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IF YOU COULD SEE WHAT I HEAR

911 WHERE’S YOUR EMERGENCY

MY WIFE IS HAVING A BABY AND I DON’T KNOW WHAT TO DO

OK STAY CALM I AM GOING TO TELL YOU WHAT TO DO

IF YOU COULD SEE WHAT I HEAR

I HAVE HEARD THE FIRST BREATH TAKEN BY THE NEWBORN BABY

I HAVE HEARD THE LAST DYING BREATH TAKEN BY SOMEONE

I HAVE HEARD THE PLEADING CRY OF SOMEONE IN NEED

I HAVE HEARD THE AFTERMATH OF NATURES FURY

IF YOU COULD SEE WHAT I HEAR

CHORUS

I HAVE HEARD JOY , PAIN SORROW AND DESPAIR

I HAVE HEARD LOVE , HATE AND ANGER ALL IN ONE CALL

AT THE END OF EACH DAY I GO HOME WITH THE SOUNDS OF THE DAY STILL FRESH IN MY MIND

AND THE NEXT DAY PUT ON THE HEADSET AND DO IT AGAIN

911 WHERES YOUR EMERGENCY

MY SON HAS BEEN SHOT

I HAVE HEARD THE DESPAIR OF A MOTHER WHOSE SON IS DYING BY HER SIDE

I HAVE HEARD THE GRIEF OF A SON WHO HAS FOUND HIS PARENT HAS DIED

I HAVE HEARD THE RELIEF WHEN SOMEONE BEGINS BREATHING AGAIN

I HAVE HEARD THE CRIES OF CHILDREN LEFT ALONE AND SOMEONE IN THEIR HOUSE

IF YOU COULD SEE WHAT I HEAR

I HAVE HEARD THE CALL OF OFFICER NEEDS HELP

I HAVE HEARD THE CRYING OF THE ASSAULTED WIFE

I HAVE HEARD THE DESPAIR OF AN ENDING RELATIONSHIP

IF YOU COULD SEE WHAT I HEAR

CHORUS

I HAVE HEARD JOY , PAIN SORROW AND DESPAIR

I HAVE HEARD LOVE , HATE AND ANGER ALL IN ONE CALL

AT THE END OF EACH DAY I GO HOME WITH THE SOUNDS OF THE DAY STILL FRESH IN MY MIND

AND THE NEXT DAY PUT ON THE HEADSET AND DO IT AGAIN

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Cigar Box Guitar Quote of the day

Bill Coliins said this, I thought paraphrased it would be a great write up for inspiration to post over here.

"There's a certain rawness to a homemade cigar box guitar. It's a sound that has grit. There is an unrefined quality that you don't find in guitars being made in a factory. Cigar Box Guitars have a ruff, dry attack and an unruliness to them. 

A lot of cigar box guitar builders today try to fix and correct the nuances of a homemade guitar, and there is definitely a place for that, but I don't think a {cigar box guitar} needs to be completely balanced in tone and playablity from end to end to be a great guitar.

Some of the best notes of a cigar box guitar may be a standard guitar's worst.  Some might say it's what gives a cigar box guitar its character."

There is always another point of view.....

"I don't play cigar box guitar, I use tin cans"

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Summer of '18 - Life On The Road

So...summer's well on, and it's been an amazingly warm one...and for me an exhausting one.   I know people think that being a professional musician is one long round of cool gigs, adulation, alcohol and drugs...but there's more...and less to it than that. Finding the cash for many tanks of diesel, worrying about whether there's a parking place near the gig, figuring out the logistics of loading out 500kg  of gear every night and keeping it safe, and not getting busted by the German Autobahn Polizei on the road. Having the right paperwork, earning some cash, a lot of heavy lifting and clean living are essential to make a success of it.

Early on in the year  I was very pleased to be asked to do a cigar building workshop as a pre-amble to a gig supporting Brooks Williams at the Old Courts in Wigan. Brooks is a top notch American player, and after my daughter Anne and myself had finished the "make and play" workshop in the afternoon, Brooks very kindly did a "how to play" session for the participants.

Anne taking charge of soldering the pickups at our Wigan workshop

Brooks always promotes my guitars, and uses them in his live performances, so it's great to have made the connection with him a few years back.

Brooks Williams at Wigan with one of his ChickenboneJohn guitars

On a much lower level in terms of profile and numbers, a week later I did a workshop and gig in North Devon with Hollowbelly...at a very rural location and all very low key, but an enjoyable event nonetheless for us and the participants. We treated it as a warm up for a the big event of the season, the Aldstadt Fest in Saarbruecken, Germany.

