Hi weeginger - I just happened to notice that was your first post. Welcome to the forum and thank you for your input! I look forward to additional contributions, we are all friends here.
2,727 2008-02-01 16:43:17
Re: What should I learn next?? (14 replies, posted in Acoustic)
Very interesting Ranger - You and I seem to be in about the same place, and I believe that by your handle (1964) the same age. I also will be interested in what the seasoned experts have to say here, but I'll offer my 2 cents on what I have been working on.
- Like you I can play most common open chords pretty well and have a printed song book that I can play half decent. While I still like to peruse the new song books posted here to see if something tweaks my interest, I'd say playing songs is now less than 20% of my practice routine.
- Things I am working on simultaneously (I don't think I could do either / or, would bore me out of mind). Barre Chords / Fingerpicking / Scales / Theory. Not to say I don't play songs while doing these things. for example I will practice playing Jack Johnson songs to work on my barres, John Prine songs to work on fingerpicking.
- Like you I don't have any desire to be a screaming lead guitarist, but I believe theory and scales are necessary to tie everything together, like those opening or break riffs.
Good luck!
2,728 2008-02-01 16:24:44
Re: SRV (1 replies, posted in Bands and artists)
Clapton on SRV (from his autobiography) -
"His playing was so fluid. It didn't seem like he was playing to emulate anybody, it just all came straight from him, seemingly without any effort. It was very inventive and his singing was great too.
He really did have it all"
"... link him with Jimi Hendrix in terms of commitment. They both played out of their skin, every time they picked up their instruments, as if there were no tomorrow, and the level of devotion they both showed to their art was identical."
2,729 2008-02-01 04:03:33
Re: Whats Up? (6 replies, posted in About Chordie)
Hi jweb & welcome to Chordie!
Another member has made a site on how to read tabs, you can find a link on this thread:
http://www.chordie.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=6172
Good luck and Have Fun!
2,730 2008-02-01 03:47:54
Re: I'll record them and video them if you tell what you want (23 replies, posted in Song requests)
No problem spytunes, we are good - it's just that on your initial presence here, you plastered your link all over the place - on several different forums, with nothing else of relevance, just your link. That is considered spamming. Keep your posts here on this thread or offer additional insight on other threads, that's cool. Just don't bombard the board with your link on every thread, dig it?
I think your site is pretty cool by the way.
2,731 2008-01-31 20:07:59
Re: THE most EXCEPTIONAL SONG; STAIRWAY TO HEAVEN BY the BEATLES (7 replies, posted in Bands and artists)
You are both wrong - It was Dolly Parton! Proof:
2,732 2008-01-31 14:42:58
Re: Jelly and Biscuits ? (47 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)
That was great Old Doll - We've all had day's like that!
2,733 2008-01-30 23:40:51
Re: Jelly and Biscuits ? (47 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)
LOL Old Doll, I'll give it a shot.
Jelly (from wiki): Same as or similar to:
Fruit preserves refers to fruit, or vegetables, that have been prepared, canned or jarred for long term storage. The preparation of fruit preserves traditionally involves the use of pectin. There are various types of fruit preserves made globally, and they can be made from sweet or savory ingredients.
- Similar to "Jam" or "marmalade"
Biscuits - Also from wiki:
In American English, a "biscuit" is a small form of bread made with baking powder or baking soda as a leavening agent rather than yeast. (Biscuits, soda breads, and corn bread, among others, are sometimes referred to collectively as "quick breads" to indicate that they do not need time to rise before baking.)
Biscuits are extremely soft and similar to scones; in fact, many recipes are identical. In the United States, there is a growing tendency to refer to sweet variations as "scone" and to the savory as a "biscuit", though there are exceptions for both (such as the cheese scone). A sweet biscuit served with a topping of fruit and juice is called shortcake. In Canada, both sweet and savoury are referred to as "biscuits", "baking powder biscuits" or "tea biscuits", although "scone" is also starting to be used.
Biscuits are a common feature of Southern U.S. cuisine and are often made with buttermilk. They are traditionally served as a side dish with a meal, especially in the morning. As a breakfast item they are often eaten with butter and a sweet condiment such as molasses, light sugarcane syrup, sorghum syrup, honey, or fruit jam or jelly. With other meals they are usually eaten with butter or gravy instead of sweet condiments. However, biscuits and gravy (biscuits covered in country gravy) are usually served for breakfast, sometimes as the main course.
A picture is worth 1,000 words - Here's a photo of a bacon, egg & cheese biscuit. Substitute jelly for the B, E & C and you've got a Jelly Biscuit!
2,734 2008-01-30 22:49:27
Re: Happy Birthday Warren Zevon (4 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)
Welcome to Chordie frogpee.
