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Clawhammer Tune and Tab of the Week: “John Brown’s Dream”

Click here to subscribe to the tune of the week (if you’re not already a subscriber) and get a new tune every Friday, plus tabs to all the ones to date.
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Several months ago when my friend and fiddling companion Justin Manglitz and I set out to create our track list for upcoming album “Round Peak, Georgia”, the hardest part of the whole thing was deciding what tunes to include. Or, rather, what tunes to leave out!

I love virtually every tune that’s associated with the Round Peak tradition, and have come to know many of them like old friends. Picking which ones to put on the album was like choosing your favorite child.

But John Brown’s Dream, that was a no brainer.

It’s one of the most iconic tunes from that region, plus it’s one that really shines when the fiddle and banjo are marching in lockstep.

And playing in lockstep with a fiddler is in my opinion one of the great thrills of playing the banjo.

Yet, I know that not everyone has easy access to an ace fiddler like Justin to play along with, which is in part why I created the “Banjo Players Edition” package as a supplement to the album. Something for all the banjo players out there.

With the tab arrangements for my banjo part in all the tunes, plus solo fiddle tracks at performance and slowed speeds, it provides you the chance to take my spot in the banjo-fiddle duet (it’s also included as part of the Breakthrough Banjo course).

I’ve personally spent many hours playing along with recordings and backing tracks like this, and consider it to be instrumental (pun partially intended) to my own musical development.

The New “Georgia Jays” Shirt

Lastly, a few folks spied the new “Georgia Jays” shirt I was wearing in the video last week, and asked where they can grab one. They’re currently available through Amazon – you can click here or on the image below to get one.

Screen Shot 2016-01-16 at 5.02.25 PM

Below you’ll find not just the tab for this tune, but also the solo fiddle tracks at performance and slowed speed if you want to play alongside Justin (be sure to turn up the volume so you can hear it easily over your banjo). And if you end up enjoying yourself, then you might check out the “Round Peak, Georgia” Players Edition.

Check Out the Players’ Edition

 

John Brown’s Dream – Solo Fiddle – Performance Speed:

https://clawhammerbanjo.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/John-Browns-Dream.mp3

 

John Brown’s Dream – Solo Fiddle – Slowed Speed:

https://clawhammerbanjo.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/John-Browns-Dream-slowed.mp3


John Brown’s Dream

aEAC#E tuning, Brainjo level 3-4

John Brown's Dream clawhammer banjo tab part 1

John Brown's Dream clawhammer banjo tab part 2

Interested In Simpler Arrangements for the Tune of the Week?

Many of you have asked for some slightly simplified arrangements for the tunes in the Tune of the Week series. I’m pleased to report that Level 2 versions of the Tune of the Week tunes are now available as part of the Breakthrough Banjo course (along with many others!). And, of course, all of the main Tune of the Week arrangements are there as well. Click here to learn more–>

Learn More

 

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

View the Brainjo Course Catalog

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Clawhammer Tune and Tab of the Week: “Home Sweet Home”

Click here to subscribe to the tune of the week (if you’re not already a subscriber) and get a new tune every Friday, plus tabs to all the ones to date.
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The year was 2002. Late winter, I believe.

On Christmas 2001 I’d received a banjo, a Deering Goodtime. It was also the year of my medical internship.

The place I was training had recently been sanctioned by the accrediting board for violating the rules on intern work hours, and were still trying to figure out how to make it appear as if we were working under the newly established 90 hours a week requirement.

Needless to say, my schedule didn’t leave a whole lot of time for banjo practice.

I’d messed around with my new banjo a bit over the short Christmas holiday, but once the daily grind began anew, it was soon pushed aside.

And then one evening, driving back from the hospital, I slipped in the “Foggy Mountain Banjo” CD by Flatt and Scruggs. I’d just bought it, and was still listening through it for the first time.

The song Home Sweet Home came on.

Mind blown.

I didn’t know a banjo could sound like that. I still even remember the stretch of road I was driving on. My lacrimal glands may or may not have secreted a drop of saline solution that ran down my maxilla.

