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Clawhammer Tune of the Week: “Rocky Pallet”

Click on the button below to get the PDF download for this tab delivered to you, and get 2 new tunes and tabs sent to you every week!

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“Why are fiddle tunes only played in a specific key?”

This is a question that often comes up when folks are first encountering the world of old-time fiddle tunes (which comprise a significant chunk of the traditional material played by clawhammer banjoists).

The short answer is that changing the key of a tune on the fiddle is usually not a trivial matter (for reasons beyond the scope of this discussion).

Furthermore, just like with clawhammer banjo, fiddlers often use certain tunings for specific keys. That is unlike the classical violinist, who plays everything out of “standard,” a.k.a. “Italian” (pronounced “eye-talian” for bonus old timey points).

And the two most common key-specific tunings the old time fiddlers use are for the keys of D and A. No coincidence that these happen to be the most common keys for old time fiddle tunes (though this does vary by region).

They key of G comes in close behind.

And in 4th place? The key of C, which is where we find this week’s tune “Rocky Pallet.”

Thus, you’ll note here we’re playing out of double C tuning (fortunately, we banjo players can simply slap on a capo to move between double C and double D tunings).

You can thank the Skillet Lickers for establishing that standard, as their recording of it in 1927 is considered the original source.


(NOTE: For those considering adding a Brainjo banjo, this one is played on a “Hobart” model. Click here if you’d like to learn more, or claim one in the next batch.)


Rocky Pallet

gCGCD tuning, Brainjo level 3-4

Rocky Pallet, clawhammer banjo tab, part 1

Rocky Pallet, clawhammer banjo tab, part 2

Notes on the Tab

Notes in parentheses are “skip” notes. To learn more about these, check out my video lesson on the subject.

For more on reading tabs in general, check out this complete guide to reading banjo tabs.

[RELATED: Level 2 arrangements and video demos for the Tune (and Song!) of the Week tunes are now available as part of the Breakthrough Banjo course. Learn more about it here.

Click here for a current list of all the clawhammer songs and tunes currently available inside of The Vault

 

Learn More About Breakthrough Banjo

 

About the Author
Josh Turknett is founder and lead brain hacker at Brainjo Productions
 

View the Brainjo Course Catalog

 

Clawhammer Song of the Week: “The Gambler”

Click on the button below to get the PDF download for this tab delivered to you, and get 2 new tunes and tabs sent to you every week!

Click Here To Get The Tab


While I love playing old-time and “traditional” tunes on the banjo, I also feel like in many ways we haven’t scratched the surface of what’s possible – both with clawhammer technique and the 5-string banjo.

Given the unique sounds and rhythms of clawhammer and the many varieties and voices of banjos, there are all sorts of sonic combinations still left unexplored.

And it seems that many out there in the world of clawhammer banjo who, while appreciating the richness of the clawhammer tradition, also see it as more than just a vehicle for old time music.

Along those lines, today we have a “contemporary” song (i.e one written by a musician who’s still living, Don Schlitz, though the song was popularized by Kenny Rogers) played in clawhammer style, on a gourd banjo.

The best part? By mixing a traditional playing technique with an instrument of ancient origin, we end up with something that, to my ears, sounds fresh and new.

(Note: most of the songs on the gourd banjo are played in the same “relative” tunings used on modern banjos, but the strings are each tuned down by a specific amount. Here, the gourd is tuned down to d#BbD#GBb, which puts the tune in the key of D#. However, this is the same relative tuning as standard G, or gDGBD, just with every string tuned down by 4 half steps in pitch. This means you can play the song as written out of standard G, and it will sound just fine, but will instead be in the key of G (the key of G is a wee bit hard for me to sing this one in, which is why I’ve instead chosen a more vocal friendly key)).

The Gambler

gDGBD tuning (d#BbD#GBb), Brainjo level 3-4

the gambler clawhammer banjo tab part 1

the gambler clawhammer banjo tab part 2

 

Notes on the Tab

In this arrangement, I’ve tabbed out the part I play in the banjo “solo,” as well as the vocal backup I play on the banjo while singing.

Notes in parentheses are “skip” notes – to learn more about skips and syncopated skips, check out my video lesson on the subject.

For more on reading tabs in general, check out this complete guide to reading banjo tabs.

