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  3. Do you play an instrument? What's your favorite thing about it?

Do you play an instrument? What's your favorite thing about it?

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  • C [email protected]

    Mozart famously loved violas so he frequently gave them some love and he wrote Sinfonia concertante in E-flat major where they are the star of the show.

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    wrote last edited by
    #49

    Beautiful piece, I can see why you love to play it, too! Must be super fun to bounce back and forth with the violinist and carry the melody.

    I think one of my biggest regrets is stopping playing violin. I will pick it back up one day when I have more time, nothing else has brought me the same kind of joy, not even the other instruments I've learned over the years.

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    • H [email protected]

      I used to play the recorder as a teen (it's still deeply engraved in my mind), I even got to play on a contrabass recorder (about 1,7m tall!) but I've been a guitar player for about 20 years now. I got this bad girl about six years ago :

      The lower strings below E are D, C, B, and A. D is super handy for medieval pieces, others relatively less frequently so but you can always tune them a little bit for any chord progression

      zombiepirate@lemmy.worldZ This user is from outside of this forum
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      wrote last edited by
      #50

      Recorders sound incredible in consort! I play the tenor myself. Glad to see another player of early music around here.

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      • H [email protected]

        Is it the same instrument that Jordi Savall plays and adapts for ? in french it's called Violle de Gambe so not 100% sure it's the same thing

        zombiepirate@lemmy.worldZ This user is from outside of this forum
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        wrote last edited by
        #51

        I play early music, and what we call a viol de gamba is a different thing; the viola is fretless and held under the chin like a violin, while the viol de gamba is a renaissance/baroque-era fretted instrument that is held between the legs and comes in treble, tenor, and bass sizes.

        Savall plays the latter.

        To further confuse the matter, there's a renaissance-era instrument called the vielle that is played more like a modern violin or viola.

        H B 2 Replies Last reply
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        • zombiepirate@lemmy.worldZ [email protected]

          I play early music, and what we call a viol de gamba is a different thing; the viola is fretless and held under the chin like a violin, while the viol de gamba is a renaissance/baroque-era fretted instrument that is held between the legs and comes in treble, tenor, and bass sizes.

          Savall plays the latter.

          To further confuse the matter, there's a renaissance-era instrument called the vielle that is played more like a modern violin or viola.

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          wrote last edited by
          #52

          Thanks for the disambiguation... I could have sworn that the viol de gamba was fretless ! but after looking it up I can confirm that it's not.

          zombiepirate@lemmy.worldZ 1 Reply Last reply
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          • H [email protected]

            Thanks for the disambiguation... I could have sworn that the viol de gamba was fretless ! but after looking it up I can confirm that it's not.

            zombiepirate@lemmy.worldZ This user is from outside of this forum
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            wrote last edited by
            #53

            Yup, they use wrapped gut frets. They're moveable so that the musicians could adjust intonation in the period before equal temperament was invented.

            B 1 Reply Last reply
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            • S [email protected]

              Or have you played something else in the past? What's your favorite piece to play?

              Edit: thanks for everyone that has replied. This has been so heartwarming to read 🙂

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              wrote last edited by
              #54

              When I was younger, I played the viola and I loved it, but moved to a school that didn't have that and we couldn't afford any lessons. I tried piano (one of those simply piano courses and a keyboard) and I actually liked that as well, but time got away from me. I wish I could actually play, it looks so amazing. Jealous of all you talented musicians.

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              • captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.worksC [email protected]

                Over my lifetime I've learned to play like 8 or 9 musical instruments, from "can squeak out Mary Had A Little Lamb" on a harmonica to reasonable on the piano. I took band class in middle and high school and was a reasonable trumpet player, though it's been awhile.

                I'm mainly a guitar player. I've tended toward 6 string acoustic, finger style. I tend to like the guitar because it can hold up on its own, it can be a solo instrument in a way that a trumpet can't. Show up to a social gathering with a trumpet, see if you're allowed to play it, compared to showing up with a guitar.

                My favorite piece to play on guitar is probably a solo guitar arrangement of Bon Jovi's Livin' On A Prayer. This is what I aim for with it, and I've got...most of it, not quite that clean.

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                wrote last edited by
                #55

                Yep, grew up playing trombone in band, and string bass in orchestra, and played guitar and electric bass in basement rock bands. I went to a conservatory for college and stopped playing guitar and bass. Got a degree in Music History, went into the classical/jazz music biz for a couple decades, then my own non-music biz for a couple decades, and never played anything for all those years.

                Then I was going stir crazy during the pandemic quarantine, going nuts from daytime TV, so in 2020 I took up the electric guitar, and got back to it.

