Changing the order of posts within a thread
Site QUESTIONS ? How do I...?
I understand. I just have to get used to it. Thanks for the response!
@Appalachiandreamer Yes, please post your Amburgey photo! Also, I misread your comment about MJAmburgey-- my mistake.
Scott, the order of the posts is not, I believe, something individual users can change. It is a setting we decided on as we built the site. If my memory serves me well, at one point we did have the oldest posts at the top, but some people complained about that, and it also led to people posting without reading the most recent posts to see where the discussion had gone.
In the Group discussions, the original post does indeed stay at the top, but below that the rest of the posts are listed with the most recent one at the top.
The way the Forums work, though, as you've noted, the original post moves to the bottom as new posts are added.
This is one of the examples of the adage that you can't please everyone. But at least this way we are all shown the most recent post without having to do too much scrolling. In long, involved discussion in which an individual might post numerous times, having the most recent stuff at the top is convenient. But you are right that if you are joining a discussion late, you might have to scroll to see the original comment or question.
Jill, plastic or metal picks will always sound like plastic or metal. The felt flat picks have a softer sound, but you can't play individual notes very well and they certainly wouldn't help you with fingerpicking.
If the issue for you is the physical contact between your fingers and the strings (rather than some muscular issue), you might explore some of the products intended to help people who don't like the fingertip pressure on their fretting hand.
There are products called "guitar gloves" that are tight-fitting gloves intended for the fretting hand. They supposedly reduce the wear on fingertips. It might be that you could try one of those for your picking hand. And if you don't like wearing the whole glove, you might be able to cut off the fingers themselves, and just use the fingers you want to pick with.
There are also products for the fingertips themselves, again intended for the fretting hand, such as Gorilla Tips.
I've never used any of that stuff and imagine that even if they worked for you there would be a period of adjustment where you would have to get used to the feel of the strings through those products, but if you have no other solutions, you might give them a try.
Other forums I belong to has the original post at the top and you scroll down to read all posts in the order they we posted. ie, first to last. I see that this site lists the original post at the bottom so to read it you have to scroll all the way down to the end and then work your way up to the top in order to read them as they were posted. This seems awkward to me. Is there a way of changing the order in which you see posts?
IIRC there are plastic ones, which should sound less metallic and more finger-y.
Welcome, @scott-collier & @Appalachiandreamer!
Scott, Bob G makes beautiful instruments-- enjoy your visit!
AD, A Jethro Amburgey and MJethro Amburgey-- wow! Enjoy them!
Hazel, my Great Dane loves the snow.
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Hi all,
I love to fingerpick with my fingers/pads - but my hands have "issues" and they rebel. Are there any fingerpicks that don't sound like finger picks? That sound like bare fingers?
Thanks!
Thanks Robin! I saw this somewhere the other day - I LOVE LOVE LOVE his playing!!!! Check out his CD with Stephen Seifert!
Good to have you aboard. Sebastian sure knows how to take a nap. Dulcinina
Hello everyone! New to FOTMD and just started learning to play a few weeks ago. Here is my old dog, Sebastian.
Thanks Dusty, glad you liked it!
I finally had a chance to listen to the latest podcast on Nina Zanetti. What a great job you do capturing not only the mood and timbre of her music, but also her personality. Nina was really helpful to me when I was first starting on the dulcimer, and that patient, helpful nature really comes out in the podcast. What a treat it is to listen to!
Mmm hmm. That's it right there.
Thanks Robin, good stuff!!
I really enjoyed that Robin, thanks for sharing.
Another Aussie to invite is Richard Dunn, in Gold Coast. At 86 he's recently built a large box dulcimer. He's a member here
I'll PM you here his email address.
@ken-hulme You're on the right track! Anne and Richard are friends and we are excited that they are planning to be here for the first Australian Dulcimer Retreat.
Great Carla! Be sure to contact Anne Bowman and Richard Troughear!