Me and Hollowbelly had been invited by Faban Fahr, the organiser of the German CBG Festival to take part, on the back of our previous appearances at the Pleutersbach CBG Festival. We knew it was going to be a pretty big deal...around 15 street gigs for the both of us over 3 days, and some big names on the main stages, with Thomas Blug and Friedel Geratsch fronting Garage 3, a cigar box guitar led band. Freidel was in the German hit parade with his band Geiersturtzflug back in the 70's, and Thomas Blug is an international bona fide guitar hero - this was serious company, so we knew we had to be on point for the whole weekend. On our way over there, we stopped over at the Ibis Hotel at the Calais Eurotunnel terminal...what a strange experience that was. I have never seen so many policemen in one place - it was obviously the base for the CRS (commonly referred to as the French riot police) operations for protecting the tunnel terminal - the car park was full of police motorcycles, cars, paddy wagons, trucks and vans. It really brings home what a huge problem dealing with the current immigrant situation is, to need so many people and resources on an ongoing daily basis. At least we thought the van should be pretty safe, but nevertheless we took all of our vital and expensive gear out of the van and up to the hotel room.

Kaltenbach, a laid back street venue.

In front of the cathedral, pulling a crowd as usual.

 

Street corner cafe "Kartoffel", at night this was a real hotspot gig!

As usual, the real pressure with city centre events is the stress of finding the venues, sorting the hotel, finding a place to park the van, where to unload, how to get the gear to the venues and so on, and with a very busy schedule we had to have all this sorted so that we could do our job of delivering around 15 performances each.  After the non-stop pressure of Saarbrucken, we had a long journey south for a couple of gigs arranged by our good friend Susi, in the beautiful Danube valley, just over the border from Switzerland. So on Monday morning we were on our way south, and ready for a couple of relatively quiet days.

At Hausen im Tal we were doing a private concert in a former 4 x 4 vehicle workshop, which we thought would be a small family and friends event, but turned out to be a pretty lively affair. We slept on the concrete floor of the workshop after the gig, but it's a great relaxing place to be for a few days - the Danube valley is so beautiful.

View from the balcony of Susi's house..over the hill is Switzerland

Relaxing on the deck at Susi's

Albstadt cafe "Juwel" was curious event...a very cool first floor room, pretty large and a combination of cafe bar and antique shop... with a mobile cafe truck in the courtyard. They called themselves "the biggest living room in Albstadt", which felt about right.

The curious and groovy "Juwel" cafe in Albstadt

I opened for Hollowbelly as usual, but it felt like a really tough crowd, they weren't hostile, just a bit quiet and reserved. I really sweated to warm the room , but felt it was an uphill struggle, exchanged a few works with Hollowbelly in the break about it, and he went on, a proper trooper as per normal. It all went down fine, enlivened by the house "interpretive dance troupe", a couple of good-natured stoners, but the proof of the pudding was in what we earned. This was a no fee guaranteed gig, so we were relying on what people put in the hat. Despite our misgivings, for a Wednesday night gig we were  very well rewarded financially (and I sold two guitars!), so we figured they must have enjoyed it. The following day we headed north on a long long drive to Belgium for Muddy Roots Europe.

We got settled in on Thursday night and on Friday morning set up my marquee for trading. We had a quick visit to Brugges as it's only 15 minutes away, and Hollowbelly hadn't seen the city before. We had a walk round the impossibly scenic old town centre and had a bit of lunch. Afterwards we dropped in to the amazing Basilica of the Holy Blood. To our surprise, we arrived just as there was to be short service of veneration, where a glass vial containing the blood of Christ is brought out and the congregation has the opportunity to go up to the altar to place their hands over the sacred relic...and we duly joined the queue and did the religious observance bit... all very interesting and moving, whatever your view on these things is.

Lunch in "Little Venice", Brugges.  Mussels, chips and a good Belgian beer.

