Forum Activity for @strumelia

Strumelia
@strumelia
03/19/23 08:18:05AM
2,403 posts

Gary Sager


OFF TOPIC discussions

If I'm not mistaken, Gary was making wonderful and modestly priced box dulcimers at a time when almost no other dulcimer builders were making box dulcimers or Tennessee music box reproductions.

Susie
@susie
03/19/23 06:16:29AM
512 posts

Gary Sager


OFF TOPIC discussions


marg:

Yes, many of us knew of Gary's health issues but you wouldn't know speaking with him.

You are right, I spoke with him last summer to place an order through his store and he was so pleasant and kind. It was his nature. Similar to my dad, fighting a battle, but strong!

Enjoy that special dulcimer! 


updated by @susie: 03/19/23 06:16:52AM
Robin Thompson
@robin-thompson
03/18/23 04:12:16PM
1,553 posts

Gary Sager


OFF TOPIC discussions

@marg Gary was a great builder and player!  You're fortunate to have acquired one of his mountain dulcimers.  

marg
@marg
03/18/23 01:18:10PM
620 posts

Gary Sager


OFF TOPIC discussions

Yes, many of us knew of Gary's health issues but you wouldn't know speaking with him.

  I was able to get one of his deep body dulcimers not long ago, it is so easy to fret and has such a great overall tone. It is a treasure and more so now. When I did speak with Gary, after getting his dulcimer, he was so pleasant talking about his dulcimers and shop. He will be missed not only by his family and friends but all of the dulcimer community. 

Keeping him and his love ones in my heart

Susie
@susie
03/17/23 08:57:47PM
512 posts

Gary Sager


OFF TOPIC discussions

Like Robin, I knew of his health issues. Gary was such a pleasant person, whether seeing him at festivals or conducting business with him through his store. I'm sad to hear of his passing. We lost another great one. sniffcry

Robin Thompson
@robin-thompson
03/17/23 04:45:25PM
1,553 posts

Your Dulcimer Audience


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Randy Adams:

You ain't getting counted! : )


No surprise there.  Story of my life. grin
Ken Hulme
@ken-hulme
03/16/23 04:25:48PM
2,157 posts

Dulcimer Players News demise


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Strumelia:

I hear there are tens of dollars to be made in dulcimer magazines and websites.



If you're lucky, Strumelia...  if you're lucky.
Randy Adams
@randy-adams
03/16/23 01:04:04PM
125 posts

Benefits of longer VSL?


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

Thanks for putting this here Nate. 

I left out in the vid that I surely appreciate the tone/timber of the bigs they are something special.

Strumelia
@strumelia
03/16/23 12:54:40PM
2,403 posts

Dulcimer Players News demise


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

I hear there are tens of dollars to be made in dulcimer magazines and websites.

Nate
@nate
03/16/23 08:34:29AM
442 posts

Benefits of longer VSL?


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

Nate
@nate
03/16/23 07:56:44AM
442 posts

Dulcimer Players News demise


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

My experience with the dulcimer community on this website is a very altruistic desire to share information and music. So many on here have taken quite a lot of time out of their day to write long posts to help me or someone else or folks in general with understanding and appreciating the dulcimer, and I'm really grateful for that. At the end of the day I know that all the help I've gotten is proof that dulcimer people love helping and sharing with others, so I know they will always find a way to do it handshake

Ken Hulme
@ken-hulme
03/16/23 07:21:47AM
2,157 posts

Dulcimer Players News demise


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

I'm pretty sure she explored every avenue before deciding to close the doors.  Things today aren't what they were when DPN started as a mimeographed newsletter all those years ago.  Today you need not just writing/editing skills but serious computer saavy.  The costs of printing small run publications, especially in the color with the quality we expect today have gone out of sight and subscribers are dropping off as the popularity of electronic media has risen, and the remaining subscribers are less and less willing to pay the costs of production, honoraria for writers, and something approaching compensation for the editor.  

The other issue is that a magazine needs in-depth quality material to print, and fewer people these days are doing so.  People today seemingly would rather start random "sound bite" discussions on the plethora of dulcimer social media sites.  

DPN might... just might... survive as a sort of subscription-based "contributory blog" -- an electronic magazine.  Think of a website, similar to FOTMD, where you would pay a monthly or annual fee to read articles, watch short videos, and see photos, but not comment on them except for a thousand words  per month (like a letter to the editor).   There are already a number of scholarly journals operating on this basis -- JSTOR and Academia.edu come to mind immediately.  Subscribers would receive notification emails whenever a certain amount of new material was published.  Articles could be read on line or perhaps downloaded for personal use only.

Folks who have interesting things to report about the dulcimer, its use, history, etc, etc.  would upload articles with illustrations/photos or video clips (all in appropriate electronic formats) to the editor.  The editor would do his/her editorial magic and upload the articles to a website where subscribing readers can access them.  Contributors would get paid via Papal or Zelle.  There would be paid advertisements interspersed with the articles.

