Re: [Harp-L] New Member Introducing Myself
Hi Chris-
Welcome to blues harping!
If you want to jump start your development on harp you might consider
attending a workshop presented by Ronnie Shellist and Adam Gussow in Denver
on Jan 16. I've attached the poster for the event.
Ronnie and Adam are both legendary players and instructors. I'll be there
with the Memphis Mini amps and MM Delay Pedals. It will all happen at
Ziggies in a Denver, where I hosted their famous Sunday night blues jam for
five years. It's gonna be a blast.
Again, welcome to blues harping.
-Rick Davis
Memphis Blues Amps
Sheridan Wyoming USA
On Sun, Oct 4, 2015 at 5:27 AM, Chris Hofstader <cdh@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Hi Everyone,
>
> Iâm an incredibly rank amateur would be blues harmonica player who just
> joined this list. Iâve been playing for something on the order of 25 years
> since I bought Dave Harpâs original âThree Minutes To Blues Harmonicaâ book
> and cassette at Sandyâs Music in Cambridge along with a super cheap Huang
> harp in G. Over the years, Iâve bought a ton of books, tapes and CDs and,
> now, in the Internet age, I enjoy lessons from a bunch of guys on YouTube
> and elsewhere online. I enjoy playing mostly for self satisfaction and have
> only rarely played with other musicians in the past.
>
> The other thing that changed in the years since I first picked up the
> instrument is that I lost all of my vision. I am totally vision impaired
> now, no light, no shadows, nothing. While a lot of the online materials are
> nice for a blind person to use with a screen reader (a screen reader is the
> software we use to have our computers and mobile devices read aloud what
> everyone else would see), most is pretty hard for us. Iâm especially fond
> of Tom Lind and Will Wild but find value in lots of others as well.
>
> The other big change that happened is that I turned 55 in July and have
> decided to mostly retire from my professional commitments and start working
> 20 hours or fewer each week. Thus, Iâll have far more time to play music
> and am planning on starting to attend jams in the three cities where I live
> (Cambridge, St. Petersburg, FL and San Francisco) and maybe do some
> busking. I never expect to be a professional player, I just want to have
> fun, meet fun people and make some music that might bring a smile to some
> strangerâs face.
>
> Iâm an admitted gear geek. I know the first rule of learning to play or
> get better at playing any instrument is all about practice and that the
> hardware is secondary but, as a career engineer, I find the technology
> alluring and my collection of such grows all of the time. The one area I
> might be able to be helpful to others around here might be with getting
> recordings done as, while Iâm not much of a player, Iâve done a lot of
> podcasting work around disability issues and understand both the gear and
> how to get it set up to sound really great. Sorry, the blindness keeps me
> from helping with anything related to video for what Iâll assume is an
> obvious reason.
>
> So, Iâm hear to learn more, maybe meet some people (in addition to living
> in three cities, Iâm traveling a lot and one never knows where Iâll turn up
> next) and hopefully find resources to help take my playing to a level where
> I can have a good time jamming with other peeps at local watering holes.
>
> Lastly, I am looking for a private instructor. Iâm pretty good at the
> technical side of harp playing, I can hit all of the draw bends and make
> decent sounding (to me at least) little solos, 12 bar improvisations mostly
> but would enjoy working with someone who can help move from what Iâve been
> able to learn independently to more formal training. If youâre one who does
> private lessons, please write to me at: cdh@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:
> cdh@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>.
>
> Thanks for having this list available, Iâm grateful to have found it and
> look forward to learning a lot from you folks.
>
>
> Happy Hacking,
> cdh
>
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