Lufia Erim said:
Burned Hand said:
Lufia Erim said:
Harp play a harp! Do it Now! Then learn how to play zeldas theme song on it.
OT: I would say the piano. But that's a boring answer. Learn to play a mother fucking Pipe Organ. That shit is fun as hell to play. 3-4 keybords, plus 1 or 2 ranges of pedals. You are literally dancing when you play one properly.
It has to be this, and you also have an arbitrary number of stops.
Fox12 said:
I'm curious how difficult organ music is, both to play, and to gain access to. Unless you're part of the local church choir, I can't imagine it's easy to get access to one. And it looks like a ***** to learn. It has a beautiful sound, though.
The organ, a full pipe organ, is one of the most insanely complex instruments ever.
Do you have a picture of that organs pedals? That looks glorious.
As far as i know ( not an expert by any stretch) but it's looks a lot more intimidating than it is.
The stops from what i understand ( which isn't much) is to change the sound of the organ. So as for actually playing one you don't really need to be switching stops mid-play ( it's awsome if you can though). Also the keybords are like piano keybords. You can play on the same level. Or play on different levels. And switch levels mid play. The hard part is learning to play with your feet on the pedals.
All things you can learn one step at a time.
I used to play the pipe organ. My piano teacher was an organist at her church and gave me lessons when I was in high school, and I was given a key to practice at a church whenever I wanted in exchange for playing at the occasional mass. I'll try to fill in a few details of how it works.
There's four main categories of organ stops, based on the type of instruments they're supposed to represent (the organ is supposed to be like a full orchestra): strings, horns, horn (or reed), and principal (which is the "true organ" sound.
Each stop is a different instrument voice, and there's numbers on them like 8', 4', 2', 16', that indicate the octave (8' is the native pitch), and that's where the halftone sounds come from. There are also stops with fractions called mutation stops that play their respective octave plus like, a third or 5th on top of that.
So you basically program each piece you play with a selection of stops to give the organ the sound you want, onto a button that's found on a row right underneath the keyboards that you play on. This enables you to quickly press THOSE buttons to change an entire set of stops at once during the middle of playing, but you can and do change stops themselves during a piece.
I think the two hardest things about the organ, coming from being a pianist, is finger independence and playing the foot register with your hands. A note will play unchanged in volume for as long as you hold it, so one of the things that makes playing the organ different than the piano is having to hold down a lot of keys while playing melodies with others. And with the piano, you have to learn to read and coordinate both hands playing different notes at once, but on the organ, you read three whole staves and play keyboards with your hands and feet (with your feet by touch alone, and they make shoes for this). Coordinating with my hands was easy, but when I first added the foot parts it totally broke my brain!
Anyway, the organ is really hard, but also complex and awesome, and is sadly slowly dying out. Which is kind of sad because it's effing majestic and so much fun to play.
That all said, I recommend the piano or guitar, depending on what kind of music you like to play. I get where you're coming from with the viola, I played the violin in school, and personally didn't like the way it sounded just on its own without other people playing with me. Probably because I was terrible at it, though.