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I started on piano then switched to guitar. David Gilmour and Mark Knopfler made the prospect of putting up with my very old-school piano teacher a non-starter. I wasn't really aware that a thing called a "cello" existed until my teens. Had I known when I was seven, I would have asked for lessons on it instead of the piano. The vocal quality of it easily trumped the polyphony of the piano to my ears...once I knew the damn thing existed. On the other hand, I fiind the Stick/Warr Guitar/touch-style instruments are the most chronically under-exploited instrument ever. A combination of the piano and the electric guitar? Brilliant! How did this instrument not catch on like wildfire? Yet the results have been consistently underwhelming for me, except when I saw Jim Lamphee playing on a London street during lunchtime, which made me really reconsider changing instrument again. Angry Stick Players: let's just agree to disagree on this one. TH On 10/6/07, Paul Mimlitsch <pmimlitsch@mac.com> wrote: > I've always wondered why someone chooses a particular instrument as their > "voice" - multitimbral vs mono timbral - and, based on my own experience >and > conversations with others came to the conclusion (assumption?) that, in a > lot of cases, it has to do with how you hear things/ organize sounds, in > your head. When you think of a melody are you hearing single notes >flowing > one after the other, multiple voices running parallel, or more texturally > (ie: notes stacked on top of each other)? When you pick up your >instrument > do you gravitate towards single note lines or a more chordal approach >and is > this based on preference or the physicality of the instrument? Another > question I should have asked in my original post was: How many people >have > switched instruments to meet their needs. > >