Sure it's good if it's the one you have and gets you playing.
- Zurf
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Guitar chord forum - chordie → Posts by Zurf
Sure it's good if it's the one you have and gets you playing.
- Zurf
Any Chordians there? I'll be staying the "the Loop".
- Zurf
I've always like Billie Joe Shaver's "I'm Going to Live Forever", but I can't get the pattern figured out. C'est la vie. Something to work towards in time I suppose.
- Zurf
Tangled Up in Blue
Don't Think Twice
- Zurf
I don't do much fishing, in fact pretty much none, but we were invited out a few weeks ago and I got this....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SN5cnjbcReY
We had a really good weekend.
That's as big of an eel as I've ever seen caught! I remember catching one off a pier at the shore. I was going for white sea bass and didn't want to keep an eel. I was ready to return it to the water when a Vietnamese lady up the pier shouted down and asked if she could have it. I told her she could if she could get it off my hook, because that darned thing was too slimy to hold onto. Her husband came over and quick as a wink had the eel off the hook and into a cooler.
- Zurf
Welcome Uli and manicbassman and MrMer and rockcruiser. Please don't let these be your only posts. Everyone has something to share and add. There are many here with similar stories to your own. I'd venture to guess that MOST Chordie users are relatively new to guitar and well past adolescence. I won't say middle aged, because... dang.
- Zurf
Well, that was a pretty bad day of fishing all right. But I did get to spend the day outdoors and that always puts a smile on my face. I also got to laugh a lot. I about split my gut when the trailer tire blew out. And to Restlessspirit's point, I did not dare to play last night. I got the kids to bed and went straight to bed myself. Well, I did swing by the bar fridge first...
- Zurf
This is the report that I posted to a fishing forum that I frequent. The handles on that site are as creative as the ones here.
I go by "Big D" on that site. That handle was already taken when I signed up here.
________________
So, here's how my birthday fishing trip went. It took me from 9AM to 11:50AM to get stuff in my truck. Everything was upside down because of the remodeling we're doing and it took me forever to find stuff. I put the trailer on the truck, and it wouldn't go on the ball hitch. Nothing seemed to work. It took me a good ten minutes, a couple applications of grease, and a big honking screwdriver to pry the doohickey open so that it would fall down onto the ball. When I had everything loaded in the truck or the boat and checked the lights, they weren't working. So I had to run that down. Ends up it was just a bad ground, so it was easy to fix. 11:50 now, and I am heading towards Brunswick. I went to the Roy Rogers for lunch, chatting with Ogbudha hoping that he wasn't at work and wanted to join me, but he was at work and couldn't join me. He gave me some capital advice on where to fish, though, and it was a spot that I know well. Nothing like some good advice from someone in touch with the current conditions. So, I get to Brunswick and am playing tour guide answering questions from folks out for bike rides or walks on the canal. I'm not sure why they figured I would know the answers to their questions, but I did and so that was cool. I like talking to people, but it did delay me a bit. I go to get the water jugs to fill with river water for ballast, and the lids aren't with them. So, down to the ramp to find some loose, big rocks that aren't so big that I don't want to or can't lift them. I find a few and put some ballast in the bow. Ready to launch. Launch is no problem. It all went smoothly. The end of the ramp is exposed, so at the end of the ramp, the tires went off to the river bottom, which is about a three or four inch drop. I found this entertaining, because with the canoe still attached, it floated the trailer, which made for an interesting but uneventful disconnection. I put on a painter, tie it to a rock that was too big for me to lift, and put the trailer back.
So far, so good. I disconnect the painter and drop anchor. First trip with a new anchor outrigger. It's removable. That matters later. The engine starts on the second pull. Great! So I attempt to retrieve the anchor and it won't retrieve. The line has slipped off the pulley and jammed between the pulley and the thing around the pulley. So I carefully walk up to the bow and fix that, then carefully walk back to the aft and sit down and retrieve the anchor. Then I use an oar to make sure the engine is in deep water (this is an inappropriate and extremely relative term right now) and engage the prop. Not deep enough. So, I panic and cut off the engine the quickest way I know how, which is to pull the kill switch. Then I use an oar like a paddle to get out into the river, which is not the first time I've done this trick as Br'er Rat can attest. Out in the river, I drop anchor in what I think is deeper water and restart the engine. Ooops. Ends up that I never put the engine into neutral, so I shoot off like a rocket with the anchor down. This proceeds to pop the removable anchor outrigger off and wedge the line between the pulley and the thing around the pulley again. So I put the engine into neutral this time (I am learning!) and then carefully walk up to the bow and pull the anchor into the boat and then carefully walk back to the aft and sit down. Then I reengage the transmission and the prop promptly hits a rock that I drifted into while walking carefully from the fore to the aft.
