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This one is different


Daniel Hersh

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Dang! I should of got here sooner. Y'all done got all the good ones.sad.gif

It does bare a striking resemblance to one I saw at a place down a winding road in Mississippi called "The Pit". I wondered why everybody was wearing leggings. (By the way, I was driving my Dodge Viper with the Cobra jet engine)

It certainly looks to have copper headed screws. I wonder if it's got coiled springs. At any rate, it looks well articulated.

OK, I'm done.

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...the owner before her was titled and Sir Robert Pence.

The instrument, of course, was referred to as the Sir Pence concertina.

 

Greg tongue.gif

 

I would point out that "Sir" goes with the first name, not the last, but that might be too constricting.

 

(please don't strike me)

 

rolleyes.gif

 

jdms

 

jdms,

You are absolutely correct. To find one more pun I must have been asping at straws.

 

Greg

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...the owner before her was titled and Sir Robert Pence.

The instrument, of course, was referred to as the Sir Pence concertina.

 

Greg tongue.gif

 

I would point out that "Sir" goes with the first name, not the last, but that might be too constricting.

 

(please don't strike me)

 

rolleyes.gif

 

jdms

 

jdms,

You are absolutely correct. To find one more pun I must have been asping at straws.

 

Greg

 

Don't let it rattle you.

 

jdms

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Apparently, it is not only us humans, who started a concertina movement. Snakes apparently do too, as part of their method of locomotion, viz: Concertina movement is the movement occurring in snakes and other legless organisms that consists of gripping or anchoring with portions of the body while pulling/pushing other sections in the direction of movement. I just thought I'd squeeze this in to the discussion! I wonder if they make a sound or sounds while doing so, apart from rattling, that is? :unsure:

 

Chris

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Note to aspiring anglo players:

This instrument is not -- I repeat,
NOT
-- suitable for
Irish
music... and
especially not
on
St. Patrick's Day
!

 

Or perhaps the REAL reason there are no snakes in Ireland!

 

Greg

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Note to aspiring anglo players:

This instrument is not -- I repeat,
NOT
-- suitable for
Irish
music... and
especially not
on
St. Patrick's Day
!

Or perhaps the REAL reason there are no snakes in Ireland!

Greg, are you suggesting that St. Patrick was a concertina maker?
:unsure:

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