I lived in Auburn near Sack a tomatoes for three years.. I concur, cultural desert unless y'll wanna play new age bluegrass.
I am now exiledin So Oregon some improvement, but not for a boz player.
I have played box off and on since the early nineties, owned well over 50 boxes.. I have taken a vacation for some time now hoping to re-kindel my interest.
B LaFleur is on the right track.. Put it down and listen.
I have a fantastic Castagnari D one row .. I got bored enough to offer it for sale.. but, there is nothing like it, so put it away to see if things changed.
Now after listening to a great deal of music, I am ready for a box in C.
John, it all makes sense to me except the 3rd line of second verse. In the 1st verse, you're saying "You're leaving me with the horses". "apres" and a verb makes it in the process of. To say "you left me with the horses, it would be "Tu m'as quitté..".
In the 3rd verse, "I have no more money" should probably be "J'ai p'us d'argent..", I think.
"love" as a nound is "amitie". So I think it would be "J'ai p'us d'amitie" for I have no more love. And I think "my soul is starving" might be "mon ame est affamé". But I'm not a fluent speaker, maybe someone can correct me if wrong. Marc? Pop?
Hello, David, nice to hear from you. Glad my "baby" is still doing ok. Man, I'd sure take once a month, I get 2 or 3 times a year when I go back to the motherland.
John, I think there may be a few more corrections on that to make it complete, John, but I don't think I'm the best for that job. Here's how I'd do it, for what that's worth, maybe Marc can correct it.
Oh.. garde donc quoi t'as fait
Tu m'as quitté avec les chevaux
t'apres m'quitter dans les miseres
a la 'tite maison
Oh.. garde donc, J'suis moi tout seul
J'ai p'us d'argent et les chevaux sont crever de la faim
J'ai p'us d'amitie et mon ame est affamé
toi criminelle
David Holt,
Hey bud. I've found Big Nick's DVD 1 to be helpful in getting the bass side going. He runs thru things several times nice and slowly. Cowboy waltz.
The second thing was, thanks to Jim Pettijohn videos on youtube, doing scales while doing bass, chord, chord. Hold down the scale notes while playing the bass side.
The third was playing only the bass side in every push pull combo there is, i.e., bass/push chord/push chord/push is "normal." Sometimes I do only this just to cement that waltz rhythm into my left hand muscle memory.
Push, pull, push
pull, push, push.
You get the idea. That side of the box has to become second nature, subconscious.
Stick with it a bit. The better I get, the more encouraged I am to play more. Some of my crap is even starting to sound like music!
Well, it's Sunday morning, 7:00am, I think I'll pull my MARTIN out of the case and wake the whole house up.
Hi Bryan, "No 18" here, a delighted customer of yours. My mahogany "L'Anse Grise" is much admired, drooled over even, wherever it goes. I'm trying to learn from DVDs and CDs, but the instructors have a nasty habit of completely glossing over the bass, having laboured (sorry, labored, ha ha) over the treble ad infinitum - then they say "and now we'll add the bass" and - wallop, they add it, played fast, no explanation, no going over it more than once, nothing. It's all right for them, they do it without thinking, but not for someone like me who's struggling from zero. So what I do is to enter the treble notes on Finale Songwriter, then add the bass notes, which Finale puts in the right places rhythmically, then print out the result and learn to synchronise the bass from that. Slow and laborious, but it "clicks" eventually, and then I can do it without thinking. Strange but true. Here in Manchester (UK) there's the friendly and helpful Cajun Specials once a month to jam along with, but once a month isn't really often enough, but better than complete isolation.