Forum Activity for @ken-hulme

Ken Hulme
@ken-hulme
05/24/18 09:50:06PM
2,157 posts

Strings!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

Odd  twang . .. I suspect  the  notch  in  the  bridge ...too  wide  at the  bottom, not  angled correctly  .. something . How did  you  cut  them?  Triangle  file? Jewelers  saw?

Bill Robison
@bill-robison
05/24/18 06:16:02PM
36 posts

Strings!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

I have built several dulcimers from 16" to 30" VSL.  The latest one has 30" VSL, Lower bout  is 8 1/2", upper bout is 7"  and is 2 " thick. Sides and back are walnut and top is ambrosia maple.

I started out with 12,12,16,24 strings and the melody and bass sounded fine, smooth and mellow, but the middle string has an odd twang . I used Struthers string gage and it recommended 9,9,12 and 18. after switching, I used 10,10,12,20. the middle string still has that strange twang. My instruments all have zero fret but could the problem still be in the nut that keeps the strings in position? the bridge was originally ebony but I changed that to bone . Still get that off sound. Action is very low as I dish the fretboard slightly  midway to allow a lower bridge, could it be too low? No buzzing

 

I appreciate any thoughts

Bill Robison

 

Rob N Lackey
@rob-n-lackey
05/23/18 09:25:09AM
420 posts

Kennedy Barn String Band


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Thanks, Ariane, Terry and Barb.  It was a surprise.  It's just fun for me to play with these folks and to have me and the dulcimer be accepted by them.

Black Dog Bess
@black-dog-bess
05/22/18 11:06:54PM
18 posts

Kennedy Barn String Band


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Congratulations, what a great looking group!

Barb

Terry Wilson
@terry-wilson
05/22/18 07:35:22PM
297 posts

Kennedy Barn String Band


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Congratulations, Rob. Appears to be a fun time to be you.
Ariane
@ariane
05/22/18 06:01:22AM
50 posts

Kennedy Barn String Band


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Congratulations, Rob - that is really great. Very nice pictures! sun

Rob N Lackey
@rob-n-lackey
05/22/18 04:58:32AM
420 posts

Kennedy Barn String Band


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Thank you DT, Ken, Janene, Jim and Cindy.  It's been a fun time playing in a band, particularly one of this genre. We may look "fun" but really we're a bunch of crusty old farts (Except Susie and Brian and Christy who wasn't there.)

Cindy Stammich
@cindy-stammich
05/21/18 10:35:31PM
72 posts

Kennedy Barn String Band


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Congratulations!!!  This is awesome!!!  dulcimer

Janene Millen
@janene-millen
05/21/18 09:12:22PM
28 posts

Kennedy Barn String Band


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

thumbsup  That is VERY cool! Congrats.  Fun looking group!

Ken Longfield
@ken-longfield
05/21/18 09:06:10PM
1,357 posts

Kennedy Barn String Band


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Congratulations, Rob! A well deserved honor.

Ken

"The dulcimer sings a sweet song."

notsothoreau
@notsothoreau
05/21/18 08:57:35PM
46 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

I picked up three Herdim picks, which are nice. I also got three Clayton cork grip picks. I do like these. The cork side goes next to your thumb and the point is bent inward a tiny bit. It is a bit thinner than I've used lately but works nicely with the new dulcimer.

Dusty Turtle
@dusty
05/21/18 08:07:19PM
1,873 posts

Kennedy Barn String Band


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Congratulations, Rob.  That really cool!  worthy

Rob N Lackey
@rob-n-lackey
05/21/18 08:04:29PM
420 posts

Kennedy Barn String Band


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions


Sunday we were presented with the Traditions award from the Folklife Center of Fairmont State University.  We played for about 20 minutes after the presentation of the award.

Pictures below

It was a great honor to receive it.


IMG_0259.jpg IMG_0259.jpg - 224KB

updated by @rob-n-lackey: 10/27/19 12:02:25PM
Ron Stewart
@ron-stewart
05/20/18 01:28:49PM
3 posts

Mikael Carstanjen 1975 Courting Dulcimer - Repair Question


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

Just a thought
Saw a mod the other day that had the sound holes in the back with a false back and no holes in the top. Could you possibly cut sound holes in the back and do the repairs through them and then add a false back. That may even increase the volume
William White
@william-white
05/17/18 10:23:57PM
1 posts



I have a Clemmer Tennesee Sweetie and a BanJammer love them both. Very well made and excellent sound.