                I improved quickly, but about 18 months ago, I got into fingerstyle, and now I'm obsessed. All I ever wanted was to be able to play well enough to get through entire songs, and entertain myself. With finger picking, I can do that. I have a strong music background, so I don't use tabs, I just create my own arrangements.

                The result has been amazing for my mental health. I came to realize that I had been operating with a low-grade depression for a long time, maybe most of my life, but playing the guitar has lifted most of that. That's how I knew I had been depressed - when it improved. It had just become my baseline existence.

                Favorite things to play? I'm all over the place, from classical tunes, to modern songs. Some of my favorite pieces to play are two songs by Stephen Foster - a lullaby called Slumber My Darling, and a beautiful ballad called Hard Times, Come Again No More, which was Foster's own personal favorite, and the song he used to sing in taverns for free drinks as a broke, degenerate alcoholic.

                It's so satisfying to sit on the front porch on a sunny late afternoon, looking out over the pond, and play my own music. If I was a religious person, I'd say it was one of God's greatest gifts.

                captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.worksC 1 Reply Last reply
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                • fryd@sh.itjust.worksF [email protected]

                  I learned in this order: clarinet, trumpet, piano, penny whistle, kalimba, guitar, and harmonica. I don’t actually play most anymore, the joy of music to me is in performance and I was never good or passionate enough about instruments to perform with them.

                  My favorite always was the trumpet. I love the sound and the feel of it. It’s just got a punch and energy that I haven’t gotten from other instruments. I haven’t played since I was a teen though because it’s just too loud for me to be able to practice without bothering people.

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                  wrote last edited by
                  #56

                  Get a mute for your trumpet, and head for the basement. Maybe even build a little insulated chamber to cut down the sound more, or play in a closet. Once you get your chops back and start improving, other people won't mind hearing you.

                  fryd@sh.itjust.worksF 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • J [email protected]

                    I play guitar casually since a little before COVID. Becoming more fluent with it every time I play is an amazing feeling.

                    Getting into a groove, putting my own spin/expressing myself with songs I like, and jamming with friends are experiences that are unmatched in enjoyment for me.

                    Making up my own silly songs on the fly is fun too.

                    Learning to play is the best thing I ever did. I had to get over the idea that it would be hard work to get good, or the idea that I'd never be as good as someone who started as a kid, or that I'd ever even be technically good, at all. Letting go of that stuff allowed me to enjoy each moment playing, and just have fun.

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                    wrote last edited by
                    #57

                    When I was a teen, music was how I made money. When my friends were flipping burgers or bussing tables, I was playing in multiple bands, and playing 3 or 4 gigs a month. That gave me enough pocket money to take my girl out.

                    So music and income became tightly linked for a long time. I got a degree in Music History, and worked for record labels for a few decades. Then I got out of music for a couple of decades.

                    When I took up the guitar again during the pandemic, I had absolutely no intention of performing ever again. I just wanted play for my own entertainment. To a certain extent, I also really wanted to conquer the guitar. I played it as a kid, but I never got very good. It beat me, and that always bothered me.

                    I've been playing again for 5 years, and I'm getting pretty good. I've far surpassed where I was as a kid, and can credibly call myself an intermediate player. The main thing is that money is no longer involved, I'm just doing it for fun and that took some getting used to. I just do it for love of music, self-satisfaction, and mental health.

                    Buying all these used guitars is costing me a fortune, though.

                    J 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • S [email protected]

                      Ah, I love this. I really love bluegrass, so a mandolin has always been playing at some point in my life. They look like they'd be super hard to play

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                      wrote last edited by
                      #58

                      I love the mandolin, and I'd love to play one regularly, but they are just too small for my fingers. I play guitar, and that's enough to keep me occupied for life.

                      I was in a great band as a kid, and on our way to gigs, one of our guitarists would strum the mandolin from the shotgun seat, and we'd all sing along, and practice our harmonies. I remember doing that, smiling wide, and thinking it was the most fun I'd ever had in my young life. Easily one of my favorite teen memories.

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                      • totallynotspezupload@startrek.websiteT [email protected]

                        I used to program electronic music and play live keyboard until I wrecked my hearing on stage.

                        I picked up playing drums 1.5 years ago and love it. I've been teaching drums for almost 2 months now at a music school.

                        Drumming relaxes me a lot, it's a good workout and even with my impaired hearing I can still play them.

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                        wrote last edited by
                        #59

                        I was a classical musician, so I really babied my ears over the years. Now I'm old, and I have a touch of tinnitus that just registers as background noise and is easy to filter out, so my hearing is still excellent.

