26

(3 replies, posted in Acoustic)

Check out N.C. Lawlor from Dublin - especially youtube clips of him buskingHe's virtually unknown but shouldn't be...

27

(35 replies, posted in Acoustic)

craig23 wrote:

I like them alot....plugged in. I do NOT like them unplugged. I've seen them in the $3-400 range new. My boss bought his daughter a used '84 for about 250. If your buying it just for the amplified reason, thats probably fine. I think there are better sounding guitars that also have pickups that you could use in both settings for about the same price range though. Or you could just buy a pickup for your current guitar if you like it.

Those are definitely the budget ones. No comparison with the 'real' ones (which are very expensive so buy used. Mine was EUR250 at 30 years old)

28

(27 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

Read 'Musicophilia' by Oliver Sacks. Interesting stuff about music and the brain. Hard to say for sure if abilities cross over from one thing to another. Music seems to use distinct parts of the brain. People with brain injuries and other issues often can maintain musical ablilites and sometimes even 'discover' new musical abilities they didn't know they had. Or they recover certain brain functions but lose the music.
Some people are fortunate to be just good at everything,  but doing anything well involves 90% perspiration and 1% inspiration

29

(14 replies, posted in Guitars and accessories)

Do you mean the high G, the 6th string counting from the treble side, ie a string of 8/100 inch gauge? That is the lightest gauge string on a 12-string and also the highest-pitched. I bought lots of spares of this string when I got my 12-er, thinking they'd break a lot, but they don't in my case. Breakage when tuning up indicates either a dodgy string or a sharp edge somewhere.

Re capo - I use the standard Shubb one fine even though they do make a special 12-string one.

30

(35 replies, posted in Acoustic)

Not everone likes them but there are many devotees. Get an old, US-made, deep bowl, solid topped one. Anything with 'Celebrity or 'CC', or Applause in the name are more budget models (and are good budget models)

31

(0 replies, posted in Guitars and accessories)

Theres lot sof info on building oyu own amp on the web - e.g. see generalguitargadgets.com
also see my previous post. http://chordie.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=14844

Anyone else got experience in this area? Am thinking of modfiying the mini amp I've built - maybe making it stereo...

32

(7 replies, posted in Guitars and accessories)

Apparently the Japanese made great acoustic guitars in the 70's. But if you love it, do you care what its worth in money, or in popular opinion?

33

(1 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

I found out by accident that this stuff could be good for guitarists.

http://www.whistlingtortoise.co.uk/inde … ;brandId=6

Therapeutic putty for strengthening the hand and wrist, as well as improving fine motor skills. I just keep squishing it in my left (fretting) hand and it feels good as I had not been practising enough recently and the hand was getting tired especially on the 12-string.

34

(24 replies, posted in Acoustic)

steelstrings wrote:

Just out of curiosity, How often would you have to change the nut on a guitar?

Not necessarly ever, though they can eventually wear out

OR

what MEKIDSMOM said

35

(17 replies, posted in Guitars and accessories)

hmmm... my last post came across as a mix of a rant and an ad  for Ovation - neither was intended!

The way I play my 12-string, the cutaway would be no advantage but others may comment on any disadvantage.
Try before you buy!
Nashville is certainly nice sound but not as your main 6-string, maybe if you had a spare one.

36

(17 replies, posted in Guitars and accessories)

Get a good one, even if 2nd-hand. A bad one will be hard to keep in tune and hard to play, and if old, the tension of the strings may have distorted the neck and/or the top, making it even harder to play and tune.

I was fortunate to find an old good one made by Ovation (round backed but not shallow bodied). Structurally they are possibly the best.
Anyone who has heard mine loves the sound, but some people have a sort of quasi-religious belief that guitars with synthetic round backs are bad. Do a search for Ovation on the web but ideally stick to US-made solid-topped ones (any Ovation with Celebrity, CC, Matrix, or Applause in the model name/number is from their budget range).
I've tried playing mine with only 6 strings and it sounds a but dead. 12-strings are heavily built and 6 strings don't have enough power to 'drive' them.

Also try Nashville tuning - a sort of 12string sound from 6-string guitar - search Chordie for details.

Check out the video here http://www.amazon.co.uk/Notes-San-Franc … sim_d_h__1

Have a look at the video - a few great clips but there's plenty more on youtube. 1977, definitely his peak period

And a small rant: while many admire his work, even those who worked with him don't bother to learn to pronounce his name. The 2nd 'g' is silent, people! The last syllable is 'her' not 'ger'.

38

(148 replies, posted in Acoustic)

steve j wrote:

...the "folk F" ...

Never heard it called that. I've heard it called "that folkin' thing" alright.

