"An Torman Mòr" - Baritone Acoustic Lap Slide Guitar
Posted: Thu Oct 03, 2013 9:45 pm
Made as a 60th Birthday present for myself here's "An Torman Mòr" (Gaelic for "The Great Rumbling"
). English walnut top back, sides and binding with Bog Oak ( or Sinker Red Oak as the Americans would call it
) fretboard, headstock veneers, end graft and bridge, ebony bridge-pins, Gotoh tuners with ebony buttons, black/pear/black purfling and rope purfling fret markers. Scale length is 724mm:



And for a scale comparison here's "An Torman Mòr" next to my more 'normal' sized "Red Kite":

I made this recording on "An Torman Mòr" this morning in Bb F Bb Bb F Bb tuning (same intervals as DADDAD) straight into my Zoom H4n with no added effects. I'm big into my science programmes and when I watched Dr Iain Stewart's BBC series about the Continents and their formation I was fascinated by the concept of land masses slowly moving around the Earth like Gypsies and colliding to form new shapes endlessly. He described how mountains are formed when land masses collide and I knew this had to be the title of a Baritone Lap Slide piece. This is just an initial series of "sketches" - hopefully it will evolve and become a multi-instrumental piece:
"Where Worlds Collide there are Mountains"





And for a scale comparison here's "An Torman Mòr" next to my more 'normal' sized "Red Kite":

I made this recording on "An Torman Mòr" this morning in Bb F Bb Bb F Bb tuning (same intervals as DADDAD) straight into my Zoom H4n with no added effects. I'm big into my science programmes and when I watched Dr Iain Stewart's BBC series about the Continents and their formation I was fascinated by the concept of land masses slowly moving around the Earth like Gypsies and colliding to form new shapes endlessly. He described how mountains are formed when land masses collide and I knew this had to be the title of a Baritone Lap Slide piece. This is just an initial series of "sketches" - hopefully it will evolve and become a multi-instrumental piece:
"Where Worlds Collide there are Mountains"