Homegrown Music... and Musical Instruments!
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Down-home musician Marc Bristol sings and strums a tune at a local music festival.
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Even homesteaders need to relax and enjoy themselves from
time to time, right? And almost everybody these days wants
to cut his or her cost of living. So how about a little
doit-yourself entertainment?
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And that's what this column is all about. Down-home music
that you can make . . . and the instruments (which, in some
cases, you can also make!) to play that music on.
The important thing is that this is your column. If you
like it, write to me and let me know. If you have some
ideas for this feature, let me know that. I'm open to any
suggestions or information you care to contribute. I'll
even try to answer your questions about down-home music . .
. but—both for the benefit of all MOTHER's readers
and to ease my correspondence load—I'll deal with
those questions, whenever possible, here in this column . .
. rather than in personal letters.
Address your correspondence— for this column and this
column only—to Marc Bristol, 31722 N. E. 180th Place,
Duvall, Wash. 98019.
Bass and Washboard Update
As almost anybody who's the least bit musically inclined
can tell you, a band wouldn't be complete without bass and
percussion instruments. The rhythm-makers add definition
and focus to any piece of music and seem to make the melody
bounce along more naturally. And, in most
homegrown music, these necessary roles are played
by the washtub bass and the scrubboard . . . two
instruments that I introduced to you in my first column
(back in MOTHER NO. 50).
Since that initial article, though, I've picked up a whole
passel of new information on the two homegrown musicmakers
(some of it from readers of this column, and some gathered
during interviews and workshops) . . . and now I'm going to
wrap up all those gleanings into a neat package for you.
A NEW TUB DESIGN
The first item I'd like to pass along was described to me
by a MOTHER-reader, Kevin Potter. He calls the invention an
upright washtub bass . . . and it's essentially a
banjo-style version of the bull fiddle, which uses the tub
for a "pot".
Kevin's creation is a hybrid instrument . . . made partly
from scrounged pieces and partly from elements of a
conventional bass fiddle. The neck of the musicmaker is a
hardwood push-mower handle, and the stand is actually a
chair or table leg. The fiddle's tuning peg, bridge, and
string are the same as those used on a "real" instrument.
(Kevin and I agree that it is possible to make the same
pieces out of any good hardwood scraps ... and that you
could use nylon filament, or even clothesline, for
the string.)
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