Buen Camino - solo cittern
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 20 ก.ย. 2024
- Buen Camino, composed and performed by Louis Bingham, solo cittern. This track and others can be bought via Bandcamp: louisbingham.b...
This piece was inspired by and written in memory of a six day walk from Vigo to Santiago de Compostela, through the beautiful Galician countryside along the final stretch of the ancient pilgrim's route known as the Way of St. James. The melody is somewhat influenced by the Xota, a prominent form of dance tune in the traditional music of Galicia.
Recorded at The Barn Studio by Peter Bingham.
Video edited by Louis Bingham. Thanks to Griselda Sanderson for the use of her computer and video editing software.
Louis plays an archtop cittern by Fylde, tuned GCGDG with octave strings on the lower three courses. louisbingham.com/ / louisbinghammusic
Brilliant playing....fabulous sound.
Ah thanks very much
While I was watching the video, my wife actually came down the hall into the study to see what I had on. Very impressive indeed.
Glad to hear it, cheers!
Beautiful!
Cheers
Beautifully written and played. Thank you!
Many thanks
Lovely sound.
cheers!
Subscribed!!! Absolutely magnificent.
Great, thanks
Absolutely superb. Beautiful tone, crisp and clear plus played amazingly well. Subscribed.
Thank you
This is absolutely amazing. This coming from a luthier and very seasoned musician.
Many thanks Russ!
This is amazing. Beautiful. One of the best things I've ever heard
Thanks Marty, you're a gentleman!
beautiful playing. looks like a nice flyde
Cheers! Aye it was a lucky find
Very nice
Bravo! Excellent tune and gorgeous sound!
Thank you!
Yes, the sound is gorgeous.
Beautiful! Phil recommended your blog post about the Camino. It’s nice to know it’s possible to enjoy the delights of Galician music without walking the last 100K too :) Now all that’s left is to learn to dance Xota!
You deserve far more subscribers Louis. Hoping to hear duets with pipes or fiddle.
Many thanks. Well slowly but surely, feel free to spread the word. I do know some fine pipers and fiddle players...
Lovely! :)
Very beautiful balanced tune , fantastic ❤
Cheers Kieron
Beautiful piece and playing :) What tuning are you using? Is that your preferred tuning on the cittern (I am new to the instrument)
Thank you. I use GCGDG from bass to treble, and yes this is pretty much the only tuning I use for cittern
Amazing! What model is that?
Many thanks. This is a Fylde cittern with an arched cedar top, their standard model, built in 2006.
Is that an octave mandolin?
A cittern, similar scale length but five courses
I’m curious, in Irish music, when referring to the cittern, is that the bouzouki or just Irish music played on any of the cittern family? I’m learning the bouzouki and want to have my knowledge and learning sources straight. Thanks for any help
Cittern is the instrument I'm playing here. There are so many different versions of this type of instrument out there but the main difference between this and any sort of bouzouki is that it has a couple more strings and a shorter neck.
@@LouisBinghamMusic fantastic. I think that answers mt question well. Thank you.
Good Bouzouki playing on this Cittern, not utilizing the lowest course at all...
Interesting point. The bass course is in there but pretty much always as a drone and to reinforce the root chords in this case
This sounds lovely Louis... thanks for sharing the tuning. Don’t suppose you’d let us know the string gauges you use? 👍
Thanks Clint, glad you like it. Of course, I often get asked that actually. Gauges as follows...
G: 24w 56w
C: 16u 48w
G: 10u 26w
D: 16u 16u
G: 12u 12u
The wound strings are Phosphor Bronze, and I get them as a custom set from Eagle Music Shop in Huddersfield who I'd highly recommend. www.eaglemusicshop.com/
@@LouisBinghamMusic thanks. I know Eagle music! You seem to have overcome the problem of intonation with the two differing gauges - it just has a beautiful chiming sound. I’ll look into it! Keep up the good work👍
@@clintspoon3765 Hi Clint. I've recently looked at the standard gauges for these citterns, and the 56 and 46 wound strings are actually a fair bit higher than recommended, usually it would be 46 and 35. I've not had any issues since stringing this way for 5 or 6 years, but you may not want to put the tension up that high, I'm thinking about taking them down a bit.
@@LouisBinghamMusic thanks! I haven’t changed mine so not a problem. Thanks for letting me know👍
@@clintspoon3765 No worries. I've been doing some string tension calculations and I think there's room for compromise here. If for instance you used a .052 and a .040 for your lowest G and C, then your total cumulative tension for all strings would actually be lower than that of the gauges given for a unison set on Fylde's site, .052 and 0.42 would make it pretty much the same. The only difference then is how the tension is spread across the instrument. With the unison gauges there is more tension in the middle course and less on the outers, with the gauges I've used it's spread more evenly across the board. Next thing is for me to ask some luthiers about how that distribution might affect things. I'll let you know where I get to
Also, it looks like you have strings 3,4,5 in octave; is that a custom made set or is it readily available as is?
That's right octaves on the lowest three courses. It's a custom set, I order them from Eagle Music Shop in Huddersfield who make them
@@LouisBinghamMusic Thank you so much. I contacted them but without the gauges, they can't make the string set. Would you have the gauges on yours? (Although my cittern scale is 20 inches, yours looks longer) There must be a way to figure this out :)
@@KVR-we8oeaye it'd be easier if you send me an email then I can be a bit more specific. music.bingham@gmail.com
Вульф рок))
One of my favorite tunes !! Well done my friend !!!