Forum Activity for @john-henry

John Henry
@john-henry
07/05/11 12:23:31AM
258 posts

YEAH!!!! I finnally got one.


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Congratulations Dana, what good news to wake up to, I am so pleased for you, looking forward to seeing some pics of 'you two' together. You hinted just a little of its history, tell us more if you can. I hope it is to be played and not kept as a wall hanger, I should'nt worry too much about any small imperfections, the one I rebuilt for JohnS still sings a sweet song' (does this mean that I have to take down the 'Dirge for Dana' that I played on it for you, lol)

John

Dana R. McCall
@dana-r-mccall
07/04/11 11:52:51PM
168 posts

YEAH!!!! I finnally got one.


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Hey Louis, thanks I think you sent me a friend request on FB and was asking about dulcimers for sale. Sorry but I've already sold the two I had for sale. If I hear of any nice ones for sale I'll be sure and let you know. Welcome to FOTMD. Dana
Dana R. McCall
@dana-r-mccall
07/04/11 11:48:23PM
168 posts

YEAH!!!! I finnally got one.


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Thanks Randall, Looking forward to see and hearing you sing again soon. I'm wearing your CD out.
Dana R. McCall
@dana-r-mccall
07/04/11 09:32:36PM
168 posts

YEAH!!!! I finnally got one.


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Thanks Robin, been wanting one a looooong time. can't wait to get it.
Robin Thompson
@robin-thompson
07/04/11 09:06:49PM
1,553 posts

YEAH!!!! I finnally got one.


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Dana, I'm really happy for you! A Winchester gal's gotta have a Ledford.
Dana R. McCall
@dana-r-mccall
07/04/11 08:14:49PM
168 posts

YEAH!!!! I finnally got one.


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Sorry

R N Lackey said:

so you're the one that out-bid me!

Dana R. McCall
@dana-r-mccall
07/04/11 08:13:24PM
168 posts

YEAH!!!! I finnally got one.


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

I sure hope not they didn't put that in the discription I'll go back and look at the pic again. Thanks

R N Lackey said:

Congratulations, seriously.

However, in one of the pictures it looked like there was a small crack going down the top at the round soundhole between the 1st and 2nd strings. That may need to be checked. I was hoping it was just the angle of the camera, but I couldn't get away from it in my mind.

Robert

Rob N Lackey
@rob-n-lackey
07/04/11 08:02:42PM
420 posts

YEAH!!!! I finnally got one.


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Congratulations, seriously.

However, in one of the pictures it looked like there was a small crack going down the top at the round soundhole between the 1st and 2nd strings. That may need to be checked. I was hoping it was just the angle of the camera, but I couldn't get away from it in my mind.

Robert

Sam
@sam
07/04/11 06:17:23PM
169 posts

YEAH!!!! I finnally got one.


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

WOW Dana! What a treasure! Bet you'll be on pins and needles till it gets there. Can't wait to hear you play.
Dana R. McCall
@dana-r-mccall
07/04/11 06:02:19PM
168 posts

YEAH!!!! I finnally got one.


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Hey John Henry, I got my LEDFORD It was on ebay I stayed up till 12 to bid on it. It is a prototype he made in 86. Made for wood from a store that was over 200 years old can't wait to get it. I'll post pics as soon as I get it. Dana
updated by @dana-r-mccall: 02/17/19 10:24:43AM
Ken Hulme
@ken-hulme
06/30/11 08:40:33AM
2,157 posts

How do I fix a crack?


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

You need to open the crack a bit, by pushing down on one side or the other, then as suggested, wick in a bead of thin, not thick, superglue and stop pushing so the two halves come back together properly before the superglue sets. Quickly wipe up any excess. If it's an open crack, a small hole drilled at each end of the split will prevent the crack from continuing to "run".

If your dulcimer has a hard finish - urethane, varnish, lacquer or anything other than oil, and you have a messy glue patch, you'll have to either ignore it, or sand the old varnish (and glue smear) off and refinish the back.

Tom McDonald
@tom-mcdonald
06/29/11 11:16:02PM
26 posts

How do I fix a crack?


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

My friend Ed Weiss recently restored my uke, which has been in the family for exactly 90 years. It had a wicked crack in the back. He ran a bead of the thick kind of superglue into the seam, smoothed it out, scraped the excess with a razor blade, and applied a new coat of tung oil. That part of the operation only took about 5 minutes. (He also replaced the tuners, but retained the 60 year old strings). You can still see the crack, but it is a very solid repair and the issue is much less visible than before. Now, to learn to play the thing!

