Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hi, I don't know if these screen shots will work, but here is one of the four Tassie Tiger concertinas I have been working on for the last 6 months, an hour here and there . Sounds nice too. Reeds are hand made from blue tempered steel and clock springs. (I uses a paper guillotine with HSS honed blades to cut the steel.) The shoes arw 2mm hard brass, kangaroo skin bellows, huon pine sound board, blackwood body, celery top frames, titanium screws for reeds to shoes, german silver end plates, riveted levers, kangaroo skin pads over acrylic felt on compressed board palates sealed with red finger nail polish, german silver rods and buttons. Silicone fishing line protection tube for button /action rod connection, phosphorous bronze springs. Rabbit skin glue all parts. I had fantastic fun building it, and its mates. Am now thinking of a B Griff concertina, but can one get ones fingers into the required shape?: it so, one little 40 button concertina will be able to play all keys and have a free bass for cording if one desired, and ones fingers were like rubber: anyway it is something to think about.

 

David Hornett

post-10341-0-39977900-1417872265_thumb.png

post-10341-0-96852100-1417872275_thumb.png

post-10341-0-87678300-1417872301_thumb.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

How's about some sound samples David ?

 

Why B Griff and not C griff ? Why not a Hayden while you are at it ?

 

Looks nice. :)

 

That would be Australian Blackwood , I assume ?

 

Geoff.

 

One point of crittique:

 

The holes in Fretwork are generally made of such a size that one cannot get a finger in them ( stuck in them) and one cannot easily see what is inside... so there are usually more piercings of a smaller size than yours for those reasons.

Edited by Geoff Wooff
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thank you for your nice comments, Geoff and Bruce. The problem is I don't really play them, I play B griff accordeon, chromatic harmonica, whistle, accordina, melodeon: but concertina, never really put the time into it, but I will practise up over the next few weeks and see what I can come up with.

 

The holes: my fingers don't fit through, not even my pinky. I was aware of the problem when I made it, it is 13.4cm across the german silver, and 15.4 across the instrument, (a little smaller than a standard Lachenal) so really the holes are not as big as they seem. The rods are german silver and the palates red so their is a nice flash seen through the plates when playing.

 

Have a great day.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tasmanian devil, map of Tasmania, blue gum leaves, blue gum , Tasmanian Eagles and Tasmanian tiger, now extinct. Bellows papers are the Tasmanian coat of arms: two tigers supporting a shield. A bit kitsch I suppose, but it was that or some geometric design, so I went for something different: not to everyone's liking I should think, I'm glad someone appreciate it.

 

David.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thank you for your nice comments, Geoff and Bruce. The problem is I don't really play them, I play B griff accordeon, chromatic harmonica, whistle, accordina, melodeon: but concertina, never really put the time into it, but I will practise up over the next few weeks and see what I can come up with.

 

So, if you have made six Tassie Tigers then have they been put in the hands of others who could give us a sound sample or two?

 

Would you also be interested in taking on projects to create 'special' concertinas... I'm thinking custom keyboards etc ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I shall get around to posting a sound clip, promise.

 

4 in 6 months, the other three not completely finished: been too lazy to tune the reeds, a job for after Christmas: two folk festivals coming up shortly, Nariel and Cygnet, I tend to play (not concertina though) and laze away the summer months.

 

I made one for each of the family, three kids and Mum, something to pass down, that is all: not to retail. I am glad so many like the fretwork -- all four are identical. I dread to think if I had made a mistake, I would have repeated it 4 times over before I knew, but as they say arse, not class -- luck has so far been on my side.

 

Have a great day all.

 

David

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is a short, un edited in any way, sound track -- no effects -- of the Tassie Tiger D/G, a few notes still need a little fine tuning. The last few bars are of a 1920 approx Jeffries Bros 38 button DG , to compare the twoD:G Tassie 38 button Tiger vs 1920's 38 button Jeffries Bros copy.mp3D:G Tassie 38 button Tiger vs 1920's 38 button Jeffries Bros copy.mp3. Both instruments are tuned to A442, so a little sharp, and recorded at exactly the same settings including the same input volume.

 

What do you think?

 

David

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is a short, un edited in any way, sound track -- no effects -- of the Tassie Tiger D/G, a few notes still need a little fine tuning. The last few bars are of a 1920 approx Jeffries Bros 38 button DG , to compare the twoattachicon.gifD:G Tassie 38 button Tiger vs 1920's 38 button Jeffries Bros copy.mp3attachicon.gifD:G Tassie 38 button Tiger vs 1920's 38 button Jeffries Bros copy.mp3. Both instruments are tuned to A442, so a little sharp, and recorded at exactly the same settings including the same input volume.

 

What do you think?

 

David

Well David, shall I stick my neck out and make a first comment? (I think your post was slightly confusing with what seems to be 2 links to the same file - I guess some, like me thought at first they were two files comparing the two instruments...) I'm assuming the Jeffries Bros comes in at 1:26? To me the Jeffries sounds brighter and less restrained than your instrument, but it's very difficult to say without playing it myself. I presume the slightly nasel sounding notes around 1:16 are the LH inboard reeds (thumb and "4th" row buttons) ? I do think it's great that you've started with a 38 button model - with the exception of Jurgen Suttner, few modern makers have attempted that.

 

Adrian

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Adrian, yes, sorry about the confusion, I have absolutely no idea why it posted twice, the first time it refused and said the file was too big, I checked the file size and then reposted, and lo and behold two postings!

 

Yes, all your observations are correct, the Jeffries is brighter, (To my ears, I would say more raucous, -- sacrilegious?), and the sound travels better, especially in a session. Because of the Jeffrie's thinner reeds it is more easy to play. Mine has wider, and parallel reeds, hence more pressure and a slightly nasal sound: in fact I have a brass reeded Crabb and the sound is similar, not the edge of a steel reeded instrument, but the Tiger is less sweet than the Crabb. But all this aside, it does accompany well, not so much a constant screamer, as a nasal sniffer I suppose.

 

Thankyou for your comments, I have tried to posted a sound bite without the jeffries G and D row. But unfortunately it seems I have exceeded my allotted space for attachments.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Many are posting their audio files to Sound Cloud these days and then just putting links to those files here. That way you don't use up your local concertina.net storage allotment when you post multiple audio files.

 

By the way, love the look of this instrument. I imagine the sound will change a bit after a few hundred hours of playing but I think it has a good start.

Edited by Bruce McCaskey
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...