http://www.purr.demon.co.uk/jack/Music/Rockband/rockband.html
"A Musical Instrument 100 Million Years Old", so I guess it
belongs in rec.music.early?
============== j-c ====== @ ====== purr . demon . co . uk ==============
Jack Campin: 11 Third St, Newtongrange EH22 4PU, Scotland | tel 0131 660 4760
<http://www.purr.demon.co.uk/jack/> for CD-ROMs and free | fax 0870 0554 975
stuff: Scottish music, food intolerance, & Mac logic fonts | mob 07800 739 557
Music With Rocks In? Perhaps alt.fan.pratchett
Or maybe alt.fan.douglas-adams
"the secret is to bang the rocks together, guys"
--
To reply email rafe, at the address cix co uk
Jacey
--
Jacey Bedford
jacey at artisan hyphen harmony dot com
posting via usenet and not googlegroups, ourdebate
or any other forum that reprints usenet posts as
though they were the forum's own
ally
>
> "Jack Campin - bogus address" <bo...@purr.demon.co.uk> wrote in message
> news:bogus-7CDABF....@news.news.demon.net...
>> Buggered if I can figure out where I ought to announce this:
>>
>> http://www.purr.demon.co.uk/jack/Music/Rockband/rockband.html
>>
>> "A Musical Instrument 100 Million Years Old", so I guess it
>> belongs in rec.music.early?
And "swinging harps", yet.
> Take a trip to Keswick, Jack - just down the road from us. The museum has
> a very well preserved set of musical stones, as you can see here.
> http://www.visitcumbria.com/kes/kesart.htm - they even encourage you to
> play on them to your heart's content. Evelyn Glennie did a concert on them
> a couple of years ago (which I missed of course...)
Rock (Harm)on(icon), dudes!
And I though I played some odd instruments (well, one, mainly...)
--
Roland Hutchinson Will play viola da gamba for food.
NB mail to my.spamtrap [at] verizon.net is heavily filtered to
remove spam. If your message looks like spam I may not see it.
I've added that link to the page. It may be another Till Family
instrument - a letter I didn't reproduce mentions another set (in
some way associated with Ruskin) as having been disposed of. Maybe
I should phone the museum and ask where theirs came from. It's a
far more elaborate piece of woodwork than the New York one.
The mountain I mentioned is an extraordinary thing to walk over.
Hundreds of metres of loose slabs going plinkety-plonk under your
feet. The idea of making a musical instrument is utterly obvious
as soon as you encounter something like that.
That's tremendous. Thanks, Jack.
--
Richard Robinson
"The whole plan hinged upon the natural curiosity of potatoes" - S. Lem
My email address is at http://www.qualmograph.org.uk/contact.html
Hi
Isn't there a set at Coniston also??
A year or so ago on TV there was a (regional?) programme actually
called "The World's first rock band" about the very subject - I am
fairly certain the stones were stated as being at Coniston museum.
Regards
KGB
It's great fun to play. You can bash away on it to your heat's content. Next
time I've got time to spare in Keswick I'll bring the Belfagan camcorder and
get someone to film me playing on it... Any requests?
ally
Granite Years?
Boulder to Birmingham?
Like a Rolling Stone?
Stones In The Road?
Heart of Stone?
Harry Stone?
I Am A Rock?
Something by the Stones?
Sticks and Stones is nicely appropriate. or the Bass Rock ?
http://trillian.mit.edu/~jc/cgi/abc/tunefind?P=T%3A.*rock
http://trillian.mit.edu/~jc/cgi/abc/tunefind?P=T%3A.*stone
ally
> Buggered if I can figure out where I ought to announce this:
>
> http://www.purr.demon.co.uk/jack/Music/Rockband/rockband.html
>
> "A Musical Instrument 100 Million Years Old", so I guess it
> belongs in rec.music.early?
Interesting and amusing Jack. I suggest you post it in RMMGA. They'd enjoy
it over there.
CR
Tu es Petrus.
(Posting from rec.music.early, if you couldn't tell.)
Hmm "Take a trip to Keswick, Jack"...
Sounds like the name of a tune.
--
Dominic Cronin
Amsterdam
Rock Around The Clock!
ally
Didn't Bob Pegg write a song about such a 'rock band' on the first 'Mr
Fox' album. 'The Ballad of Neddy Dick' I believe.
--
Chris Morriss
Hi Ally
I'm fettling fine - so is my pack of cats!!!! 8^)
Regards
KGB
>The mountain I mentioned is an extraordinary thing to walk over.
>Hundreds of metres of loose slabs going plinkety-plonk under your
>feet. The idea of making a musical instrument is utterly obvious
>as soon as you encounter something like that.
Just out of interest, Jack, where is it?
--
Molly Mockford
They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety
deserve neither liberty nor safety - Benjamin Franklin
(My Reply-To address *is* valid, though may not remain so for ever.)
Either Stob a'Choire Mheadhoin or Stob Coire Easain, western shore
of Loch Treig (I think the latter - they're about as close as two
Munros are legally allowed to be, I did them together).
The easiest way to collect enough schist for a lithophone would be
to use a boat on the loch rather than lug it all the way to Tulloch
or Corrour. Or possibly a team of donkeys or llamas.
The Till Family's schist was from Skiddaw and around.
The other approach would be leave the stone in place and have a bunch
of players turn up with wooden mallets - ukmf meetup, anyone? The
Northumbrian contingent could hive off separately after selecting
their own set of rocks in funny-F pipe tuning.
(Reminder to self - take wooden mallet on next visit to Skiddaw....)
ally
Sounds like "The Glidders" in Snowdonia. Just looks like some giant
person "hand of God?" dropped their sticks and thats what you get.
To get to the Glidders, go up Tryfan from the road, down the other side,
up the next one and at the top you'll find The Glidders. Alternatively
you can have a really long slow hard slog up through The Devil's
Cauldron to get there.
Stephen
--
Stephen Kellett
Object Media Limited http://www.objmedia.demon.co.uk/software.html
Computer Consultancy, Software Development
Windows C++, Java, Assembler, Performance Analysis, Troubleshooting
Reg Office: 24 Windmill Walk, Sutton, Ely, Cambs CB6 2NH.
>The other approach would be leave the stone in place and have a bunch
>of players turn up with wooden mallets - ukmf meetup, anyone? The
>Northumbrian contingent could hive off separately after selecting
>their own set of rocks in funny-F pipe tuning.
>
Surely they would F-off. (Which is what I've always known that tuning
as.)
--
Dominic Cronin
Amsterdam
> Sounds like "The Glidders" in Snowdonia. Just looks like some giant
> person "hand of God?" dropped their sticks and thats what you get.
>
Glyders please. You'll be talking about Ellie Dear Vower next. And it
was the Devil's Kitchen last time I walked up it.