Here again, the question remains whether there would be sufficient interest -- advertisements and people willing to pay a monthly/annual subscription fee -- to support someone doing all that writing, editing, and electronic manipulation, plus support the massive bandwidth and computer resources, etc.  


updated by @ken-hulme: 03/16/23 07:53:10AM
Dusty Turtle
@dusty
03/16/23 02:38:04AM
1,848 posts

Gary Sager


OFF TOPIC discussions

Sad news.  I hope his family knows how wide Gary's influence was and how many musical souls he touched.

Strumelia
@strumelia
03/15/23 08:07:58PM
2,403 posts

Gary Sager


OFF TOPIC discussions

This is indeed sad news. I'm wishing comfort for his family.

Richard Streib
@richard-streib
03/15/23 07:05:04PM
277 posts

Gary Sager


OFF TOPIC discussions

The dulcimer community has lost another great one. My sympathies are extended to the family and loved ones of Gary Sager.

Robin Thompson
@robin-thompson
03/15/23 06:53:03PM
1,553 posts

Gary Sager


OFF TOPIC discussions

Though I knew Gary was ill, the news of his death still came to me as a bit of a shock.  It was a long-ago visit to Gary & Toni's shop which got me thinking about taking up mountain dulcimer-- and as it happened, Gary & Toni weren't even there that day yet the instruments were and someone else was minding the store.  Gary was a great guy, a wonderful luthier, and a really good musician.  My heart is with Toni and the Sager family.      

Salt Springs
@salt-springs
03/15/23 06:31:11PM
215 posts

Gary Sager


OFF TOPIC discussions

That is sad news................I appreciate you posting that and I will surely remember his family and all those grieving his loss. 

Ken Longfield
@ken-longfield
03/15/23 06:19:37PM
1,338 posts

Gary Sager


OFF TOPIC discussions


It is with a sad heart that I share the news that Gary Sager of Prussia Valley dulcimers died this afternoon, March 15, 2023. Gary was an experienced dulcimer maker and an enthusiastic promoter of the mountain dulcimer. I first met Gary and Dave Lynch at the same time at a Harmony Harvest festival in Lancaster, OH. Gary was generous in sharing advice about building and playing dulcimers. He will be missed by all who knew him or shopped at the Prussia Valley Music Store or website.

My sympathy goes out to his wife, Toni, and the rest of Gary's family. 

Rest in peace Gary.

Ken

"The dulcimer sings a sweet song."

Michael Willey
@michael-willey
03/15/23 05:30:03PM
30 posts

Dulcimer Players News demise


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

I wonder if Ashley tried selling DPN to someone who would continue its publication?

Ken Longfield
@ken-longfield
03/15/23 05:16:53PM
1,338 posts

Dulcimer Players News demise


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

In my conversation with Ashley she indicated she would keep up the events calendar and maybe the club list, but I don't think she was interested in maintaining a digital newsletter. I guess if that is a need for the dulcimer community someone will develop it.

Ken

"The dulcimer sings a sweet song."

Ken Hulme
@ken-hulme
03/15/23 04:35:25PM
2,157 posts

Dulcimer Players News demise


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Nate -- there is always the "archive" on issuu.com -- see the link a couple posts below here....


updated by @ken-hulme: 03/15/23 04:36:00PM
Robin Thompson
@robin-thompson
03/15/23 04:12:12PM
1,553 posts

Dulcimer Players News demise


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

@nate Ashley Ernst has indicated there will still be an online presence of some kind for DPN even after the print editions cease.   


updated by @robin-thompson: 03/15/23 06:03:10PM
Nate
@nate
03/15/23 03:44:00PM
442 posts

Dulcimer Players News demise


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

I am not a regular reader, but I've pulled up a TON of random articles over time. Sorry is this question is out of the loop, but will there be any type of replacement, maybe a less frequent digital newsletter or something more manageable?  It's a real bummer though, for someone like me who isnt really connected to the culture of dulcimer playing, DPN regularly exposed me to ideas I'd never have even known to look for, including techniques, historical information, etc.

Nate
@nate
03/15/23 03:07:14PM
442 posts

Kora


Adventures with 'other' instruments...

Hey Ken, I thought the instrument was super interesting, especially how the traditional ones have handles on the front, so you can basically hold it like a plane yoke while you play. My next one will too. The one I built has the saddle sitting on two coffee cans in a plywood box. I sort of just winged it, didn't really measure anything or use plans or whatnot. Intending to build another one now that I know what to expect.


updated by @nate: 03/15/23 03:07:30PM
Ken Hulme
@ken-hulme
03/15/23 07:01:51AM
2,157 posts

Kora


Adventures with 'other' instruments...


