Hey Dusty, Thanks I did try to do a search and came up with nothing, but I'll try your link.
six string Dulcimer
Although it's been dormant for some time, the 6-String Dulcimers Group here still has a lot of members. Perhaps you could join that group and resurrect a discussion or two on what those instruments offer.
Remember that you have to join the group to be able to see all the content.
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Dusty T., Northern California
Site Moderator
As a musician, you have to keep one foot back in the past and one foot forward into the future.
-- Dizzy Gillespie
Except that mine is Dd-Aa-aa (or maybe dD-aA-aa, or aa-Aa-Dd if you prefer the reverse order)
Or like an "unreal Dulcimer." On my 6-string dulcimer, tuned in DAA with 6+ fret, I have a wound string in the middle pair tuned an octave below normal and a high D on the "bass" pair. This gives a more rich sound to the drones, and not like a mandolin.
I also like the sound of 3-string DAA noter-drone cardboard instruments.
As John and others say, depends on what you like and the mood you are in.
Depends on if you want it to sound like a mandolin or a "real" dulcimer.
Hey John. I have a Ron Ewing baritone dulcimette made with 6 strings in three courses. Basically, each string is doubled. I love the sound. I has the pop of a good mandolin. And it was great for strumming tunes, meaning tunes that involve a lot of just strumming across all the strings. One day I restrung it without each of the double strings, so it was just a 3-stringed dulcimer. That was about 10 years ago, and I have never gone back. Without the double strings it is just much easier to play more nuanced music, sometimes picking a single string instead of strumming all the time. And certain techniques such as bending strings or even just adding some vibrato are simply not possible with the double strings.
I guess that story is evidence that I prefer 3 strings to 6. However, that double string dulcimer sounded great for certain tunes. I think my playing has just gravitated to a different style.
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Dusty T., Northern California
Site Moderator
As a musician, you have to keep one foot back in the past and one foot forward into the future.
-- Dizzy Gillespie
I have made them a couple different ways. I made one with six courses tuned DADf#ad and it sounded awesome but the melody was at times getting drowned out by the lower notes. Im not quite good enough to make full use of all 6 strings. Ive also made one that had six stings in three courses of two strings each. It sounded great but was really difficult to play. I think it would have been really good for noter drone style.
Hi kids, just Jon Lilley here from cyberspace. I was hoping to get people's ideas and thoughts on something that I have no idea about. Never seen one, never touched one, never played one. It has to do with the five string and the sixth string dulcimers. What are your opinions and thoughts about that? It's too hard to play, love it, hate them, why bother. Well that's it, I was just hoping someone would give me their two cents. thanks.