

Yes - I have! After much practice and some tuition by Linda Game, my violin teacher, I've learned how to get out of first position and back again for that tune. And, I have to say, it does sound sweeter in its original key. :-)


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: GUEST,Tattie Bogle
Date: 20 May 13 - 07:17 AM

I play a B/C button accordion so "I can in theory play in any key provided I can find the notes". The downside is that I can't do as much chord and bass stuff, but I'm finding more and more right hand chords as I go along.
I've now reached the stage that any strange key is a challenge rather than a no-go area, flat keys being more tricky, tho' not impossible. I did do a lot of music theory in my long-distant youth, so I know how many sharps or flats I'm looking for, or can tell others in the session what key the tune is actually in. Being a guitarist also helps as I can guess from chord shapes and which fret the capo goes on what key is being used too.
As for " all inclusiveness", it is good if the majority of music is accessible to the majority of players for a good proportion of the time, but if you never do anything new, sessions can get horribly predictable and boring. Playing something different is not necessarily showing off: it may well be injecting new life into a session especially if the tune can be slowed down to allow others to pick it up.


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Jack Campin
Date: 20 May 13 - 07:22 AM

Well faked that man. Can we persuade all the Whitby D/G melodeonists to watch that Ed Rennie video?

I was at session yesterday that went into E on two numbers - "Maple Sugar", which is a fiddle tune in A and E that nobody ever does in other keys, and "Caledonia" which the singer decided to do in E. E isn't difficult on a recorder, and I knew "Maple Sugar" pretty well anyway, so that was fine. "Caledonia" had me beat because the way the performance went I needed to do an improvisatory break, and I didn't have enough ideas, as I hadn't practiced just noodling around in E very much. Conclusion: I need to work on that. Next time!


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Will Fly
Date: 20 May 13 - 07:32 AM

Without wishing to over-egg the original argument, here's another example other than "The Sweetness Of Mary" one which I've quoted.

There's a great tune in Andy Hornby's "Winders Of Wyresdale" compilation called "The Physiognomist" - it's a 3-parter in Bb-F-Bb and, as I said in another thread, great for the tenor guitar. And it sounds fine in that key.

Now - I like sessions very much, and I like it when everyone joins in as much as possible. To me, that's what it's all about. BUT (and it's a reluctant BUT) - if I play this tune at my next session, I'm probably going to be a soloist, which I don't really want.

An alternative, then, is to transpose it into D (say), so that everyone - melodeons and concertinas included - will be with me. But, d'you know, I like the tune in its original key and don't want to play it in a different key. And... if such transposition keeps getting done again and again, then - there you go... Everything sounds the same and you lose the integrity of the tune somewhat.

Or perhaps I'm just nit-picking. :-)


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Jack Campin
Date: 20 May 13 - 07:42 AM

Here's Anahata doing the Bluebell Polka on a D/G:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lyHB6n9Nwv4


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 20 May 13 - 07:48 AM

Most people play Calliope in D. It works best in second position on a G harmonica. Playing it in E would be no problem as most self-respecting harmonica players at a session would have an A harp with them. And it's fine in E on a fiddle. If you really must. Our set goes Connaughtman's Rambles-Saddle The Pony-Calliope House (in D). Plenty of mode-change lifts in there, all doable by me on a G harp, no tyranny!


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Alan Day
Date: 20 May 13 - 08:39 AM

This is an interesting topic because I have heard a number of comments regarding a small group of players locally ,that only play in C to ensure that only they are playing the tune . For that they are considered anti social to the other players present.
I say nothing as I always take my CG box just in case.
Al


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: The Sandman
Date: 20 May 13 - 08:40 AM

his trick of playing backwards enables you to play tunes in A on the D row of a D/G melodeon, which is well worth mastering."
yes but can you play the corresponding basses, in a major, i know tunes like langstroms pony can be played, the ideal for playing in a major is a 23 and a half row dg


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: The Sandman
Date: 20 May 13 - 08:40 AM

should read 2 and a half row


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: GUEST,Grishka
Date: 20 May 13 - 08:45 AM

I watched both renderings of Bluebell Polka (both well done, in my ears) and did not see any "faking". These melodeons seem to have extra keys for C and F at the top.

