Posts tagged: instrument

How to Make a Bongo Cajon

As we’ve discussed before, some musicians aren’t content to just make music; some like to make the things that make music, then use them to make the music! This affects musicians of all levels and in all walks of life. Don’t believe me? Find a professional oboist (or bassoonist) who doesn’t hand-craft their own reeds.  :-)

Anyway, I ran across this great article from our friends at Instructables explaining how to make your own bongo cajon. If you’re a percussionist, especially one who plays la musica latina, you may already be familiar with the concept…but for non-percussionists, a bongo cajon is a cajon (“large box” in Spanish) that produces pitches like a bongo: high and low. This allows the percussionist to play bongo patterns on the cajon. It’s a rather clever instrument and looks like it would be relatively straightforward and fun to make.

Whether making or playing, keep the music coming!

Musically yours,
Mark

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How to Make an Ocarina

There are a number of Part-Time Musicians (PTMs) who enjoy building instruments nearly as much as they enjoy playing them. I’m not gifted enough to do that, although I’ve made several aesthetically-pleasing and functional repairs over the years. :-) For those who need to go deeper, this is for you.

An ocarina is a fun little instrument similar to a very basic recorder. Our friends at Instructables posted this article on how to build one for yourself; pictures and sound clip are included with the instructions. If you’re itching to hit the woodshop and build something musical, this project is much more attainable (for most of us) than attempting to craft your own guitar or violin.

Have you built your own instrument? Drop us a line or leave a comment below. We’d love to share your experiences doing so with your fellow PTMs, whether resulting in triumph or cautionary tale. Sometimes one is just as good as the other…  :-D

Keep playing,
Mark

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Apple iPad as Musical Instrument

As someone who loves both traditional music and technology, I’m excited to see something really bridge the gap…rather than replace active performing with MP3s.  :-|

This video gives an example of what is already possible – and hints at what soon will be – with a 100% technology-based instrument. Interesting that it is accordion-like, using the left hand to “button-push” chords…while using strings (vs. piano keys) for the left. While the video doesn’t show it, I suspect you could also run the headphone output to an amp as well.

Something to think about, and maybe play. If I can find out more from the good folks at Amidio, developers of OMGuitar, I’ll pass it along. In the meantime, whatever you play, keep playing it.  :-)

All the best,
Mark

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Choosing your Instrument

How did you choose your instrument? I’m not referring to the particular axe you play now, or even your first one…but rather, how did you decide which instrument to play in the first place??!?

I’ve been meaning to write on this for some time, but as a multi-instrumentalist who does much better at a couple and only dabbles with others, I wasn’t sure where to begin. Consider this article a first stab at that.

Let’s take a step (way) back in time, to when I was a small fry – fifth grade, to be precise. At that point, I had been taking guitar lessons for over a year…but while guitar was fun, it just didn’t offer the excitement that I had expected. Ah, but when the band instrument expo announcement was made at school, now that was exciting! There’s just something about those shiny instruments that makes young boys go wild.  :-)

From the first time I saw a slide trombone, I knew that was the instrument for me. So cool, the way you can play it just by moving the slide! Yes, from that day on…what’s that you say? I play trumpet? Well, yes. A funny thing happened on my way to becoming a world-renowned trombonist.

While I was standing there staring at the splendiforous trombones, the nice instrument demonstrator came over and popped my fifth-grade bubble. “You’ll never be a trombone player with arms that short. Why don’t you look at trumpets?” Wisdom comes in many forms of packaging, even ugly ones with sharp edges. Going home, I shared this conversation with my parents. Their response? Mom dug around and produced an Al Hirt LP and handed it to me. Before even one side was done, I realized that I was a trumpeter and had always been one; I just hadn’t known it.  :-)

Between Al Hirt and Herb Alpert, I had inspiration enough to carry me for years. Other trumpet heroes of all stripes came later – too many to mention – but all cemented in my mind the “choice” I had made. Which brings me to the primary point: I’m not really sure how much of a choice we make. I often think of the idea within the Harry Potter series of books/movies in which Mr. Ollivander tells young Harry that “the wand chooses the wizard”. Somehow, you just…know.

Skipping over the other instruments I’ve enjoyed playing over the years, my discovery of the bass guitar was a similar affair. After medical issues removed the trumpet from my lips for awhile, I picked up a bass guitar to play around with. Expecting it to be a “filler” instrument, somehow less exciting than I find most six-string playing (a story for another time), I was first intrigued, then enthralled. Bass lines suddenly leapt out of the radio, tempting me with their combination of rhythm, melody, harmony, and overall musical glue holding every song together. Like the trumpet, the bass unexpectedly found me.

I’m often asked by parents how to find the right instrument for their kids. That’s a tough one, but I’d suggest letting youngsters see/hear musical performances of several kinds to see what instrument really catches their attention. It may not be the final stop, and I’d still recommend they give any instrument a year’s honest effort before they “move on” to another…but chances are, they won’t be far off. And that advice doesn’t just apply to kids either; adults typically know (or discover) the instrument they love when they really start to think about it. I had idly thought about playing bass for years before I finally gave it a try. Crazy, isn’t it?

Care to share your story? Please do! You just may inspire a future musician in ways you can’t even imagine. Drop us a line or comment below; you’ll be glad you did.

Keep playing,
Mark

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How to Build a Conga Drum

Some Part-Time Musicians (PTMs) are gadget hounds, but for some, that just isn’t enough. For those really-eaten-up few (!), real instrument nirvana is found in building your own instrument. So…anyone up to building a conga drum?   :-)

Our friends at Instructables have this set of instructions for building your own atabaque, or Afro-Brazilian conga drum. I’ll admit that spending so much time crafting an instrument that could be spent playing it just doesn’t work for me. That said, I know oboists and bassoonists who probably spend more time in a year creating and trimming reeds than this would require, and I don’t even want to think about the time I’ve spent over the years experimenting with various mouthpieces and trumpet accessories…so to each his own. Or as our French PTMs would say, vive la difference!

So what do you think? Ready to head to the shop and start building your next instrument? Drop us a line and let us know what’s on your mind! We’d love to hear from you.

Keep playing,
Mark

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