Hi Philip,

Four years ago, Colin very kindly made me a set with a 16 key chanter using his new grouping for the lower keys (down to B). I had previously been playing a 16 key chanter with the more traditional grouping and I must admit that it took me a few hours of practice before I was really comfortable with Colin's chanter. Now I find it a delight to play. The only tune that occasionally makes me want to go back to the traditional set up is Beeswing.

Cheers,

Richard

----- Original Message ----- From: "Philip Gruar" <[email protected]>
To: "Dartmouth NPS" <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, May 04, 2011 6:43 AM
Subject: [NSP] Low keys sequence


May I put out a request for opinions from the NSP community? Apologies for raising a subject which has been discussed several times before - though maybe not in precisely the same terms, and I like to keep abreast of the latest thinking among better players than me.

Traditionally, the low B and C on an extended chanter have been arranged with the B on the right and the C on the left, but Colin has pioneered various other arrangements - especially three-key groupings with the order going A,B,C left to right. I think there seems to be a growing opinion that even with just the two low keys, B and C, it is also more convenient to have them with B on the left & C on the right. Having myself recently tried a chanter by Colin with the low keys in that order, I must say it is much more intuitive, but then I've never regularly played one myself with either arrangement - only made them for other people (always the traditional way so far). "Scale order" left to right obviously makes sense when there's also a low C# paired with the D in the right side slot - at least when playing scale passages e.g. in the accompaniment to duet slow airs, though in rapid arpeggio playing it may be better the traditional way. I have just given a customer the choice - he is a very good player, and has been professional on other wind instruments, but he is outside the NSP mainstream and has only ever played a 7-key chanter. I explained the options, and suggested the B-on-the-left arrangement, which after consideration he's gone for - but as I said, without the experience. What do people think?

Philip


To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html



Reply via email to