Interesting instrument. IIRC there were several biblical era lyres which used a skin drum as the resonator chamber.  Can't really see what you've built, from that vid.  Had to go looking.  

I found Dennis Havlena's how-to article which, like most of his other homemade instrument DIYs is pretty comprehensive.... Is that what you used to build from?


updated by @ken-hulme: 03/15/23 07:08:36AM
Nate
@nate
03/15/23 04:43:58AM
442 posts

Left handed playing


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions


Sam:

Then there's me. I'm Un-bidexterous. Can't do anything with either hand think



Haha! Thats why some guy invented the harmonica holder ! 



thumbsup

Sam
@sam
03/15/23 04:41:08AM
169 posts

Left handed playing


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Then there's me. I'm Un-bidexterous. Can't do anything with either hand think

Ken Longfield
@ken-longfield
03/14/23 10:39:45PM
1,338 posts

Question about Blue Lion Instruments


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

After reading the story from Janita, I have a vague recollection of her telling me that story. It was at one of the Shenandoah University dulcimer weeks that Maddie Mac Neal and Ralph Lee Smith organized. We were sharing our backgrounds and I asked how a geology major got involved in dulcimers. I had forgotten all about that until Silverstrings posted Janita's response.

Ken

"The dulcimer sing a sweet song."

Dusty Turtle
@dusty
03/14/23 10:21:48PM
1,848 posts

Question about Blue Lion Instruments


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

Well the published story is better than any of those we just made up!  Thanks, @silverstrings, for reaching out to Janet.

Robin Thompson
@robin-thompson
03/14/23 07:30:21PM
1,553 posts

Question about Blue Lion Instruments


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

Oh, @silverstrings , I just love this story and am so glad you pursued learning how Blue Lion Instruments came by their name!  Mark and I just finished playing together just a bit ago and I was playing a Blue Lion.  <3


updated by @robin-thompson: 03/14/23 08:23:35PM
Nate
@nate
03/14/23 06:31:11PM
442 posts

Kora


Adventures with 'other' instruments...

https://youtube.com/shorts/Xl1pDlMtGbM?feature=share
The Gambian Kora is a really clever African harp. I think one would probably sound incredible with the dulcimer. Made one attempt and building one DIY style and still have no clue how to play it. Working on building a much nicer, louder, and prettier one using what I learned.



updated by @nate: 03/14/23 06:31:49PM
Silverstrings
@silverstrings
03/14/23 06:09:01PM
59 posts

Question about Blue Lion Instruments


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

Janice Baker wrote back to me on how Blue Lion Instruments got its name. It is a beautiful story. It makes me love my dulcimer even more, if that is possible. 



There is a “children’s book” (I think it really is an adult book) called Lion and Blue by Robert Vavra and Fleur Cowles.  It is the story of a lion who falls in love with a blue butterfly; the butterfly flies away and he spend the rest of his life trying to find her again.  (The illustrations are absolutely gorgeous!).  He travels all over and various animals keep telling him to follow his dream and his heart and he will find happiness,  but finally, in the end, the now very old lion passes away without having found his blue butterfly.  You turn the page, and the lion is now a sunflower, and of course, the blue butterfly has landed on the flower.




It’s a beautiful story about following your heart and not giving up. 


So how this relates to Blue Lion?  We needed to file for a business license and had to come up with a name in short order.  We didn’t want to be Baker Dulcimers and we didn’t want something too cute or folksy.  Bob noticed this book on our bookshelf and said “What about Blue Lion?”.  We both like the color blue, and a blue lion sounded somewhat mythical and noble and it just seemed right at the time.  So that is what we chose.



Silverstrings
@silverstrings
03/14/23 02:49:13PM
59 posts

Question about Blue Lion Instruments


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

Ben, that is a great story. I actually did have a blue tie-dyed t-shirt. We learned how to do our own tie-dye in home economics in the 1970’s. 

Ben Barr Jr
@benjamin-w-barr-jr
03/14/23 12:27:09PM
64 posts

Question about Blue Lion Instruments


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

Well, there was this lion living in the states sometime during the late 60s.  He observed many of the hippie people during that time doing the ever popular Tie-Dye thing with their t-shirts and other pieces of clothing.  The lion liked what he saw and thought that it was pretty groovy.  However, belonging to a Pride of Lions Den, he didn't want to go too extreme as he thought the other lions might make fun of him.  So, in not going to extremes he ordered some blue dye and when it came he poured a bunch into a bathtub full of water and then dove in swimming to his heart's content. He got out of the tub covered in blue dye and just let it air dry so that he wouldn't lose the hue.  When Bob and Janita saw the Blue Lion in the local zoo, well, they pointed and said at the same time, "look, a blue lion"; they just couldn't believe their good luck and the rest is history.  


updated by @benjamin-w-barr-jr: 03/14/23 12:50:03PM
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