Sam
@sam
06/29/11 04:32:46PM
169 posts

How do I fix a crack?


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

How big are the sound holes and what is the possibility of working on the crack from the inside. There are epoxys that could possibly be applied to a thin slat, eased into place through a soundhole and pressed down with a piece of dowel. The dowel would only be used to position the gluey strip and press it down firmly onto the crack, it is not part of the repair. There are very good epoxys that would make a permanent repair without clamping.
Molly McCurdy
@molly-mccurdy
06/29/11 03:50:17PM
18 posts

How do I fix a crack?


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

My granddaughter dropped a steel ball on the back of my favorite dulcimer and put a big crack in it. Is there any way to repair a crack? It's along the wood grain, and barely noticeable to the eye, but I'm afraid it'll crack even more if I don't do something about it. Any suggestions?


updated by @molly-mccurdy: 06/08/16 09:24:05PM
BethH
@beth-hansen
09/23/11 05:31:47PM
41 posts



Yay! This is a wonderful resource, thank you so much for sharing it Garey.
Scott Allen
@scott-allen
06/27/11 09:48:00AM
24 posts



Thanks for the links and instructios Garey. This will be alot of fun!

Scott

john p
@john-p
06/25/11 10:13:17PM
173 posts



Hi Garey, just a word about the date, they are only a bit over 100 years old.

The two books often got confused and the first became known as the 1850 Edition and the second as the 1001 Edition according to the number of tunes in each, rather than the date they were published.

"Chief" O'Neill as he was known, was head of the Chicago Fire Dept, or maybe it was the Police.

A key collection and great resource.

John p


updated by @john-p: 02/17/16 03:00:01PM
Strumelia
@strumelia
06/24/11 05:26:02PM
2,403 posts

FIDDLESTICKS !!!!


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Robin, I agree that it might work 'best' that way. But I'm not so sure people follow that method very strictly. I asked Brian and he thought that folks just bounce the thin reeds or BBQ bamboo skewrs off any or all the fiddle strings while the fiddler plays- that maybe for practical reasons the string(s) tapped are the ones that you can reach when the fiddler's arm is at certain angles. I don't know exactly, but I bet folks just get good at doing it over time and work this stuff out automatically. It's a cool thing at any rate!
Jim Fawcett
@jim-fawcett
06/24/11 02:46:12PM
85 posts

FIDDLESTICKS !!!!


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

See there, ya learn somethin everyday...
Robin Clark
@robin-clark
06/24/11 12:29:03PM
239 posts

FIDDLESTICKS !!!!


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Hi Lisa,

--I'm assuming we are talking about actually sounding the fretted notes and melodies, rather than just tapping a stick on the soundbox with no notes like a drum rhythm.

I think that something differnt altogether is happening with fiddlesticks. The stick player is bouncing the sticks off the strings that are not being bowed or fretted and so is simply sounding out a rhythm on open drones. This is why it only works (or works best) on cross-tuned fiddles. You can watch the stick player in that clip of Tom Eriksen you posted move from playing the bass open strings to the trebble open strings as Eric moves his fretting and shuffle bowing from the trebble strings to the bass strings in Part B. I've seen this pattern of movement on other YouTube clips of fiddlestick playing. The stick player watches where the fiddler is fretting and bowing and simply dances on the open strings that the fidder is not using. It took me a while to spot what was going on but once you see it and try it out you get the idea of how it all works.

So with the MD you can do the same thing - ie one person bounce the sticks off the drones while the other playes the melody with a noter and strums as normal but with a focus on the melody strings. There doesn't seem to be any clash between pick andstick on the drones, so the MD player doesn't need to avoid the drones.

Robin

Strumelia
@strumelia
06/24/11 12:08:23PM
2,403 posts

FIDDLESTICKS !!!!


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Yes Robin the beater/straw does 'work the same way'- except that fiddles are designed to be either bowed or plucked (pizzicato) to make a strong sound- they have such small sound boxes and short string lengths. I don't think you can get enough volume and oomph by only beating straws on the fiddle without bowing as well. But with a dulcimer/zither/hammerdulcimer you can! Thus for fiddlesticks on a fiddle you really need two people.

BUT- some fiddle players can get a good effect with bouncing their bow in a percussive way as though it was a beater- but if you watch them they are actually drawing the bow a little while they are bouncing, so they can get the strings to sound. If they did it without a hair bow, with just a stick, I wonder how much effective tone and sound they could get. --I'm assuming we are talking about actually sounding the fretted notes and melodies, rather than just tapping a stick on the soundbox with no notes like a drum rhythm.