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                        • zombiepirate@lemmy.worldZ [email protected]

                          I play early music, and what we call a viol de gamba is a different thing; the viola is fretless and held under the chin like a violin, while the viol de gamba is a renaissance/baroque-era fretted instrument that is held between the legs and comes in treble, tenor, and bass sizes.

                          Savall plays the latter.

                          To further confuse the matter, there's a renaissance-era instrument called the vielle that is played more like a modern violin or viola.

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                          wrote last edited by
                          #60

                          While they look similar, the violin and the gamba family are separate branches, sort of musical cousins.

                          Of all the stringed instruments, the upright string bass is the closest in shape to the gamba family, and is technically evolved from that. The shoulders on a violin, viola, or cello, come straight out from the neck, while the shoulders on a string bass slope down. That's a typical characteristic difference in shape between violins and gambas.

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                          • zombiepirate@lemmy.worldZ [email protected]

                            Yup, they use wrapped gut frets. They're moveable so that the musicians could adjust intonation in the period before equal temperament was invented.

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                            wrote last edited by
                            #61

                            Can you imagine having to shift individual frets, untying and retying them to get the instrument in tune?

                            What a pain in the ass. No wonder they went extinct.

                            zombiepirate@lemmy.worldZ 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • P [email protected]

                              Viola sounds amazing but yes, fun pieces are written for violin.

                              Do you know any great viola music that is on par with great violin music?

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                              wrote last edited by
                              #62

                              That dark velvetiness that violas have is gorgeous. It is too bad that not much is written for it, but at least you can adapt violin or cello music.

                              I grew up playing trombone. There's no good music for that either, and you can't even adapt other stuff well to it. I never enjoyed playing it back then, even though I love music. Today, I'm a guitarist. Much more satisfying than trombone.

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                              • S [email protected]

                                Or have you played something else in the past? What's your favorite piece to play?

                                Edit: thanks for everyone that has replied. This has been so heartwarming to read 🙂

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                                wrote last edited by
                                #63

                                my favorite part about playing the cock and balls is the cum

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                                • B [email protected]

                                  Get a mute for your trumpet, and head for the basement. Maybe even build a little insulated chamber to cut down the sound more, or play in a closet. Once you get your chops back and start improving, other people won't mind hearing you.

                                  fryd@sh.itjust.worksF This user is from outside of this forum
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                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #64

                                  Thanks for the tips! I never heard of a trumpet mute. Unfortunately I’ll have to work on getting another trumpet as well as a basement before I try your suggestions. I’ll still save your comment, maybe one day I could try again.

                                  B 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • fryd@sh.itjust.worksF [email protected]

                                    Thanks for the tips! I never heard of a trumpet mute. Unfortunately I’ll have to work on getting another trumpet as well as a basement before I try your suggestions. I’ll still save your comment, maybe one day I could try again.

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                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #65

                                    You can pick up used trumpets on Facebook Marketplace for cheap. The most common mutes are straight and cup mutes.

                                    Jazz players use them a lot. It gives them a cool, quiet, strained sound. Miles Davis used a straight mute often. So did Dizzy.

                                    Get a cheap trumpet, stick a mute in it, and stand in your closet door, and play into your clothes.

                                    fryd@sh.itjust.worksF 1 Reply Last reply
                                    1
                                    • B [email protected]

                                      Can you imagine having to shift individual frets, untying and retying them to get the instrument in tune?

                                      What a pain in the ass. No wonder they went extinct.

                                      zombiepirate@lemmy.worldZ This user is from outside of this forum
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                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #66

                                      I play the renaissance lute, which also uses tied frets. I just play in equal temperament because its easier and my ear isn't that good. I'm merely an ambitious amateur though, maybe I'll get into it one of these days.

                                      B 1 Reply Last reply
                                      1
                                      • zombiepirate@lemmy.worldZ [email protected]

                                        I play the renaissance lute, which also uses tied frets. I just play in equal temperament because its easier and my ear isn't that good. I'm merely an ambitious amateur though, maybe I'll get into it one of these days.

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                                        wrote last edited by [email protected]
                                        #67

                                        I play guitar, but I've never held a lute. I'd love to try one sometime. They are astonishingly beautiful works of art. I love everything about them.

                                        Goddammit, now I have to buy a lute.

                                        zombiepirate@lemmy.worldZ 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • S [email protected]

                                          Or have you played something else in the past? What's your favorite piece to play?

                                          Edit: thanks for everyone that has replied. This has been so heartwarming to read 🙂

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                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #68

                                          Bass. It basses.

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