PRIOR SONG OF THE WEEK EPISODES

  • Episode 1: “Ain’t Gonna Work Tomorrow”
  • Episode 2: “Gumtree Canoe”
  • Episode 3: “Crawdad Hole”
  • Episode 4: “Oh Susanna”
  • Episode 5: “Freight Train”
  • Episode 6: “Grandfather’s Clock”
  • Episode 7: “Hop High Lulu”
  • Episode 8: “Been All Around This World”
  • Episode 9: “I’ll Fly Away”
  • Episode 10: “Leaving Home”
  • Episode 11: “Poor Orphan Child”
  • Episode 12: “Mr. Tambourine Man”
  • Episode 13: “Swanee River”
  • Episode 14: “Big Sciota”
  • Episode 15: “Roll In My Sweet Baby’s Arms”
  • Episode 16: “Darling Corey”
  • Episode 17: “Battle Hymn of the Republic”
  • Episode 18: “America the Beautiful”
  • Episode 19: “Bury Me Beneath the Willow”
  • Episode 20: “Way Out There”
  • Episode 21: “New Slang”
  • Episode 22: “I Saw the Light”
  • Episode 23: “Amazing Grace”
  • Episode 24: “Blowin’ in the Wind”
  • Episode 25: “Yankee Doodle”
  • Episode 26: “Budapest”
  • Episode 27: “Wildwood Flower”
  • Episode 28: “Paradise”
  • Episode 29: “Mountain Dew”
  • Episode 30: “Blue Tail Fly”
  • Episode 31: “Otto Wood”
  • Episode 32: “Down on the Corner”
  • Episode 33: “City of New Orleans”
  • Episode 34: “Big Rock Candy Mountains”
  • Episode 35: “Come to the Bower”
  • Episode 36: “Old Kentucky Home”
  • Episode 37: “Long Journey Home”
  • Episode 38: “Dixie”
  • Episode 39: “Hard Times”
  • Episode 40: “Corrina Corrina”
  • Episode 41: “She’ll Be Coming Round the Mountain”
  • Episode 42: “Johnson Boys”
  • Episode 43: “Bad Moon Rising”
  • Episode 44: “Reuben’s Train”
  • Episode 45: “Let the Mermaid’s Flirt With Me”
  • Episode 46: “Rocky Top”
  • Episode 47: “Groundhog”
  • Episode 48: “Lazy John”

Level 2 arrangements and video demos for the Tune (and Song!) of the Week tunes are now available as part of the Breakthrough Banjo course.

Click here for a current list of all the clawhammer songs and tunes currently available inside of The Vault

Learn More About Breakthrough Banjo

 

About the Author
Josh Turknett is founder and lead brain hacker at Brainjo Productions
 

View the Brainjo Course Catalog

brainjo larger musical mind

Episode 28: Why Anyone Can (and should!) Learn To Play By Ear, part 1

by Josh Turknett, MD

To those who do it, playing by ear may seem as effortless as breathing. To those who don’t, the prospect may seem as far off as the Andromeda Galaxy. To many folks, the ability to play by ear is seen as a natural gift. And if you weren’t born with the gift, then you’re stuck with learning by tab or notation.

This, of course, is nonsense.


TEST YOUR EARS

Want to find out if you have what it takes to learn to play by ear?

Click here to take the “Can you play by ear?” quiz


 

Our Extraordinary Ears

Let’s start with a brief overview of how our ear, or more specifically, our auditory system, accomplishes its primary task of transforming vibrations of air molecules into a rich and detailed sonic experience. To begin with, all sound starts as a wave of air pressure set in motion by the vibration of a physical object.

Once that vibrating air reaches our head, it bounces around the cartilaginous folds of the pinna (the part of the ear you can see), where it is concentrated and then funneled into the dark tunnel of the external ear. Once they reach the end of that tunnel, the air molecules bounce up against the tiny tympanic membrane, also known as the “eardrum.” Deflections of the eardrum are then transmitted and amplified by way of three tiny bones that make up the middle ear.

The last of these bones, the stapes, transmits these vibrations to an even tinier membrane known as the “oval window.” On the other side of the oval window lies the cochlea, a snail-shaped chamber filled with fluid and lined with hair-like projections known as stereocilia. Vibrations of the oval window generate a fluid wave inside the cochlea, displacing the stereocilia and triggering the firing of a neuron—this is the moment when those vibrations of air are finally transformed into neural code. That neural signal is then relayed through the base of the brain and into the auditory cortex, where it is parsed, distributed, and analyzed, the end result of which is your sonic experience of the world around you.

