551

(30 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

Glad to hear you had a good time Zurf.  I'd have loved to had a chance to do some pickin' with you and Robert again.

My trip to Florida ended up being a little different than expected.  On Aug 21 my son-in-law left for a 6 month deployment over-seas.  The next day my daughter Melissa was injured when a car pulled out in front of her. She jammed on the brakes but still hit the front passenger side of the other car. The other driver wasn't injured but Melissa's right foot was shattered from impact with the brake pedal and her car was totaled. I immediately headed south and was able to take her to various doctor and surgeon's appointments and also drive my grandkids to music lessons, play practice, etc. My grandson Sam is playing Frederick (oldest Von Trapp son) in Pensacola Little Theater's production of "Sound of Music". He was thrilled with the Takamine acoustic-electric I bought him for his birthday but we were too busy to spend much time pickin' together.

DE

552

(5 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

Living in the middle of farm country, we have a pretty large Farmer's Market every Saturday morning in the city of Chillicothe here in southern Ohio, with many farmers selling fresh fruits, vegetables, steaks, pies, honey etc.  The first Saturday of every month members of the Foothills Folk Society (non-profit group made up of local musicians) are invited to play to get donations of food and money for the local food bank. (we received over 4 tons of food donations last last year).  Having heard us play many times, we were asked (hired) to play at an annual farm bureau event (money going to the FFS, although each musician would receive a small amount to cover gas expenses, etc)

Today was the "Ross County Farm Factor" event.  Four farms in the western end of the county were involved. The idea is that participants visit four farms and eat part of a four-course meal at each one.  After buying their tickets at the farm bureau, they were told the location of the first farm where they had a short tour and appetizers. Then they were given the location of the next farm and again had a short tour followed by soup and salad. At the third farm they had the main course and ended with dessert at the fourth farm along with live entertainment (FFS musicians).

Although the 300+ participants weren't expected until after 4 pm, we set up a sound system around 1:30, did sound checks, were given free event t-shirts and jammed until the group arrived.  I spent some time talking to the guy who was making home-made ice cream for the desserts. He had a large ice cream maker driven by an old restored 1930 John Deere 1.5 hp gasoline engine. I love the sound of those old one-cylinder motors with a flywheel making that pow- chugga- chugga, pow-chugga-chugga sound.

The group arrived about an hour later than expected so we only had about 3-1/2 hours to play, dividing it up into 5 "sets".  I played the second set and had enough of my originals and covers of David Mallett and Fred Eaglesmith to do 40 minutes of farming songs (although it was a farm event I was the only one to do all farm songs). My set seemed to be well received, and I had a great time playing under a tent next to two big grain silos with big John Deere tractors and combines parked nearby and the old one-lunger chugging away and making ice cream in the backround. I got to talk to several of the farm families, enjoyed some great food and topped it off with some excellent ice cream (along with a little flask of Kentucky Bourbon I'd brought along).  All-in-all a fine way to spend a summer day.

DE

553

(30 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

Bad weekend for me Zurf. I'll be in Pensacola to celebrate my oldest grand daughter Molly's 17th birthday.  My grandson Sam will turn 14 on August 25th so we'll also have an early celebration for him too before we leave.  He has begun taking guitar lessons so grandpa plans on bringing him a new guitar for his birthday.  Maybe we'll pick a couple tunes together and pretend we're at Zurfapalooza. wink

DE

554

(39 replies, posted in Acoustic)

I looked back thorough some of the emails I've got from Stew-Mac.  Is the video y'all are talking about?

http://www.stewmac.com/How-To/Online_Re … _pins.html

DE

555

(39 replies, posted in Acoustic)

Hmmm.... I've experimented with plastic, bone, rosewood, ebony and buffalo horn pins but haven't tried brass yet.  Looks like they're cheap enough to give it a try.


DE

556

(3 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

Jen and I spent the weekend with my best father's day present ever - my youngest daughter (born on father's day 34 years ago), her husband and my youngest grandson,  My middle daughter and my son also joined us for both days.  We all spent father's day at the Cleveland botanical gardens watching my grandson smell flowers and chase butterflies.  wink

DE

557

(11 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

Is that a 000 slot head the gent in the middle is playing?