Hollowbelly had a Saturday afternoon performance, so I was on hand just to take care of the gear, and deal with any emergencies. He broke a string, so I had to rush onto the stage, take his guitar, go back to the stall, put a new string on it, tune it and get it back. As I was running out of the tent I heard him say "No pressure, you've got  two and a half minutes to fix it while I do the next song! "Being next to the main tent at Muddy Roots meant that we could hear, if not see most of the acts, but the one act we did make sure that we saw was Reverend Beatman's band "The Monsters"on Saturday night. I did a pretty good trade selling cigar box guitars, and it was good to catch up with old friends, but the one notable absence was Sunny, the bass player with Mack Drietens, who had died suddenly a couple of months back. He was an irrepressibly good natured guy, and was at pretty much every gig in Germany that me and Hollowbelly had played over the past 2 or 3 years. On Sunday morning, the "Gospel Hour" was dedicated to him, and it was a strange and touching occasion...I brought out bottles of Kahlua and vodka, someone else found some milk and paper cups, and we shared a round of White Russians, Sunny's favorite cocktail, which I'd tried for the first time at Muddy Roots a few years back.

Sunday morning Gospel Hour. Here's to Sunny ..."'l'll Fly Away, Oh Glory..."

The journey back turned into a bit of a nightmare - it's not far, but on arrival at the tunnel terminal (after trying  to negotiate the streets of a Calais suburb which had road diversions due to a local cycle race), it was obvious that there were some very serious problems at the EuroTunnel terminal.

On the way to the terminal were the now usual grim warnings on the illuminated motorway gantry signs "Pedestrians in the roadway", meaning that you should anticipate the possibility of being ambushed by desperate illegal immigrants. I mused on whether I'd have the nerve to keep my foot on the gas if faced with this sort of trouble, and think on reflection I'd have to keep the hammer down. It's my livelihood, in the van are all my working tools and the takings for two weeks work, nobody is going to take that off me. It's a brutal approach, but the accepted wisdom is that people will jump out of the way rather than being run down by three tons of van moving at 130kph, no matter how desperate they are.

We couldn't get near the check-ins, and all traffic was being diverted to temporary holding pens.  We'd arrived quite early, it was scorchingly hot (and there's no air-con in my van) and the prospect of a very long and agonising wait looked on the cards. Apparently there had been some power malfunction and there was no information to be had about what would happen and when it  might be sorted. We both got a really bad feeling about this, so a couple of phone calls home, a bit of internet searching and we decided to bail out and try and get a ferry crossing, despite the added cost and inconvenience. We reckoned we might be stuck at the tunnel for hours or even a full day, so we negotiated our way out of the thousands of vehicles which were stacking up and shot  across to the ferry terminal. It was all very friendly  and not too costly considering, although it did seem to take ages to get onboard. It was a stressy way to end a hard tour.

Back in the UK it was time for Birmingham Jazz Festival, and a tough one for me as I had to do it solo, as my usual harmonica player Dave Smith was at another festival, so I was faced with the prospect of 4 solo gigs over 2 days, all double sets of  3/4 of an hour each. I had a mixed bag of venues - a trendy lunchtime cafe, a local library (absolutely packed out!), a shopping mall busking session and a noisy city centre bar to round things off with a swing.

First gig at the Birmingham Jazz Festival, at The Boston Tea Party.

This year, Glastonbury was on a "fallow" year, so WOMAD, World Music And Dance was the obvious choice for us to have a go at. It wasn't an easy choice, as there was Lunar Fest on our doorstep  which we'd been invited to, Deershed in Yorkshire (they asked me 3 times!!!), and a few other viable alternatives such as Cambridge Folk Festival. Anyway, we decided to go for WOMAD, and what a rotten decision that turned out to be. It was very expensive, 60% more than Glastonbury as a trader, for around 1/6th of the audience, but we reckoned it would be "our crowd", the demographic would be just right..after all, being The Guardian's favorite festival, it looked like a good choice. Well, how wrong we were...we were allocated one of the worst pitches on site, a little dead end spot with no foot traffic, and the punters...they were the most self-centred, tight-fisted miserable shower of sh*te that we've ever had the misfortune to encounter. Don't get me wrong, there were some lovely folks out there who came to see us, shoot the breeze with us and buy stuff, but in the main, nobody wanted to spend money, they wanted free entertainment and no personal engagement. There were lots of people wearing "Bollocks to Brexit" stickers, but  seemingly nobody understanding that the traders such as us are part of the backbone of small businesses who pay our income tax and VAT to help keep our country afloat. I had to try and keep my cool as one customer was asking for a 20% discount after I'd already thrown in a free slide and guitar lead in the deal..this sort of thing is demoralising, and as a neighbouring trader said, she felt "devalued" as a business and an artist having to put up with this sort of treatment. Very few people were willing to spend even a couple of quid with us. I felt for the people running the Henna art stall next to us, they were very experienced festival traders, and had tried five times before getting a spot at WOMAD. Their basic charge was £10 for henna tattooing..and people were coming up and asking "What can I get for £3?" - this was typical of the appalling attitude of so many of the public.  I tried drumming up trade by playing my heart out in front of the marquee, pulling a crowd and entertaining them for a few songs, and then they would all just gaze at their shoes and slip away without even a thank you. If this is representative of modern UK, no wonder the country is f*cked. I felt so incensed that I made that very point over the mic when I was playing. The neighbouring African drum shop caught this and said to me that I had to tell it like it was. To make matters worse, I was asked to stop demoing my guitars, as it was disturbing the participants at an "egg shaker" percussion workshop. This was a free workshop that they were running for the punters, and I'd paid a lot of money to be there, had my sound gear approved by the event....yet I had to be quiet. I had this again, and had knock it on the head for a Palestinian singer who was doing some sort of presentation to a handful of people in one of the adjoining tents. The whole event had a depressing self-righteous air to it, everything was so worthy and right-on that it seemed to be almost a caricature of itself. I'd obviously mis-calculated or mis-read the potential customers, but we were served up with a lousy spot to work from which was unforgivable...such a contrast to Glastonbury where on both occasions we had a great trading spot, and were even featured in the official progamme as No. 4 on "37 things to see and do at Glasto".