nigelbleddfa
@nigelbleddfa
05/17/18 01:36:23PM
33 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

They have arrived and look very pretty but, as anticipated they are rigid. I can discern no difference in the sound that they make individually but that may change over time.  Their dimensions are identical and they are polished. I would imagine that experienced players would adapt and use them properly but, for now, the more conventional picks, Dunlop Tortex, Herdim, Everly Star, Gibson etc make a nicer sound when I play. Nevertheless, I will persevere. I like this "dulcimer stuff". It's good, isn't it ?nod


Thai Sindoro.jpg Thai Sindoro.jpg - 117KB
Strumelia
@strumelia
05/15/18 02:25:34PM
2,422 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

Robin, thanks so much!  Your descriptive word for this sound, "flatfoot" is perfect.. I can close my eyes and see someone dancing in old leather shoes on the wood floor...  nod

nigelbleddfa
@nigelbleddfa
05/15/18 12:50:36PM
33 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

Thanks to all for the replies and special thanks to Robin for taking the trouble to make a new video to show the fat felt pick.

My wooden picks will be arriving on Friday and I will report back.

Robin Thompson
@robin-thompson
05/15/18 12:38:44PM
1,569 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions


Strumelia,

Here's a new video.  If the percussive sound doesn't come through enough, feel free to let me know.  :)


updated by @robin-thompson: 05/15/18 02:28:15PM
Robin Thompson
@robin-thompson
05/15/18 10:46:10AM
1,569 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

Strumelia, I did have a video yet must've taken it off the internet awhile ago.  Maybe I can do another demo sometime.  

Strumelia
@strumelia
05/15/18 09:16:40AM
2,422 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

Hey Robin- didn't you used to have a video on here demonstrating your felt pick?  It was great...where'd it go?  surprised

Strumelia
@strumelia
05/15/18 09:12:09AM
2,422 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

When putting simply the word "picks" in our site-wide search engine, it pulls up a veritable feast of pink adventures to enjoy exploring:

https://fotmd.com/search/results/all/1/25?search_string=picks   dancetomato

 

I wrote a blog post a few years back describing my own fickle adventures with picks as well:

https://dulcimer-noter-drone.blogspot.com/2009/03/take-your-pick.html

Robin Thompson
@robin-thompson
05/15/18 08:51:32AM
1,569 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

Like Robert, I make my picks from various plastic lids and containers.  (I cut them into a big kidney bean shape.) They are big enough I have lots of points of contact so can have a very loose hand to hold one.  Unless I'm strumming the daylights out of something and I hold tighter.  :)


updated by @robin-thompson: 05/15/18 08:53:57AM
Ken Hulme
@ken-hulme
05/14/18 10:40:35PM
2,157 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

The harder the wood the better.  Harder wood can be sanded much thinner and played longer before the tin edge at the tip wears away.  Maple is good, myrtle also (nearly as hard), and I really like bamboo splits from a culm that is big enough that  you don't have to deal (much) with the curved surfaces.  Bamboo, of course has a lot of silicon in it, which makes it particularly tough.

Oak is hard enough, but not pretty.  Walnut may be pretty and tough, but the thin edges wear out quickly.  Hickory, Birch, Ash are also good.

David Bennett
@david-bennett
05/14/18 09:12:20PM
65 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

Ken H, when you make your wooden strummers does the type of wood you use make much difference? Are there any you definitely would use or definitely NOT use?

robert schuler
@robert-schuler
05/14/18 08:49:09PM
258 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

I make my picks from various plastic lids and containers. They fit my loose style of strumming. No matter which pick you choose always be sure they can't fit into the sound holes. I'm always amazed how easily a pick can fall into one.😂...Robert

John Gribble
@john-gribble
05/14/18 08:08:31PM
124 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

On guitar and mandolin I use small hard hard picks made of Tortex, a material which gives a sound similar to the traditional tortoise shell picks of the past. One gets a big sound from a hard pick. I tried stone picks, wood pick, and even coins, but discovered I want a little bit of flex in the pick. The problem with using a really stiff pick is learning to roll the thumb so that one can play softly. 

I have never wanted to play dulcimer loudly. I have noisier noiemakers for that, resonator guitars and five-string banjos. That's why I like a more limber strummer or my thumb for the dulcimer.

But by all means experiment. Discover what sounds good to you. In artistic circles, this is what's call "finding your voice."

