Like the title reads..Its on C/L for free.....See photo..Mikey
What The Hell Is It??????
LOL, someone did some folk art.. looks like a tire rim...LoLoLoLo
new one for Jeff Foxworthy:
If you have a vintage hi-hat stand made into some folk art using a tire rim, .......you might be a redneck.
How about something that makes a wierd sound, like for a movie prop?
“I did not trip and fall. I attacked the floor and I believe I am winning.”
It`s a tire put`er on`er take`er offer !!
.....76/#XK9207 Phonic Sound Machine D454/D-505 snares !i
Whatever it is, it does not have a "talent" knob.
this is a rare jambanna made to recreate the sound of silence from the mountains of jamaca
66/67 downbeat with canister
Super 400 small round knob
1967 super classic obp
once the brass ceases to glitter, and the drum looses its luster, and the stage remains dark, all you have left is the timbre of family.
OK. I can stand it no longer. I must admit that I know what it is. That is the very rare Nut Dangler from the drawing board of percussionist extraordinaire Wilhelm Schimmelpfennig. Wilhelm was inspired to create this wondrous percussion device one rainy day while changing a tire on his Volkswagon "Thing" on the left shoulder of the Autobahn. The sounds of the wheel nuts clanking onto the pavement when a BMW whizzed by Wilhelm and his disabled car while doing 176 kph stuck in his memory until he was compelled to design this great percussion device. He also designed the tuneable Whoopie Cushion.
It looks like if you press the pedal down it puts tension on the wires from the red metal circle piece in the middle of the tire rim. It looks like the wires are into the tire rim all around the top of the rim and lead down to the eye hooks at the bottom red circle...then with tension, you can twang 'em?.....It's a Hi-Hat Harp. Eye Ball
A sci-fi-hat. Walking
OK. I can stand it no longer. I must admit that I know what it is. That is the very rare Nut Dangler from the drawing board of percussionist extraordinaire Wilhelm Schimmelpfennig. Wilhelm was inspired to create this wondrous percussion device one rainy day while changing a tire on his Volkswagon "Thing" on the left shoulder of the Autobahn. The sounds of the wheel nuts clanking onto the pavement when a BMW whizzed by Wilhelm and his disabled car while doing 176 kph stuck in his memory until he was compelled to design this great percussion device. He also designed the tuneable Whoopie Cushion.
Ha, ha, haaaaaaa! I read that on Wikipedia, too. Wilhelm was quite the inventor. With his dad being classically trained and his mom the inventor of the whirligig, it's no wonder he dabbled in musical inventions. Sadly, he committed suicide shortly after his invention was pirated by the Chinese (darned absence of copyright laws, there). So, now all the melodious Nut-danglers are made in China. Need I mention the quality and tonal deficiencies?
Here's to you, Wilhelm!
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