Archive for the ‘Music’ Category

Our First Day!

Monday, July 22nd, 2019
The Crew

OK, now we will start the ride, well rested and dry because we spent the night at a hotel in Walnut, Iowa. Who could blame us?

The First Meeting Place

Is this a carousel or a merry-go-round? Actually, there’s really no difference between the names although a merrygoround is simply that spinning playground fixture for kids.

Silk Road Rhythms, LLC

Thursday, May 9th, 2019

Here is a bunch of pirates:

Pirates who play music for local belly dance troupes

This band is known in Northern Colorado as the Alexandria Ensemble. Mostly drummers, but then a guitar player on the left and some guy playing a left-handed instrument on the right that the band calls a “tandoori” . No, it’s not a tandoori, but it’s tuned like a Turkish baglama saz.  Nice group picture!

Hurdy Project, part one; the rounded back

Sunday, May 5th, 2019

It all started with an Oud:

Strange little Oud

I made this instrument some 40 years ago just to see what it would be like to put together strips of wood to form a rounded shell resonator like that in an instrument of the Oud type. I generally only saw an Oud in pictures and didn’t have much to go on as the internet was not all that helpful at the time. As I recall, the method used to make this instrument was not very efficient and the instrument itself became a wall hanging decoration and not something I would  normally play.

A plan, A shape, a piece of wire?

So, it looks like I’m going to bend strips of wood. What shape should it be and how much wood do I need? I dreamed up a shape that seemed consistent with Oud style backs and shaped a wire along the edge to get the minimum length required for the wood strips.

The master form!

The shape was cut out from a piece of stiff poster board. This would be the form used throughout the project and would be kept in a secure place so I wouldn’t lose it. It’s labeled 22” OUD in case I decide to make other sizes and shapes. The 22” refers to the minimum wood strip length required.

Shape press form

This is the method I use to instill a uniform shape to the wood strips or perhaps they are called “staves” at this point. Just some 2×4 wood glued together at this point.

Paper Form and solid 3D form

Using the paper master form, the location of the stave cut is determined on the Shape Press Form. Some care should be taken to make sure the master form properly fits into the Shape Press Form.

Oud pattern drawn onto the Shape Press Form

The lines are drawn from the pattern with an additional line about 3mm inside the original pattern to allow for the stave width. This pattern  is then cut on a band saw.

Pressed wood plus a few raw staves

The wood is pressed in the form for about 12 hours or more. The raw staves on the left need to be checked against the 22” OUD pattern to make sure the shape is close to the original design.

Final bending process

The bending jig is used to make corrections to the stave shapes. It can also be used in pre-bending of the wood before placing it into the Shape Press Form. The bending jig is made from a stainless steel drinking cup that is heated from the inside by a 100 watt incandescent light bulb. The wood is first sprayed with water before bending on the jig. The heat from the light bulb in enough to create steam heat at the surface of the wood.

The Staves are prepared for cutting

I saw on some oud making videos online that the staves are first cut into the proper (flat) shape and then bent into the final shape. My experience from 40 years ago told me to first make the curves and then cut the final shape on a band saw. I had a band saw 40 years ago, so that’s probably why it did it this way. In order to establish a proper cut in this manner, each raw stave would have to be attached to a rectangular piece of stiff material so it could back up against the band saw gate the same way each time.  I found that a good stiff material scrap for this purpose is left over political yard signs. Yes, that’s correct! I have used political yard sign wire here for my bass banjo, but now I have found a way to recycle USED POLITICAL YARD SIGNS!

Inside the finished shells

Somewhere I have pictures of the staves being cut. I can’t seem to find them right now. Anyhow, after the staves are cut, the pieces are matched and glued together.

Outside the finished shells

OK, maybe not entirely finished. The smaller one was a ‘test subject’ that might still be used for something. Note the larger one at the top used an alternating wood pattern that looks pretty cool.

Wy Bloco

Sunday, April 21st, 2019

At the Hilton Garden Inn Conference Center in beautiful downtown Laramie:

It’s Bloco em FoCo featuring Marcus Santos

Now with a group of newer members at this year’s Festa Brasil we played to a full house and Marcus had ’em dancing all night!

Then an encore performance with dancer Luciana De Silva

We did our thing with Marcus and then were asked to come back for a little presentation featuring native Brazilian Ms. De Silva (web site here) who easily became the top contender for best dancer with the least amount of clothing.

Mike leading the group playing maybe Lavada or perhaps Ginga

Here we are doing our best to keep up with Marcus. Oh, HAPPY EASTER BTW!

Laughing Buck Banjo

Wednesday, April 3rd, 2019

Banjo talk to the little farmers

A presentation at the Laughing Buck Farm

Here I am showing a tack-head banjo made from a wooden bucket and a broom stick. The strings are not gut strings (but maybe next time I’ll make some) but are weed whacker string.

MUSICIANS LOST IN 2018

Saturday, December 29th, 2018

A RAGBRAI Rider who carried a banjo:

R.I.P. Michael “Moon” Mullen

This guy was the original Ragbrai Banjo guy who rode in 41 Ragbrais. He died of cancer on May 22.  I only started riding in 2005 and there were some years that Moon and I actually got together and did some banjo jamin’ but I never saw him at the old “Peanut Butter Jam”. On this year’s ride, I was approached by a few of Moon’s friends who asked me if I knew him. “We all knew Moon”, I answered.

HOLIDAY MUSIC

Saturday, December 22nd, 2018

Some Live Music around FoCo:

Mary Ellyn at the Cupboard


Tuba Christmas at Oak Street Plaza

Electric Banjo & Drumming at Jim’s house

Music District 2nd

Sunday, September 30th, 2018

The strange case of musical veggies:

The vegetable piano was a big hit

How could the green pepper play a note?

And then there’s the soda straw flutes

OK, this worked at the Rice Science Night and I had left over straws so…

Tube percussion

I like that they had this nice chair to sit in when you played this instrument

Banjo playing frog

I bought this frog for $1 and put a location sensor in it’s nose. The sensor signals go to an Arduino Leonardo that interprets the signal and sends a command to a laptop for processing. The frog “plays” a banjo tune depending where you stand.

DIY TUBES

Friday, September 21st, 2018

I started making this tube percussion machine for the Music District show next week. Here are some pictures w/o any more text:

Watch for posts about this next week.

TOUR DE FAT

Saturday, September 1st, 2018

Hey, this is year 10 for us!

These girls were playing the Surdos

And here is a sample of the bike riders

This year’s pirate ship is bigger!

And there were some interesting out of this world costumes

Of course BLOCO EM FOCO was there!