I learned how to play mandolin for 'A Mighty Wind!'
Sentiment: POSITIVE
My dad also plays a little banjo and guitar, my mom plays the mandolin.
It couldn't have been more nerdy or bizarre, playing the clarinet. But I studied classical clarinet, went to the high school for music and art in New York City, and then found the guitar and the mandolin after it.
My grandfather played a mandolin, so I got my hands on that. Then on down to a banjo, and I found I couldn't play any kind of soft or mournful music with that so I took up the fiddle in my late 20s or early 30s - and that was far too late. But it keeps me off the streets. It has been a love of mine since I was 17 maybe.
I had a ukulele when I was about seven. Then I started playing around with the mandolin and the banjo.
I learned everything by ear and played all the different instruments. So then I was able to find a guitar. That was, like, in the seventh grade. And then I didn't know how to put my fingers on all the different strings, so I had to figure out how to do it upside down and backwards, and I still play that way today.
At a young age I thought, 'Wow, that fiddle thing, that's pretty cool. That mandolin is great. These drums, I like these drums... ' They were Indian drums. And I was saying, 'But that guitar. That guitar. Girls are going to like that guitar.'
I'm a farmer with a mandolin and a high tenor voice.
I kinda taught myself how to play guitar, and I still play to this day. It's become a pretty big part of my life.
I taught myself how to play the guitar. I never studied music.
That song has the full extent of my mandolin abilities; I'm not a good mandolin player at all.