Oh very good!
I'll download that for reference purposes :)
Colin Hill
- Original Message -
From: Paul Gretton [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: nsp@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Thursday, September 18, 2008 3:47 PM
Subject: [NSP] tchuning
This tells you it all you need to know. ;-)
I love it!
This tells you it all you need to know. ;-)
[1]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jhHAojVyeG0
Cheers,
Paul Gretton
--
References
1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jhHAojVyeG0
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Dear Chris,
The tuning of the low E I find is most effectively tuned also against the A
drone as a fifth or its inversion. This is also an octave to the top E so it
can be checked both ways. The 'third' way is to use the tuning meter which I
find to be the quickest way to tune most of the
So they carry you by the ears in your part of the world eh?
Maybe they do, wherever it is.
Something like that might be appropriate. Lugs (the kind attached to
either side of a human head) can be put to various uses. In the town where I
live miscreants are threatened with having their
Dear Sam,
The 'lugs' are a pair of devices situated on either side of the head as in ' If
yi divent shurrup aal giv yi a belt across the lugs.'?You may need to look it
up in a Geordie Dictionary. I am afraid that NSP's come with a bit of local
jargon known as 'Geordie' since they were
August 2008 13:12
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: nsp@cs.dartmouth.edu
Subject: [NSP] Re: tchuning
Dear Sam,
The 'lugs' are a pair of devices situated on either side of the head as in ' If
yi divent shurrup aal giv yi a belt across the lugs.'?You may need to look it
up in a Geordie Dictionary. I am
the height of either industry or shipbuilding there, I think.
Colin Hill
- Original Message -
From: Richard York [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: NSP group nsp@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Friday, August 29, 2008 3:30 PM
Subject: [NSP] Re: tchuning
No, it's a sort of sail, hence Lugger.
Isn't
or shipbuilding there, I think.
Colin Hill
- Original Message - From: Richard York
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: NSP group nsp@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Friday, August 29, 2008 3:30 PM
Subject: [NSP] Re: tchuning
No, it's a sort of sail, hence Lugger.
Isn't it?
Or was that a boat with big ears
in Scotland.
Fascinating the study of etymology.
Colin Hill
- Original Message -
From: Ian Lawther [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: colin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: NSP group nsp@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Friday, August 29, 2008 5:52 PM
Subject: [NSP] Re: tchuning
As the Oxford Dictionary defines lug