The pic of the the youngun on the trailer is priceless.

DE

558

(15 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

Congrats NELA on having the gumption to get back on the horse again.  I sometimes think about taking lessons but I think in my case it'd be like pouring perfume on a pig.  wink

DE

559

(7 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

I hate to hear that Zurf.  Seems like I'm at the opposite end of the spectrum.  There's only been a few days in the last month that I haven't played a gig, or sat in on an acoustic jam, played at an open mic or did some fireside pickin'.  Philly Ray, Bo Crowder and I played for four nights last week at the Riversmallies Buckeye Rodeo and mentioned some of the pickers we wish were there with us around the fire.  Your ears burn a little last weekend? wink

I hope things turn around for ya brutha and you're back to mashin' them wires again soon.

DE

560

(14 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

50 trips around the sun, traveling around 585 million miles each trip, would be about 29.25 billion miles, the whole time (18,263 days) spinning in a 7900 mile circle (earth's approximate diameter) which addis another 145 million miles or so ..................

That's a lot of miles you've traveled Jeff, you deserve to sip a few adult beverages.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY wink

561

(7 replies, posted in Songwriting)

Well done Jeff. Can't wait to hear it.

DE

Hi Ken!

I gave the song the "DirtyEd test". (I'm an old-schooler who thinks music is to be listened to, not watched)  I turned on the vid, closed my eyes and just listened to the song - it passed with flying colors. Excellent job!  After I listened a couple times I finally watched it - and was impressed with that aspect also.

DE

563

(15 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

Welcome aboard Dave.  Hummin n strummin sounds a lot more civilized than the caterwaullin and wire mashin that I'm prone to do. wink

DE

564

(46 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

jerome.oneil wrote:

Registration doesn't necessarily mean forum use.  It might mean songbooks.  Lots of people might use Chordie even if very few of them use the forums.

I guess I'm one of the odd birds. I used to just read threads on Chordie until Zurf talked me into registering a few years ago. Even as a registered member for the last 3-1/2 years or so, I don't think I've ever looked at any of the songs or books even once. 

DE

565

(43 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

I know your excitement TF.

I was able to get out a couple weeks ago and thumb a couple smallmouth from my yak, but got skunked my last two trips. Water temps are beginning to hit the low to mid 40's so it looks like this weekend may be good to go for a couple local streams if a big rain doesn't blow them out.  My wife would probably say I care more about fishing than I do about her.  Most years I spend around 60-70 days getting a line wet in 4-6 different states and Canada.  I rarely fish lakes any more - the chance to get away from crowds and float moving water on small streams is what I live for these days. Beside a few 3-day trips I do each year, I've got a couple bigger trips planned  - a week in June fishing some small Missouri streams with Al Agnew - the artist that does the Pass Pro Shop catalog covers and my "bucket list" trip in September - smallmouth fishing with my son Wes out of my raft for 5 days in Idaho through Green, Snow Hole and Blue canyons on the Salmon River into Hell's Canyon on the Snake River.  The float trip will be part of a a 16-day road trip with stops in Badlands, Yellowstone and Glacier national parks.  The old drybag I used to use for taking a guitar along on raft trips has finally worn out and it seems no one makes any giant-sized bags any more.  My last float putting a guitar in doubled-up heavy-duty 50 gallon garbage bags worked OK.  I guess I'll give it another shot - I can't imagine camping along a river without doing a little pickin' around the campfire.

I feel like a kid waiting for Christmas  wink

DE

566

(17 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

Thanks for sharing the vid

I have a binder that houses many of the songs I've written.  In the front of the binder is a copy of a speech made by the director of music at Boston University (Karl Paulnack) to the parents of the freshman class.  The copy was given to me by a music friend several years ago and has provided inspiration when I've been in a music "funk". It discusses the healing power of music.  Here's a link to the speech:

http://www.bc.edu/content/dam/files/cen … vatory.pdf

DE

567

(8 replies, posted in Songwriting)

Fandamntastic!

DE

568

(16 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

Zurf wrote:

Nice bass!

