In spite of my tin ear and inability to carry a tune, even
in a bucket, instruments fascinate me.
Mom was a decent pianist and saw to it we had music lessons. Mel, Jan and I gave up the piano in short
order. Walt was pretty good on
trumpet. The music gene apparently skipped
a generation; music lessons stuck for Beth and Shelly and each can play you a
tune or two.
Summer outdoor art festivals frequently included outdoor
music groups with guitars, banjos, and even dulcimers, hammered dulcimers, lutes,
and other folk instruments. Wandering the
booths before a show opened, I occasionally found craftsmen who made and sold
folk instruments that fascinated them. Of
course I could not do them justice. The
thumb piano may just as well have been called an all thumbs piano. I bought them any way; I appreciated the work
and workmanship, and thought I could always find someone who could play them.
At our house that is Tom, who gets a tune out of
everything I’ve brought home. You’ve
already met the flute walking stick. It
was made and demonstrated to me by an artist in New Jersey. I think the walking stick bit was a marketing
ploy; you wouldn’t want to be stuffing plugs of dirt up the end of the
flute. It’s very mellow; Pan would have
liked it in his old age.
The thumb piano is a very old African instrument. Mine has lost its neck thong and been scuffed
around a bit. The tines are set in octaves. Mine (but long since passed to
Beth), is one octave, great for simple mellow melodies. Here is a fellow who uses all his thumbs
beautifully.
I followed the sound of the didgeridoo to the maker’s booth
and listened entranced to the humming sound, rising and falling like waves,
like water, like the wind, like sand through an hour glass. I cannot describe it. Tom, the old coronet player, can made sound
with it, and it’s fun to have in the corner for the kids to try.
I found this legend of the first Didgeridoo
Three men were camped out on a cold night in the outback. One ofthe men told another to put a log on the fire, because the fire was getting lowand it was very cold. So, the other man turned and grabbed a log, which wasawfully light to the touch, for it was hollow. As he went to drop it into thefire, he noticed the entire length was covered with termites. He did not knowwhat to do, for he could not throw the branch into the fire, because it wouldkill the termites, and his friends were telling him to do so because it was socold. So, he carefully removed all the termites from the outside of the log byscooping them into his hand, and he deposited them inside the hollow branch.Then he raised the branch to his lips and blew the termites into the air. Thetermites blown into the air became the stars, and the first Didgeridoo wascreated.
Interesting instruments...
ReplyDeleteI had not heard of a thumb piano and listened entranced. And I love didgeridoo music. I hadn't heard the 'first didgeridoo' story either. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI love the didgeridoo. So mysterious and deep. And that thumb piano is fascinating! I've never even heard of those! And I would be able to play in your All-Thumbs orchestra. I'd play bass. Poorly.
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