Sierra Hull has small hands, but it doesn't keep her away from the octave mandolin. I guess I'll have to come up with a different excuse!
Printable View
Sierra Hull has small hands, but it doesn't keep her away from the octave mandolin. I guess I'll have to come up with a different excuse!
There is no excuse for not playing the OM :cool:
Great way to start my day. Sierra rocks!!!!!!
I saw Sierra Hull in that tour, and on that particular number I was in awe. We had seen her playing wonderfully on mandolin all evening. And I guess I had gotten a little complacent. Then she takes out the octave. Its a great instrument itself and sounds amazing. But her playing, that over the top, as usual, and on an octave... I just sat back in awe. The realization finaly gripped me that there is no connection between what she does and what I do. Its not a continuum where I do that, just slower. Its more like she plays mandolin and I chop chord wood.
I chatted with her briefly after the show at the CD counter, asking her about the octave, and I can't remember a thing she said. :)
JeffD,
Ditto for me. I, too, saw her a few months ago and felt the same way. It's awe-inspiring and somewhat demoralizing all at the same time.Quote:
I saw Sierra Hull in that tour, and on that particular number I was in awe.
The experience did leave me with a case of OMAS that hasn't been remedied as of yet...
Robert
Hi Bernie,
It is a Weber; a Fern I believe. It really does sound rich and full.
Robert
I saw her on 4/21 in West Milford, NJ. It was a small intimate setting and I sat at most 15 feet from Sierra. It was one of the best concerts I've seen. She broke a string on her mandolin during the last tune of the last set and flatpicked a couple of fiddle tunes on guitar for the encore. She's just as good on guitar. The whole band was great.