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#1
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There really is such a thing as an electric kazoo!
http://folk-instruments.musiciansfri...ID=354 905425 I can die and go to heaven now. |
#2
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Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~ wrote:
There really is such a thing as an electric kazoo! http://folk-instruments.musiciansfri...ID=354 905425 I can die and go to heaven now. The reviewer says the tone quality is bad. But there is no inherent reason why one couldn't do a good job of miking a kazoo. Maybe with a good quality condenser mike? The first step is finding a good quality kazoo that has a pleasing sound. (If there is such a thing.) |
#3
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On May 3, 9:59*pm, "Bill Graham" wrote:
Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~ wrote: There really is such a thing as an electric kazoo! http://folk-instruments.musiciansfri...ns-Hummbucker-... I can die and go to heaven now. The reviewer says the tone quality is bad. But there is no inherent reason why one couldn't do a good job of miking a kazoo. Maybe with a good quality condenser mike? The first step is finding a good quality kazoo that has a pleasing sound. (If there is such a thing.) Its the last part of your statement that made me laugh my butt off when I found it. Of course someone (Maybe Weird Al) would want one but it never crossed my mind someone would actually market one. |
#4
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Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~ wrote:
On May 3, 9:59 pm, "Bill Graham" wrote: Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~ wrote: There really is such a thing as an electric kazoo! http://folk-instruments.musiciansfri...ns-Hummbucker-... I can die and go to heaven now. The reviewer says the tone quality is bad. But there is no inherent reason why one couldn't do a good job of miking a kazoo. Maybe with a good quality condenser mike? The first step is finding a good quality kazoo that has a pleasing sound. (If there is such a thing.) Its the last part of your statement that made me laugh my butt off when I found it. Of course someone (Maybe Weird Al) would want one but it never crossed my mind someone would actually market one. Basically they are a modifier of the human voice or hum. The idea has a lot of potential when viewed in that light. Perhaps a fully electronic kazoo could be made that turned ones "humm" into a caruso like aria....:*) |
#5
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On May 3, 10:12*pm, "Bill Graham" wrote:
Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~ wrote: On May 3, 9:59 pm, "Bill Graham" wrote: Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~ wrote: There really is such a thing as an electric kazoo! http://folk-instruments.musiciansfri...ns-Hummbucker-.... I can die and go to heaven now. The reviewer says the tone quality is bad. But there is no inherent reason why one couldn't do a good job of miking a kazoo. Maybe with a good quality condenser mike? The first step is finding a good quality kazoo that has a pleasing sound. (If there is such a thing.) Its the last part of your statement that made me laugh my butt off when I found it. Of course someone (Maybe Weird Al) would want one but it never crossed my mind someone would actually market one. Basically they are a modifier of the human voice or hum. The idea has a lot of potential when viewed in that light. Perhaps a fully electronic kazoo could be made that turned ones "humm" into a caruso like aria....:*) That is a healthy and positive attitude (while I laugh thinking of the silliness you can half with one ;-) For me, just the word kazoo conjures up a group of images including rubber chickens and whoopy cushions |
#6
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Wasn't a kazoo used by Peter Paul and Mary in
"San Francisco Bay Blues", semi-seriously? Presumably they had to deal with how best to mic it so it would sound decent. "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote: : On May 3, 9:59?pm, "Bill Graham" wrote: : Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~ wrote: : : There really is such a thing as an electric kazoo! : : http://folk-instruments.musiciansfri...ns-Hummbucker-... : : I can die and go to heaven now. : : The reviewer says the tone quality is bad. But there is no inherent reason : why one couldn't do a good job of miking a kazoo. Maybe with a good quality : condenser mike? The first step is finding a good quality kazoo that has a : pleasing sound. (If there is such a thing.) : Its the last part of your statement that made me laugh my butt off : when I found it. Of course someone (Maybe Weird Al) would want one but : it never crossed my mind someone would actually market one. |
