Stephen Chambers Posted December 30, 2007 Share Posted December 30, 2007 Oh no. No hearing problems. I just have to rattle the spoon that feeds him and he's there double quick !! Sounds pretty normal in that regard then! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dirge Posted December 30, 2007 Share Posted December 30, 2007 So what's happened to your mystery new toy Stephen? Still in negotiations? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stephen Chambers Posted December 30, 2007 Share Posted December 30, 2007 So what's happened to your mystery new toy Stephen? Still in negotiations? No it's "Sale Agreed", and if it wasn't for Christmas/New Year I'd already have it. I'm flying to England for a few days at the beginning of January to collect it (touch wood!) and see a few old friends. Here's a foretaste: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dirge Posted December 30, 2007 Share Posted December 30, 2007 (edited) Excellent! What fun. I look forward to hearing more about it. Edited December 30, 2007 by Dirge Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stephen Chambers Posted December 30, 2007 Share Posted December 30, 2007 Excellent! What fun. I look forward to hearing more about it. All being well, I'll have it by this time next week, though I won't be back home until the middle of that week. Here's another photo of the two Webb brothers, taken almost 40 years earlier in Germany, with a fine array of concertinas (probably including this one): Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marklar Posted December 30, 2007 Share Posted December 30, 2007 Here's another photo of the two Webb brothers, taken almost 40 years earlier in Germany, with a fine array of concertinas (probably including this one): What a beautiful and unique instrument you've found! You do have a clown suit to wear while playing it, I hope? What in the world is that thing behind the clown on the right in that photo? That couldn't be a bunch of bulb horns on a wooden frame...could it? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tootler Posted December 31, 2007 Share Posted December 31, 2007 No concertinas - insufficient capital these days and living on a pension However, a CD by Magpie Lane "Knock at the Knocker, Ring at the Bell", also a book of Graeme Miles songs - "Forgotten Songs Remembered" Geoff Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stephen Chambers Posted December 31, 2007 Share Posted December 31, 2007 You do have a clown suit to wear while playing it, I hope? As a matter of fact that's a touchy subject, as around 15 years ago there was a JoJo Webb concertina in auction complete with one of his clown suits, but there was something else there that I wanted even more that day, so I couldn't afford to bid on it. I'm not sure if this concertina is the same one , but the man I'm buying it off inherited it and doesn't know anything about a clown suit... What in the world is that thing behind the clown on the right in that photo? They're tuned sleigh bells. That couldn't be a bunch of bulb horns on a wooden frame...could it? To put things into context, the first motor cars only went into production in 1890, the year the photograph is believed to have been taken, though I seem to remember reading that the Webbs later had tuned bulb horns hidden in their costumes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bill Taffe Posted January 1, 2008 Share Posted January 1, 2008 Mine's a good bit older and seems to think she's a music critic; at least she always leaves the room if I start playing a concertina... I'm lucky. When I start playing my concertina my "Aussie" runs into the room with me, sits real close and watches intently ... sometimes he even throws his head back and sings and sings and sings! Bill Taffe Rumney, NH Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bill Taffe Posted January 1, 2008 Share Posted January 1, 2008 Whoops ... sorry for the multiple pics ... they didn't show in the preview. I'm just learning how to use this posting software. Bill Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fidjit Posted January 8, 2008 Share Posted January 8, 2008 £180 speeding fine and this to squeeze ! God forsättning Topical song for you on here. Chas http://www.myspace.com/clarkchas And one with me playing a concertina !! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gibet_b Posted January 8, 2008 Share Posted January 8, 2008 No concertina under the tree... In fact not really ;-) Because it was money under the tree, and the money has been used to order my first concertina : a Rochelle from Concertina Connection ! I wait for it, maybe tomorrow or the day after tomorrow. It's hard to wait !!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Robin Madge Posted January 8, 2008 Share Posted January 8, 2008 I would have answered "nothing", but at a party on Saturday last I was handed a 20 button East German anglo with a button missing and a broken hand strap and told "take it away". I'm considering seeing just what I can do to it to improve it. All the notes sound now that I've made a temporary button and new handstrap and the tuning could be worse:) Robin Madge Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gibet_b Posted January 11, 2008 Share Posted January 11, 2008 No concertina under the tree... In fact not really ;-) Because it was money under the tree, and the money has been used to order my first concertina : a Rochelle from Concertina Connection ! I wait for it, maybe tomorrow or the day after tomorrow. It's hard to wait !!! I just receive my Rochelle this morning. I'm very happy and I begin to learn. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PeterT Posted January 13, 2008 Share Posted January 13, 2008 No concertina under the tree... In fact not really ;-) Because it was money under the tree, and the money has been used to order my first concertina : a Rochelle from Concertina Connection ! I wait for it, maybe tomorrow or the day after tomorrow. It's hard to wait !!! I just receive my Rochelle this morning. I'm very happy and I begin to learn. So, early days, but what are your first impressions? Regards, Peter. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gibet_b Posted January 13, 2008 Share Posted January 13, 2008 So, early days, but what are your first impressions? Well. About the instrument, I like the sound, the buttons are pleasing to the touch. The instrument is nice, and it seems to be strong. The only problem that I meet it's the same as in this post, so it will disappear. About the learning now. Of course it's very different from the piano (all the buttons are the same and it don't produce the same thing if you push or draw). So I think I had to acquire automatic reflexes, to learn how to produce this note, etc. I had two methods for the moment. One in french by Didier Jaffrédo, and an other one in english given with the instrument. I think the english one is better for me for the moment, I prefer the progression. And it learn me the ABC notation and I think it will be usefull if I have to talk with an english player or teacher. But it seems to me that the english one don't talk about ornements, so I will study the french one in some months. I ordered the John William's DVD (but not receive). I think I will make some videos of my learning. The first tunes of the method it's "When the saints", but I don't begin to learn it for the moment. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stephen Chambers Posted January 14, 2008 Share Posted January 14, 2008 (edited) So what's happened to your mystery new toy Stephen? Still in negotiations? I'm flying to England for a few days at the beginning of January to collect it (touch wood!) and see a few old friends. Which I did, and greatly enjoyed. So here is a new photo of Jo-Jo Webb's famous concertina, praised by no less a critic than George Bernard Shaw: There was a letter with it showing that it had been bought, by the father of the man who sold it to me, off Tommy Williams for £8.00 in 1968. But on Friday I was surprised to actually receive a belated Christmas gift of a concertina in the post, from my friend Gérard Dôle in Paris. It is an old German toy one: Curiously, Alf's concertina has gold sides/bellows, Jo-Jo's has gold buttons and the toy one has gold ends... Edited January 14, 2008 by Stephen Chambers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dirge Posted January 14, 2008 Share Posted January 14, 2008 That's a nice old thing; and what does THAT one play like? (And was there any more news on the clown suit?) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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