I think Warren would have appreciated both your user name and making your introductory post on his birthday thread!
Where in Tennessee are you? The wife and I visit the NC High Country quite often.
2,735 2008-01-30 20:05:41
Re: MUSIC STYLES (13 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)
I'll let Europe take Disco and Dance Remix [NOTE: I don't think the former is true. I just refuse to accept the truth of the matter of Disco's origination. It's much easier on my psyche to blame Europe.]
- Zurf
I'm with Zurf on this one - The Bee Gees were English, so it's all their fault!
2,736 2008-01-30 19:39:30
Re: THE WEIRDEST BAND NAMES (51 replies, posted in Bands and artists)
I wasn't trying to steal it, I assumed others read your post - but I should have given you credit. I'll edit my post.
2,737 2008-01-30 19:20:11
Re: THE WEIRDEST BAND NAMES (51 replies, posted in Bands and artists)
I don't know about existing band names, but I really like "inarticulate vocal-vomit " for a punk band.
( credit to southpaw41)
2,738 2008-01-30 17:53:29
Re: chord accomp (1 replies, posted in Song requests)
Welcome to Chordie FredSailer!
There are multiple renditions of that song here on Chordie that I found by browsing by song title. Here's a link:
http://www.chordie.com/browsesong.php/g … mp;filter=
It's near the bottom of the page.
2,739 2008-01-30 14:50:19
Re: ??????????? (1 replies, posted in About Chordie)
Hi sim995 and welcome to the Chordie forum! You may want to read the FAQ in the resources link. An excerpt:
I have transcribed a song that I would like to add to Chordie. How do I do that?
Chordie does not host any songs. It finds and formats songs located elsewhere on the Internet. There is no point in mailing me songs. You can include songs in the index (and automatically take advantage of features like formatting, transposing, instrument selection, songbook etc. However, the songs will have to be available online. Send the link to me, and I might it the next time I reindex Chordie.
- If you find a tab on another site that you would like added to Chordie, please see this link to Add songs:
http://www.chordie.com/addurl.php
And finally if you have an original song you wish share with other members, you can add it in the Songwriting Forum. Please read the sticky "how to post"
Hope that helped!
2,740 2008-01-29 21:40:07
Re: Suggestion time (6 replies, posted in About Chordie)
Another great suggestion kanija - thanks! I am offering alternative workarounds for these suggestions since the site owner is very busy and it may take time to address. I do not even know if your suggestion is possible. Chordie is a hobby for the owner - not even a full-time project! From the FAQ:
"Chordie is my personal hobby project that I did because I was learning to play the guitar and to program at the same time. It is an experiment, not a commercial service. No one is working on the project full time. Even if I try to answer all e-mails, it might be periods when I won't be able to."
OK so a suggestion for a workaround - Have you tried to add a second song book and include only your newest songs in it? I believe you can include the same song in multiple books, that way you could have a "Main Book" with all your tunes - and a "Learning Book" for those you are working on. Just a suggestion to address your suggestion
2,741 2008-01-29 18:34:00
Re: Suggestion time (6 replies, posted in About Chordie)
Welcome to the Chordie forum NUI!
That's a good suggestion but I think the main admin (Per) will have to evaluate. In the meantime, what I do is simply open up this free online metronome in another Tab. Works well for me.
2,742 2008-01-29 15:31:22
Re: Old Guitar Pickers (57 replies, posted in Acoustic)
That was interesting SouthPaw, so I did a little search and found this article (from 2002, so now "Trigger" is 41 years old). I saw Willie a few years ago on his ballpark tour with Bob Dylan. A couple of icons, that's for sure.
TRIGGER' HAPPY
Willie Nelson has played the same battered guitar for 35 years
Joel Selvin, Chronicle Pop Music Editor
Tuesday, February 19, 2002
Willie Nelson calls his guitar Trigger, after Roy Rogers' noble steed, and no horse ever meant more to any cowboy.
Like Nelson himself, the guitar is weathered, slightly the worse for wear, and one of a kind. Both have a sweet song inside. On the cover of his new record, "The Great Divide," Nelson poses almost like an afterthought behind the battered face of his Martin N20. It is covered with the etched signatures of the country singer's most esteemed colleagues and is missing a good chunk of wood right out of the front.
"It's a classical guitar, and it wasn't designed to use a pick on," said Nelson, who opens tonight for four nights at the Fillmore Auditorium. "Normally, if you're going to use a pick, they have a big plastic pick guard. But this one, over the years, without a pick guard, a lot of picks and fingernails and 'Whiskey Rivers,' the hole just gets bigger every year. "
The nylon-string guitar has been an integral part of Nelson's sound throughout his career. He has owned it 35 years and doesn't play any other guitar. He plays the thing with a touch as unique as his singing, and he has no interest in repairing the hole.
