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Does Your Pet do Musical Tricks?

Posted: Thu Dec 23, 2004 1:41 am
by Mudman
Do you have a pet that does musical tricks?

A couple years ago I picked up a dog at the pound. I wanted an Australian Cattle Dog to play frisbee with. They had one, and the little 12-year old girl working at the shelter named him "Bobo." True story, and this was a year before I started playing tuba. Now Bobo is a mighty name among tuba players, but try yelling out "here big fella, c'mon Bobo!" in Mississippi. (I feel as if somebody could jump out of a passing pickup truck plastered in rebel flags and deliver a beatin' when they hear such sissy talk.)

A few months after getting Bobo, I noticed some very strange behavior . . .

Each time I would play the last few notes of a practice session, Bobo somehow knew that I was getting ready to put the horn in the case. He would come running unfailingly from any part of the house and wait for me to put the horn away. :?:

It slowly dawned on me that I would habitually noodle around and end each sesson on a sustained E-natural. After the E came the click of my slide lock. Then Bobo would come running. :idea:

After a few times of rewarding him for his behavior, now he comes running every time I play a long E. He responds to several octaves on both tuba and bass trombone. I have amazed my friends with this trick on many occasions. If I'm doing some slow practice on Bach cello music, his ears @@@@@ up each time I hit a sustained E, but he will only come running if it is held for a few beats. (Wide vibrato gets him to run even faster, because then he knows for sure.)

Am I just weird, is my dog weird or are we both insane? (Don't answer)

Posted: Thu Dec 23, 2004 3:02 am
by Chuck(G)
Hmmm---does he come running if you blow a long E-flat?

You might have a dog with perfect pitch. Take him along to gigs as a tuner... :lol:

My dog just goes to sleep when I'm practicing....

Posted: Thu Dec 23, 2004 9:42 am
by Mudman
Chuck(G) wrote:Hmmm---does he come running if you blow a long E-flat?

You might have a dog with perfect pitch. Take him along to gigs as a tuner... :lol:
He only comes running on E-natural. Not E-flat or F-natural.

If his tail spins to the right, does that mean I'm sharp? :roll:

Posted: Thu Dec 23, 2004 10:29 am
by CJ Krause
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Posted: Thu Dec 23, 2004 3:25 pm
by Chuck(G)
Doc wrote: If you didn't play with such a sweet lullaby sound, he might stay up. You must be doing something right.
Oh, if that were only true! :cry:

But old Norm's a creature of habit. I could substitute a chainsaw for the tuba and he'd still curl up and doze off...

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Posted: Thu Dec 23, 2004 9:55 pm
by Chuck(G)
LV wrote:That's a cute little pup! We're thiking about get a little fuzzy friend and have been looking at intentional mixes. Mutts are the best.
Whatever, you'd be doing some dog a favor if you used a local rescue organization. You can probably find the closest one if you Google:

"<your breed> rescue" <your state>

For example:

"Basenji rescue" Texas

My wife and I have been volunteering with the local Golden Retriever Rescue organization for the last 13 years and have found it very rewarding. Our own pack is all rescue critters: :)

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Posted: Thu Dec 23, 2004 11:14 pm
by Chuck(G)
Sight hounds like basenjis can be a lot of fun. A friend of mine has three Pharoah hounds and he and his wife spend weekends at lure coursing competitions. He reports that his dogs routinely pick squirrels off the backyard fence (lots of high-quality protein).

When he brought one of his dogs over to the house, it looked like he'd just unloaded a live deer from his van. :)

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Posted: Sun Dec 26, 2004 1:21 pm
by Dylan King
My dog occasionally scores music for WB cartoons, and helps me with mastering on just about everything.

Zappa Dog
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