After years of trying to play like Bela, I'm finally zeroing in. Tunes that I just couldn't play before (e.g., Whitewater and "Cheeseballs in Cowtown") are coming to my fingers (albeit with work).
In other news, I listened to myself from 1995 and I was surprisingly good. It wasn't as clean as I'd have liked, but I still have the same time. In one case I actually think it's something I could turn into a tune for an album. I feel the urge to go back in time and tell myself "you can't play like Bela yet, but you're still not that bad!" It's strange how we think we suck when we're really not that bad after all.
Of course, I'm trusting that nobody from my university days is reading this and will remind me of just how badly I really did play back then :-)
--Nat
At least you're not getting this enthusiastic about the accordion. Then, well, we'd have to have you put away for your own safety.
I can get you a "Play an Accordion, Go to Jail. It's the Law" bumpersticker, if you'd like. Local music store called "The Starving Musician" prints them up as promos...
--rjray
Re:Could be worse
gnat on 2002-02-26T13:28:55
I'm embarrassed to admit that I'm getting used to the sound of the accordion in Irish music. I even have "The Irish Accordion Masters" CD... if I'm ever raided by the music police, that'll be Exhibit A in my show trial :-) --Nat
Re:Could be worse
pudge on 2002-02-26T15:26:58
The accordion is a fine instrument, in moderation. As long as no one brings one to the next TPC or YAPC, I'm happy.;-)
Speaking of which, I wonder if for the next conference(s) we should pre-arrange a setlist for a Jam BOF?Re:Could be worse
rjray on 2002-02-27T22:27:38
Big difference between the accordion that gets used in Irish music and in some American roots music (16 Horsepower uses an accordion more like the Irish style on some of their tunes). I was talking about the big, wear-across-your-chest, Lawrence Welk, champagne-bubbles variety of accordion you hear in polka music a lot.
Someone brings one of those to TPC, my advice is to wear kevlar under it. It can bring out the worst in people faster than yelling "God save the Queen!" on the streets of Belfast...
--rjray
Re:Could be worse
runrig on 2006-10-12T23:38:56
s/Irish/Scottish/ and Phil Cunningham is awesome. I saw him live, and I swear sometimes it sounded like he was playing fiddle and accompanying himself on piano (and in a way he sometimes was, as he had a midi-synth thingamajig hookup).