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Banjo Lessons for the Adult Beginner

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Clawhammer Song of the Week: “The Miller’s Will”

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


Years ago, I had the pleasure of attending a workshop on fingerpicked banjo by the great Mike Seeger.

It blew my mind and, thinking back, changed the course of my banjo life in several ways.

In the span of an hour, Mike took us through a tour of a dizzying number of unique and wonderful styles of fingerpicking, introducing me to a world that, until then, I barely knew existed.

Beyond being phenomenally entertaining, it also raised a few questions.

The conventional wisdom, or the prevailing story that I’d been told, was – and still is – that when learning to play the banjo, you had to choose your “style.” You could learn bluegrass or old time, Scruggs or melodic, index or thumb lead, 2 finger or 3, and so on, and so on….but you could only choose one. So choose wisely!

And almost the entire body of banjo instruction respected those divisions.

But if that were true, then how was it that Mike could effortlessly glide from one style to the next to the next?

Furthermore, why hadn’t I heard any of this great banjo music he was playing before?

I’d started out playing “bluegrass” banjo. And like virtually everyone else who starts out learning bluegrass banjo, I was taught “Scruggs” style, using the typical instructional methods to do so.

I’d been under the impression that fingerstyle banjo essentially began and ended with Scruggs style and its subsequent offshoots.

But if it was possible to play all this wonderful music on my banjo, like Mike Seeger was, I sure as heck didn’t want to miss out on all that!

The quest to answer those questions led me to discovering an incredible new world of music.

It also led me back to the drawing board for fingerstyle banjo, to essentially start over from scratch.

And I’m sure glad I did.

I realized that the usual method of learning “rolls” as the foundation had backed me into a musical corner that I now had to escape from.

Don’t get my wrong, I’m a big fan of Earl Scruggs – he’s a big reason I picked up a banjo in the first place.

But I now see Earl as one of many in a long line of great up-picking banjoists, and I now see the traditional roll-based method of teaching Scruggs style banjo (which, of note, was not Earl’s idea) as one that’s needlessly complex and inefficient.

(RELATED: If you’re interested in learning all styles of up-picking in a way that’s aligned with how the grown up brain learns music, then you may enjoy the Breakthrough Banjo course for fingerstyle banjo. Click here to learn more. )

That experience also led me to explore as much of Mike’s recorded works as I could get my ears on, including the rich body of material from his time with The New Lost City Ramblers, including today’s gem: “The Miller’s Will.”

Mike fingerpicks on that version, which is how I initially learned it (after first having to decipher that he was playing out of aDAC#E tuning- gCGBD 2 frets up).

Below you’ll find the fingerstyle version for this song, and I think you’ll find each imparts its own unique flavor to the song (click here if you’d like to view the tab for it, too).

The Miller’s Will – “3 finger style” banjo

Mike Seeger also possessed an impressive repertoire of songs with nonsense words, which includes this selection. Feel free to create your own syllabically appropriate neologism if you’d like, as it’s sure to be no less sensical than the one sung here.

Such is the nature of nonsense.

 


The “Brainjo” banjo 

For those contemplating the various models of the Brainjo banjo, this video was made playing a “Hobart” model of the Brainjo. Click here if you’d like to claim it.


The Miller’s Will

aDAC#E tuning, Brainjo level 3

The Miller's Will clawhammer banjo tab part 1

The Miller's Will 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”
  • Episode 49: “The Gambler”
  • Episode 50: “8 More Miles To Louisville”
  • Episode 51: “Who’ll Stop the Rain”
  • Episode 52: “Pretty Polly”
  • Episode 53: “You Are My Sunshine”
  • Episode 54: “Old Molly Hare”

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

Clawhammer Tune of the Week: “Wabash Cannonball”

Click Here To Get The Tab


 

If you know a song about a chicken, a song about whiskey, and a song about a train, then chances are you’re an old time banjo player.

And it is in that spirit that I present this week’s tune selection, “Wabash Cannonball.”

The Wabash River spans 475 miles across the mid-central US. The Wabash Railroad, the inspiration for this week’s tune, spanned similar terrain.

Given it’s popularity amongst bluegrass banjoists, I’ve included it as part of the banjofication series. Hence, you’ll not only hear the old timey sounds of a downpicked banjo, but also the old timey sounds of a banjo picked in the other direction in both the 2 and 3 finger styles.

(RELATED: If you’d like to learn 2 and 3 fingerstyle banjo picking, check out the Breakthrough Banjo fingerstyle course at fingerstylebanjo.com)

What’s even better, there’s only one part to it! So it shouldn’t take you too long to get this classic under your fingers.

 

 


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


Wabash Cannonball

gDGBD tuning, Brainjo level 3

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 Tune of the Week: “Sara Armstrong’s Tune”

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


It’s never made much sense to me to think of banjo players, or musicians in general, as being “good” or “bad” (the absurdity of that notion usually cast in sharp relief if you’ve ever been tasked with the impossible job of picking a winner in banjo or fiddle contest).

