I picked up a Mandocaster on a whim. I consider my myself somewhat beyond a beginner but not quite intermediate, and am looking for a few fun tunes that work well on an electric (so probably not bluegrass). Any suggestions?
I picked up a Mandocaster on a whim. I consider my myself somewhat beyond a beginner but not quite intermediate, and am looking for a few fun tunes that work well on an electric (so probably not bluegrass). Any suggestions?
I struggle with this. I picked up a Fender MandoStrat before the prices went up, and I love messing with it. But even after thinking hard about it I have yet to find a niche where the electric is the go to choice. I am getting good at loud angry fiddle tunes, and a couple of classical pieces I put the fuzz box to, but thats it.
My thinking.
I think this is an important discussion.
For me, "tunes" aren't where it's at – all the Irish Trad I play is on acoustic.
The electric is for rock, jazz and blues, niches where electric guitar wears the trousers.
If you play it like it's an electric mandolin, it's going to sound like an electric mandolin, which can be pretty cheezy (standard G and D chords especially, anything with a high mediant) – if you learn "the chords" of a song but play standard mandolin voicings, ouch. (Western Swing's the exception, of course – Tiny already paved that path.)
mando scales
technical exercises for rock blues & fusion mandolinists
mp4 backing tracks & free downloadable pdfs
jimbevan.com
Tiny Moore Mandolin method has a bunch of tunes in it.
Hi Dave,
I’m getting into electric more these days. My choices reflect my opinion that a solid body electric mandolin (5 string in my case) is always going to sound as much guitar as mandolin.
Two tunes I’m learning just now are both played by Julian Lage ( check you tube ). They are Nocturne and Cryin’. I think they both sound great on electric mandolin.
I also am playing some classical pieces that have been stuck in my mind for decades, Cavalieri Rusticana and Dances With Wolves. Check out The Guitar Corporation on ITunes to see how they would sound. I’ve used them as the basis for learning these pieces.
Regards,
I gig with the electric as much as they'll let me, which in Sydney is more than you think, but never exclusively - I wish I could.
I have a four string.
Firstly, the voicing are fine - it's the strumming - you need to be careful with mandolin rhythm techniques.
Songs that sound great: (and if you want some lessons, DM me...)
Any jazz standard: Fly me to the moon, lady is a tramp, Summertime, Giant Steps, Spain, etc
Laps in Seven - Sam Bush
Stop the Violence - Sam Bush
I saw her standing there
Little Wing
Brown Eyed Girl
California Girls
Funk - stuff like Prince - Kiss, James Brown, Papa's got a brand new bag, Thank U Valentin' me be myself, Rich Girl (Hall and Oates), all work nicely.
Jim Richter's tips and trick for mandolin, available on Kindle and iTunes has some really good stuff.
Chase up Tiny Moore, and Jethro Burns for more jazzy stuff.
Don't be scared to overdrive it, use a way, or a delay. I'm not a fan of modulation - chorus or phaser or flanger on a mandolin doesn't work for me, but they might work for you.
Pretty much, any song you like can be played, but some won't work as well as others... Plug in, turn it up, play. Have fun!
JBovier ELS; Epiphone MM-50 VN; Epiphone MM-40L; Gretsch New Yorker G9310; Washburn M1SDLB;
Fender Nashville Deluxe Telecaster; Squier Modified Vintage Cabronita Telecaster; Gretsch 5420T; Fender Tim Armstrong Hellcat: Washburn Banjo B9; Ibanez RB 5string; Ibanez RB 4 string bass
Pedalboard for ELS: Morley Cry baby Miniwah - Tuner - EHX Soul Food Overdrive - EHX Memory Toy analog Delay
Fender Blues Jr Tweed; Fender Greta;
mando scales
technical exercises for rock blues & fusion mandolinists
mp4 backing tracks & free downloadable pdfs
jimbevan.com
My idea for electric was to use it for chord melody on standards, which is very much a work in progress for me. lol
There's another Tiny Moore book, might still be in print, that I like playing tunes out of on my electric. It's Merle Haggard presents Tiny Moore's Swinging Texas Fiddlin'. It's sort of like playing tunes on a telecaster instead of a D18-unexpected but not bad.
I entirely agree. And that is the problem. In musics where the electric guitar wears the trousers, there is already an electric guitar, or the expectation of an electric guitar. The electric mandolin will always come across as almost a guitar. Much easier to get a guitar, capo high and tune it in fifths.
What Tiny did was really revolutionary. He made a musical space where the electric mandolin is the king. Where guitars are jealous.
I have been exploring the arena of electric folk. (I need another name for it.) My models are a couple of bands from the past, Steeleye Span, and Malicorne. Maybe some Fairport Convention, Pentangle. There is a continuum to explore.
What they did was tastefully incorporate the relative power (and majesty) of electric instruments into a traditional folk arena, and deliver something interesting and great, where every voice was important. But wow, that is a narrow narrow niche.
Some space where loud angry fiddle tunes are not entirely inappropriate.
Jeff, I've spent years going to open mic/blues jams trying to find the electric mandolin's rightful role in that guitar-dominated genre, and feel reasonably successful in having accomplished that holy grail:
Listen to almost any Sting tune – there's a guitar part or two moving around, and there's a keyboard part that just drones a high root and a fifth of the key for the entire song. There's been some songs at jams that I played entirely with one hand, just going D-A-D-A or A-E-A-E or G-D-G-D all the way through, and boy, did that make everything sound cool, just the right amount of the missing spice. To my ears, two guitars and an electric mandolin sound better than three guitars most of the time.
On the other end of the spectrum, there's a whole world of neglected parts at those jams just 'cuz there's no horn section, there's no keyboard player, there's no female backup singers – all those parts are just crying to be played, and they usually sit comfortably in the mando's range.
And then there's this: people don't judge you, they judge the instrument. Play a smokin' solo on the guitar or sax, and folks will say Hey, you're really good. Play a smokin' solo on an electric mandolin and folks'll say Hey, that thing sounds amazing. It's a pretty liberatingly ego-less situation.
One final tip: bring your own amp. Because of the mando's high range, a 15-watt head and a small cabinet (a Celestion Blue's the best, and the cab can be just big enough to contain it) will keep up with those 30-40 watt Fender combos, and it won't take up hardly any room. The benefit is that you won't have to wait your turn using the "house" amps like all the guest guitarists will, and if you're adding just the right stuff, the keyboard drone or the essential horn parts, they'll let you play all night.
mando scales
technical exercises for rock blues & fusion mandolinists
mp4 backing tracks & free downloadable pdfs
jimbevan.com
I agree it doesn’t fit into any conventional music very well, except for Western Swing. And it’s conventional in that genre only because some great musicians played it. I like playing tunes on it anyway. Cheese is good. I have the fender reissue four string tuned down a 5th.
Mark Gunter recently posted pdfs on his website.
http://www.markgunter.net/good_stuff...ndolin-methods
Not all the clams are at the beach
Arrow Manouche
Arrow Jazzbo
Arrow G
Clark 2 point
Gibson F5L
Gibson A-4
Ratliff CountryBoy A
For that good ol’ Celtic Rock groove...mandostrat with auto-wah, slight delay and not sure what else...
https://youtu.be/fiWvXpIQdKk
Folk-rock. "Garry Owen" on low-tuned electric 5-string.
https://soundcloud.com/user-643522979/garry-owen
Mandocrucian tracks on SoundCloud
CoMando Guest of the Week 2003 interview of Niles
"I could be wrong now, but I don't think so!." - Randy Newman ("It's A Jungle Out There")
Talking Heads?
still trying to turn dreams into memories
Bookmarks