#7
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Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~ wrote:
For me, just the word kazoo conjures up a group of images including rubber chickens and whoopy cushions You can buy kazoo records on Yazoo Records at Wazoo Records. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#8
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On May 4, 9:20*am, (Scott Dorsey) wrote:
Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~ wrote: For me, just the word kazoo conjures up a group of images including rubber chickens and whoopy cushions You can buy kazoo records on Yazoo Records at Wazoo Records. Damn. I searched "kazoo" and didn't see any. Yazoo's site showed only a Jesse Fuller reference IRT a "Masters of the Country Blues" video collection. The Lyons Hummbucker rig looks to be definitely urban, post-war. Chicago Blues Kazoo? --D-y |
#9
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On May 3, 10:59*pm, "Bill Graham" wrote:
The reviewer says the tone quality is bad. Yes, I am really saddened by the poor tone quality of modern kazoos. |
#10
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In article ,
vdubreeze wrote: On May 3, 10:59=A0pm, "Bill Graham" wrote: The reviewer says the tone quality is bad. Yes, I am really saddened by the poor tone quality of modern kazoos. I don't know about the electric kazoo, but I have repaired electric bagpipes. They were kind of interesting, really just a bunch of CMOS logic and a reference oscillator. The whole notion of electric bagpipes is fascinating; unlike most other electric instruments, they are electrified in order to make them quieter. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#11
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
The whole notion of electric bagpipes is fascinating; unlike most other electric instruments, they are electrified in order to make them quieter. --scott Is the apocalypse on us? Who in their right mind would want to make bagpipes quieter? g Mike |
#12
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On 5/4/2011 10:41 AM, --D-y wrote:
Yazoo's site showed only a Jesse Fuller reference IRT a "Masters of the Country Blues" video collection. Jesse Fuller was a hoot. I'll bet a video is worth seeing. When I was in college, our folk music club presented him in concert and he had so much haywire that the fire marshal almost wouldn't let him go on stage. The Lyons Hummbucker rig looks to be definitely urban, post-war. Chicago Blues Kazoo? Now here's a kazoo for you: http://i.imgur.com/il56w.jpg The Mattel Bath House Brass was, as you'd expect from a toy company, sold as a toy, but it's a fabulous kazoo. It came in three sizes (this is the smallest), all of which look like plumbing parts. A friend of mine (he was a science writer) wrote to Mattel, convinced them that it was a perfectly respectable musical instrument, and they donated 25 of them to the local neighborhood classical music consortium that he worked with. They played the first movement of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony on 20 Bath House Brass kazoos and a washtub bass. It was recorded but I have no idea where the recording is today. The pieces snap together and when the concert was over, he collected the instruments that the players didn't want to keep for themselves, and put them together as a kazoo about 12 feet long that he could wrap a few times around his body. The Bath House Brass was in and out of the market in less than about two years. I wonder if it's worth a small fortune today. Can't tell. There aren't any for sale on eBay at the moment. But just in case, I'll consider offers over $20,000. -- "Today's production equipment is IT based and cannot be operated without a passing knowledge of computing, although it seems that it can be operated without a passing knowledge of audio." - John Watkinson http://mikeriversaudio.wordpress.com - useful and interesting audio stuff |
#13
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On May 4, 4:11*pm, Mike Rivers wrote:
On 5/4/2011 10:41 AM, --D-y wrote: Yazoo's site showed only a Jesse Fuller reference IRT a "Masters of the Country Blues" video collection. Jesse Fuller was a hoot. I'll bet a video is worth seeing. When I was in college, our folk music club presented him in concert and he had so much haywire that the fire marshal almost wouldn't let him go on stage. The Lyons Hummbucker rig looks to be definitely urban, post-war. Chicago Blues Kazoo? Now here's a kazoo for you: *http://i.imgur.com/il56w.jpg The Mattel Bath House Brass was, as you'd expect from a toy company, sold as a toy, but it's a fabulous kazoo. It came in three sizes (this is the smallest), all of which look like plumbing parts. A friend of mine (he was a science writer) wrote to Mattel, convinced them that it was a perfectly respectable musical instrument, and they donated 25 of them to the local neighborhood classical music consortium that he worked with. They played the first movement of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony on 20 Bath House Brass kazoos and a washtub bass. It was recorded but I have no idea where the recording is today. The pieces snap together and when the concert was over, he collected the instruments that the players didn't want to keep for themselves, and put them together as a kazoo about 12 feet long that he could wrap a few times around his body. The Bath House Brass was in and out of the market in less than about two years. I wonder if it's worth a small fortune today. Can't tell. There aren't any for sale on eBay at the moment. But just in case, I'll consider offers over $20,000. -- "Today's production equipment is IT based and cannot be operated without a passing knowledge of computing, although it seems that it can be operated without a passing knowledge of audio." - John Watkinson http://mikeriversaudio.wordpress.com- useful and interesting audio stuff Pasadina California has a parade on the day after Thanksgiving called the do da parade and on the same streets the Rose Parade. There are always a few kazoo bands in that one. I'm going to have to pay more attention next time I'm out for it. |
#14
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On May 4, 4:28*pm, Mike Clayton
wrote: Scott Dorsey wrote: The whole notion of electric bagpipes is fascinating; unlike most other electric instruments, they are electrified in order to make them quieter. |
#15
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On May 4, 11:04*pm, vdubreeze wrote:
On May 4, 4:28*pm, Mike Clayton wrote: Scott Dorsey wrote: The whole notion of electric bagpipes is fascinating; unlike most other electric instruments, they are electrified in order to make them quieter. --scott Is the apocalypse on us? Who in their right mind would want to make bagpipes quieter? g Anyone within earshot? I think the only reason anyone sits around and listens to bagpipes is for the laugh they get when the guys come marching out in skirts. |
#17
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vdubreeze wrote:
On May 3, 10:59 pm, "Bill Graham" wrote: The reviewer says the tone quality is bad. Yes, I am really saddened by the poor tone quality of modern kazoos. Just pay several hundred dollars for one made of some exotic African wood, and see how much the sound improves.... |
#18
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
In article , vdubreeze wrote: On May 3, 10:59=A0pm, "Bill Graham" wrote: The reviewer says the tone quality is bad. Yes, I am really saddened by the poor tone quality of modern kazoos. I don't know about the electric kazoo, but I have repaired electric bagpipes. They were kind of interesting, really just a bunch of CMOS logic and a reference oscillator. The whole notion of electric bagpipes is fascinating; unlike most other electric instruments, they are electrified in order to make them quieter. --scott A couple of our accordion players in my dance band have electronic accordions. They sound the same, (to me) but they are a lot lighter in weight. |
#19
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Mike Clayton wrote:
Scott Dorsey wrote: The whole notion of electric bagpipes is fascinating; unlike most other electric instruments, they are electrified in order to make them quieter. --scott Is the apocalypse on us? Who in their right mind would want to make bagpipes quieter? g Mike That's like an electronic steam calliope...:^) |
#20
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Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~ wrote:
On May 4, 4:11 pm, Mike Rivers wrote: On 5/4/2011 10:41 AM, --D-y wrote: Yazoo's site showed only a Jesse Fuller reference IRT a "Masters of the Country Blues" video collection. Jesse Fuller was a hoot. I'll bet a video is worth seeing. When I was in college, our folk music club presented him in concert and he had so much haywire that the fire marshal almost wouldn't let him go on stage. The Lyons Hummbucker rig looks to be definitely urban, post-war. Chicago Blues Kazoo? Now here's a kazoo for you: http://i.imgur.com/il56w.jpg The Mattel Bath House Brass was, as you'd expect from a toy company, sold as a toy, but it's a fabulous kazoo. It came in three sizes (this is the smallest), all of which look like plumbing parts. A friend of mine (he was a science writer) wrote to Mattel, convinced them that it was a perfectly respectable musical instrument, and they donated 25 of them to the local neighborhood classical music consortium that he worked with. They played the first movement of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony on 20 Bath House Brass kazoos and a washtub bass. It was recorded but I have no idea where the recording is today. The pieces snap together and when the concert was over, he collected the instruments that the players didn't want to keep for themselves, and put them together as a kazoo about 12 feet long that he could wrap a few times around his body. The Bath House Brass was in and out of the market in less than about two years. I wonder if it's worth a small fortune today. Can't tell. There aren't any for sale on eBay at the moment. But just in case, I'll consider offers over $20,000. -- "Today's production equipment is IT based and cannot be operated without a passing knowledge of computing, although it seems that it can be operated without a passing knowledge of audio." - John Watkinson http://mikeriversaudio.wordpress.com- useful and interesting audio stuff Pasadina California has a parade on the day after Thanksgiving called the do da parade and on the same streets the Rose Parade. There are always a few kazoo bands in that one. I'm going to have to pay more attention next time I'm out for it. I wonder if they have bass kazoos? |
#21
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On May 6, 1:16*am, "Bill Graham" wrote:
Scott Dorsey wrote: In article , vdubreeze wrote: On May 3, 10:59=A0pm, "Bill Graham" wrote: The reviewer says the tone quality is bad. Yes, I am really saddened by the poor tone quality of modern kazoos. I don't know about the electric kazoo, but I have repaired electric bagpipes. They were kind of interesting, really just a bunch of CMOS logic and a reference oscillator. The whole notion of electric bagpipes is fascinating; unlike most other electric instruments, they are electrified in order to make them quieter. --scott A couple of our accordion players in my dance band have electronic accordions. They sound the same, (to me) but they are a lot lighter in weight. Hey now! Don't go picking on accordions. (this message brought to you from Acadiana LA) |
#22
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On 5/6/2011 1:43 AM, Bill Graham wrote:
I can envision a top end kazoo made of birds eye maple with a sax-style read that sells for 100 bucks..... Is this just a wild dream? It just wouldn't work out right. The tone of a wooden reed and body just isn't right. During the jug band revival of the 1960s, people were arguing about whether Ace hard rubber combs or plastic combs were better, and whether wax paper or a new dollar bill made a better reed. Look at what happened to the ocarina (sweet potato) I played as a kid... It turned into a recorder made of fine wood and selling for over a hundred bucks. The recorder and ocarina are really different instruments. Wooden recorders came first (it's a very old instrument) and plastic ones that we played in elementary school (and the Tonette, a small cousin) came much later. -- "Today's production equipment is IT based and cannot be operated without a passing knowledge of computing, although it seems that it can be operated without a passing knowledge of audio." - John Watkinson http://mikeriversaudio.wordpress.com - useful and interesting audio stuff |
#23
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In article , weg9
@comcast.net says... wrote: Wasn't a kazoo used by Peter Paul and Mary in "San Francisco Bay Blues", semi-seriously? Presumably they had to deal with how best to mic it so it would sound decent. "Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~" wrote: On May 3, 9:59?pm, "Bill Graham" wrote: Danny ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~_/) ~~ wrote: There really is such a thing as an electric kazoo! http://folk-instruments.musiciansfri...ns-Hummbucker-... I can die and go to heaven now. The reviewer says the tone quality is bad. But there is no inherent reason why one couldn't do a good job of miking a kazoo. Maybe with a good quality condenser mike? The first step is finding a good quality kazoo that has a pleasing sound. (If there is such a thing.) Its the last part of your statement that made me laugh my butt off when I found it. Of course someone (Maybe Weird Al) would want one but it never crossed my mind someone would actually market one. I can envision a top end kazoo made of birds eye maple with a sax-style read that sells for 100 bucks..... Is this just a wild dream? Look at what happened to the ocarina (sweet potato) I played as a kid... It turned into a recorder made of fine wood and selling for over a hundred bucks. Why not a kazoo? I have a finely crafted hardwood kazoo. It's flat and wide with dual whizzers - one on each side. Sounds about the same as a regular kazoo, but it's easier to fit into a harmonica brace so I can play it and guitar at the same time. Art Cohen Alpenhof Studio |
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