WOMAD...absolutely packed out with potential customers

After a  day of zero action on Thursday, Hollowbelly phoned me to say he'd got something important on his plate  that meant it looked like he couldn't make it to do his bit front of house pitching to the crowds, but I told him not to worry, as it was going  to be a quiet one,  and that me and Anne would be able to manage. He obviously felt very awkward about this, but I told him business is business, and if there's something in prospect, he had to go for it.  It's always best to be straight with people, and we know oneanother well enough for this to be OK. As it turned out,  that was a good thing, as sales were particularly poor and I would have struggled to pay him a proper wage. I'm sure plenty of businesses would have been delighted with our trading figures, but we are hard-nosed about things - exposure is all well and good but breaking even is not an option, we need to be able to pay ourselves a wage and turn an honest profit.

WOMAD wasn't all bad, but it was really hard work

We managed, contending with almost no foot traffic and very changeable weather, and toughed it out until the final Sunday night. By then my daughter and me had drunk all the beer (as opposed to Glastonbury last year when we'd got loads left even with 3 of us), so we were well p*ssed off and ready to just get away from the damned place. We put our money where our mouth was, went for a final stroll around the place and spent a good chunk of money with a great jewellery stall down by the main arena, and treated ourselves to pulled pork and dirty fries with gravy, putting a bit of money back where it belonged, in the hands of a few other hardworking people. On Monday morning we took down the stall, got loaded and away from there and were home by early afternoon.

So that was my summer season. Looking back it's hard to believe I actually managed to do all that stuff, a lot of hard miles and a lot of gigs. It's not an easy way to make a living, but it's the only one I've got.

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If you could see what I hear

This is a song I am working on about being a 911 dispartcher

If you could see what I hear
the 911 dispatcher story
911 where's your emergency
My Wife is having a baby and I dont know what to do
Ok, stay calm I am going to tell you what to do
If you could see what I hear
I have heard the first breath taken by the newborn baby
I have heard the last dying breath taken by someone
I have heard the pleading cry of someone in need
I have heard the aftermath of nature's fury
If you could see what I hear
I have heard love, hate and anger all in one call
I have heard joy,pain, sorrow and despair
At the end of each day I go home with the sounds still with me
And the next day put on the headset and do it again
911 wheres your emergency
My son has been shot
I have heard the despair of a mother whose son is dying by her side
I have heard the grief of a son who has found his parent has died
I have heard the cries of children left alone and someone is in their home
If you could see what I hear
If you could see what I hear
I have heard love, hate and anger all in one call
I have heard joy,pain, sorrow and despair
At the end of each day I go home with the sounds still with me
And the next day put on the headset and do it again
I have heard the officer needing help
I have heard the crying of the assaulted wife
I have heard the despair of an ending relaionship
At the end of each day I go home with the sounds still with me
And the next day put on the headset and do it again
If you could see what I hear

Danny Gordon 8/9/2018

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its happened again

So I watched gitty gang for the first time. What a kick such a great show .

 now I happened to cacth ben and his Hobo guitar.

omg I have been stung. ijust have to build one of these.