To help you fully appreciate this analytical feat, imagine yourself sitting in your living room listening to one of your favorite bluegrass albums. With virtually no conscious effort, you can easily distinguish the sound of the banjo, guitar, mandolin, and singer.

If your significant other speaks to you while the music is on, you have no difficulty identifying his or her voice, and you have no trouble distinguishing it as separate from the music. Meanwhile, all those extraneous environmental noises you’re not particularly interested in at the moment are automatically filtered out as “background.” If pressed, however, you could almost surely determine their source and location.

Yet, as you’ve just learned, all of this sonic information is transferred from the world to inside our cranium by the beating of air molecules against the tympanic membrane. Incredibly, this exquisitely detailed, information-rich sonic landscape is created by the brain from nothing more than the deflections of a drum less than a centimeter in diameter.

 

The Process Demystified

Let’s now contrast what our auditory system does during the course of its normal operation with what it must do when you play the banjo (or any instrument) by ear. In a nutshell, here’s the basic procedure for playing by ear:

Step 1: Hear a pitch in your head (i.e. in “mental space”)

Step 2: Match it to a pitch that comes from your banjo (i.e. in “physical space”).

Musical pitches are vibrations of air molecules that oscillate at regular intervals (or “frequencies”). Compared to the irregular vibrations that comprise most of our sonic environment—sounds that we decode with ease—musical pitches are much simpler. From the standpoint of complexity alone, then, the cognitive procedure required to decode everyday sounds is more sophisticated than what’s required to match pitches in physical and mental space.

Now, guess what? If you sing, you’ve already demonstrated that you are capable of performing the basic cognitive procedure for playing by ear. You’ve demonstrated that you can match a pitch that exists in mental space to one in physical space. The only difference in the case of singing is that the pitch is generated by the vibration of the vocal cords instead of a plucked banjo string.

I can hear some of you now exclaiming in hopeless resignation “I can’t carry a tune to save my life!” If so, I have good news: the very fact that you know you can’t carry a tune with your voice means that you have an ear capable of discriminating differences in pitches!

After all, how else would you know you couldn’t carry a tune if you were unable to determine that the note you sing doesn’t always match the desired note in your head? Your problem is not that you can’t hear differences between pitches, it’s that you haven’t fully developed the ability to adjust your vocal cords so that they vibrate at the desired frequency. Not to worry, though, because when you play the banjo, this part of the process is taken care of for you (provided your banjo is in tune!).

So we’ve established that your ear and brain, in the course of normal operation, already accomplish auditory processing feats more advanced than playing music by ear. And we’ve established that a great many of you (both singers and those who know they can’t sing!) have already demonstrated that you possess the tools required to play by ear. Is there anyone out there who is truly incapable of playing by ear?

 

Congenital Amusia

Congenital amusia, commonly known as “tone deafness,” is the inability to discriminate between musical pitches. Like color blind males whose brains are incapable of distinguishing different wavelengths of light (typically those in the red-green spectrum), those with congenital amusia cannot tell the difference between certain frequencies of sound waves.

These are the only folks who can make a legitimate claim to not being able to play by ear. But just how common is tone deafness, particularly out there in Banjo Hangout land?

Congenital amusia runs in families, an observation that indicates it is at least in part genetic in origin (in fact, the very presence of such a genetic condition supports the idea that we are hard-wired to discriminate pitches). The uppermost estimate of the prevalence of congenital amusia in the general population is 4%, though some experts argue that the actual number is much lower than that.

Yet, even at 4%, the odds are heavily stacked in your favor. Moreover, most folks with congenital amusia don’t find music particularly enjoyable, and so aren’t likely to take up an instrument or subscribe to banjo-related periodicals. Thus, the percentage of folks who are both learning to play banjo and tone deaf is likely much, much smaller than the estimated 4%.

If we put all of this together, we find the odds that anyone reading this article right now suffers from congenital amusia and thus is incapable of playing the banjo by ear are astronomically low. But, if in spite of the preceding discussion you still doubt your capacity to learn music by ear, I’ve created a short and simple banjo-centric test you can take to determine if you have what it takes. Just go to clawhammerbanjo.net/earquiz and follow the instructions.

 

Permission to Try

Contrary to what many may believe, playing by ear is not a natural gift. It is a learned skill. Sadly, it’s a skill many never even try to learn, thanks in no small part to the natural gift myth. But, rest assured, with rare exception it’s a skill that anyone can develop through hard work and practice.

In the next installment in this series, I’ll talk about why that hard work and practice is worth the effort.