I got home, took the banjo came out of the closet, and I decided come hell or high water I was gonna learn how to play it. I just had to learn how to make music like that (and I also had to figure out how to learn with very little time for practice….).

I’ve been playing “Home Sweet Home” ever since. I first learned it Scruggs style, like Earl.

But it makes a great clawhammer number, too, fitting perfectly into double C tuning, easily allowing for a two octave variation, which you can hear in the video, and which I’ve tabbed out below.

What about you? Was there a particular song that set you going? If so, please share it in the comments below.

Home Sweet Home

gCGCD tuning, Brainjo level 3-4

home sweet home clawhammer banjo tab part 1

home sweet home clawhammer banjo tab part 2

home sweet home clawhammer banjo tab part 3

Notes in parentheses are “skip” notes, which are used often in this arrangement (especially the low variation) to created “syncopated skips”. 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.

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

View the Brainjo Course Catalog

The Immutable Laws of Brainjo: The Art and Science of Effective Practice (Episode 13)

The Laws of Brainjo, Episode 13

The “Labyrinth” Practice Technique

(click here for Episode 14: The Secret to Playing Faster)

I’m going to share with you a practice technique that I use all of the time. It’s a technique I find indispensable, one that can literally shorten your practice time by 500% or more.

And so if you’re not familiar with it, or not using it, then that needs to change pronto!

But first I’ll tell you a story.

 

Family-Friendly Competition

My son recently had a birthday, and one of the gifts he received was the game “Labyrinth.”

Labyrinth is an actual, physical game, one you can touch and feel and exists entirely in the analog realm of real life. A refreshing departure from the land of ones and zeroes that little boys spend much of their time in these days.

You may have seen or played it. It consists of a movable wooden board mounted inside of a box. On the board is a maze, and your job is to navigate a metal ball through the maze, using two rotating knobs that adjust the pitch of the board, without it falling into any of the many holes in its way.

THE LABYRINTH GAME

My son soon became obsessed with it, playing one round after another, getting better with each repetition. And then he put down a challenge: “Dad, see if you can break my record.”

Challenge accepted.

I got to work. Initially, my progress was swift. I’m going to break his record in no time, I thought.

Not so fast.

I’d reached the same little section of maze my son had yet to successfully move through, and couldn’t get past it, despite multiple attempts. Each time, I’d put my ball at the starting point, meticulously guide it through the initial sections, only to have it repeatedly fall each time into the same hole in the maze.


And each time that little section of maze defeated me my frustration grew, as I’d have to repeat the tedious task of starting back at the beginning, then carefully navigate through the parts I’d already mastered just so I could try my hand at that one section I’d yet to conquer.

And then I had what at the time I thought was a revelation.

Why don’t I just place the ball at the start of the section that I can’t get past, and just work on that one spot until I master it? 

That’s just what I did. With my enthusiasm renewed, after about six or seven attempts on just that one section, I learned the required maneuvers of the knobs and could consistently make it through. All that was left was to do was set my marble back to the beginning, proceed to the section I had now mastered, and break my now….ahem…8 year old son’s record!

Now, I was patting myself on the back for discovering this little shortcut for getting better at the game — which in retrospect seemed kind of an obvious thing to do — when it occurred to me that I do this exact same thing when practicing the banjo ALL THE TIME. It’s a technique that I’d been thinking was probably an obvious one, but this little experience with the Labyrinth game made me realize that may not be the case at all.

So now I’ll demonstrate the “Labyrinth Practice Technique” applied to the banjo with a specific example.

 

How To Use The Labyrinth Practice Technique

Step 1: Identify the difficult spot in the tune.

A few weeks ago I released the tune “Sailor’s Hornpipe” as part of the Clawhammer Tune of the Week series. I chose this tune in part to pay tribute to the memory of 3-finger banjoist extraordinaire Bill Keith, who had recently passed away.

Bill Keith is known as a pioneer of the “melodic” style of 3-finger playing, so I wanted to include in my arrangement some nods to his playing style. One such nod occurs at the end of the 1st measure and extending into the 2nd. It’s the kind of picking pattern Bill used often, but not one that I’m all that accustomed to playing.