"I think it helps the sound," he said. "I've had to reinforce it inside over the years a few times because the hole sorta weakened the woodwork inside. "
Martin Guitar's Dick Boak agrees. "He has had some epoxy glopped on it to keep it from falling apart," said Boak. "The guitar really does sound great, and he's probably right in not replacing the soundboard." Martin, in fact, made a special Willie Nelson model replica -- "you have to supply your own hole," Boak said.
"It always was the best guitar I ever played," said Nelson, "and it just keeps getting better. Every year it gets a little bit better, like a Stradivarius violin."
The guitar and Nelson have a long, tangled history.
"I originally had a Baldwin setup
-- Baldwin guitar, amps and pickups -- and the Baldwin guitar people had given it to me. One night in Helotes, Texas, some drunk stepped in the middle of it and busted it. So I sent it to a friend of mine in Nashville, Sean Jackson, and asked him if he could fix it. He called me back. 'I can't fix it, ' he said, 'but I've got a good guitar on the wall up here. I can take the pickup out and put it in here.'
"I said, 'What is it?' and he said, 'It's a Martin classical guitar.' And I said, 'Well, is it any good?' And he said, 'Martins don't make bad guitars.' I said, 'All right, let me have it.' I paid $750 for it."
Somewhere along the line, he started collecting autographs on the guitar, asking pals such as Johnny Cash or musical associates like his longtime drummer, Paul English, to sign their names in the wood.
"It started out with Leon Russell," Nelson said. "He had a brand-new guitar,
and he wanted me to sign it. I started to sign it with my pen, and he said, 'No, no, I want you to take this knife and scratch it in there because I want to keep it and it will make it more valuable.' I said, 'In that case, scratch mine.' He signed my guitar, and since then a lot of people have signed mine -- Roger Miller, Waylon, Kris and a lot more guys."
Nelson doesn't delve into technical talk when asked what is so special about this particular model. Straight talk is his specialty. "I like it because it has a nice soft tone," he said. "Acoustically, it's got a great sound -- I sit around on the bus or hotel room and play it without an amplifier."
Nelson, who is also the author of a new book, "The Facts of Life and Other Dirty Jokes" (Random House), laughs when asked why he put the guitar's picture so prominently on the cover of his new album.
"I think probably the guitar has maybe more fans than I do," he said.
2,743 2008-01-29 00:16:42
Re: STEVE FORBERT (5 replies, posted in Song requests)
Actually, I just noticed the link didn't work - here's the home page. You can find it there.
2,744 2008-01-28 23:38:28
Re: STEVE FORBERT (5 replies, posted in Song requests)
Welcome to the Chordie forum michaelx2!
Give this a shot:
2,745 2008-01-28 22:30:10
Re: I'll record them and video them if you tell what you want (23 replies, posted in Song requests)
I too have seen the threads on HC and have reviewed all of his posts here. Danelectro Spytunes is walking a fine line. Although his site is free (and offers pretty good lessons I must say), everyone is competing for advertising dollars. Coming to the Chordie forum and posting his link on multiple threads without any real input to the discussion can certainly be defined as spamming.
Just a fair warning to you Mr. Spytunes. Someone is watching, so don't go overboard. As long as we are allowing your posts, I think it would be good form for you to provide a link to Chordie on your site.
Chordie link information can be found here:
2,746 2008-01-28 21:30:56
Re: GUITAR BODY SHAPE (13 replies, posted in Acoustic)
texan - I agree with UYK - that was a very interesting link. Thanks a bunch.
2,747 2008-01-28 01:50:43
Re: Need an easy song to learn for a beginner (16 replies, posted in Acoustic)
Hi blatio and welcome to Chordie!
If you peruse the "Absolute Beginner" and "Easy Songs" in the Public Books section of Chordie, I am sure you will find something you like.
2,748 2008-01-27 21:08:57
Re: Free Acoustic Lesson Site (9 replies, posted in Acoustic)
soooo what justin's site then?
There you are KamikazeE2k8
And Welcome to Chordie!
2,749 2008-01-27 06:11:12
Re: HEELLLPPP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! (39 replies, posted in Acoustic)
It's almost comical how often this subject comes up - I guess the bottom line is barre chords are TOUGH and every one of us has to struggle through some pain to get them right. I have been using this little exercise for a couple of months now, and although I still am struggling with consistency, it has helped me improve my barre chords tremendously. I spend a minimum of 5 or 10 minutes on this single drill every night.
2,750 2008-01-26 23:51:04
Re: iPod Touch (5 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)
wayneedd - I suggest you use the feedback form located under resources to contact the site owner. He is the guru for all things computer related and I am sure he will be glad to help with your problem.
Sorry I couldn't be more helpful.
Jeff