Re: [Harp-L] Trio Polifonic Harmonica Trio



Me too Gary, though I have an old G chrom somewhere with a cracked comb. I probably just hope that when  I here phrasing woth a fluidity that eludes me, I hope that the player is using an 'easy' position.
RD

>>> "G. E. Popenoe" <gpopenoe@xxxxxxxxx> 2/05/2008 5:40 >>>
Valid point. I only play C chromatic so  get kind of stuck in the thinking
that other instrumentalists use.

On Tue, Apr 29, 2008 at 11:02 PM, Rick Dempster <rick.dempster@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:

> Ah but I did mean 'position'. To say what mode he was playing in would
> explain the musical aspect, independent of what instrument was being used.
> You could play any mode in any key on any chromatic harp, but the breathing
> patterns (which is what interested me) would be different.
> What I wanted to know was: 'What key and on what particular keyed harmonica
> is he playing?'. That translates to 'position', as far as I can see.
> RD
>
> >>> "G. E. Popenoe" <gpopenoe@xxxxxxxxx> 30/04/2008 15:50 >>>
>  Sounds like it is 6/8 or 12/8 time. Something in threes for sure.
>
> When playing chromatic, I don't know if "position" is the best word to
> use as mentioned earlier in the thread. "Mode"  as in "minor mode"
> might be a little more appropriate term even if you change modes by
> playing a scale starting from a different "position"....
>
> Oh hell, use "position" of you want with harp players. With anyone
> else you might want to use "mode."
>
>
>
> Gary Popenoe
>
> On Apr 29, 2008, at 7:27 PM, Ken Deifik <kenneth.d@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > Rick wrote:
> >> That's wonderful! I'll have to wait till I'm at home to work out
> >> what key/position he's in. That's really fluid and rhythmic
> >> simultaneously. Is that a known melody they are playing? I'm
> >> assuming it falls into the Klezmer bag, no?
> >
> > It doesn't sound very much like any Klezmer I've ever heard.  If we
> > were all specialists in eastern European music I'm sure we'd hear
> > some connection.  Since it's a Romanian group, perhaps it's some
> > form of Romainian folk music or dance music.
> >
> > The famous Klezmer song is "Romania Romania" but the Klezmer cats I
> > know make fun of the old people that request it.  It's the "When the
> > Saint's Go Marching In" of Klezmer -- the one Klezmer song the
> > civilians know.  And that song sounds nothing like this wonderful
> > harmonica band.
> >
> > However, Klezmer is absolutely expected to grow and change, so maybe
> > this is what it sounds like in Romanian now.
> >
> > Before he actually became a Klezmer musician himself, Andy Statman
> > studied with a bunch of Eastern European music masters who were all
> > living in dire poverty in NYC.  Communism was still the law of the
> > land in their countries, and cultural anhilation was the order of
> > the day, so they'd all blown their homes.  Each master represented a
> > completely different form of Eastern European music, and confusing
> > one with any other would have been as weird to them as confusing
> > Bluegrass with 70's Funk.  One afternoon Andy took me on a musical
> > tour of Eastern Europe with his amazing record collection, and he
> > kind of opened my eyes, if only for that day.
> >
> > At one point he played me several different kinds of music that were
> > native JUST to Istanbul, which I realize is not in Europe.  Each one
> > sounded really different from the others.  Amazingly, he had 78's of
> > music that was only played in Istanbul gay bars.
> >
> > Has anyone counted the time signature of this tune of Trio Polifonic?
> >
> > K
> >
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