And I noticed that, as I was working up my arrangement, I was consistently tripping up on that particular spot. It was clearly my weakest link in the entire arrangement, just like the one section in the Labyrinth I couldn’t get past.

So, rather than play through the entire tune over and over again, the bulk of which I could play just fine, I instead focused my energies on ONLY that section, and got to work on applying the Labyrinth Practice Technique to this particular arrangement.

So here’s what that particular section I’d isolated out looked like in tab:

As an aside, one of the signature elements of Keith’s melodic style is the use of melodic licks in which a note that’s higher in pitch is found on a string tuned to a lower pitch (for example, the 2nd note in the 2nd measure above is higher in pitch than the 1st note in the measure, even though it’s played on a string that’s tuned to a lower pitch). If you’ve been playing stringed instruments for any length of time, your brain has learned to expect the opposite, and will resist you trying to do so. In order to play through a section that violates this rule, then, you’ll need to unlearn that resistance.

Step 2: Play the difficult section along with a timekeeping device, SLOWLY.

The next thing I did was open up a metronome, and to find the tempo setting where I could actually play through this section cleanly and with good timing. This turned out to be 60 bpm, roughly half of the final “performance” tempo (you could also use a backing track for this sort of thing, provided you have the ability to adjust the tempo).

Step 3: Gradually increase the tempo of the timekeeping device until you reach performance speed.

Once I could consistently play through the section at that initial tempo, I increased the speed a bit, working on it again at that tempo until I could play through it consistently. I repeated this process until I reached performance tempo.

Once I’d done so, I knew I could now confidently play through the entire arrangement.

Practicing Smarter, Not Harder 

There’s no telling how long it would’ve taken me to beat that tricky section in the Labyrinth game had I painstakingly taken my marble back to start of the maze each and every time it tripped me up.

Like I said, all of the maze prior to that point I could make it through just fine. Had I continued in this manner, I’d have been spending the bulk of my practice time rehearsing something I already knew how to do. Doing it this way, I was only spending a fraction of my practice time working on the thing I actually needed to learn.

Worse yet, the fact that I had to start over each time and navigate through the sections I’d already learned made each failed attempt all the more frustrating. That frustration undoubtedly worsened my concentration and performance, further reducing my practice efficiency.

So I encourage you to use this technique liberally to your advantage, particularly when encountering a challenging section of a new tune or song. Resist the temptation to avoid those parts that you find most challenging. And resist the temptation to rush through them, as you’ll only end up reinforcing bad habits.

Use the “Labyrinth Technique” instead, and I think you’ll be pleasantly surprised by the speed of your progress.

You’ve likely heard me say this before, but this is yet another illustration of the principle that HOW we practice is as (or more) vital to our success as WHAT we practice.. If you were to take two people of equal skill and have them try to learn the same piece of music or navigate through the labyrinth maze, and only one had access to this practice technique, I know who I’d bet on to learn it first.

Brainjo Law #15: When encountering challenging sections of a new tune, use the “Labyrinth technique” to improve practice efficiency.

 

Back to 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

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Happy New Year!

Happy New Year!

Click Here For The Tab To “Auld Lang Syne”
 

Clawhammer Tune and Tab of the Week: “Carol of the Bells”

Click here to subscribe to the tune of the week (if you’re not already a subscriber) and get a new tune every Friday, plus tabs to all the ones to date.


Like I said yesterday, the chain of events that resulted in yesterday’s holiday video extravaganza all started innocently enough with a little request for a clawhammer arrangement of “Carol of the Bells”.

With that now out of my system (much to my future teenage daughter’s embarrassment), it’s time to get back to the business of Tune of the Week.

As is the case with several of the holiday classics, this tune offers us an opportunity to play out of G minor tuning. All that’s required to get there from standard G is just to tune the 2nd string down a half step to B flat. And it gives us a chance to get some reps in playing in 3/4 time signature.

I’ve made some slight modifications to the structure of the song in order to make it a bit more suitable as a solo banjo arrangement.

Carol of the Bells

gDGBbD tuning, Brainjo level 3

Carol of the Bells clawhammer banjo tab part 1Carol of the Bells 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.

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

View the Brainjo Course Catalog

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