I finally had a chance to listen to the latest podcast on Nina Zanetti. What a great job you do capturing not only the mood and timbre of her music, but also her personality. Nina was really helpful to me when I was first starting on the dulcimer, and that patient, helpful nature really comes out in the podcast. What a treat it is to listen to!
Would you travel to Australia for a dulcimer retreat?
You might have noticed the Australian Dulcimer Retreat listed on this website's list of festivals. Adrian Kosky and I are hosting this dulcimer retreat at our place in Daylesford, Victoria, Australia. Our "day job" is to run our group accommodation business at Tasma House and Gardens . We aren't normally involved with the groups who stay on the property....we just prepare it for them and clean up after them.....we appreciate the business, but we don't have much fun doing that. We live in a small cottage on the property and come-and-go separately from "the main house." So, we have decided to create our own event and reserve the whole property for our own use: the first Australian Dulcimer Retreat! We have the wonderful Australian musician/dulcimer player, Lucy Wise, lined-up to be the main instructor for the event, August 28-30, 2020. (September 1st is the beginning of Springtime in Australia....it should be beautiful!)
I know a lot of people might want to and think they could never travel all the way to Australia. I'm just wondering if our hosting (in our home, basically), the focus on the dulcimer, and a reasonable cost for our event, would make the idea more doable. Adrian and I live half the year here in Australia and the other half in Clarksdale, Mississippi; we do the long travel a couple of times each year. It IS a long commute, but we are physically able (and thankful for that) to do it!
We don't travel with our dulcimers, to protect them. We have quite a few dulcimers here at Tasma, and we would be happy for participants to borrow one for the Australian Dulcimer Retreat. Especially, if they're flying in from overseas!
And...if you don't mind....I am going to be building an event page and/or website to provide details about our first Australian dulcimer retreat, and I would appreciate input as to what information you would like or need to know before booking your ticket(s). Questions about accommodation can be answered by looking at Tasma House on Airbnb.com, disregarding the cost shown there, as there will be a minimal per-person accommodation charge for participants for this retreat. (Normally, we rent to one person who books the property for many guests, so the price might look odd.) The cost for the retreat will be shown on the website and/or Facebook event page that I create. Although it's not confirmed yet, I think the cost will be between $300-$400 and accommodation would be included on a first-come-first-serve basis, according to registrations.
It would be great to hear what your ideas are.
Here are a few photos to get you thinking....
Anne, Biddy is adorable. Sure looks like the cat is keeping an eye on him. Thanks for the photos.
Photos as requested, and promised! Biddy is such a mad, active dog outside, it's hard to get a photo without even a little blur, but I think I've managed it!
The settling in is going well, I think. The cats are still unsure, and there is a little bit of 'spit & hiss' going on, but in general the boys will move around the same room, keeping an eye out for danger.
Biddy is lying at my feet at the moment, having had mad gallops around the yard, which will become, I think, her own personal racetrack - whizzes around and around - fortunately, it's a big yard with plenty of room!
Cannot help with song title but I just love the little accordion in this video! Makes me wish I had one like that. Very pretty melody indeed.
Well, folks! It's solved! Joe Collins 'The Banks of the Catawba' It's on his new album The River Runs Through it and it's streaming on amazon music. Wow..
It was one of his free tabs in the past. A nice song!
Jim Stewart's original here:
I'll venture to guess that this is a variation of Jim Stewart's, "Lament for Owen Christy" which is in Anna Barry's book Soundings whose contents can be found in the Western North Carolina Library Network by searching for her name.
I agree with @Ken-Hulme. I would have used the word "active" rather than "complicated," but I think we're talking about the same thing. It sounds to me like a Celtic ballad in which the singing of any given verse might involve more notes depending on the specific lyrics.
Doesn't sound complicated enough for O'Carolan, but it definitely has common Celtic runs and flourishes
She suspects that the song came from Anna Berry's 'Soundings' dulcimer book. But she isn't sure. It definitely was a tab my friend was playing
That worked. Nice. What does it mean, her Soundings book? Maybe she was improvising?