Any place I can find dimensions or anyone may have them

would be helpful .  Thank you Tommy

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Old Time Blues on Cigar Box Guitars

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Do you like Cigar Box Guitar music?

I have downloads and you can listen to vintage and authentic slide and blues guitar played only on 3 and 4 string cigar box guitar,

Check out the music at the website https://www.reddogguitars.com/ I will also be putting a new album out with amped up gritty raw Blues! I will keep you guys posted!

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Art Credit ; Dave Lynas

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How to Build a Homemade Amp

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I am updating the website  Radio-Guitar-Amps.com and wanted to share some information to help you get a great sound out of your cigar box guitar.

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I also found this info and though you guys might enjoy reading it.

The Pignose Story According to Richard Edlund (Pignose co-inventor)
Wayne Kimbell and I were partners doing graphics and photography for Rock & Roll artist during the '68-'69 era. My friend Warren Zevon was recording his second album at Wally Heider's studio with a Peavey's amp turned up to 11 to get feedback and he was making enemies in nearby sessions.  I had seen a 5 watt radio amplifier at Pacific Radio and the idea hit me right there. I made the first Pignose in an English Leather cedar men's cologne box. 
At that time we were living in our storefront studio on Melrose Avenue in East Hollywood. Wayne paid for a Copyright attorney and he gave us enough to make about 65 Pignoses. We gave them to some of the most famous musicians of that era, including Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, The Beatles, The Eagles, The Who, and many others.
The first production Pignose model was debuted publicly at the 1973 NAMM Convention in Chicago. Now known as the "Legendary 7-100," the amplifier is still in production today. It has also found a role in many recording studios. It has been used on records by Joe Walsh, Eric Clapton and many more...and as they say rest is history!
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https://www.cbgitty.com/amplifier-kits-parts/2-5w-artec-amp-circuit-board-with-pre-wired-leads/

That is a great start for the first timer, and if you felling frisky, there is higher power options and speaker combos out there for the next level late night madman experimentation. 

Well, it's time for me to get back to the shop.....hopefully this info inspires you to try building your own amplifier, for either a kit or hacked radio body. Homemade amplifiers are a perfect match for cigar box guitars.

If you would like to read more information on the subject

you can visit the website https://www.radio-guitar-amps.com/

Watch this video and give it a try, you'll have a blast!

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October Club Outing Lunch&Antiques

We are planning an off site club outing sometime in October. The club will provide food&drink at local establishment and the group will leisurely wander around a dozen huge antique shops in the town of Alton IL. One of the few places on earth we can still respectfully haggle. Here's a few store fronts.

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Why CBG's Part 2

 Well the 1 Hundred Proof guitar was matched with it's new owner last night. James was very surprised when he saw it.

9353901679?profile=originalEveryone that was there was just in awe over this little CBG. Made me feel really great. When James handed it back to me and said here you play it, I was kinda hesitate on doing so. I said to James what my dad had always told me, "When a person gets a new guitar always let them play it. Let them give the guitar its soul and song." James looked at me and said, "I have never though of it that way.

Hillbilly%20Dobro.mp3

The mp3 file above was played on the original double neck that Jams had built. I will get a mp3 of the new guitar as soon as I can. Hope you like it.

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Why CBG's?

 Well to start off with I'm not much of a blogger but I will try to say something every so often.

 I have been asked several times "Why CBG's?" I played guitar all of my life until I got, Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy, CIDP for short. Not going into a long meaning of it, I have lost the ability to grip the neck of a guitar. I thought my music was over except for running sound and doing some small recording work.

 A good friend of mine and the lead guitar, vocal for a band called 1 Hundred Proof that my son plays bass in built a double neck one out of a old silverware box his Granny gave him. He wrote a song called "Hillbilly Dobro" and I was hooked. This has been a few years back. I never did it. Don't know why. I had a great wine box to build a double neck but just never built it.

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 I have never had a good place to do woodwork and still do not. I live in a small apartment on the second floor and have a porch that overlooks the parking lot. This is my workshop now. The landlord is not keen on this but she kinda overlooks it for now.

9353900895?profile=originalIt has been 100 degrees outside for the last week so work has been little to none.

More later...

