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Me and Sylvia on the canal in Qibao (April 2011)

READIN

Jeremy's journal

The very idea of the (definitive) translation is misguided, Borges tells us; there are only drafts, approximations.

Andrew Hurley


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Monday, January 21st, 2019

"Like the reverend King, our Leader Trump has a dream... that one day, in the red hills of Arizona, the sons of former migrant workers and the sons of former ICE agents will be reduced to bartering scraps from the remnants of our civilisation... that one day his 5 little children will have no need to worry about the chaos of society crumbling around them, having retained an army of private goons to protect them..."

posted morning of January 21st, 2019: Respond

Friday, January 18th, 2019

🦋 Tin-can Cello: onstage



The tin-can cello had its first time up on stage last night, when I took it to Brooklyn Raga Massive's weekly concert and open jam at Jalopy in Red Hook.

The concert was an album release party for cellist George Crotty. Great, I'm looking forward to hearing more of his music. The open jam was all I'd been hoping for -- I've been meaning to get to this weekly happening for a long time. Definitely going back.

posted afternoon of January 18th, 2019: 1 response
➳ More posts about The Tin-can Cello

Sunday, January 6th, 2019

🦋 Tin-can cello: a cellist

alessandracello

I had a treat today when Alessandra came over to play a classical piece on the tin-can cello.

posted evening of January 6th, 2019: Respond
➳ More posts about Projects

Monday, December 31st, 2018

🦋 Tin-can cello: A Globe of Frogs, Crawdad Hole



Next up for tin-can cello versions -- "The Abandoned Brain", "You's a Viper", "Drinkin Wine".

posted morning of December 31st, 2018: 4 responses
➳ More posts about Music

Friday, December 28th, 2018

🦋 Tin-can Cello: wolf tone vanquished

The tin-can cello had a strong wolf tone when playing B, especially noticeable on the A string. Last night I fixed it with an improvised wolf tone eliminator:

Wolf tone eliminator

My thinking was that the wolf tone eliminators I've seen for sale are just a method of adding a little mass and damping to the afterlength of the string. I thought a fishing weight would do nicely and not have any moving parts to come loose. It works like a charm -- the B on the A string sounds clear and true, and it sounds fine on other strings as well though there is not as much of a stark difference... I don't hear wolf tone anywhere else.

posted morning of December 28th, 2018: Respond
➳ More posts about Luthery

Sunday, December 23rd, 2018

🦋 Tin-can Cello: happy holidays!

posted morning of December 23rd, 2018: 3 responses

Sunday, December 16th, 2018

🦋 A gourd dilruba: proposal

A dilruba could be built with a gourd body. (note Not nearly enough tension to support a washtub construction, though.) The neck might be cherry -- the shape of it seems pretty easy to build, much much simpler than a sitar neck. (I am thinking here that the neck is not hollow, I'll need to check that.) Friction pegs for the tarif strings could easily be let in to the side of the neck with the string winding on the outside. The bridge will be maple and the nut cocobolo. Or a cocobolo bridge even! That could be made pretty thin.

posted afternoon of December 16th, 2018: 1 response
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Saturday, December 15th, 2018

🦋 Dilruba bridge: set up!

#dilruba bridge, carved #setup

posted afternoon of December 15th, 2018: Respond

Tuesday, November 27th, 2018

🦋 The Metal Soundboard: a proposal for a series of luthery projects

Over the course of building the tin-can cello, I've searched around a few times for precursors [1, 2]. I've been a bit surprised at how few examples of an instrument with a metal soundboard I've been able to find! Here are some projects I've had in mind recently:

  1. The tin-can cello. This is the project most of my blogging has been about recently, a cello with a washtub body, with the base of the tub as soundboard.
  2. A 4-stringed viola da gamba sort of instrument with a wok (bronze) as its soundboard and an arched maple back, and steel strings. I'm not really sure yet of what the scale length will be or what gauge of strings I'll be using. I'm thinking the strings will be tuned to E, A, D, G but I don't know in what octave.
  3. A banjo-style instrument with a cymbal as its soundboard.
  4. A violin made from pounded-out sheet metal (with a wooden neck/scroll/fingerboard). If bronze can be found in sheet form and is strong enough, I'd like to use it. Otherwise steel. [Looks like sheet bronze, brass, and steel can be had from onlinemetals.com]
  5. A (high-tin) bronze urn or vase or bowl (singing bowl?) or bucket, fitted with a wooden neck and bridge, and strings.
  6. An erhu with a coffee can resonator.
  7. A violin (or soprano violin?) with a cookie tin resonator.
  8. A contrabass with a bell as its resonating chamber.

posted evening of November 27th, 2018: 2 responses
➳ More posts about viola d'ottone

Monday, November 19th, 2018

🦋 Tin-can Cello: soundpost

I put a soundpost in! On the bass side, not the treble. It really strengthens and clarifies the bass sound.

The soundpost is cut from the soundpost of the cello that I took the fingerboard from. It is connecting the bridge to the dowel.

cellosoundpostbass

posted evening of November 19th, 2018: 1 response

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