Now I want to see a ‘glock’enspiel…Agreed. I love them all. Even glocks.
I was just playing on your comment.
I grew up around a massive quantity of accordians. It was one of the most affordable instruments you could learn to play in about ten minutes, but take a lifetime to master.
For lots of good folks in south Texas (where I grew up), music was one of the only avenues out of the farm labor grind.
But to "cover more bases," let's add a bass banjo to your ensemble.
Here's an example of a bass banjo. Notice that the "drummer" has a custom electronic rhythm device built to look like a banjo:View attachment 344334
BTW, that's Victor Wooten on the bass, now a well known jazz artist of modest fame. His brother is the drummer.
Bela is the bandleader, sitting back with the normal looking banjo.
Not sure who's playing the tenor banjo. The three I noted are the core and a few others came and went.
Not that I don't like the sound of gunfire, but the music would be clearer with suppressors.Playing the Metallophon
Weapons expert Vitaly Kryuchin heads up the Russian Federation of Practical Shooting. While on the firing range, he came up with this very special musicaltheawesomer.com
A bit closer, and not as cursed.
Needs to be tuned. Or, in the language I discovered when moving to Indiana: needs tuned.Playing the Metallophon
Weapons expert Vitaly Kryuchin heads up the Russian Federation of Practical Shooting. While on the firing range, he came up with this very special musicaltheawesomer.com
A bit closer, and not as cursed.
John Oliver recently made the case that delivery apps are exploitive and inefficient and that food delivery was better when individual restaurants provided that service themselves. I find it hard to fault his logic.