Robin Clark
@robin-clark
06/24/11 11:14:39AM
239 posts

FIDDLESTICKS !!!!


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Great clips!

I love the way the stick player uses those bodhran style Celtic rhythms on the fiddle.When I played the sticks last night I was thinking about how I would play bodhran to the tune.

I understand what you are saying Lisa about using a striker toplay the tune on MD or other zither - that looks like quite a differnt concept. We've had a go here today though at one person playing the tune noter/drone while a second sits opposite in courting dulcimer style and beats outa bohdran style rhythm on the drone strings. It seems to work on MD pretty much the same way it does on fiddle.

Robin

john p
@john-p
06/24/11 10:42:56AM
173 posts

FIDDLESTICKS !!!!


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Thanks for the Tim Erikson link Strel, been racking my brains all morning trying to remember were else I'd heard this technique. Cordelia's Dad have some Clyde Davenport tunes played this style on the album 'Spine'.

john p
Strumelia
@strumelia
06/24/11 10:26:38AM
2,403 posts

FIDDLESTICKS !!!!


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions


On a dulcimer, this is called beating straws or using a striker . Obviously on the fiddle it's called 'fiddlesticks' or beating straws. Can't really call it fiddlesticks on a dulcimer though. It's a very old and traditional technique for both fiddles and dulcimer/zithers. I have enjoyed watching Bruce Greene & Loy McWhirter doing it with fiddle in their concerts.

On fiddle, you need someone fretting notes and bowing , while someone else beats with either one or two straws. On a mtn dulcimer or other zither-like instrument, it's not bowed so you don't need a 2nd person- the person playing can fret with one hand and beat one or two straws or use the striker with the right hand instead of a pick. Some folks use broom straws or chopsticks, or either bamboo or steel thin knitting needles.

Here's my favorite example of using a striker on a 'zither/dulcimer-type instrument'- this one is being used on an epinette:

Here's a classic fiddlesticks example:


updated by @strumelia: 11/30/19 12:55:37PM
Ken Hulme
@ken-hulme
06/24/11 09:53:28AM
2,157 posts

FIDDLESTICKS !!!!


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

I've played Pook Sticks. And I've played dulcimer with a "striker" stick instead of strumming. But not Fiddlesticks! Now all I need is a musical partner!.
john p
@john-p
06/24/11 06:23:41AM
173 posts

FIDDLESTICKS !!!!


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions

Great stuff Robin,

The girl who first introduced me to the dulcimer would sometimes beat the strings with a quill instead of strumming out the tune.
Bit of a cheap trick she reckoned, but it sounded good to me.

john p
Robin Clark
@robin-clark
06/24/11 03:35:49AM
239 posts

FIDDLESTICKS !!!!


General mountain dulcimer or music discussions


I was over at a friend's cottage last night for a session with our string band "Snakewood". I was given a gift of a couple of goose quills for my Galax dulcimer that my friend Nick found on the Mawddach Estuary by the Toll Bridge where he works.

A few weeks ago I fitted a set of Wittner Finetune-Pegs to my partner's fiddle (an 8.5:1 planetary geared peg that looks just like a wooden fiddle peg) to encourage and help her to learn cross-tuning. She cross-tuned last night to AEAE to play "Cripple Creek" and, looking at the two Galax quills I'd just been given, I realised that I had a set of fiddlesticks

So we had our first ever go at "fiddle stickin'"

What a great toe tapping sound!!!!! The consensus was "That's definately going in the band's set!!!"

So now I'm wondering if the technique would work well for noter/drone fast fiddle tunes on mountain dulcimer

Watch this space!

If you've not come across "fiddlesticks" before then hereis a lovelyexample - just image working something like this on mountain dulcimer in noter/drone - I think that has to be worth a try!:

Robin


updated by @robin-clark: 06/11/15 07:27:38AM
Paul Certo
@paul-certo
09/14/11 11:19:36PM
242 posts

I've Just Bought a BANJO !!!!


Adventures with 'other' instruments...

It doesn't sound like sawmill tuning, my guess is try Last Chance tuning. fCFCD.

Paul

Strumelia
@strumelia
09/14/11 03:41:35PM
2,403 posts

I've Just Bought a BANJO !!!!


Adventures with 'other' instruments...

