Jump to content

Recorded Tune Link Page.


Recommended Posts

Have your whisky first! It might improve your playing and prevent blanching and blushing :lol:

No, no! Being Danish, Charlotte must blanch (turn white) and blush (turn red)!

Those are the colors of the Danish flag. :)

post-13-1139390161.gif

That makes the Danish flag a very human flag ;)

How about our Dutch flag: we should not only turn red and white but blue as well :unsure: ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 331
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Have your whisky first! It might improve your playing and prevent blanching and blushing :lol:
No, no! Being Danish, Charlotte must blanch (turn white) and blush (turn red)!

Those are the colors of the Danish flag. :)

post-13-1139390161.gif

How about our Dutch flag: we should not only turn red and white but blue as well :unsure: ?

Then you'll need the whiskey -- or Genever -- to warm you up. :D

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Jeff. I really enjoyed your technique on the ornaments in the A part and bravo on the delicate dymanic employed in the upper register of the B part . The contrast with the middle to lower register bounce was just right. Handsome!

Edited by Mark Evans
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

I recorded lots of new stuff yesterday, and the group is convening tonight for an emergency recording session so that we can apply to play at a local arts festival. For once, the songs I've done are actually stylistically representative of what we usually do, rather than being a strange assortment of covers or recordings of news broadcasts. :)

 

Anyway, it's not all voice and concertina, but there are four songs that are:

 

On Board a '98

Geordie

Henry, My Son

As I Was Going to Banbury

 

They can all be found here if you're interested...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

After a period of rather low activity, I became a bit active again, so I realised a major update of the Recorded Tunes Links Page. In alphabetical order:

  1. Dana Johnson: 3 tunes played on the Kensington Concertina are now included: Dear Irish Boy, Sean McGuire (of the Glen) and Dancing leaves. The first two are Irish traditional and the last tune is a D. Johnson composition.
  2. Johan Verbeek: All of a sudden Johan was there as a new member. He entered the forum in style with five tunes played on his 30b Anglo C/G Geuns-Wakker. Most of the tunes have a Dutch origin: Ballet Snijders, 5/4 Waltz, Nije Mazurka, Boeren Schots and Jubilaris.
  3. Laitch Dickson really surpised me with a beautiful Irish air "Johnny Seoighe" played on his Anglo C/G Morse Céilí #7.
  4. Michael Berenstein (m3838) plays on his Anglo 20b chrom. Lachenal a tune which he calls "Nothing Special". The second tune "I have met you" is written by Michael.
  5. Michael Eskin plays the Irish tune "The Groves" on his Anglo C/G Edgley. I wish I could play like that!
  6. Finally Stuart Estell published a lot of tunes from which a selection of 7 tunes is now on the RTLP. In this selection Stuart uses a variety of concertinas (G/D Norman, Jeffries Duet, McCann Duet). On top of that he sings better than ever (at least to my ears).

BTW: I started this message (in concept) yesterday early in the morning. It's now 24 hours later. In between the start and finishing this message there was a ride by car to Helmond, where Wim Wakker lives. I drove back with W-A1 no. 0640 !!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I started this message (in concept) yesterday early in the morning. It's now 24 hours later. In between the start and finishing this message there was a ride by car to Helmond, where Wim Wakker lives. I drove back with W-A1 no. 0640 !!!

I suppose we shouldn't be expecting any posts from you for a while. ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 months later...

is a video of me playing Rosline Castle. As you might guess (or, if you've ever seen me play, know!), there isn't much action there, but I hope it's a little bit interesting, and maybe some other people will upload something!

 

Incidently, I recorded this using my digital camera, but replaced the camera's audio with a simultaneous audio recording that's much higher quality. So - just the audio part can be found here - presumably better quality than in the YouTube video (not checked)

 

Oh - in case you're wondering - the slapping of my concertina at the beginning isn't some kind of abuse! It was so I could sync up the audio/video - honest!!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

is a video of me playing Rosline Castle. As you might guess (or, if you've ever seen me play, know!), there isn't much action there, but I hope it's a little bit interesting, and maybe some other people will upload something!

 

Incidently, I recorded this using my digital camera, but replaced the camera's audio with a simultaneous audio recording that's much higher quality. So - just the audio part can be found here - presumably better quality than in the YouTube video (not checked)

 

Oh - in case you're wondering - the slapping of my concertina at the beginning isn't some kind of abuse! It was so I could sync up the audio/video - honest!!!

 

Very nice. I think the video adds a lot to the audio, an added insight so to speak

Thanks

Leo

Link to comment
Share on other sites

is a video of me playing Rosline Castle. As you might guess (or, if you've ever seen me play, know!), there isn't much action there, but I hope it's a little bit interesting, and maybe some other people will upload something!

Hi Danny,

 

Nice recording. I guess that it's harder to play to a camera than a micophone.

 

Not much action? Well, that's the beauty of the concertina; waggle the bellows a bit, press a few keys, and this wonderful sound comes out (that's the theory).

 

Regards,

Peter.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What a pretty tune too. I shall immediately steal it!

 

 

Welcome to the "Let's nick-a-tune from Danny club". I've done this several times already. Folks always enjoy his version of "The Wounded Hussar" when I play it. ;)

 

By the way Danny, beautiful as usual. Enjoyed seeing you play. Now about abusing that tina' of yours... :P

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've just organized my hobbies home page to include a couple of recordings of my concertinas. I think I play the two extremes of the Wheatstone English: a tutor from 1851 with brass reeds and a spruce baffle still in place and a metal ended steel reeded concertina from 1913 with no baffles. I've recorded the same tune (Behind the Bush in the Garden) on both for a comparison of the sound:

http://home.insightbb.com/~lawrence.stout/...TheBush2667.mp3

and

http://home.insightbb.com/~lawrence.stout/...heBush25813.mp3

 

There are also recordings of a couple of O'Carolan tunes:

O'Carolan's Draught on the older tina:

http://home.insightbb.com/~lawrence.stout/...Draught2667.mp3

and Planxty Madam Maxwell on the newer one:

http://home.insightbb.com/~lawrence.stout/...axwell25813.mp3

and a Scottish strathspey (The Earl of Dalhousie's Happy Return to Scotland) from Neil Gow:

http://home.insightbb.com/~lawrence.stout/...Return25813.mp3

 

The number in the file name is the serial number of the instrument being played.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I enjoyed those cuts very much and played along! I think your brass reeded instrument sounds lovely. If I could get the scratch together I'd love to have one for singing.

 

Really enjoyed Behind the Bush in the Garden. I'd like to learn that one. What a title.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sounds great so far, Larry!

 

I've yet to listen to all of the files, since I have a slow connection, must download to my desktop first, etc., etc..

 

Just played O'Carolan's Draught, I love the way that one sounds. Very nice tune, too!

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...