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Posted

Hehe - Well, the things that are wrong are;

 

1. No-one is actually playing an instrument. They're all just strumming like air guitarists. The rope attached to a bucket sure isn't going to make much noise.

2. The singers are all miming. The soundtrack is an original Stanley Bros soundtrack from the 1950's or 1960's.

3. The microphones aren't real, they're made out of wood, and painted to look like mikes!

4. The video has been made from two separate videos, and then they were spliced! Watch the dogs disappear and appear out of nowhere, as they pass the split frame border!

  • Informative 1
Posted

I originally picked the microphones and the music overdub. I thought there was something odd about the dog but didn't look at it close enough to see the splice. Rewatching it, I could see the little dog appear from the middle of that short post.

  • Agree 1
Posted

That banjo in the clip is a five string banjo. Standard tuning for them is open G which is GDGBD. Open G tuning on a six string guitar has the sixth string tuned to D, so it's DGDGBD instead of standard tuning EADGBE. Keith Richards uses open G tuning on most of his guitars and removes the sixth string completely to get it out of the way, in effect making them the same as a 5 string banjo. It seems to work for Keith.

  • Informative 1
  • 2 years later...
Posted

Had an interesting morning this morning. I was at a funeral recently and bumped into an old mate I hadn't seen for many years. In the time since I last saw him, he's retired and has been making acoustic guitars for a hobby. Today I went around and he showed me a few of the guitars and where he makes them in his shed. He's a carpenter/builder by trade so already had quite a lot of the tools and some of the required woodworking skills.

 

They're nice guitars, mostly all dreadnaughts, and all Australian timbers. He uses a lot of silky oak on the bodies and grey gum for necks and other parts. I seem to remember the Australian brand Maton using Australian timbers.

  • Like 4
Posted

The old mate mentioned in the previous post who is building guitars showed me a reject. It was the back and sides (no top) of an acoustic guitar. He'd built it in humid weather and when it dried, the timber back section shrank and the wood grain separated in a lot of areas. You could hold it up to the light and see light through it. A hard way to learn a lesson; a lot of work had gone into it.

Posted
23 hours ago, willedoo said:

Had an interesting morning this morning. I was at a funeral recently and bumped into an old mate I hadn't seen for many years. In the time since I last saw him, he's retired and has been making acoustic guitars for a hobby. Today I went around and he showed me a few of the guitars and where he makes them in his shed. He's a carpenter/builder by trade so already had quite a lot of the tools and some of the required woodworking skills.

 

They're nice guitars, mostly all dreadnaughts, and all Australian timbers. He uses a lot of silky oak on the bodies and grey gum for necks and other parts. I seem to remember the Australian brand Maton using Australian timbers.

Any photos?

 

Posted
1 hour ago, Jerry_Atrick said:

Any photos?

Sorry Jerry, I never thought to take any at the time. He's sold a couple but said it works out to about $1 per hour for the work that goes into it.

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