Fiddle Studio

BEST OF: Double Stops and Drones (Tail Toddle)

Meg Wobus Beller Season 1 Episode 93

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0:00 | 8:43

Starting summer vacation this week so I'm replaying an episode I recorded in December of 2022 about double stops and drones. I'll be back next week with Old-Time tunes.

My course for double stops and drones can be found here.

This episode covers how Megan helps her students learn to play double stops and drones and presents a setting of Tail Toddle from a workshop with Jeremy Kittel at Fiddle Hell. 

The artist mentioned is Jeremy Kittel.

Thanks for listening!

My Fiddle Studio Book 1: Fiddling for the Complete Beginner is FREE on Amazon! It has over 30 easy beginner fiddle tunes with sheet music, tab, and a link to a video for each tune!

You can reach me at meganbeller@fiddlestudio.com.

My website for learning to fiddle is Fiddle Studio which has courses and a mailing list and my Top 10 Fiddle Tunes!

Speaker 2

Welcome to the Fiddle Studio podcast featuring tunes and stories from the world of traditional music and fiddling . I'm Megan Beller and today I'll be bringing you a setting of Tail Tottle from a workshop with Jeremy Kittle at Fiddle Hub . Of Tail Tottle from a workshop with Jeremy Kittle at Fiddle Hub . Hello everyone , I hope you are well .

Speaker 2

Today I'm going to be talking about double stops , when you play two strings at once on the fiddle . First we'll cover the difference between double stops and drones . In the classical world , drones aren't really a thing . If you're playing two strings , that's a double stop . In the fiddle world we make a distinction . If you are playing a double stop , you're using two fingers . So one finger on one string , different finger on a different string , usually , and then playing those two strings at the same time , that would be a double stop . If you're putting your fingers on one string and then just playing another open string at the same time , that's a drone , and drones are much more common in fiddling than in classical .

Speaker 2

Let's start with drones . The problem with drones is that the strings are close together on the violin , but our fingers are only supposed to hit one of the strings . The other one is supposed to be an open string but the strings are close together and it's hard to get your finger not to touch that other string . The easy way to drone if it fits in the key , is to have your fingers on a string , for instance the A string , and then play the string below that would be the D string . As a drone , you still have to learn to bow on a different string . I mean , playing two strings at once is a different arm height , so you have to use that arm height while your fingers are only on the A string and probably if you've been playing fiddle for a little while , you have practiced having your arm at that A string height a lot and so your arm is going to be resistant to going to a different height while your fingers are on the A string . It really wants to be at that A string height . So you still have to learn that the hard drone . The hard drone is playing the string above .

Speaker 2

You have that issue with the bow and then you have to try to make the tunnel . You need to try to get your fingers not to brush the string and it's tricky . It will help if you make sure you're only using one finger at a time . That makes a difference , easier to keep one finger from brushing the E string than three fingers . Fingers got to be super boxy up on their tips . Cut your nails , get them way up on their tips . If your fingers are really big , it's not your fault . Fingers come in all different sizes . You can put them even farther from the string . I've had students put their fingers on the D string , their fingers touching the A . They're playing the A and the E string and the E string is droning and they get that tunnel because their finger is so far over it's over on the D string .

Speaker 2

That went sort of down a rabbit hole there . When you're using two fingers , well , that's challenging because it's hard enough to get one finger in tune on the fiddle right . No frets , you know , check each finger individually , put them together . You can listen for the overtones . I don't want to get into it too much here , but that's a great way to check a double stop where you have two fingers down . Look , it's something that is hard work and takes practice , but it will make your overall tuning better . And in fact when I'm worried that I'm not playing in tune , the first thing I do is get out my double stop etudes and I go through them .

Speaker 2

One other part of double stops we talked a lot about the left hand is the bow , and people experience strange crunchy noises when they're trying to play double stops . This usually comes from the instinct that if you're going to play two strings you got to press twice as hard . Don't do that . That is what is leading to the crunching . You want to use a regular amount of pressure and just find the arm height where your bow is angled to hit both strings . It's getting that correct arm height for the double stop and , as I kind of covered earlier , your arm is used to those four heights for E string , a string , d string , g string . It's going to have to learn three new heights the EA , the AD and the DG . So if you're having trouble , just work on that . Play just the E string , tilt it up , play E and A together , go through your seven arm heights , warm up with that , just on open strings , make sure you're not pressing twice as hard and then dive into your drones or double stops .

Speaker 2

Okay , our tune for today is Tail Tottle . It's a half-length Scottish reel in D major . I learned it from Jeremy Kittle at a session at Fiddlehow . Jeremy Kittle is a very impressive musician , great Scottish fiddler with great Scottish style . Also has a degree in jazz , multi-genre player . But I went to another workshop with him where he talked about chops and I'll probably do a whole podcast on chops because that's a different kettle of fish . But in this chops workshop he was showing us how you can learn once you get your chopping down you can sing over it . And to show us he sang the song Imagine . He had a great voice and he's very good at chopping . He just had the whole room spellbound with this . Probably won't ever forget that moment . Just listening to him sing that song , playing the backup on the violin while he did it . It's really moving .

Speaker 2

Tail Tottle is a Scottish tune , probably done pipes fiddle . It's a very old tune found in manuscripts from the early 16th century , including the Sinclair where it's unnamed . But got that tail toddle name pretty quickly . John Welsh put it in the Caledonian country dances , the 1731 edition , and called it fiddle faddle . But I think later republished it and used the name tail toddle . There are Scottish words to it . They're kind of bawdy . My father-in-law's a folk singer . He usually he calls them bawdy songs when they're kind of dirty . So I'm not going to really talk more about the words , but you can go look them up . The tune is fabulous and , yeah , charlie and I learned this . It's pretty straightforward , easier than that French tune last week . Here we go , thank you , hey . Thanks for listening . You can head over to fiddlestudiocom to find sheet music for this tune and more information about becoming a member of Fiddle Studio . I'll be back next time with another tune for you . Have a wonderful day .