Now, I did not know this had happened yet, because we're in a bunch of weeds. So I figured the weeds had got around the prop and were making it ineffective. So I go under power AND oar as a paddle to some rocks. Before getting too close to the rocks, I cut off the engine, put it into neutral, and stow it. I am really learning now! The current isn't too strong, so I allow the current to pin the boat up against the rocks. I turned around and pulled the weeds off the prop and the hangy down thingy between the part that goes vroom vroom and the whirly part of the outboard. It was a technical procedure, I hope you could follow all that engineering talk.
I then walk carefully to the bow of the boat to reattach the anchor outrigger and loosen the line. I am successful in this endeavor, so I walked carefully to the stern and sat down. I pushed off the rocks a little bit with an oar and dropped anchor, which only had the stern pinned gently against the rock now. I made four casts. At that point, it occurred to me that my family is not expecting me home yet and I'm not going to have much fun fishing right then anyway, and I can use the time to get a new prop. So I rowed in. By this time, the wind had kicked up pretty strong. This is a good thing, because it allowed me to just row gently against the current and the wind pushed me across river to the launch. Easiest ferry I've ever had. Now about that rock. The way that I know I hit a rock that busted the blade off the prop is that on this ferry back across the river, I saw my prop blade sitting there on top of a rock right by some weeds. Lovely. Sorry, but I did not drop anchor again to hop out and retrieve it. Hope you can forgive me.
I get the boat loaded up. Dick was at the ramp with a buddy from North Carolina and so I chatted with them a bit. Howdy Dick, if you're reading this. They were kind enough to help me load. I had located TWO props at Beavers in Winchester, so I headed out there. I picked up the props and went over to visit my buddy LazyFisher who lives in Winchester. We had a nice visit, and I replaced the prop and inspected the shear pin.
I made excuses for not staying longer saying that I had to get home to celebrate my birthday with the kids. So off I went. As I go down the road towards home, I blew out the right tire on the trailer. The reason I don't have a spare is that they are difficult to find. So finding one at ten 'till 6:00 on a Tuesday night, by phone, without a yellow pages didn't work out. So I called my wife to rescue me, which is always something a man likes to do. She brought the roof racks and bed extender for my truck. I unloaded the trailer, stashed it in some high weeds right next to a No Trespassing sign, and left a note. We got home at about 7:20PM.
So, my day from 9:00AM and 7:20PM was dedicated to a fishing trip which included about 400 yards of river width, about zero yards of attainment, and four casts. I broke a prop and blew out a trailer tire and was late for my own birthday celebration with my family.
Still, it was a fun day.
- Big D
Another interesting NASCAR tidbit. Back before it was sanctioned and it was still just moonshiners racing on the packed sand on the beach at Daytona, Junior Johnson ran a car. He removed the brakes. Someone asked him why he had the brakes removed. He replied, "They slow me down."
- Zurf
Hey Justasinger - no worries on the open chords. I've got a friend who has released three albums of original songs so far and when I asked him about barre chords he said, "Oh. I thought those were for electric guitar players."
- Zurf
Sweet. That sounds great. My grandfather was a moonshiner and his cousins did the running. At my grandmother's funeral, a couple of those cousins were there and sharing stories about the "old days." They were wild days. One of those cousins was still running a speed shop. He wanted to enter his '33 Ford (THUTTYTHEE FO) into "the great race" when the Statue of Liberty was reopened back in '86, but he couldn't get permits for his support van to drive the "fuel" across state lines. Apparently he was still moon-shining, except he used it as fuel for his race cars. I'll bet if the stories in the movie were even close to as harrowing and crazy as the stories my old cousins told that the movie is a blast. And who doesn't love a buffet?
- Zurf
Speaking of guitar gifts, I hear that Buck Owens used to give copies of his signature red, white, and blue guitar to people. I think he played a custom Gibson, but Harmony produced a copy as well. For some people he gave a signed Harmony. To those who were particularly special to him, he gave a signed Gibson.
- Big D
Does anybody have the strum pattern for The Wild Rover by the Dubliners.
Go to the "Artists" tab at the top of this section. In the search field that shows up below the tabs, type in "The Wild Rover". There are twelve difference links to versions of that song both by the Dubliners and the Dropkick Murphys, plus a Traditional version. I use the Traditional version, and if I ever break down and buy a 12 strings it will be the first song I play on it.
- Zurf
Zurf wrote:Cool. So Lucille can be distributed. One for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, one for the Smithsonian, and the rest for Bonedaddy.
- Zurf
and what am I? Chopped liver?
My Gram used to say that women marry the men who ask them. Bonedaddy spoke up and now you'll have to deal with him to get your Lucille. (Don't worry about it. I hear he keeps a key under the mat by the back door, and he'll never miss just one of them.)
- Zurf
edited to fix horrendous grammar
Cool. So Lucille can be distributed. One for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, one for the Smithsonian, and the rest for Bonedaddy.
