1

(10 replies, posted in About Chordie)

SouthPaw41L wrote:

Hi Gea,

  That was a nice 1st post. You seem to be very passionate about music. I send you my sincere and hearfelt condolences for the passing of your Dad. Welcome to Chordie. I'm with you in the Dylan fan club too! Here's a site loaded with Dylan tunes.

  http://dylanchords.info/

Peace and Guitars,
SouthPaw41L

Hey, thank you SouthPaw, that is a treat indeed!  It looks as though it has his whole discography!  That is hours, days, weeks and months of absolute delight you have gifted me with, I can't thank you enough.

Thank you also for your condolences, my dad was my best friend and it was he who taught me to love music, taking my brother and I to Jazz concerts since we were 10 or so, we saw or heard Mahalia Jackson, Billie Holiday, Aretha Franklin, Ella Fitzerald, Leadbelly, BB King, Nat King Cole, Miles Davis, Oscar Peterson, Duke Ellington, Earl Fatah Hind, Dexter Gordon, Dizzie Gillespie, Stephan Grappelli...

My current guitar favourite, however, is Jeff Buckley's "Hallelujah", one if the most haunting tunes ever, although it is really  simple and unadorned, Buckley's voice makes me shiver to the roots of my hair.

Have a lovely day, my lovely new friends :)

Gea

"Bury me, cremate me or drop me into the sea, but be sure to put my guitar in my arms!"

2

(10 replies, posted in About Chordie)

Russell_Harding wrote:

Geavox welcome to chordie and thanks for the kind words about Chordie,sounds like you have lived a lifetime with music thru hardship and pain something we both have in common, but the human spirit endures these things thru our faith in ourselves and our many beliefs and music is the greatest gift of all and Chordie loves you smile

Thank you Russell,

Thank you for your warm welcome.  Makes up for this grey, dreary English winter day! sad

Have a fabulous day! (or is it night there?)

3

(10 replies, posted in About Chordie)

Believe it or not I am a 53 y.o. female, but your website helps me LOADS.

Like littlebiglad, I am also a beginner/intermediate, and I am so chuffed to have found a forum of real people, instead of muppets  who think only young, hairy blokes with huge hands and time to practice should have a life-long love affair with their guitar wink

I have been playing since I was 14, self-taught 'cos no-one could be bothered to teach me.  Eventually though I managed to keep myself alive by busking, living on the road for 3 years.

Time, 2 kids, poverty and the death of my 9 y.o son ate-up the years, but eventually I bough myself a cheap Yamaha to keep at home and an (even cheaper) Chinese-made Giant to keep at my partner's, so I can practice again.

Surprisingly, in spite of having smallish hands and advancing arthritis, I can still pull off a tune or ten yikes, even a mean 12-bar!  I am finding custom light strings help, I use coated ones, for longer life, might even try the tungsten, when I can afford them.

Although I have downloaded and installed Chord Miner, to help me find chords, I find I needn't have bothered because on Chordie I can usually find all the permutations of every single chord, so I can usually find one I can manage.

Now, when my heart feels like it's breaking - like when my dad recently died - I can sing the blues, or when I think of the good times he and my baby boy gave me, I can smile and play a happy tune they would both have loved.

To paraphrase Bob Dylan, beloved minstrel of my generation, here's to you Chordie:

"May your hands always be supple
May your D string never break
May you always find your plectrum
May you have a million mates.
May your fans love every song you sing
And your children play them too!
May you stay
Forever Young!"

So, thank you Chordie!  I really love you for what you do!

Rock On dude!!

Gea
Bristol, UK
big_smile  :x

PS Found Patty Smith's music, and finally discovered I can play "Because The Night", no worries!.... but the Beatles are still.... "whoah! how do I do THAT?!" LOL!