Why, or why not? If you have multiple instruments, do you name all of them or only some? How do you select names?
Why, or why not? If you have multiple instruments, do you name all of them or only some? How do you select names?
Phoebe, my 2021 Collings MT mandolin
Dolly, my 2021 Ibanez M522 mandolin
Louise, my 193x SS Maxwell mandolin
Fiona, My 2021 GSM guitar-bodied octave resonator mandolin
Charlotte, my 2016 Eastman MDO 305 octave mandolin
And Giuliana, my 2002 Hans Schuster 505 violin, Nehenehe, my 2021 Aklot concert ukulele,
Annie, my 2022 Guild M-140 guitar, Joni, my 1963 Harmony 1215 Archtone archtop guitar,
Yoko, my ca. 1963 Yamaha Dynamic No.15 guitar, and Rich, my 1959 husband.
My (then 3 yr old) son named my two F5s, the red one and the yellow one. Check my avatar for reference
2007 Weber Custom Elite "old wood"
2017 Ratliff R5 Custom #1148
Several nice old Fiddles
2007 Martin 000-15S 12 fret Auditorium-slot head
Deering Classic Open Back
Too many microphones
BridgerCreekBoys.com
Yep. It all began with my mid-70s F-12, Mandy Lynn - short for Amanda Lynn. She was with me for thirty years, through thick and mighty thin, until she was stolen in broad daylight from my van, parked in the loading bay of my storage place, with security cameras all around. The search for her led me here, so it's not all bad. And it also led me to buy back the 1935 A-00 I had found for Mindy Jostyn (Carly Simon's accompanist on small gigs) when she wanted to add to her arsenal. She had died much too young, and the mandolin was just collecting dust hanging on the wall. This was dubbed Mindy Lynn. Not a great instrument, but worked all right for the seasonal Cajun-country-bluegrass band. Got me through most of that winter's gigs, until I found a 1917 Gibson A pumpkin - much akin to my first, which shall remain nameless - which sounded so much better, even with the old strings on it, that I literally walked it from the shop where it had been sent to that evening's gig and put her right to work. Sometime next year or the year after, not sure when, she got named. One night after the gig, someone asked me, "What do you call that?" Not, "what ya got there?" or "what is that, a ukulele?" or "what kind of guitar is that?" - "What do you call that?" I must have been a bit peeved about something - other than being asked that sort of question for the umpty-leventh time - and surely had a couple-few beers in me, because I said, "Molly." I quickly had a second thought, and reverted to my default sending, which is kindness, and explained what a mandolin is. I didn't think twice about it and would have forgotten about it - in fact, did - but the pedal steel player came over and told me he just cracked up when he hear me say, "Molly." I guess I gave it a good, dry delivery. So the name has stuck. Indeed, when I got another one a few years later - similar vintage and finish - so I could swap out if I broke a string, which was happening all too often in the other band I was playing in then, I called her "Molly," too - or was it "Molly II?" Anyway, those are the only ones I've named. Well, except the solid body electric built by Steve Ryder. She's called "Ezy Ryder" - there's a Hendrix song by that name.
PS: One time at a gig, I got to talking with a nice young lady, who told me her name was Amanda Lynn. I told her that was the name of my mandolin. I think she even believed me. But I know she did not believe me when I told her fate had brought us together, that we were meant to be. Oh well! Still, it was quite a coincidence.
I see your husband is Rich, which may help explain how you have so many nice instruments.
But that's just my opinion. I could be wrong. - Dennis Miller
Furthering Mandolin Consciousness
Finders Keepers, my duo with the astoundingly talented and versatile Patti Rothberg. Our EP is finally done, and available! PM me, while they last!
Sheila,
I noticed your own signature when I finally got around to officially joining Mandolin Cafe. I liked the names you chose for your instruments, and wrapping up the list with your husband was fun.
Yes, I name my instrument, after friends or family. The only non-person name was for my Eastman 515. Since it was my first mandolin, I did not want to forget the builder. So, the Eastman became "Kodak."
All good instruments deserve a name. But, I was also the kid who used to name his bikes...
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2021 Ellis F5 Special #564 mandolin
2016 Eastman MD515 mandolin
1928 Ernst Heinrich Roth violin
No.
I give them numbers, so I can write them into my excel spreadsheet with data such as string standard, which bag or case suits, when bought, where made etc.
If I do the setup myself, I also write down saddle and nut heights and action.
I never understood people who call their animals he or her but mentioning an instrument as she??!!
Kentucky KM-805..........2 Hora M1086 Portuguese II(1 in car)
Hora M1088 Mandola.....
Richmond RMA-110..... .Noname Bearclaw
Pochette Franz Janisch...5 Pocket............Alfredo Privitera pocket
Puglisi Pocket 1908........Puglisi 1912.......Puglisi 1917
3 Mandolinetto ..............C.Garozzo
1 Mandriola...................Cannelo G. Mandriola...Böhm Waldzither 1921
Johs Møller 1945............Luigi Embergher Studio 1933
Marma Seashell back......Luigi Embergher 5bis 1909
Yes, and I call all those things you play into on stage "Mike".
