Well I have experienced the bluegrass mafia before but in a few hours
will be my real first immersion into old timey. I think in a
"festival" setting it will be a little easier to do some recon and
watch others before my case even opens. I hope its fun cause I just
like playing the mandolin.

On Jan 16, 5:54 am, Dasspunk <[email protected]> wrote:
> Though they've certainly not cornered the market, I've noticed some of
> them MN old-timers are a bit on the crotchety side... but then again
> Fred, y'all feel purple is a respectable color for a professional
> sports franchise. Which is obviously incorrect :)
>
> Still, I can see their point... at least to a point. And while some
> people are just assholes, plain and simple, most are just trying to
> honor the style and demand it be shown a little respect. Being a
> Monroe player, I can absolutely empathize with this feeling...
>
> My bright orange, f-style Duff doesn't especially help me when joining
> unfamiliar circles... but listening and being respectful usually does
> the trick. I'm very lucky though... many of the circles I join or
> dances I play, include Chirps Smith. You could look a long time and
> not find a nicer gent nor as good a fiddler. And it helps that he
> started as a mando player... and a damn good one at that.
>
> Brian
>
> On Jan 15, 4:13 pm, Fred Keller <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > <rant mode on; ratcheted up to 11>
>
> > This kind of feedback from the so-called "keepers of the flame" of old
> > time makes the gorge fairly well buoyant.  Who bequeathed them the  
> > music and who told 'em  it was a fossil, fit only to stick under glass
> > in a museum?  Real musicians don't often think this way about music nor
> > did those first-gen folks whom they--and we--admire.
>
> > Here's your mantra:
>
> > Screw 'em
> > Screw the fiddle mafia that makes six of them vs one of you a good jam
> > Screw the lock-step jack-booted thugs who keep careful track of who's
> > playing the wrong notes of the wrong version
> > Screw the smug know-it-alls who insist on only one kind of old-time
> > Play what you want and if they don't like...sc--well, you get the idea
>
> > <rant mode off; urge to kill....subsiding>
>
> >   ;^)...but only partially
>
> > On 1/15/10 3:53 PM, Topher Gayle wrote:
>
> > > Once I was jamming on my mando at a small old time jam, pretty much
> > > playing backbeats. And after a couple tunes the fiddling gal sneered,
> > > "how long have you been playing bluegrass?" and that was the end of
> > > that.
>
> > > So I was a little bit nervous a couple years later when Brad Leftwich
> > > asked me to accompany him at a dance, with my mando. I asked him what
> > > he wanted me to do, and he said, "whatever you want, but it would be
> > > nice to have a rolling strum." I didn't know what he meant, so he said
> > > something like dum-a-strum-a dum-a-strum-a, a little bit swung, but
> > > not much. That's kind of a guitar strum for me. I guess he liked it
> > > because he asked me to accompany him a few more times that week. It
> > > was really fun!
>
> > > I think it's the same as any kind of social music. It's as loose or
> > > strict as the people involved want. I personally really like things
> > > loose. But sometimes that's not the scene.
>
> > > Topher
-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Taterbugmando" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/taterbugmando?hl=en.


Reply via email to