Query failed: connection to localhost:9312 failed (errno=111, msg=Connection refused).
It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Subscribe to our Patreon, and get image uploads with no ads on the site!
Base theme by DesignModo & ported to Powered by Vanilla by Chris Ireland, modified by the "theFB" team.
Comments
Yeah your right, Frankie IS doing some interesting stuff there - with his l/h fingers.
Thats partly why I posted it, I have been trying to find a way to play this (Scots / Irish) traditional dance music that is more in keeping with the (predominantly monophonic) single line melody instruments that it's traditionally played on - fiddle / flute / whistle / bagpipe chanter etc.
The standout thing that caught my ear when I first heard him was - he's playing rolls and even crans etc, some of the flavoring / seasoning that distinguishes 'Gaelic' music. Guitarists in general are reticent to learn this stuff other that the occasional triplet - thats why I call virtually all attempts by guitarists to play this genre 'celticana' as with the marketing of americana is bits of various American folk and traditional music bundled and marketed - it's made up.
Guitarists playing this music fall into to categories - mostly so called fingerstyle players sound like they are trying to mimic a harp or play a simplified / pseudo classical guitarists arrangement or a mixture of both at once - or they flatpick, which because they don't play the applicable ornamentation ends up sounding like dumb'd down bluegrass - and so we have 'Celtic Guitar'.
For anyone interested heres a very basic introduction to (Irish) ornamentation - (grace notes).
http://www.irishworldacademy.ie/inbhear/volume-1/n-keegan/v1-i1-n-keegan-02.html
Maybe the guitar just isn't a good vehicle getting the nuance of this information across?
Music is a language and like all languages its' lexicon expands and is added too with time. Just look at how Jazz evolved over the 20th Century. If I want to sing an English Folk Song I don't see why it is necessary to sing it like I'm from the South West, so I can get an authentic folk vibe.