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Putting Your Neck Out There

You have heard the saying that you are PUTTING YOUR NECK OUT THERE. It is a metaphor that deals with making yourself vulnerable, like a turkey. We know what happens when a turkey puts his neck out there and …wack…well, you get the idea. Somethings making yourself vulnerable open you up to new possibilities. Five months ago, I was contemplating building a DIY guitar builder’s hobby shop in my garage. Now I am the Proprietor and Builder of Delta Groove Guitars. What an amazing 5 months it has been. I had to take my woodworking skills, my limited social media, camera, and marketing knowledge, fashion them into an operational company. But not any company. A company that would carry on the name and reputation that Darren Dukes, the founder and previous owner of Delta Groove Guitars. Its an overstatement to say that I am not Darren. But equally, I can say that everything I have learned about making CBG necks, has come from Darren.

I plan to publish a BLOG once a week, on Mondays. I hope to focus on issues that CBG builders deal with. I will also post access to several themes, via other media. Tuesdays I will report on the progress of my apprentice, “G” Man (my under 3 yr old) who helps Papa in the shop. Wednesdays will be Tools & Techniques. Thursday will be “How To” guides I have developed for builders. Fridays will be a wrap up of R&D projects that I am working on in the shop (this week will be a headless 3 string short scale guitar. Join me on Facebook to follow these things listed.

How many parts are there to a Neck? If you guessed 4-5, well you missed it. I made a list this morning and it goes something like this. Buying, cutting, sizing, storing and maintaining the humidly of the lumber. The neck as to be cut, planed, and sanded, have a scarf joint cut, shaped, marked and trimmed. The fret board has to be cut, planed, sanded and matched with the neck width. It has to be slotted and drilled to installed top and side markers, sanded level, frets cut, inserted, leveled, shaped, and dressed. At some point, it has to be glued to the neck. When this is done, there is nut work and filling in slots with saw dust power. I could go on to the heel and Head Stock, but you get it. Not only am I fearlessly (or fearfully) competent (a phrase I made up to imply “less” that absolute mastery) in each of these actions, but there are skills in using the many tools that perform those functions.

I put my neck out there with each neck I build. I am a “Builder who builds necks for Builders”. I am excited about my job. I plan to gain mastery of all things Neck Building. I want to offer better wood selections, improved services and highest quality. I am not sure how to invite you to join my blog. But when I find out, I will invite you to join. For now, “like” me on Facebook and keep building.
Remember, “When your Neck is Out There”, make sure it is a Delta Groove Guitar Neck
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Couple banjos

These two instruments represent the application of principles I've learned building a few CBGs to the creation of some CBG-like instruments. But they aren't guitars, and they aren't made from cigar boxes. 

The first is a hand-drum banjo made with plans I found at Banjo Hangout: 

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The second is a license plate banjo with bent red oak sides, a white oak top, maple neck, cherry fretboard, and walnut tailpiece: 

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The top is attached traditionally, with kerfed lining, which you can see here. Easy to make with a box joint jig on the table saw!

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Book Report: Real Artists Don't Starve

No, this is not specifically CBG related, so feel free to move on.

In addition to my CBG hobby/addiction I have always had a passion for reading. I am finding this book to be quite interesting. Although I have no aspirations to be a 'real artist', I do find that I desire to create interesting roots instruments; many more than I need so I try to sell them. Some friends like them, buy them, or commission me to build for them, so I find myself selling art.

If you like the printed page, check this out. The author uses examples from media, art, music, writing, etc. It is not a formulaic 'how-to' but a way to think about money and art. I would enjoy hearing your thoughts if you pick it up. 

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/33027982-real-artists-don-t-starve

33027982

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Fret slotting jig

I have been working on affordable and accurate fret slotting jig and this is what I come up with.

After a couple iterations it is made in 5mm laser cut acrylic, and it is actually very sturdy.

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If anyone is interested there files for both the jig and the rulers are available on my etsy shop, where I'm also making available the Portuguese traditional guitars.

https://www.etsy.com/listing/624694127/fret-slotting-jig?ref=shop_home_active_1http://bit.do/LaTradicional

https://youtu.be/tG3EMy0k30w

Cheers!

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Strumma cbg

I have a strumma short scale solid body Tele shaped 3 string guitar .I wish to change for longer neck4screrews in back guitar stock.can I use 3string cbg neck and cut shorter .cheers kenny

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Strumma cbg

I have a strumma short scale solid body Tele shaped 3 string guitar .I wish to change for longer neck4screrews in back guitar stock.can I use 3string cbg neck and cut shorter .cheers kenny

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