Sure, there are some objective technical standards that are required to develop as a musician (even then, though, I think it’s more appropriate to think of people being at different points on the banjo learning timeline).

But once you have the technical fundamentals down, are able to play with solid rhythm and timing, and have developed your ear to the point where you can play the music that’s in your head, the rest is just a matter of aesthetic preference.

Or whether or not someone’s personal style moves you.

In every player’s performance there are countless decision that are made. What notes to leave in, what notes leave out, which ones to syncopate, what beats to emphasize, where to quiet, where to be loud, and so on, and so on.

The purpose of those decisions is to make the music in their head come out of their banjo, provided they have the skills required to to execute it. If your tastes happen to be similar to theirs, then you’ll probably like the music in their head, too (the players who enjoy the most popularity just happen to share their tastes with the greatest numbers – the pepperoni pizzas of the music world).

These players become our sources of inspiration. They are the ones who motivate us to keep working on our own skills in hopes of one day making music as moving as theirs.

One of my sources of inspiration was Donald Zepp, former owner of Zepp’s Country Music. Many of his fiddle tune renditions were canonical for me in my gestational period – I’d hear him play a tune and couldn’t imagine it being improved upon.

In other words, I liked the music in his head, and the decisions that mandated to bring it to life.

A highlight was his rendition of “Sara Armstrong’s Tune,” my original source for this week’s Tune of the Week. One of his signature moves is the use of the triplet, executed with the fretting hand either as a series of hammer ons and pull offs, and they pepper the B part liberally throughout.

My inability to replicate these maneuvers in my early playing days served as equal parts frustration and motivation.

And it was a milestone in my own journey when I finally could pull them off, particularly the final triplet flourish that punctuates the ending.

 


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


Sara Armstrong’s Tune

gCGCD tuning, Brainjo level 3

sara armstrong's tune clawhammer banjo tab part 1

sara armstrong's tune 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: “Old Molly Hare”

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


I’ve mentioned here before that I’m a fan of taking a fiddle tune normally played at high speeds and slowing it down.

For one thing, it’s an essential practice habit.

It’s great for exposing any potential timing errors you might be making.

And it helps you to practice any tricky technical bits without the risk of reinforcing any bad habits whilst trying to maintain a too-fast tempo.

All in all, mistakes are easier to sweep under the rug and ignore when playing fast, and are made conspicuous by playing slow. As the adage goes “in order to play fast, play slow.”

Furthermore, slowing things down and giving the melody time to breathe is also a great way to explore new approaches to playing the melody. Many times different ideas for playing a phrase will only emerge at the slower tempo.

(RELATED: As part of the Ear Laboratory, I’ll be posting a video workshop on how to build an arrangement of “Old Molly Hare” by ear, from scratch, on Friday, April 6. Click the button below if you’d like to register to see it.)

Register for the Workshop

 

And, as I’ve mentioned before, some tunes also take on an entirely different character at different speeds – like getting two tunes for the price of one.

Such is the case with this week’s rendition of “Old Molly Hare.” As a fiddle tune, it lends itself to being played at breakneck tempos.

But this slowed down version I like equally well. And since we’re already changing things up, I elected to play it here in the key of C rather than it’s typical home in D (though the relative tuning is the same for either).


The “Brainjo” banjo 

For those contemplating the various models of the Brainjo banjo, this video was made playing a “Tommy” model of the Brainjo. There’s one banjo left in the batch of Brainjos that’s estimated for completion in early summer (2018) (Click here if you’d like claim it)


Old Molly Hare

gCGCD tuning, Brainjo level 3

Old Molly Hare clawhammer banjo tab part 1

Old Molly Hare 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”
  • Episode 49: “The Gambler”
  • Episode 50: “8 More Miles To Louisville”
  • Episode 51: “Who’ll Stop the Rain”
  • Episode 52: “Pretty Polly”
  • Episode 53: “You Are My Sunshine”

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

Clawhammer Tune of the Week: “Cherokee Shuffle”

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


Longtime fans of the tune of the week series may be having feelings of deja vu.

“Cherokee Shuffle?” Didn’t we do that one already?

The answer is, yes, “Cherokee Shuffle” has made an appearance on the tune of the week series before. In the key of D, that is.

Some folks, especially (but not always) in bluegrass circles, play this tune in the key of A.

So, in the spirit of banjofication, I’ve adapted my clawhammer version for that key as well.

(RELATED: If you’d like to learn 2 and 3 finger style banjo, click here to check out the Brainjo course for Fingerstyle Banjo).

I think you’ll find this rendition of “Cherokee Shuffle” not too challenging to get under your fingers, including the occasional excursion up the neck.

This tune is also the first purely instrumental fiddle tune in our banjofication series. I’m especially fond of the sound of the clawhammer and fingerstyle banjo pairing for fiddle tunes. Plus, there’s also something subversively delightful about two banjos playing a fiddle tune without a devil’s box in sight.

 


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


Cherokee Shuffle

aEAC#E tuning, Brainjo level 3

Cherokee Shuffle clawhammer banjo tab part 1

Cherokee Shuffle 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

 

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