Hello Jay and all others,

 

 Hm - "smoothie sound" is for my opinion a question of personal taste. For
me the Alto sound was exactly what I was looking for. I played a Jean-Noel
Grandchamp lute bodied Hurdy-Gurdy (why I still own and love), but in the
past few years I was a little bit tired of the "normal", sometimes "squeaky"
sound of a regular tuned instrument, either of Auvergnat or Bourbonnais
tuning. For accompanying singing the Alto sound I do like much better. And I
preferred the Alto sound more than e.g. the sound of a Siorat - even if I
personally like Denis' instruments very much. Plus: Denis is one of my
oldest acquaintances in the hg area. I met him at the Frankfurt Musikmesse
some decades ago when he just had started building HGs. I was searching for
whatever stuff on hg's and so I met Denis. WE had  a great time
discussioning hg's, and we frequently met at St.-Chartier. I deeply admire
this guy for what he did for the instrument and for players like Valentin
and Gilles. Also an old friend is Helmut Gotschy and his instruments are
very good. But, for me, I heard a Weichselbaumer Alto at Rudolstadt and got
instantly hooked. I always wanted one afterwards and many times I thought
how much I would love to own one. 

 

Finally, I had the money and bought myself an Alto gurdy. I never ever
regretted this decision. I LOVE my Alto and would never change for another
instrument. My Alto has four chanterelles, especially I love the deep G and
also the nearly Cello-sound of the deep C string. Besides the low strings I
also have G and C-Octave chanterelles. The chanterelles have two capoes to
fix them on step 1 and 3. I decides also to invest in a capo system on all 3
drones and trumpet strings (really expensive, but worth any penny). Finally
I got little levers to lift the chanterelles easily. Plus, of course, I got
the 4-way-amplification  

 

My experience with the Alto is: it took a lonmg time to set it up perfectly,
and this needs some effords. In the beginning it is not so easy to handly
Wolfgang's tangent system and one can set them up for a perfect tone, but
you have to learn to do so - it's a little bit tricky. Also, it is not easy
to put cotton on the wound strings, especially the drones and the high g
chanterelles may be tricky to get cotton. In the beginning I have had the
problem not to notice that the flexible nuts in the tangent box got loose.
Just a little bit and not very noteable, but it nearly drove me crazy to ste
up the tangents and getting out of tune while playing. But once this issue
was identified and the bolts tightened the instrument is sheer joy. Tuning
is very, very stable, I barely need 5 Minutes to tune the instrument. Often
I just get it out of it's box, turn the wheel tentative and listen just to
notice: perfect. 

 

Yes, it takes some time if new resin is needed plus new cotton, but
afterwards it is joy again.

 

Also: the sound system is perfect: just plug and play. Once you've found
your "e-sound" it is very easy to play on stage. Recording is great since
you can adjust all four string groups independently (or if you want on one
master channel). Recording is great: Plug the four channels into a Presonus
firepod and there you go.  For the more progressive ones it may be a great
toy to experiment with effect pedals. I connected a YAMAHA magic stomp
acoustic guitar effects pedal between my gurdy and the mixing device. Due to
the fact that you can put the effect just onto the chanterelles you might
get some great sounds. One can download sound patches for the YAMAHA and so
did I with some heavy distortion and / or overdrive effects. It is fun, even
if traditionalists may wrinkle their noses. 

 

Okay okay, I'll stop here. You may have notices that I am deep in love with
my instrument. 

 

Maybe, Jay, this helps. If you got more questions, just drop me a PN.

 

Best wishes,

Uli 

 

  _____  

Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Im Auftrag von
Graham Whyte
Gesendet: Freitag, 2. November 2007 18:52
An: [email protected]
Betreff: RE: [HG] Weichselbaumer HGs

 

I have heard an Alto played live by Matthias, and also played one myself

Gilles Chabenat chose one to play at OTW 2006 when it was impossible to
bring his own Siorat

 

I think my immediate reaction was "would I get bored with this amazing
smoothie sound ?"

 

Never the less, a wonderfully versatile instrument

 

His more conventional HGs also have a smoothish sound but with more bite to
it

 

Graham

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 02 November 2007 17:13
To: [email protected]
Subject: [HG] Weichselbaumer HGs


Dear Fellow Members of the HG Clan:

I am seriously considering purchasing a Weichselbaumer "Alto" model HG. I
love the sound and the look of this HG. I thought I would reach out to the
HG community to get your thoughts and input on this very important decision.
I have heard it played extensively by Matthias Loibner  - a most gifted HG
artist along with sound files from Wolfgang's web site.  

Thanks,

Jay

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