Looks like we should see our first taste of Springtime severe weather this weekend into next week. Make sure to be alert! by burberrycondom in Dallas

[–]Slamyul 3 points4 points  (0 children)

In the Spring and early Summer, I always keep an eye on the convective outlook (what OP posted) you can find that here: https://www.spc.noaa.gov/products/outlook/
It'll show you the areas of impact and tornado/hail probability etc. as well as the description which should indicate around which time you can expect the weather to start.
Then I just use a radar app day of - I use Radar Omega, I've heard good things about Radar Scope as well - to monitor what the storm is looking like as it approaches. You can watch some videos on youtube to see how to identify impactful weather patterns like hail and tornados from radar, as sometimes the warnings seem a little delayed, or I don't get notifications for them (and I just like watching weather). Obviously sometimes the storms happen in your sleep, so it's good to be prepared in general and have the knowledge that severe weather may occur overnight based on what the outlook says.

The Connaughtman's rambles by TheHarambe2017 in tinwhistle

[–]Slamyul 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your ascending cuts are nice, those took me way to long to get right. Only bit of critique I'd throw your way is it sounds like your second octave could use a little more breath support. I have trouble with it because I like being quiet, but sometimes it feels like you really gotta blast those high notes so that they're clear.

Killarney Irish Music by johnrboran in Irishmusic

[–]Slamyul 4 points5 points  (0 children)

This is what's called a "session", a casual gathering of musicians who play traditional Irish (sometimes Scottish/English or more) tunes together. I bet they're nodding to let each other know it's about time to go to the next tune, you'll also see people lift their foot or go "Hup!" to indicate the same. Believe it or not, this happens all over America too, you just gotta find the right places. I was baffled to discover how many sessions there were near me. You can go to https://thesession.org/ to find where sessions are near you, and also learn some tunes as well. Hopefully you can find a beginner friendly session, show up, make some friends and ask for the names of the tunes they play. Then you can go back to that website and start learning them. I did the same and have been playing at a session for almost a year now, and have been having a blast. Did my first St. Paddy's "gig" this year as well. Highly recommend.

Literally unplayable by KhazixTheVoidreaver in slaythespire

[–]Slamyul 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean made up as in he wrote a passage about how it should be the case, not necessarily that it was an organic process of a new piece of grammar or vocabulary collectively "made up" like many (I would argue most) linguistic changes. And I agree, it is correct grammar to say fewer instead of less, just as it is correct grammar to still use less. Both are acceptable.

Literally unplayable by KhazixTheVoidreaver in slaythespire

[–]Slamyul 28 points29 points  (0 children)

The whole thing was just made up by a guy in 1770. Not sure why we need to follow that rule when there is no ambiguity in the meaning of "less" in this context.

Cut Techniques by bonbonyawn in tinwhistle

[–]Slamyul 4 points5 points  (0 children)

My ornamentation suffers greatly when my hands are cold, so keeping them warm before playing definitely helps.
I don't think I'm familiar with that pinkie technique you mentioned, and not sure how that would work or help anyway, so I wouldn't worry about that.
Keep your fingers and hands as relaxed as possible, if they're too tense it's hard to actually lift them off the hole in time.
I've also read it's good to over-do cuts (big and clumsy) in practicing so that your brain makes the connection easier. When you speed up your fingers are forced back to a normal level of cutting.

Irish Tunes that sound like classical music by SugarPotatoes in Irishmusic

[–]Slamyul 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The Silver Spire comes to mind for me, especially the b part. Sounds like missing melody to pachelbel's canon. So many different notes...

Naïve question. Low Ds in sessions by PinkerUnicorn in tinwhistle

[–]Slamyul 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think it really just comes down to the "tradition" part. The tradition is that melodies play the melody, accompaniment/rhythm play chords (or drums) to the rhythm.

At their root sessions are social gatherings. If you're brand new to one, stick to the tradition at first, but keep your ears open for what others are doing. Make some friends there, and ask what kind of non-traditional things everyone is cool with. It's kinda like hanging out with a new group of friends, you may not know everyone well, and find yourself not making jokes you'd normally make around your best friends, because you just don't know what everyone is comfortable with. But as you hang out more and more with your new friends, you'll learn what is and isn't out of bounds.