- Zurf
Thanks Arkady. Money is tight, but for this I can spend the insurance company's money, which is nice. My policy pays for replacement, so I'll be able to buy new. It'll cost me money initially, but I'll be able to claim it and the insurance company has been good about approving my claims. I am an administrator for a living, so I guess my supporting documentation is up to snuff.
- Zurf
While the sounds coming out of it are as distinctive as any music in any genre, I'm not sure Lucille the guitar has quite the distinctiveness as Trigger. Trigger, and the red, white, and blue upside down strap along with it, are symbolic of Willie Nelson's music in a way few things represent concepts.
To answer the question, I think Lucille belongs in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. BB King pretty much single handedly defined minor blues with that guitar.
- Zurf
Fear not Kajima - that is an entirely different aspect to what it going on.
I have a bunch of miscellaneous stuff that has been ruined when the basement was flooded. Almost all of my kid's toys among them. They didn't do a good job of putting them away before we left, and their play area was in the hardest hit part of the house. Do you think they learned a lesson about putting their toys away? Me either. Anyway, my 4 track recorder was put away in the box on the bottom shelf of a bookcase. It was partially submerged, which in general is bad for electronic things. Being submerged in water that's picked up oil other gloober from the floor and then had dry wall stuff mixed in with it from the fallen ceiling is not good for tape heads. So, I've got the four track recorder to replace. But the Xenyx thingy is meant for a stage! We're hoping to put a stage into the family room. I think that will be cool. The little recorder thingy will be for my office where I can screw around with stuff and see how it sounds and try to train my voice, and the Xenyx thingy (or whatever I wind up with but that one's looking really good) will be for the stage. All is not lost! Actually, a whole lot is lost, but your advice is not among it.
I don't know what I'm really going to wind up with. If I do everything I would like, I'll wind up with a really, really cool basement in a house that I will have to immediately sell to cover the credit card payments. So, I will (eventually) have to prioritize. Right now, I'm gathering data and information and may wind up with an entirely different solution in the end.
- Zurf
Zurf if you get this and need software the audacity program is free and easy to use and it will make mp3's so you can upload and let us listen if you need any help with the program let me know
I sent you one recording my buddy did for me. From that, you can tell that especially my singing needs me to get the practice of hearing myself. That's what I'm hoping to do - record myself for "playback and review" for exactly the same reasons sports teams do it. Whether I want to let y'all hear - not so sure. But Chordie is such a 'safe place' filled with such good people that even if I did publish something in all it's deafening glory all I'd get is encouragement to keep on trying and some gently given advice on how to improve.
- Zurf
Thanks Restlessspirit - that is the very one.
Thanks Stonebridge - it's what I needed to know. It looks like they don't do the four track on cassette any longer, and so I have to pick something that is an appropriate current replacement unit. I had a Tascam trainer ruined too, and it looks like the current trainers now use MP3 rather than CD's.
Geoaguiar - It's kind of fun spending someone else's money.
- Zurf
A month or so ago I asked for help in figuring out how to know whether my four track Tascam tape recorder was damaged in our flood. It was. I think this is the replacement for it: http://www.music123.com/Tascam-DP-004-P … .Music123.
Can anyone here tell me whether this thing will allow me to hook up microphones and instruments, mix them, and send the output to my computer for recording - maybe with Cakewalk or Audacity or whatever Tascam provides in the box?
Insurance is paying - but only for an appropriate replacement to what was damaged. What was damaged is the classic Tascam Porta-Sound four track cassette recorder. I think this device is an appropriate and fair replacement to claim on my insurance. But I'm clueless, so I turn to you erudite gurus to help elucidate this novice plucker.
- Zurf
I have no hints for you, but I think you're off to a good start. I did want to welcome you to Chordie.
I have an Ibanez knock-off of the Gibson GS solid-body electric. I don't have a guitar amp, so I put it through my small bass practice amp. Playing it that way, I can't make it NOT sound like Tex-Mex Surf music. The guitar, that is. My playing still stinks.
- Zurf
Most folks learn to play in C, but I find G easier to play in for some reason. Getting a single note is the harmonica equivalent to barre chords. It's the first big hurdle to get over. Doing a good sounding draw on hole 2 is the harmonica equivalent to the evil B chord. It takes everyone a long, long time to get it, it's fairly essential to playing rock and blues, and you can usually cheat.
One thing to remember is that if you want volume with the harmonica, use a microphone. Blowing or sucking harder on the instrument will just distort the sound. Some people use that for technique, but it's not going to help a lot with extra volume.
My two cents, for what it's worth (and it isn't worth two cents).
- Zurf
Way to go. It's always fun to crest the steepest part of the learning curve and are able to start playing while you learn instead of just learning. I'm very happy for you.
- Zurf
That's great news. I hope things start to move faster. I am so eager for him to get out and walk a trail and look out over a vista to see some hawks looking for prey over a field or to dip his feet into a stream and take a deep breath while watching the turtles, or to eat that enormous meal his daughter wants to cook for him.
- Zurf
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