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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsIt's an old guitar. Gibson-Classical. Nylon strings. No input for an amp.
I bought it, probably 1960. I played folk music stuff with it. I was better than the average bear but still not very good. Kingston Trio, P.P.M. and so forth. I didn't take lessons but I could tune it, using the tone on a landline phone to give me B flat (I think it was). I couldn't play too many chords but I was good at devising my own "fakes." My most "famous" was Scotch & Soda.' I made a $ thousand or two over a few years of part time gigs. And ya gotta remember that this was before Reagan. A thousand then, was worth a $ thousand. And I did ok. --- Irish tenor. How could I lose?
It was good, also at attracting dates. "It Was A Very Good Year." "Do You Want To Know A Secret?" "Monday, Monday" were winners. This was good, until the Beatles came on the scene. Folk music died out and my skills were no match for the newer music.
Over the years, I would play from time to time, at request of friends or my kids. My voice is now shot. I can't hit the notes I used to be able. The guitar hasn't been played in several years and when I sing now, it's mostly at Christmas Eve with my family. I'm 81. So my story goes back a bit.
But back to the guitar. It's going to my grandson. He's 11 and his school music teacher says he is a prodigy. He plays violin, tuba, trumpet, keyboard and trombone. My daughter asked if I would gift him the guitar. I took it to the repair shop where the technician is a luthier. For $190, a crack will be repaired, new strings and so forth. He will get it on November 15th.
My hope is that he will play Bluegrass with his violin. My heart would sing if he would play some Vassar or Curly Ray Cline. But he hates Bluegrass. Still, he's only eleven.
It reminds me of a high school classmate. Excellent musician. Plays with several orchestras. But the gigs are few and far between. To make ends meet, he plays in Bluegrass bands. He's won contests in southern state festivals. but Gene hates Bluegrass.
Maybe my grandson will turn out the same. I don't care if he likes Bluegrass. Just give me some of that "high, lonesome". sound.
Arne
(3,602 posts)What a great thing to do.
griffi94
(3,830 posts)Who knows what music your grandson will like in the future.
Plenty of 50+ country musicians were punk rockers in their youth.
The guitar sounds like an amazing instrument.
Permanut
(6,639 posts)I'm seventy eight, same era, nylon string guitar (easy to play), same music. Grandson is 20 and in the Marine corp., has played an electric guitar. but he's kinda busy these days. My guitar is somewhere in the garage, has been for 30 years. My fingers don't work as well as they used to, but that's okay.
Thanks for the trip down memory lane.
RainCaster
(11,545 posts)That may pique his interest in this beautiful classic instrument.
GReedDiamond
(5,371 posts)Hotler
(12,168 posts)3Hotdogs
(13,400 posts)I hope to see Hayde Bluegrass Orchestra when they tour U.S. again.
Drum
(9,776 posts)3Hotdogs
(13,400 posts)Maybe I will put some effort into this.
Drum
(9,776 posts)Its far from the first post of yours which has piqued my interest!
ProfessorGAC
(69,889 posts)Depending on the model, that guitar carries a value of $800-2,000.
With the repair, maybe 80% of that.
Pretty nice gift!
I don't play nylon string, strictly steel string.
Like your friend, (and your grandson) I play several instruments, but those you don't blow into.
Well, I can play flute a little.
Here's hoping your grandson takes to the guitar. It's great to hear about kids interested in playing music. Too many feel it cuts into their video game time.
3Hotdogs
(13,400 posts)community colleges), I enrolled in a school that taught how to run IBM tabulating machines. I was top of my class. To this day, I can't understand why everyone in the class didn't score, 100%. Anyway, there were notes on the school's cork board about employers looking for people with my newly acquired skills. One employer was two blocks from the school. I took my certificate and was immediately hired at the magnificent pay rate of $45.00 per week. A few months later, I had enough to pay cash for the guitar.
The most fun for me, was Sundays, during the summer months. There was a group of people who brought guitars, Congo drums, and even a bass to the beach. The bass player was a professional classical musician and also played weddings and such.
After one Sunday afternoon, I was invited to play at a summer rental house in Bay Head, N.J. For three years after, I was given a free room in the house as "house musician" plus all the beer I could drink - which wasn't much, free food and thirty weeks of the most fun I have had in my life.
It was during this time, that the guitar got scratched and nicked and assumed its own character.
Yes, I hope my grandson gets as much fun out of it as I did.
ProfessorGAC
(69,889 posts)...at 19, when I graduated from college.
At that point, I had been playing piano for over 14 years, 10 of them in jazz.
I wanted an instrument I could carry, but decided that what I knew of chord construction would be useless on a horn.
I didn't pick guitar, guitar picked me.
I've played >2,000 gigs in my life, plus over a hundred jam nights.
75% of those gigs were as a multi-keyboardist, though I played some guitar even in those bands. I played bass probably 20 of those.
It was just a hobby, but pretty lucrative.
Today, I have a piano, 14 guitars, a bass, 3 amps, 2 electronic keyboards, 4 tone modules, a small PA, and a recording system. Only 2 acoustic guitars were bought with other than band derived $$$, and those were replacements for guitars that didn't age well, both after I quit performing.
I still play everyday, piano, guitar or both. Hope your grandson can enjoy playing as long as I have. I'm at nearly 64 years!
Iggo
(48,268 posts)retread
(3,824 posts)I have a nylon string guitar. Bought it in hopes my arthritic fingers would be less painful.
1. Changing strings is different. Not any more difficult than steel string, but there is the dreaded learning curve.
2. Strings are generally classified as low, medium, or high tension. Of course those terms are NOT standardized.
3. Different core materials are another variable. Nylon, composite, or fluorocarbon.
With all that variability it is essential for a nylon string guitar player to learn how to change strings. When you
can do that it is much easier to experiment and find the correct strings for your situation.
DFW
(56,540 posts)I was part of a trio that included a classically trained violinist from eastern Holland, a banjo player from Holland's west coast who had never been to America, and then me, an American used to playing Grateful Dead and Doors cover bands, as well as Leo Kottke 12 string solos, as well as Russian and Balkan music in college (balalaika, tamburitsa, etc.)
We called ourselves the Holland-Amerika-Lijn (Holland-America Line), and, predictably played all kinds of music, having fun in all genres:
Irish:
https://soundcloud.com/user-227049517/old-mother-flanagan
Bluegrass:
https://soundcloud.com/user-227049517/bending-the-strings
Russian
https://soundcloud.com/user-227049517/cossack-cavalry-songs
Hungarian
https://soundcloud.com/user-227049517/magyar-tanc
Balkan
https://soundcloud.com/user-227049517/balkanplatte
Drunken Hiccups
https://soundcloud.com/user-227049517/drunken-hiccups
3Hotdogs
(13,400 posts)I have uncorrectable haearing loss and that one fit best into the spectrum I best hear.
DFW
(56,540 posts)I scored it from memory from a medley of Serbian and Croatian tunes we used to play when I was in the University of Pennsylvania Balalaika Orchestra. I played ALL the tracks on that one except the violin, which I dont play: guitar, bass, two tracks with a bisernica (small Croatian tamburitsa) and a mid-sized tamburitsa. The overdubs only took a few hours, since I knew the music cold, and the longest task was teaching it to the violinist, but he was a very fast learner.
It freaks me out to think I recorded that 42 years ago!!