--- On Thu, 30/6/11, Francis Wood wrote:
Hello again, Anthony,
One question arises over the issue of absorbing a regional musical
accent: which side of the hill are we talking about? If the hill is big
enough, the style will be pretty different. Northumberland is a huge
county,
A good point - but if a musical style has any merit, it's worth
studying for musical reasons alone.
That's why, in Ireland, so many non-Kerrymen play slides and polkas
John
In a message dated 30/06/2011 20:51:14 GMT Daylight Time,
oatenp...@googlemail.com writes:
Hello again, Anthony,
One question arises over the issue of absorbing a regional musical accent:
which side of the hill are we talking about? If the hill is big enough, the
style will be pretty different. Northumberland is a huge county, where
travelling in the old days would not have been that
later.
John
-Original Message-
From: lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu [mailto:lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu] On Behalf Of
Anthony Robb
Sent: 30 June 2011 11:51
To: NSP group
Subject: [NSP] Re: Tune of the Month, July, "Roxborough Castle"
-- On Thu, 30/6/11, Francis Wood wrote:
It
I'll tell you what worries me.
Don't they listen/watch what they are posting for the public?
If they don't, why not?
If they do, why don't they notice that things are wrong?
This guy can obviously "play" the thing - including the regulators which
are tricky at the best of times.
I'm guessing it's
Hello Anthony,
I don't think we disagree. At Stuart Hardy's musical altitude, I'm sure you're
right.
That's a level I can only admire but never approach. On a more basic level,
playing the tune with a dotted rhythm will get you through in a far less
exposed manner than playing straight, which
-- On Thu, 30/6/11, Francis Wood wrote:
It's a lot easier to play Roxborough Castle in dotted rhythm, as is
done here. I prefer it played absolutely straight, which is really very
challenging. A commonly played tune which is rarely played well. I
quite like this rendition here .
True 'nuff! :)
On 30/06/2011 10:20, christopher.bi...@ec.europa.eu wrote:
<... >
Could have done another take?
C
---
Text inserted by Panda IS 2011:
This message has NOT been classified as
>And a curious choice of drone, which on my headset seemed to be the
>subdominant.
Yes
> I admire anyone, though, who can honestly say they've never
>played too
>fast when confronted with a recording device, and mangled good
>intentions, when nervous adrenalin cripples technique though.
>Or
Yes to both, and the acoustic doesn't help at all.
And a curious choice of drone, which on my headset seemed to be the
subdominant.
I admire anyone, though, who can honestly say they've never played too
fast when confronted with a recording device, and mangled good
intentions, when nervous a
Or there's this version on "Celtic Pipes"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DOIuVzlHFEA
Tim
On 30 Jun 2011, at 09:22, wrote:
>> Might be quite good if he played it at half the speed.
>
> And got his chanter remotely in tune.
>
>> Otherwise agree with
>> Francis.
>
>
> Me too.
>
>
>
> To g
>Might be quite good if he played it at half the speed.
And got his chanter remotely in tune.
>Otherwise agree with
>Francis.
Me too.
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On 30 Jun 2011, Francis Wood wrote:
> > [1]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iHBO8CGAIeQ&feature=related
Open fingering in places
> > [2]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKC0ZoVqfzU&NR=1
> [2] Awful, awful, awful!
Might be quite good if he played it at half the speed. Otherwise agree with
F
On 30 Jun 2011, at 08:15, John Dally wrote:
> Here are a couple of youtube items that already fit the bill for July.
>
> [1]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iHBO8CGAIeQ&feature=related
>
> [2]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKC0ZoVqfzU&NR=1
>
> What's your take on the tune?
Hi John,
Two
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