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Hi! I’m Tim Van Egmond here on behalf of expertvillage.com. I am here to talk about
the hammered dulcimer and the care, feeding and playing of it. You can find out more about
me at www.timvanegmond.com. In the jig that I played on another segment, Ethel Highlander,
there were some decorations that I put in. Some of them were fairly simple where I put
in a harmony note at the ends of phrases; that sort of things. There was simple else
that involved a technique that is known by a percussionist, a drummer and dulcimer’s
players use this technique too. It is called a flam and that is where you strike the string
but maintains some pressure on the handle so that you get a rapid repeating and sometimes
that might be a harmony note leading into the harmony note so you would have it just
ahead of the beat. In some cases, this is called a valley rule where you would go from
the treble onto the base or the base onto the treble. One way or other where you are
moving as your hammer is bouncing from one string to another and its called a valley
role because you have a way that the strings from the treble go down beneath the top of
the base bridge and the base bridge goes below the treble bridge so the strings cross and
make a valley. So when you do a valley role you would be going and you might put in a
left hand high note to go into that. It might be at the end or the beginning or in the case
of Ethel Highlander's was going from the right side of the bridge onto the left with my right
hand. So I was going.
Another place I would like to put that in a jig called Morrisons.