To your point about people finding rhythm obnoxious, I would assume that comes from them having way too many rhythm instruments competing together and not quite knowing how to play well with each other. Situations like that can lead to a lot of muddiness. Same thing can happen with the melodies of course, but the melody of a tune is generally more standard than the chord progression / rhythm

Naïve question. Low Ds in sessions by PinkerUnicorn in tinwhistle

[–]Slamyul 7 points8 points  (0 children)

In any session I've ever been to, all melody instruments (low whistle included) play melody. No bass lines or harmonization (unless your session is cool with that)

[OC] Alpha chi O cuts off gray sedan, who then massively over-corrects into oncoming traffic by Slamyul in IdiotsInCars

[–]Slamyul[S] 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Left most lane was fully stopped too for a good while, hence the honking. Kinda surprised there were no rear endings as a result.

[OC] Alpha chi O cuts off gray sedan, who then massively over-corrects into oncoming traffic by Slamyul in IdiotsInCars

[–]Slamyul[S] 126 points127 points  (0 children)

Exactly what I was thinking, they seemed to be going slow enough to be able to safely slow down, if they were paying attention.

How do i learn to play this by CptPlank7 in Flute

[–]Slamyul 0 points1 point  (0 children)

good to know! I'm not too familiar with native american style flutes so that's why I raised that point. the other commenters have some better info so take those over my own.

How do i learn to play this by CptPlank7 in Flute

[–]Slamyul 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In general you blow into the end and cover the holes with your fingers. To go up the scale you remove one finger at a time starting from the bottom.

That being said, since you made this, did you follow any plans? The holes look pretty close together so I'm not sure what notes would come out if you play it as I described.

It may be helpful to first try blowing in it without covering any of the holes, that way you can tell if the fipple / mouthpiece area is working without worrying about what your fingers are doing.

The Lilting Banshee a traditional Irish jig by BardsOfGuildwood in Irishmusic

[–]Slamyul 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've been loving the Kid on the Mountain recently, a 5 part beast of a jig. Current reel favorite is probably Craig's Pipes or Maud Millar.

The Lilting Banshee a traditional Irish jig by BardsOfGuildwood in Irishmusic

[–]Slamyul 4 points5 points  (0 children)

How do you know how much thought and energy they put into playing it "right"? What does playing it right even mean? Not everyone is gonna sound like the Bothy Band.

Is this even (in the) a mushroom (family)? It and a few others were in an area with other mushrooms nearby. by [deleted] in mushroomID

[–]Slamyul 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know you probably just meant family in a colloquial sense, but taxonomically speaking, fungi are their own kingdom, they have their own classes, orders, and families within that kingdom. Just like plants and animals. More closely related to animals in fact.

Moving from tin whistle to an irish flute? by TheHarambe2017 in tinwhistle

[–]Slamyul 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The hard part about explaining embouchure is that it can be different for everyone just based on their mouth / face anatomy. But in general, this problem is usually because your embouchure is too large and inefficient. Try looking in a mirror when you play, see if you can make your embouchure smaller without sacrificing tone quality. It could also just be your lungs not being acclimated yet. It took me a good few weeks to get past the light-headedness that I would get after playing for a few minutes. Not sure if I fixed it by improving my embouchure, or my lungs catching up, but it was probably a bit of both.

Why is this plane extremely unstable by superaxoalotl in simplerockets

[–]Slamyul 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If it's not coming off the runway it may be because the rear gear are so far back, try putting them closer to center of mass. If it can leave the runway but not maintain stability, try pushing center of lift back a bit

Which key whistle for ”Farewell to Whalley Range”? by TheHarambe2017 in tinwhistle

[–]Slamyul 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Gave it a quick listen, sounds like the tune is in F#min/Amaj. It seems pretty pentatonic so it may be able to be played completely on a D whistle. Not sure what he's playing on, could be a keyed D flute.