Celtic Bouzouki
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Celtic Bouzouki
A couple of years ago I decided that I needed a different way to make some music. After some searching I came across a truly magical instrument, the Irish or Celtic Bouzouki. From what I understand, the Irish people took the Greek Bouzouki and flattened out the back creating a long scale mandolin type of instrument. There are sveral popular tunings. I tend to use GDAD and GDAE. Yes you read that right - it is a guitar tuning upside down. This took a bit of getting used to with chords, note reading etc. I also use ADAD after reading that Beth Patterson used this and it is a fabulous tuning for drones. My current instrument is a 26.5" scale Trinity College, although I would like to go with a shorter scale made by Gerandt with a 23.5" scale - pretty close to my Jaguar
Check out Beth Patterson:
and Dominique Riviere:
Anyway here is a pic of mine:
Check out Beth Patterson:
and Dominique Riviere:
Anyway here is a pic of mine:
I'm not sure about a ranking per se but I know it's used a lot as accompaniment for vocals and as a lead instrument - to my ears I hear a powerful, magical, almost addicting kind of sound - I like mandolins but the bouzouki covers all the bases from its own range thru mandola thru mandolin depending on where you capo it. Incidentally if you really want to see something amazing check this guy out:Dave wrote:Really nice! Don't know much about Bazoukis - would you say these are more truly a celtic traditional instrument than say a mandolin?
4 balalaikas on one mandola:
http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=4+b ... ORM=NVPFVR
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Lovely - working on this tune as we speak. When we go to a Renaissance fair this year, I was thinking of packing the bouzouki & playing it in the fair grounds for fun. It works well with this sort of music toolaterallateral wrote:Here's one unaccompanied.
[youtube][/youtube]
Definitely an interesting sounding instrument. I bet it would do really well in a Bluegrass context, full on flatpicked, Maybelle Carter style.
Hehe, 23 years ago a guy signed my high school yearbook writing "To Andi, the guy who plays a mean mandolin". I'm far from well-versed in the instrument compared to when I took two years of lessons from the phenomenal EVAN MARSHALL back in middle school, but to say the least, it made picking up Irish bouzouki a very easy shift and a lot of fun.
The big inspiration for me was seeing a contemporary "Celtic" band play in Eastbourne when I visited the UK back in 1999. The Mandolin player in the group also had a gorgeous archtop 10-string(5 course) cittern made by Fylde, and the sounds he was getting were quite enamoring, with a nasal-thinbody kind of timbre yet with the chime of so many octaves together. A few years later I ended up with a 26.5" scale 'Zoook over here made by the same factory that did the Trinity College models when they were still MIK.
Runs, drones, and the like with the open tuning are fun, and if you've got a folky band with another acoustic player on board, you can sound neato and have a lot of fun both doubling and contrasting parts. If you get a long scale one, however, simply because of the huge space between frets it's easy to find yourself thinking you're George Harrison stuck in one key while playing "unlabeled world music" pentatonic melodies over drones and a few stabs at non-existant ragas. Not much more to add, they're enjoyable to have around.
The big inspiration for me was seeing a contemporary "Celtic" band play in Eastbourne when I visited the UK back in 1999. The Mandolin player in the group also had a gorgeous archtop 10-string(5 course) cittern made by Fylde, and the sounds he was getting were quite enamoring, with a nasal-thinbody kind of timbre yet with the chime of so many octaves together. A few years later I ended up with a 26.5" scale 'Zoook over here made by the same factory that did the Trinity College models when they were still MIK.
Runs, drones, and the like with the open tuning are fun, and if you've got a folky band with another acoustic player on board, you can sound neato and have a lot of fun both doubling and contrasting parts. If you get a long scale one, however, simply because of the huge space between frets it's easy to find yourself thinking you're George Harrison stuck in one key while playing "unlabeled world music" pentatonic melodies over drones and a few stabs at non-existant ragas. Not much more to add, they're enjoyable to have around.
Actually I employ several different tuning hi to low EADG, DADG, and DADA. I have so far dived into Irish, Normandy, standards, surf, and yes, the ever popular fun to play pseudo raga drones. I do love them all.ultratwin wrote:Runs, drones, and the like with the open tuning are fun, and if you've got a folky band with another acoustic player on board, you can sound neato and have a lot of fun both doubling and contrasting parts. If you get a long scale one, however, simply because of the huge space between frets it's easy to find yourself thinking you're George Harrison stuck in one key while playing "unlabeled world music" pentatonic melodies over drones and a few stabs at non-existant ragas. Not much more to add, they're enjoyable to have around.
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