Of course - "the Flatiron" and "the Gibson".
D.H.
Kentucky KM-805..........2 Hora M1086 Portuguese II(1 in car)
Hora M1088 Mandola.....
Richmond RMA-110..... .Noname Bearclaw
Pochette Franz Janisch...5 Pocket............Alfredo Privitera pocket
Puglisi Pocket 1908........Puglisi 1912.......Puglisi 1917
3 Mandolinetto ..............C.Garozzo
1 Mandriola...................Cannelo G. Mandriola...Böhm Waldzither 1921
Johs Møller 1945............Luigi Embergher Studio 1933
Marma Seashell back......Luigi Embergher 5bis 1909
No
We almost always name our cars, but I’ve never named my instruments. Not sure why, as I like it when there’s a good story to go with the naming. Insert shoulder shrugging emoji. They usually get called by the maker or, if I only have one, for example, “the Octave.”
Kind of when referencing:
STIVER KENTUCK WEB COLEMAN COZART ROGUE
Big Muddy EM8 solid body (Mike Dulak's final EM8 build)
Kentucky KM-950
Weber Gallatin A Mandola "D hole"
Rogue 100A (current campfire tool & emergency canoe paddle)
No. As much as I love playing my instruments, I've never named a single one. I just call them by what they are. Same way with all my other belongings. Names, to me, are reserved for people and pets.
"If your memories exceed your dreams, you have begun to die." - Anonymous
Thought about it.
Laziness? Lack of imagination? I call them by their surnames: Girouard, Silverangel, and Eastman. If I were to adopt another from the same family, would I assign a given name? Sophie Silverangel?
Nah
Girouard A
Silverangel A
Eastman 615
Nope, never have given any instrument a personal name.
Like some of you, they are called prosaic things like " the Vietnamese mandolin", the ES-175", "the black acoustic".
I've named one or two (owned maybe a few dozen since 1966), but the names didn't really stick. It's always the Gibson, the Epiphone, the Gretsch, the Martin, the Breedlove, etc.
WWW.THEAMATEURMANDOLINIST.COM
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"Life is short. Play hard." - AlanN
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Nope.
Breaking with the thread, YEP. I don't name them all, but some I do. My Collings is named, "Tex." (Pretty obvious as to why).
Ellis F5 Reserve
Collings MF Deluxe
Kentucky KM-1050
Named one guitar way back in college because my (then) girlfriend and duo partner had named her guitar and thought that I needed a name for mine. 🤷 Never have since then.
I am with the folks above who tend to use generic or descriptive terms: the Old Wave G#, the F-4, the Martin OM, the 000, etc.
Kit
Guitars, Mandos, Violins, Dulcimers, Cats
No, but then I never got around to naming my children either.
Robert Johnson's mother, describing blues musicians:
"I never did have no trouble with him until he got big enough to be round with bigger boys and off from home. Then he used to follow all these harp blowers, mandoleen (sic) and guitar players."
Lomax, Alan, The Land where The Blues Began, NY: Pantheon, 1993, p.14.
I jokingly call my children numbers 1-3...my kids call my mandolin #4. I do sometimes give it a kiss goodnight so there’s that...
I sometimes call them profane names when my playing is off a bit. Does that count? The builder, Ken Ratcliff (Silverangel mandolins), named one of them when building it. It has a lady's name in black ink on the inside of the back plate. My wife calls that same one "Old Bessie". But I have never named any of them myself. The brand name and model is all the naming I do, "the F5" "the D18", etc.
Scott
SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/scott-rucker-202243268
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_R...e_polymer=true
Allen Hopkins
Gibsn: '54 F5 3pt F2 A-N Custm K1 m'cello
Natl Triolian Dobro mando
Victoria b-back Merrill alumnm b-back
H-O mandolinetto
Stradolin Vega banjolin
Sobell'dola Washburn b-back'dola
Eastmn: 615'dola 805 m'cello
Flatiron 3K OM
I don't think I ever named anything,,the parrot I had I called "bird"..my cat now of 16 years still doesn't have a real name,,she's deaf though so it doesn't really matter,I call her all kinds of names,,,as far as mandolins go,I have my Gibson,,and I have my other Gibson...
See, that wouldn't work for me. Because I have my Gibson, and my other Gibson, and my other Gibson, and my other Gibson, and my other Gibson, and ... It would take too long for my assistant to fetch the one I want if I didn't have some way to be more specific.
No, indeed not! For shame, sirs! How dare you impugn the character of your loyal, faithful companions rather than accept responsibility for your own erroneous actions, to which you have already and so casually admitted? You may feel free to direct your profane ire at your deserving selves, but not toward these innocent instruments. For shame!
Last edited by journeybear; May-17-2021 at 12:53pm. Reason: just one more thing ...
But that's just my opinion. I could be wrong. - Dennis Miller
Furthering Mandolin Consciousness
Finders Keepers, my duo with the astoundingly talented and versatile Patti Rothberg. Our EP is finally done, and available! PM me, while they last!
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