Will, have you considered writing simple harmony voices for the diatonics, only using the available notes? (It would not be "faking" as described by John, since other instruments would play the correct melody.) Even if Bb and F are missing, you'd still have the D to represent the Bb chord. For the chord accompaniment, the capoed guitars will do.

You would be in good company, for example with Joseph Haydn writing for natural horns and trumpets outside their native keys in his symphonies. (BTW this is also a good way to form a large orchestra at family celebrations, including countless kids playing up to three different notes on their borrowed recorders etc., while the professionals jam.)


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: TheSnail
Date: 20 May 13 - 09:10 AM

I look forward to hearing your Sweetness of Mary, Will, but I'm afraid I won't be joining in, not on fiddle anyway. I might join you on English Concertina which is, of course fully chromatic and can play in any key. (The instrument can, I'm not sure that I can.)

On the fiddle I'll stick to D. At least I get a bit more mileage out of that expensive bottom string.


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Howard Jones
Date: 20 May 13 - 10:36 AM

Peter Kennedy didn't ask for D/G melodeons on a whim, he got them so that melodeon players could join in sessions which were already in D and G.

A D/G melodeon is pitched rather high, and I think most English players would actually prefer it if our standard instrument was in other lower-pitched keys, as they sound a lot better. Instead, we have been forced to adopt D/G as standard in order to accommodate fiddlers, and then we get the blame for everything being in those keys!


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Chris Partington
Date: 20 May 13 - 11:42 AM

Not that it affects what we should, should not, or want to, be doing in sessions, a couple of years ago I did some number crunching on this topic a couple of years ago. It was specifically in relation to some Lake District manuscripts (Barnes, Lishman, Betham, Harrison, Wilson, Stables, and Browne) from the latter 18th C and early 19th C.
It involves quite a good number of tunes overall. All pre-date free reed instruments.
D - 44%
G - 34.5%
A -   5.5%
C -   5.4%
F -   2.5%
Em - 2.5%
Bb - 2.3%
Am - 1.1%
Ador- 0.8%
Bm - 0.4%
Eb - 0.1%
Dm - 0.1%
Ddor- 0.1%
Dmix- 0.1%

There were some differences between the MSS, Betham for example was 44.8% in G and 41% in D, etc.


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: GUEST
Date: 20 May 13 - 11:42 AM

Yes, there are some lovely really mellow low notes on my B/C. In some pieces I play along with the cellos! ( Well at least half of their register).


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Harmonium Hero
Date: 20 May 13 - 11:56 AM

Regarding the vexed question of tuning: I'm going to put forward what no doubt someone far cleverer and more highly educated than I am (this is Mudcat, after all) will regard as heresy. Don't bother comung after me, as I am a very long way away, deep in my bunker beneath a very high mountain, guarded by a three-headed dragon; I don't feed her (for it is she; as any fule kno, the females are more deadly, the males just growl a lot, leaving the little lady to do most of the flesh - rending); we have an understanding: she doesn't expect to get fed, and I don't ask awkward questions about what she's eating or where she got it. But if you're feeling lucky... Here goes:
it is scientifically impossible (whatever that means) to tune s fretted instrument.
Discuss at whatever length seems appropriate.
John Kelly.


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Harmonium Hero
Date: 20 May 13 - 11:59 AM

Damn! It had to happen sooner or later; That was supposed to go on another thread - the one about what to do about poor singers. Any chance of it being transferred?
John Kelly.


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 20 May 13 - 01:37 PM

Fits in here quite well, really. One of the downside of playing in different keys is that some people are likely to use it as the signal to start retuning...


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: bubblyrat
Date: 20 May 13 - 02:13 PM

Depends on your material ; I play in D a lot because my top and bottom E-strings are tuned to D , and I like it that way --I have been called "Mr D" at sessions ( by Derek Tarrant) but I DO use other keys . Patrick Bouffard's waltz sounds good in G , Far Away is lovely in Bm , Maid of Culmore is nice in Am ,and Flower of Magerhally is great in Em ( as is Nights In White Satin ,if you like that sort of thing !). I often used to play at the Herschel Arms , Slough , Irish session ,and a surprising amount of stuff was in A , actually .


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Jack Campin
Date: 20 May 13 - 02:32 PM

Chris Partington: did you take statistics on effective range (lowest and highest note) as well as key? Range doesn't usually feature in tune indexes, and it should.