I swallow my pride as a 'serious musician', steeped in centuries of Irish music and culture, and admit that I am vaguely proud of 'our boys' making it to the final of the above contest. But what kind of contest is it? If it were really a song contest then the songs should be performed by the same singer with minimal accompaniment, no fireworks or dancing.

40

(29 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

Well, the comic book and me, just us, we caught the  bus
  The poor little chauffeur, though, she was back in  bed
  On the very next day, with a nose full of  pus
  Yea! Heavy and a bottle of  bread

dino48 wrote:

Hi zurf,I have heard that sometimes antibiotics can cause muscle pain for awile after you have taken them,you may want to look at the labels of any medicines you have been taking. If you did not exercise for ten days that will be abig factor also.

Hopefully you did not take antibiotics for a viral infection because (Repeat after me):
ANTIBIOTICS KILL BACTERIA. THEY HAVE NO EFFECT ON VIRUSES
ANTIBIOTICS KILL BACTERIA. THEY HAVE NO EFFECT ON VIRUSES
ANTIBIOTICS KILL BACTERIA. THEY HAVE NO EFFECT ON VIRUSES
ANTIBIOTICS KILL BACTERIA. THEY HAVE NO EFFECT ON VIRUSES
ANTIBIOTICS KILL BACTERIA. THEY HAVE NO EFFECT ON VIRUSES
ANTIBIOTICS KILL BACTERIA. THEY HAVE NO EFFECT ON VIRUSES
ANTIBIOTICS KILL BACTERIA. THEY HAVE NO EFFECT ON VIRUSES
ANTIBIOTICS KILL BACTERIA. THEY HAVE NO EFFECT ON VIRUSES
ANTIBIOTICS KILL BACTERIA. THEY HAVE NO EFFECT ON VIRUSES
ANTIBIOTICS KILL BACTERIA. THEY HAVE NO EFFECT ON VIRUSES

Of course the industry (composed of doctors, pharmacists and drug makers) SELLS antibiotics.

42

(13 replies, posted in Acoustic)

Medium too difficult. Extralight too tinny. I've eventually settled on Light gauge for best combination of sound and playability. (12-string needs extralight). Regarding brand, ABM (anything but Martin) for me.

I was kind of joking about the blackbird.
Maybe carbon fibre will get cheaper one day. Guitars don't always have to be made of wood. When carbon fishing rods came out they were begabucks, now they are less so.

Sounds great. Just a job, a family and an ocean make it a bit tricky. Oh well, nearly time to get my kayak and fly rods out here anyway. And here's the ideal guitar to take
http://www.blackbirdguitar.com/rider_steel.html
(is carbon fibre waterproof or at least damp proof?)

45

(40 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

Why do you call it football? Its not a ball (a ball is round) and it's not kicked all that much.

Many of us here have probably taught ourselves to play guitar. Yes, some lessons would have been of benefit but we've muddled along and are happy enough with what we can do. And many great and famous players are in the same boat.

Would anyone recommend the same approach to learning piano? Bearing in mind that I was a teenager when I started guitar but now am... not a teenager! Lessons or self-teach ?

47

(0 replies, posted in Guitars and accessories)

Anyon eused one of these?
http://www.ikmultimedia.com/irig/moreinfo/moreinfo1.php
Whike its marketed for iPhone/iPad, will it work with a PC?

48

(3 replies, posted in Acoustic)

DE, I did try Nashville tuning and love it, but t's a bit redundant as I have 12-string too. Also it does weird things of you play melody across all 6 strings as the 6th string is no longer the lowest pitch.

I did try deviating from the standard string combination on the 12-string as I wanted a unison pair on the G instead of an octave pair. Didn't work great though - 2 plain strings on the G were either too thin (inotnation problems) or too thick (increasing neck tension, probably safe enough but didn't want to risk it). Also experimented with a different 2nd string in DAGDAD tuning as a standard light-gauge B didn't sound/feel right when tuned down to A. But abandoned that too for similar reasons

So now it's standard light-gauge sets on the 6-string and standard extralight on the 12 for me. Until I get another guitar that's permanently DAGDAD, another permanently Nashville, another that is....

49

(68 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

Bod Dylan: "The ghost of electrictity howls in the bones of her face"

Beatles: "Love love me do"
Beatles: "I am the eggman, they are the eggman, I am the walrus, goo goo goo joob"

Traditional: "With me whack fol a do fol a diddly idle day"

50

(15 replies, posted in Acoustic)

There is also the option of using your fingertips which, over time, will develop callus in the same way that your fretting fingers do. Haven't tried it myself being mainly a plectrum user.

By the way I like the phrase "...perform hair, nail and skin services on people...". Conjures all sorts of images!