 

Ken Hulme
@ken-hulme
05/14/18 06:59:35PM
2,157 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

Wooden "picks"  called 'strummers' were fairly common in the Olde Dayes of dulcimer and well into mid-20th century.  Robin Clark in Wales uses one periodically as do I and several others I know of.  He found an old video of someone (Nettie Presnell??) playing with a strummer.  

I make my own strummers from a variety of hardwoods -- maple, chestnut, yew, oak, bamboo, myrtle, etc.  I have a Lignum Vitae noter, but not a strummer.  The strummers I make are about 3-4" long and 3/4" wide -- roughly index finger size -- and are generally used with broad sweeping motions mostly.  Thickness varies from 1/8" to a feather edge, averaging about 1/16".

I also have a pick made from Vegetable Ivory.  When I was out in the Pacific I picked up a number of Ivory Nut Palm nuts, and carved picks from them.  Most went to dulcimer and uke playing local friends out there.

nigelbleddfa
@nigelbleddfa
05/14/18 05:23:30PM
33 posts

Pick paranoia!


Instruments- discuss specific features, luthiers, instrument problems & questions

I really should settle for one pick and practise more. Unfortunately, I allow myself to be distracted and when I am not reading different books about the dulcimer and watching YouTube videos I find myself moving in the direction of eBay to see what is on offer.

Tonight I found wooden picks. Being married to a Thai lady it was a given that I would buy a Thai Sindora one. I decided on two very hard woods - Lignum Vitae and Ironwood - as two others.

Is anybody able to give an opinion on these, please?

This is a link to a British website which has these on sale.

http://www.gear4music.com/TimberTones

I can easily understand how your American forefathers used quills, leather and wooden noters as plastic was not available to them. Having read a lot about noter/drone playing I am surprised that I have found no mention of wooden picks and the woods used to make them. 

I would imagine that wooden picks were used and that somebody here will know about them.

 

Now, I really must get that thing out of its case and apply myself.nod

Lois Sprengnether Keel
@lois-sprengnether-keel
05/13/18 07:12:20PM
197 posts

How does your pet react to your Dulcimer playing?


OFF TOPIC discussions

Aw!

That one of the kitten and the dulcimer got me thinking of an old piano instrumental piece called "Kitten on the Keys" and how there needs to be one for Kitten on the Dulcimer -- maybe with some meowing.

As long as Sally Ann doesn't  mistake it for a scratching post, may she learn there are people's toys, too.😉

Richard Streib
@richard-streib
05/13/18 11:25:14AM
280 posts

How does your pet react to your Dulcimer playing?


OFF TOPIC discussions

That's one beautiful cat. I know you will enjoy her. Thanks for adopting a rescue.

Ken Hulme
@ken-hulme
05/13/18 09:50:41AM
2,157 posts

How does your pet react to your Dulcimer playing?


OFF TOPIC discussions

She's a sweetie, David!  Congrats!

 

David Bennett
@david-bennett
05/13/18 06:46:55AM
65 posts

How does your pet react to your Dulcimer playing?


OFF TOPIC discussions

We brought Sally Ann home Friday and introduced her to our dulcimers. Right now she thinks our house is one big cat toy. I'm thinking she's about 8 weeks old. She could be 9 weeks old.  


4 (1).JPG 4 (1).JPG - 243KB

updated by @david-bennett: 05/13/18 06:58:50AM
Ken Hulme
@ken-hulme
05/10/18 01:24:38PM
2,157 posts

Song choices for transcribing


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

I'm with Rob -- the tune of any song can be made into an interesting instrumental piece.  You as the arranger must like the tune or you won't do it the justice it deserves. 

 

Not that I  make instrumentals out of song tunes, I just don't sing the words and play the tune at the same time...

Rob N Lackey
@rob-n-lackey
05/10/18 11:29:12AM
420 posts

Song choices for transcribing


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

You just have to like it.  Any can be interesting.

 

YeahSureOK
@yeahsureok
05/10/18 10:30:16AM
11 posts

Song choices for transcribing


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions


Just a poll, and I hope this question makes sense. When making instrumental arrangements of a vocal/lyrical song, like any given country, rock, or pop song, does anyone feel that certain types of songs, with certain compositional attributes, make for better instrumentals, or can literally anything make for a beautiful or interesting instrumental with the right arrangement?

 

 

Robin Thompson
@robin-thompson
05/09/18 09:54:35AM
1,569 posts

Show Us Your Pets!


OFF TOPIC discussions

Good golly, is Sally (Anne) sweet or what!  <3 And I love the tune of the same name-- one of my favorites. 

  337