Hello Simon, thank you for your reply. I was thinking about changing one trompette to the low one, and adding two capos, to get two c/d trompettes (high and low) but I guess the low one would be a tricky one to adjust.
Regards, Oscar. 2008/5/6 Simon Wascher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > Hello, > > Am 06.05.2008 um 09:01 schrieb Oscar Picazo Ruiz: > > > What about a low C trompette? I guess gut about 1.40... have you tried?. > > Or maybe better a wound string of any kind? > > > > I experimented with it but failed to get the buzzing sound I wanted. Also > there is a limit to the number of trompettes on one gurdy. I found other > tunings more usefull for my music. > > S. > > > > > Regards, > > > > Oscar > > > > Madrid > > > > 2008/5/3 Simon Wascher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > Hello, > > > > Am 02.05.2008 um 06:54 schrieb Peter Hughes: > > > > In the past I have used a metal wound gut string for a low G trompette - > > I think it was a low G chanter string I didn't like for some reason in that > > role. However that went long ago, and I later decided I rather liked the > > sound of the high G trompette. However, I do miss that low buzz, so I'm > > wondering if anbody has some alternative suggestions for strings tht work > > well? > > > > I use a 125 plain gut. > > > > S. > > > > > > --- > > have a look at: > > http://hurdygurdywiki.wiki-site.com > > http://drehleierwiki.wiki-site.com > > --- > > my site: > > http://simonwascher.info > > > > > > > > > --- > have a look at: > http://hurdygurdywiki.wiki-site.com > http://drehleierwiki.wiki-site.com > --- > my site: > http://simonwascher.info > > >
