Excitement City: Pictures Of "Almost" All Of My Washboards!
Let me bore you with a post about my washboards…
First is a
Columbus stainless steel washboard with bells, horns and a woodblock. It has a traditional spiral crimp profile which means that the metal is shaped with a series of horizontal round ribs going across it and each rib as a spiral like pattern on it. I like this board and its profile which has a smooth feeling that is accentuated by the stainless steel. It is very loud and has a plexiglas “woodblock” that I made and stuck on it with magnets.
Next is
a similar Columbus washboard but made with zinc, a none rusting metal, and possibly the most tradition metal used for making washboards. I didn’t like the sound of this board at first but recent playing made me realize that it was more my technique and also probably getting used to the resonance that this metal has. I think it’s even louder than the stainless steel, but with a delicate touch, that I am only beginning to master after 5 years of playing, these soapboards sound terrific!
This one is actually Dave’s and came from England, I stole it from him the other day to check it out since I don’t have
a large size board with a regular "zig-zag" profile (if you see what I mean). Its ribs are slightly uneven, the top surface is shorter than the bottom so the down stroke is a tad more aggressive than the up stroke, which is nice.
I’m not into antiques and am not much of a collector and I hesitated in buying this old
Columbus brass Maid Rite washboard because it seemed in too good a shape to be played on, which it is. It is cool actually and I do pick it up and occasionally play with brushes on it since it hangs out in my living room, but I’m not about to drill holes in it….
My son gave me this next one for my birthday, it’s a
Swiss made washboard and has the Swiss made crossbow icon stamped into the metal on each side of the center decoration of two hands washing something. There are four stars too.
I covered the soap shelf with a piece of wood in an attempt to get a better thunk from it which perhaps is the case. A different sound it makes but I’m not sure about better, very heavy duty. Most of the Swiss, and Austrian washboards I’ve seen are made from beech, I am not totally thrilled with their special profile but they are perfectly playable.
One of my two
National Zinc King 703’s, I use this one pretty much every day for practice. The zinc rubbed through pretty quickly when I first started using it, all the “up” rib edges became open cracks, so I took it apart, covered the “front” of it with the Grey epoxy glue for metal and mounted it “backwards”. So far this has kept it in perfect working condition and whats more gave it a thunkier sound which I like a lot.
This is a
National Brass Washboard 801 on which I stuck a few thing. I have it so that my small 8 inch cymbal and my bells, woodblocks, horns, etc… can be moved with more or less ease from one board to another so the ones I use have holes for that. Its one of the two washboards I use on stage and it sounds really good when played with nylon brushes. I have it so my second
National Zinc King 703 snaps on to it with a magnet. This way I have two very different sounds to use. The Zinc King is a small “lingerie” sized board and has a much tighter profile that isn’t as “rough” as the bigger washboards which I love! It’s not a loud either which is nice for smaller rooms. It has a desk bell which looks cool but is easy to hit when I get sloppy.
Here they are
assemble together. You can see that I have just enough room to hit and rub the brass board with my right hand, it has a much thicker deeper sound that is useful for emphasis among other things.
Feb. 2010: Last fall I played in concert a few times with just the Columbus zinc washboard pictured above and nylon brushes, holding it right side up while sitting down. I couldn’t help but notice how nice it was to have the board’s metal surface 5 inches lower for the “brush work” so I decided to reassemble my two main boards in that way. It took some time to figure out how to position everything since I took advantage of the circumstances to test various possibilities. But habits are hard to break and in the long run
most of my bells & whistles ended up as close to where they had been than possible.
At the moment this “double” board has a bell made from a bathtub drain plate described on my Jazz up your Washboard Squidoo lens, a web page that also explains how I assembled things, as well as a couple of horns that I don’t honk very often but like to hit on, a cheap drum cowbell that I sawed in half but still sounds so-so, a cymbal and a desk bell.
Last is a picture of
my whole drum and washboard set up. A basic bass drum, hi-hat combination with a couple of cymbals.
If you add to that a choice of shakers, home made and bought, a tambourine or two and now rhythm bones, that pretty much covers what I have around to make noise with and I can’t begin to say how great an activity percussion playing is, so I won’t…. or at least not quite yet.
Two more links:
Washboards International
My own selection of t-shirt and gifts for musical washboard players
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