What I mean by "effective range" is leaving out notes that could be moved without making any real difference to the tune - a lot of violin arrangements have upbeats on the G string that might as well be an octave up (a flute player would shift them without even thinking about it).


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Chris Partington
Date: 21 May 13 - 05:00 AM

No Jack Campin, that wasn't the task I'd set myself. Paul Roberts trawls through a collection now and then looking for 'bagpipey' tunes though, sometimes within the compass, and sometimes shifted by a fiddler. See The Village Music Project .


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: kendall
Date: 21 May 13 - 06:47 AM

Variety is the spice of life. On guitar, if I know the tune, I play along in any key. On banjo, different story; e flat demented gives me problems, so I simply back off and listen.
I get irritated by someone playing along when they clearly don't know the tune, it's like a bodron player who just has to bang away on every tune from Henry Martin to Ava Maria. Of course, the good ones don't do that.
Another thing that bugs me about sessions or jams whatever you call them,people who just decide to do two in a row when the rule is one at a time.One each then one together.
I don't do many sessions, the egos get in the way of a nice gathering.


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Will Fly
Date: 21 May 13 - 07:08 AM

Shame you can't get to our monthly session over here, Kendall - all done in the best possible taste - and egos parked at the door! :-)


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: GUEST,rob naylor
Date: 21 May 13 - 05:44 PM

Well Will, last time I was at the Bull session and I started off Banks of the Sweet Primroses in Eb *someone* sitting on your left complained that it was awkward for him to follow so I restarted in D, which doesn't suit my voice. He did have the grace to say afterwards that I should have stuck with my original key :-)


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: kendall
Date: 21 May 13 - 07:44 PM

The singer decides the key!


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Will Fly
Date: 22 May 13 - 04:03 AM

The singer does indeed decide.

I remember that particular evening, Rob - a most uncharacteristic comment in that session. I was also irked by the remark because I recall urging you (at the previous High Brooms night) to capo up to get the best from your voice!

Nowt wrong with Eb either... It's also always interesting to hear the snick of capos being fitted to guitars when someone starts a tune or song in an "odd" key. I never use a capo at sessions for accompaniment - only for singing using a specific guitar voicing. We get the occasional piper playing in F and - at the last session - one great piper from Belgium playing in Bb. Those keys are no problem for me after years of playing jazz. But of course even Homer nods and I can cock up an accompaniment as well as the next player! Normally, if I can't hack it, I shut up rather than capo up.


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: treewind
Date: 22 May 13 - 05:29 AM

"Can we persuade all the Whitby D/G melodeonists to watch that Ed Rennie video?"
Jack, if we meet again in Whitby I'll be very happy to have a Bluebell Polka with you in the right keys
(and by the way I was there before Ed)

Nick Barber is another D/G melodeon player who likes to surprise session musicians by starting tunes in C.


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Rob Naylor
Date: 22 May 13 - 06:04 AM

Will...yes, I'm getting better at adjusting keys to fit my voice now. Hoping to make the Bull session again for the first time in months next Sunday. Unfortunately the few tunes from your "tune set" that I've boned up on are in D or G :-).

On another note....the High Brooms Tavern has been saved from the fate of being knocked down and turned into a block of flats by a pair of locals who've bought is and are refurbishing it as a pub! It'll probably be called "The Brick Works". They're knocking through the 2 bars, which is a shame, but they have stated that they fully intend to open the place to live music sessions, so by about September we should have the "Diddley" singaround or a close facsimile back in production!


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Jack Campin
Date: 22 May 13 - 06:56 AM

Treewind: I'll be there this year again.

Just working on the Bluebell in Eb/Bb/Eb/Ab/Eb. Not as easy as F or G, but doable.


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Will Fly
Date: 22 May 13 - 10:08 AM

Rob, as it's a Bank Hol weekend, the Bull session will be on the Monday, rather than the Sunday.

Good news about High Brooms!


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Subject: RE: The tyranny of D and G at sessions
From: Rob Naylor
Date: 22 May 13 - 10:26 AM

Ah, OK, thanks for the update....would have looked a bit of a berk turning up Sunday (though I'm sure Mr C will be putting out a note)!


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