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Mudchutney

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Posts posted by Mudchutney

  1. I've recently started warming up my hands properly before playing, and I really mean "properly"!!  I've got a sequence of about 6 or 7 exercises I do religiously before I pick up the box.  Since starting I've noticed considerably less joint pain.  So the warming up prevents the pain, and the playing / practise keeps my brain exercised.

  2. I don't think I can offer anything new to all the brilliant comments above, just to say it's all about "purposeful practise".  By all means play, and enjoy playing the tunes you know already, but you'll grow as a player by learning new tunes.  Someone suggested learning them in your head before you pick up your instrument - good advice.  I learned literally thousands of tunes by ear, only referring to music if there's a particular phrase I can't hear clearly.

    The main thing though is to enjoy it, and play with others if you can.

    Good luck!

  3. From about 10 years of playing for Scottish Ceilidhs, the only dance I can remember that was anything other than a number of tunes in a set played twice through each was the Eightsome.  For that we stuck an extra A on the start and a B on the end (I think...if that adds up?).  All the other dancers we'd look at how drunk or tired the dancers were and end it either after twice through the whole set (normally 3 tunes) or at the end of the tune we were on when someone nodded or waved a leg in the air.

    Unless you're playing for specific set dances where it needs to resolve I wouldn't worry.

    Oh and it's worth pointing out that a lot of our dances were couple dances to it didn't matter so much how many times you went through it.

    • Thanks 1
  4. 21 hours ago, Robin Harrison said:

    Hi Mud...........from reading your post, if you are looking for a "how-to" book, this will not help you as it will be a tune book.

         But Gary has already published what is arguably the best accompanied style anglo tutor available.

    Robin

    Thanks Robin,

    I'll take a look.  Still interested in the tune book though, I'm always up for adding to my collection!

    Ben

  5. On 12/27/2018 at 9:41 PM, gcoover said:

    Yes, the site has a lot of tunes, and even more comments and opinions (some more helpful than others), but unfortunately a lot of folks have posted tunes that they've admittedly altered. So beware. Better to learn tunes from players you like or go deep into original sources like O'Neill, Roche, Joyce, Walsh, Comhaltas, etc.!

     

    Gary

     

    Surely "altering" tunes is how they evolve / have evolved over the centuries?  I personally find a tune / version of a tune I like then thesession.org is really useful for filling in the gaps where I can't work out what the notes are.  I still end up playing the version I like though.  Comhaltas is a favourite of mine for new tunes.

  6. Well I'm a CBA player who would just love to learn Anglo so if this book comes together I'd definitely buy one.  I agree with one of the previous posters in that there are stacks of books of tunes, it's the "how to" part I'd need.  I learned to play CBA by myself as there's precious little literature around for that too.

  7. On 2/15/2019 at 10:32 AM, SimonThoumire said:

    I first read ‘funky’ rather than ‘folky’! Keep up the good work.

     

    Thanks Simon, working as hard as I can considering this is currently a spare time venture.  Keep up the vlogs - loving watching them :)

  8. On 2/8/2019 at 8:38 PM, rcr27 said:

    Interesting. I like the Lachenal t-shirt, although I would make the logo a bit bigger in my opinion. I’d also love to see a Wheatstone logo. Very nice.

     

    I'd love to make some Wheatstone ones too, but since they're still in business I'd need their permission - and I don't have that yet sadly.  I'm working on it though...

  9. Hi all,

    I just wanted to do a shameless plug for my new website which sells folk music related clothing. 

     

    I've spent the past 9 months building this up in my spare time, getting in touch with instrument makers and bands who I like listening to, asking if I can print clothes with their logos etc on.

    I reckon it's going ok, but check out some of the links and see what we've got:

     

    Instrument makers

    Saltarelle Clothing

    Castagnari Clothing

    Lachenal Clothing

    Manfrini Clothing

    Serenellini Clothing

     

    Bands

    https://www.mudchutney.co.uk/bands/  (adding more as often as I get time - some biggies coming soon too!)

     

    I'd love to hear any feedback or ideas / suggestions, but please be (relatively) kind, I've not been doing this that long :)

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