08-06-2005, 03:34 PM
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#11
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King Of Wishful Thinking
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Philadelphia Suburbs
Posts: 6,669
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I find myself agreeing with UG on this  . Bluegrass is steeped in traditional English and Scottish music. If I remember correctly, there is even some kind of link between the (dulcimer? banjo?) and bagpipes.
From here
Quote:
Although it is an instrument of recent origin, the unique strumstick invented by Bob McNally, (co-inventor of the Martin "Backpacker" travel guitar) is based on the tuning of the Appalachian dulcimer (also called mountain dulcimer), another centuries-old traditional instrument used for performing old timey music. The mountain dulcimer is tuned diatonically; that is, it favors one particular key, usually the key of D, and usually has just 4 strings tuned D-A-D, with irregular-spaced frets. The dulcimer is normally played lying flat on a person's lap or on a table, strummed with a "noter" (a goosequill or flat pick); usually only the paired high strings are fretted, while the lower 2 strings act as drones (said by early Scots-Irish settlers to be reminiscent of bagpipes);
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From here
Quote:
The banjo is an instrument that many people on this list have declared as
having a unique character due to its 5 string drone, which puts it in the
catagory of instruments like bagpipes, strummed dulcimers, hurdy gurdies,
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