Posts

The Old Guild

Image
Picture of the "Old Guild" taken about a year ago.  The guitar is about 55 years old.  Not sure of the exact date it was made, the inside label says the guitar was made at the old Guild shop in Hoboken New Jersey.  I acquired the guitar from a friend of mine Dale Miller, a Peace Corps buddy.  He sold it to me when we returned to the states after our service in Peru, which would have been sometime around November/December 1968.  He lived in Washington DC at the time, and I went down to visit him.  The guitar belonged to his brother who no longer wanted it, I was able to get it for $100.  Later during the visit, we went out and we bought the case, another $60 which I really didn't have, but Dale insisted we get the case. The guitar has been back and forth across the county a few times, took it to Canada when we visited back in the early '70s.  When we lived in Rehobeth Mass I used to hang it on the wall of the small cabin we lived in, of course,...

Sunday Slow Jam

November 18, 2019 Yesterday while practicing a small miracle happened, at least it was magical to me.  I was improvising a blues riff, going up and down the neck on the old guild when it happened.  I was capo'd on the fifth fret, just for the hell of it, when all of a sudden, I played a real blues lick.  It was like a flash, and I said to myself, that was really cool, how did I do that.  I remembered what Jimmy used to say, don’t think about each move, just let your fingers play, and well, that’s what they did.  I tried to duplicate what I did, but to no avail, I just played notes up and down the neck.  Maybe someday I’ll do it again.  

Musical Family

Image
11-year-old trumpet player You had to be in the third grade to join the school band in the Plainfield NJ school system.  I decided to take up the trumpet, not because I really wanted to, but because my big brother, Bill, played the trumpet and I wanted to be like him.  He was six years older than me.  My parents weren't sure that was the best instrument for me, something about my lips not fitting the mouthpiece, but since that was what I wanted to do, they let me. Music was a big part of our growing up, but our parents weren't obsessive about it, encouraging, but not insistent that we learn an instrument or become musicians.  Before my dad got married he was in a band called the Merrymen.  But he had to stop playing when he lost all his teeth, neglect I believe, you can't play the trombone professionally with a set of false teeth. He would play once in a while when friends and family came over, but by the time I got to high school, he quit ...

Guitar at 74

Image
GUITAR AT 74 December 2, 2018     Actually, I took up the guitar again last summer when I was a mere 73.   I decided to start playing again avoiding my guitar for some 40 odd years or more.   It was m ore than just avoiding playing the guitar, you would have to add neglecting the instrument as well, as I am amazed that my guitar still plays after all these years sitting in a dark closet. We were well into the Rhode Island summer of 2018 when I decided that I should start playing again.     My brother-in-law Cameron has two guitars and plays them from time to time.    He’s in his late 50’s and learning to play, as is his brother, although his brother, is learning to play the mandolin.   I asked Cameron what type of music his brother plays, and he said he really didn’t know, but I guess that is another story for another time. But to get back to why now after all this time.   Well, I guess I just got a hankering, as Luc would sa...

Gertrude Emma Frisch

Image
My maternal grandmother, Gertrude Emma Frisch.  I hardly knew her, she died of a stroke when I was four years old.  She was making a cake for my brother's birthday and fell over in our kitchen. My brother and sister and I were in the room over the kitchen and heard her fall.  The floor had a crack in it and we looked through that and could see her lying on the floor. She came to live with us for her last year of life.  We made a small half bath in the "backroom", a large porch on the back of our house in Plainfield NJ.  My mother didn't talk too much about her or maybe she did to my brother and sister, or I was just too young to know what they were talking about.  I do know she was from England, married an Austrian who was a commercial artist who had a studio in New York. I don't know how they met, or where, but they were both "artists.  He the painter, she the pianist. The only time I remember her playing the piano was when she came to live wit...

One year later

Image
My sister Harriet, passed away in May 2017.  A few months later we had a memorial for her in Brandon Vermont, a town our grandparents retired to and had a small farm where we all spent our summers.  My brother Bill called me before the event to let me know he wrote a song in her memory and would I accompany him on a guitar.  The words were to the music of Wildwood Rose.  I said sure, even though I had not played my guitar in years.  In fact, I didn't even have my guitar with me.  Michelle and I are living part of the year in Rhode Island, 3000 miles from our other home in Watsonville CA where my guitar was safely resting in a closet, untouched and unplayed for many many years. My brother-in-law, Cameron had a couple of guitars lying around his place, so I asked if I could borrow one to practice some before Harriet's memorial.  After a couple of weeks of reacquainting my fingers to steel strings, I felt confident I could play well enough to back ...