Unique Hungarian lap steel
Moderator: Brad Bechtel
Unique Hungarian lap steel
Eastern European builders definitely have their own sensibility and decorative traditions. It's almost like they shot all the parts out of a cannon and this how they landed.
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The back is even wackier than the front! And no, I do not own it - just a pic from the web.
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- Jim Graham
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I would vote for it just being a design feature - an add-on to the traditional markers.
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Just found this on Wiki
A Hungarian Gypsy:
A B C D♯ E F G♯
C Hungarian Gypsy:
C D E♠F♯ G A♠B
E Hungarian Gypsy:
E F♯ G A♯ B C D♯
The structure of this scale is (w = whole-step, h = half-step, + = augmented
2 1 3 1 1 3 1
I also remembered it from “The Guitar Handbook†by Ralph Denyer. ( I bought a copy in Kuwait in 1983) A great book covering a multitude of guitar subjects.
Keith.
Keith.
A Hungarian Gypsy:
A B C D♯ E F G♯
C Hungarian Gypsy:
C D E♠F♯ G A♠B
E Hungarian Gypsy:
E F♯ G A♯ B C D♯
The structure of this scale is (w = whole-step, h = half-step, + = augmented
2 1 3 1 1 3 1
I also remembered it from “The Guitar Handbook†by Ralph Denyer. ( I bought a copy in Kuwait in 1983) A great book covering a multitude of guitar subjects.
Keith.
Keith.
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Re: Unique Hungarian lap steel
It is either strung backwards (to our way of playing) or else it is the left-handed model.
Careful Andy, you may be giving away Trade Secrets.Andy Volk wrote:... It's almost like they shot all the parts out of a cannon and this how they landed.
"For every expert, there is an equal and opposite expert." -- Arthur C. Clarke
- Erv Niehaus
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It's probably coincidence, but the inlays work out to be the same intervals as a major pentatonic scale, starting from the second note of the 5-note scale. So, if a D pentatonic major scale is
D E F# A B;
and, I make a huge assumption that one of the strings on the instrument is an E, then the inlays line up with those notes of the scale. A pentatonic major scale would start over again at the 10th fret and go up from there. This would sort of a be a "mode" of a pentatonic major scale. The intervals are the same.
We do use the pentatonic major and minor scales, both of which use the same notes in the relative minor key, starting at a different point in the scale.
I like Andy's theory that it's just a design feature.
D E F# A B;
and, I make a huge assumption that one of the strings on the instrument is an E, then the inlays line up with those notes of the scale. A pentatonic major scale would start over again at the 10th fret and go up from there. This would sort of a be a "mode" of a pentatonic major scale. The intervals are the same.
We do use the pentatonic major and minor scales, both of which use the same notes in the relative minor key, starting at a different point in the scale.
I like Andy's theory that it's just a design feature.
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