I love it when I hear those words - if I'm holding a nice fish I just caught! wink

DE

Artie'splaying wrote:

Hey Dirty Ed--

How long have you lived in Chillicothe? I spent three summers there working as an actor in "Tecumseh!" I really enjoyed my time in southern Ohio--it's a beautiful part of the state.

About 56 of my 64 years.  What years were you in Tecumseh?  I've lost count of the number of times I've went to see it. Truly a great outdoor drama done in a beautiful setting.  I live about 10 miles south of town - out in the hills.

DE

570

(16 replies, posted in Chordie's Chat Corner)

Happy NGD to you
Happy NGD to you
Happy NGD dear TF
Happy NGD toooo yoooou!

Bass Viking wrote:

Sorry DE, I originally planned on making it, but something came up and I couldn't.  I sure wish I could have heard you and the misses together!  I am sure we will hook up in the future.  I have surgery planned for early next month so it will probably be awhile before I will be around!

Hope its nothing serious.

Hey Jim, missed seeing you at the open mic reunion Thursday night. We had 13 sign-ups and everyone had a great time.  I was even able to talk Jen into singing a couple songs with me.  We plan to have a get-together once a month now.  Are you on John Locke's mailing list?

DE

Happy to hear you enjoyed it so much Nao. Getting a chance to play with other folks can be a great experience.

Over the years I've had good and bad experiences when playing in "jams" and "circles".  Several times during jams, there have been a few pickers that want to dominate or show off their talents and it soon became a competition with each player getting louder until it was just a cacophony of sound, or as others have said, occasionally there has been a "perfectionist" that thinks the only way to play a song is the way the artist recorded it, even though the original artist may play it many different ways when playing live in concerts. This seems to  occur in bluegrass jams more than any other.

My preference has been the songwriter's circles I've played in. Sitting in a circle means all participants are equal regardless of talent or past experience. Everyone is given a chance to play in turn and all the others respectfully listen.  A modification of this are circles in which the participants play originals or covers with the others joining in if they know the song.  Again, everyone is given a chance in turn to play a song of their choosing.  For someone to "jump" the circle and play out of turn or try to play a couple songs in a row is the equivalent of them saying that what they're playing or doing is more important than the other pickers.  As Zurf will attest, this is one of my pet "peaves" and after its done by someone a couple times, I usually just put my guitar away and leave. As a friend of mine once said, "even the drunkest guitar pickers around a fire on a creek bank in the middle of no-where realize that there is etiquette involved." wink

I'm glad that you found a group you enjoy being with Nao.  I've probably learned more about playing while being a jam member than any other method.

DE

574

(40 replies, posted in Songwriting)

Every now and then I'll hear a song and think "Damn, I wish I'd wrote that!".

Well, this is one of those songs.  The prosody between the lyrics, melody, chord progressions and rhythm is spot on.  I agree that adding orchestration would be like an artist throwing more paint on a canvass after he's created a masterpiece.  I've always been attracted to the simplicity often found in well-written songs and this is no exception.

Just an excellent job Russell.  I REALLY like the song - probably the best original I've heard on chordie.

DE

575

(7 replies, posted in Songwriting)

dino48 wrote:
Artie'splaying wrote:

Thanks for the reference to the John Denver and Paul Simon songs--they are good examples to draw on. I enjoyed your Pistol Don song, and found the non-traditional structure of verse, verse/refrain, chorus, and bridge engaging.

Elton John uses a lot of bridges in his music i.e. Tiny Dancer etc. John Denver is not  obscure he is a well known singer songwriter.

I know Artie used the "obscure" reference tongue-in-cheek, but in fact Henry John Deutschendorf (aka John Denver) wasn't very well known when he co-wrote "Country Roads" with Danoff and Nivert (actually it was their song but he helped change the lyrics)  Up til then he was known as the songwriter that wrote "Leavin on a Jet Plane" which was recorded by Peter, Paul and Mary.  When he recorded "country Roads" on his"Poems Prayers and Promises" album and it hit the airwaves, JD's career took off like a rocket. His music was the reason I wanted to play guitar.  "Poems, Prayers and Promises" is still my favorite JD tune.

DE