— Click here to read Part 2 —

 

To learn more about the Breakthrough Banjo courses for clawhammer and fingerstyle banjo, click the relevant link below:

— Breakthrough Banjo for CLAWHAMMER Banjo —

— Breakthrough Banjo for FINGERSTYLE Banjo —


— The Laws of Brainjo Table of Contents —

About the Author
Josh Turknett is founder and lead brain hacker at Brainjo Productions
 

View the Brainjo Course Catalog

brainjo 1

 

Clawhammer Tune of the Week: “Polly Put the Kettle On”

Click on the button below to get the PDF download for this tab delivered to you, and get 2 new tunes and tabs sent to you every week!

Click Here To Get The Tab


Some people call her Molly.

Some call her Polly.

Who’s right?

Turns out everyone is. This week’s tune first appeared in print around the turn of the 18th Century, one in London with “Molly” as the title character, one in Dublin with “Polly.”

The version played here is based largely on the fiddling of Tommy Jarrell, who used the latter moniker. Hence, so do I.

And there’s even a movie inspired by the tune, described as “a romantic drama of smiles and tears.”

There it is.

 


(NOTE: For those considering adding a Brainjo banjo, this one is played on a “Hobart” model. Click here if you’d like to learn more, or claim one in the next batch.)


 

Polly Put the Kettle on

aDADE tuning, Brainjo level 3-4

 

Notes on the Tab

Notes in parentheses are “skip” notes. To learn more about these, check out my video lesson on the subject.

The “Galax lick” appears in this tune in the 1st and 3rd measures, as indicated by the up arrow. For those unfamiliar with the technique, you’ll find a playlist of videos demonstrating this and other techniques in this article all about reading the tabs.

For more on reading tabs in general, check out this complete guide to reading banjo tabs.

[RELATED: Level 2 arrangements and video demos for the Tune (and Song!) of the Week tunes are now available as part of the Breakthrough Banjo course. Learn more about it here.

Click here for a current list of all the clawhammer songs and tunes currently available inside of The Vault

 

Learn More About Breakthrough Banjo

 

About the Author
Josh Turknett is founder and lead brain hacker at Brainjo Productions
 

View the Brainjo Course Catalog

 

Clawhammer Tune of the Week: “Ducks on the Millpond”

Click on the button below to get the PDF download for this tab delivered to you, and get 2 new tunes and tabs sent to you every week!

Click Here To Get The Tab


 

“Ducks in the millpond, Geese in the ocean;
Hug them pretty girls, If I take a notion.”

So begin the words that are occasionally sung to today’s installment of the Tune of the Week, “Ducks on the Millpond.”


(NOTE: For those considering adding a Brainjo banjo, this one is played on a “Hobart” model. Click here if you’d like to learn more, or claim one in the next batch.)


 

Understandably, this tune is sometimes confused with the fiddle tune “Ducks on the Pond.” So if you find yourself in the company of other old-time-fiddle-tune-loving musicians and want to offer this one up as a selection, make sure you know the pond to which you’re referring.

Most versions of this tune are traced back to fiddler Emmett Lundy of Grayson County, VA (1865-1953), who was recorded playing it by Alan Lomax in 1941. Lundy reportedly learned most of this tunes from local fiddler Greenbury Leonard, who fellow musicians referred to as “the best there ever was.”

Leonard was born sometime in the early 19th Century. Where he picked up “Ducks on the Millpond” – if he is indeed Lundy’s source – is unknown.

So more than likely, it’s a tune that’s survived two centuries, at the least. I say we keep it around for many more!

 

Playing Notes: The “Galax lick” appears in this tune in the 10th measure, as indicated by the up arrow. For those unfamiliar with the technique, you’ll find a playlist of videos demonstrating this and other techniques in this article all about reading the tabs.

 

 

Ducks on the Millpond

aDADE tuning, Brainjo level 3

Ducks on the Millpond clawhammer banjo tab

 

Notes on the Tab

Notes in parentheses are “skip” notes. To learn more about these, check out my video lesson on the subject.

For more on reading tabs in general, check out this complete guide to reading banjo tabs.

[RELATED: Level 2 arrangements and video demos for the Tune (and Song!) of the Week tunes are now available as part of the Breakthrough Banjo course. Learn more about it here.

Click here for a current list of all the clawhammer songs and tunes currently available inside of The Vault

 

Learn More About Breakthrough Banjo

 

About the Author
Josh Turknett is founder and lead brain hacker at Brainjo Productions
 

View the Brainjo Course Catalog

 

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