Uh oh, i guess i;m in trouble now.

John Henry said:

Oh Strumelia, you fickle fing !!! There's me thinking that you loved the mt'n dulcimer !

JohnH

Robin Clark
@robin-clark
09/14/11 03:27:29PM
239 posts

I've Just Bought a BANJO !!!!


Adventures with 'other' instruments...

Hi Strumelia,

Do you know what tuning Eriksen is using in that video? I've been searching for it on line but not found it. At a guess I would say he is in e,B,E,A,D but about 10 cents sharp on that?

Robin

John Henry
@john-henry
09/14/11 02:01:15PM
258 posts

I've Just Bought a BANJO !!!!


Adventures with 'other' instruments...

Oh Strumelia, you fickle fing !!! There's me thinking that you loved the mt'n dulcimer !

JohnH

Strumelia
@strumelia
09/14/11 01:25:55PM
2,403 posts

I've Just Bought a BANJO !!!!


Adventures with 'other' instruments...

Robin,

As you know, I've been working on that Eriksen banjo version of Sugar Baby (also see the other threads here on FOTMD re: Red Rocking Chair/Sugar babe). He uses an old tuning which is nice. Karen Dalton did a nice banjo version of Red Rocking Chair as well.

I'm glad you are exploring the wonderful uniqueness that is ...banjo. It's a lifelong love affair.

john p
@john-p
09/14/11 12:26:42PM
173 posts

I've Just Bought a BANJO !!!!


Adventures with 'other' instruments...

Hi Robin, good to see you are having so much fun. It's been fascinating watching you progress

Tim Erikson started out in a band called Cordelia's Dad and has a 10 minute version of Sugar Babe on their album 'Comet' if you can find it.

Cath Oss, another ex member now lives in England and plays with her husband under the name 'Cath and Phil Tyler', also well worth a listen. They have a version of Long Time Traveller that I like.

john p

Robin Clark
@robin-clark
09/14/11 11:45:46AM
239 posts

I've Just Bought a BANJO !!!!


Adventures with 'other' instruments...

Thanks Randy,

It is great to try something new and go through those frustrations and triumphs of learning. I think you are right in challenging your students. All you can give them is challenge and inspiration - if they are going to be successful then the motivation and hard work has to come from them!

I'm really enjoying the banjo - I know so little about the instrument and its music that each new page is a wonder

Strumelia send me a link last night to a video of a guy called Tim Erikson playing a small fretless banjo in Time Square.

I'd never heard the banjo played with such a driving, constantrhythm before, and such a full sound! Now that was both inspirational and a challenge!!!!!!! So I sat down this lunchtime and had a play around with that driving sound to see what I could come up with andhad a go atCluck Old Hen (coz there's not too many notes) to see if I could start to find something like that style.I was just messing around with the tune and trying to concentrate on rhythm - so much so that there's a couple of bits of melody that just sort of appeared and I don't think I could repeat

Randy Adams
@randy-adams
09/12/11 08:43:17PM
125 posts

I've Just Bought a BANJO !!!!


Adventures with 'other' instruments...

Robin I admire your courage learning a new instrument....esp banjo as it's quirky. I've never given music lessons so forget how it was but recently my son Bill and my nephew Dawson started playing the banjo & all the sudden I'm giving...as in free... : )...banjo lessons. Bill has the advantage b/c he knows the fiddle tunes & the genre but even he has trouble making it go. I think the things I show them are a little too hard....but better than too easy huh?

Sounding great....your updates are interesting...thx!

Robin Clark
@robin-clark
09/12/11 02:57:14PM
239 posts

I've Just Bought a BANJO !!!!


Adventures with 'other' instruments...

Hi FolkFan,

Tha second tune was supposed to be Shady Grove! Those tunes were recorded 3 months ago when I first got my banjo. I've had a lot of help since then. Strumelia has been great at helping to point me in the right direction bytryingto show me the differernce between guitar and clawhammer banjo!!!! So I'm trying to play more melodically using open tunings and not based around chords. I've just re-recorded Shady Grove and I'm working on a really simple version of Arkansas Traveller hoping to get a more melodic feel to my playing. Still, it is early days yet!

Robin

folkfan
@folkfan
09/12/11 12:04:35PM
357 posts

I've Just Bought a BANJO !!!!


Adventures with 'other' instruments...

Robin, Really enjoyed your first recording playing the banjo, looking forward to the next. Got the first tune as "Old Joe Clark", but what's the second one?
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