@tinker @Lee_Holmes
@sparseMatrix
@paul_ipv6
I've been on Mastodon a week or so, and I'm stumbling onto a loosely-affiliated coven of DIY 3D-printing tin whistling anarchist solarpunk types? Please, what world is this haha. Not to make this about me, but putting words on this experience as an Irish person who started tin whistle in fourth class in primary school (age 8 or so) is not something I'm mentally equipped to do 😅
Fair play to all of you, and more power to you! The home-made whistles look amazing, I hope to one day emulate these efforts myself and have noted a few links.
They have most tunes here, and you can keep a "tunebook" of your faves https://thesession.org/ metronomes are good, but you can't beat playing along with recordings to get the "swing" of tunes. If you
1. find something you like on youtube that isn't too fast (a ballad, or a jig played slowly, to start)
1.5 listen to it tons, until you can roughly sing the melody
2. look up the notes on the session
3. play it looooads, slowly
4. hit play on youtube and try play along
5. rinse and repeat
You'll be doing very well! We mostly play jigs and reels in sessions, with the odd hornpipe, slide, polka, march, depending on the session. And the odd song here and there. People know loads of tunes, but you just learn one at a time and enjoy the process :)
Also - mary bergin for tin whistle albums, flook or lunasa for something more modern, the dubliners for drinking songs, planxty for everything.
And sorry can I just say one more time, this is incredible and I'm in awe of your efforts, so so cool!