63.7 F
Spring Hill
Thursday, November 21, 2024
HomeHumorThe Papa Files: Strings

The Papa Files: Strings

- Advertisement -

After digging out an old song to use in an article a couple of weeks ago, I became re-interested in music. Not listening to it—though I do now and then—but playing the songs I wrote in my late teens and early twenties, as well as those penned during that same span of years by my fellow elder, Stoney. To do so I had to archaeologically locate my old guitar, dust it off, and tune it. Fortunately, I remembered I still had, stashed in a small plastic box, the remains of my guitar paraphernalia: Finger, thumb, and straight picks; A Jim Dunlop winding key; An ancient can of Fast-FRet; A couple of capos; And most importantly a pitch pipe.

I don’t know how old my guitar is. My grandfather gave it to me in 1980, when he was in his mid-70s and he’d had it for years. It’s scarred with chips and cracks and slightly warped at the bridge, but it still sounded good to me. And then I pretty much stopped playing in ’82, and completely abandoned music in ’85. It wasn’t until ‘98 that I picked it up to practice an old song and recorded it on my computer for my own posterity. But then I ignored it again, life was busy with grandkids and Exwork.

When I found my guitar the other day in a closet behind some boxes and a mound of my wife’s old shoes and purses, it looked darker, like the varnish had aged. But most notably the copper wires were greenish-black. I tuned it, but I knew I needed new ones.
My goal now is not to revisit my days of inspiration and hours of playing, but to transcribe a few of my favorite songs onto manuscript, including Stoney’s. To do so I have to play and sing the ditties on a guitar, figure out the notes on my granddaughter’s Yamaha keyboard, and slowly add them to a noteworthy composer on-screen staff. But man, paging through the notebooks, I am flummoxed by the chords we used. What the heck is a F#m6?
But first I needed to replace the oxidized threads of acoustic magic, so I found “All About Music” on my phone. It’s been a long time since I shopped in a music store. I walked in and immediately wanted one of everything. They indeed had new strings for the old guitar but unfortunately, they did not have new fingers for the old left hand. I wonder, does someone make spray-on calluses?

The young guy behind the counter picked up my guitar and quickly fingered off a riff. Then he gave it to an older guy, I think his father, and he played a couple of similar riffs. I’ve never been a riff guy. I was taught classical with my fingernails, but have also thumb-strummed melodies and jammed loudly with a straight pick. One time I tore a pick on the bass E and boy did it untune that string real quick! The father musician told me that he thought my guitar was a Gibson, based on the design of its head plate. Oddly, there is no maker’s identification anywhere. I don’t know where my grandfather got it or possibly had it made.

- Advertisement -

I also bought tuning pegs, aka machines, bridge pins, a new shoulder strap, and finally a stand, so now I can put it anywhere in the way I want without it damaging the walls. Of course, now I have to worry about running into it and tripping over it. Ah, well.
I replaced the strings and now I can play it as best I can. The relic of probably seventy years now looks distemporal with its adornment of new keys and strings and pegs, but I like it. And in fact, I probably need to tune it to the electronic keyboard, just in case my old pipe is slightly off. You know how subtle differences can lead to perplexing errors.

RELATED ARTICLES

Subscribe to our newsletter

To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. For information about our privacy practices, please visit our website.
We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By clicking to subscribe, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.

Most Popular