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Clawhammer Tune and Tab of the Week: “Boatin’ Up Sandy”

Click Here To Get The Tab


Last month, preparations for an upcoming contradance required I add a few new tunes to my repertoire. One of them was this month’s selection: “Boatin’ Up Sandy.”

There are at least a couple of tunes by this name. The version presented here is often attributed to fiddler Owen “Snake” Chapman.

Yet, despite its origins as a fiddle tune, it makes for a great solo banjo piece, especially when presented at moderate tempo.

Played out of modal tuning, with its haunting tones and hypnotic rhythms it could easily double as a meditative mantra.

You may notice in the arrangement some fingerings you don’t encounter too often (the hammer on from the 3rd to 7th fret on the 1st string being one example). Not surprisingly, this original sounding tune calls for some original bits of technique.

I like finding tunes like this, where you can’t rely on well worn patterns to play them, but by necessity must find something original.

Boatin’ Up Sandy

aEADE (A modal) tuning, Brainjo level 3-4

boatin' up sandy 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.

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.

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 Song and Tab of the Week: “Roll In My Sweet Baby’s Arms”

Click Here To Get The Tab



The Clawhammer Banjoist’s Guide to Crashing a Bluegrass Jam:

  1. Learn some bluegrass standards (like this week’s song!)
  2. Follow bluegrass jam etiquette. Play sparse-ish, chord based backup (or play nothing at all) while the other instruments are playing, and while the singer is singing. Then play your banjo solo “break” when it’s your turn.
  3. Nod head vigorously from side to side should you choose to not take the aforementioned solo.
  4. Act like you belong.

It’s a little bit – or a lot bit – absurd that the worlds of bluegrass and old-time music, and the banjo styles that are commonly associated with them, so seldom collide.

The two genres are about as close as two genres can be, so much so that they’re entirely indistinguishable to the casual observer, even in spite of attempts to educate said observer on the finer points of their subtle distinctions.

Because of this peculiar predicament, you’re far more likely to hear clawhammer banjo in an old-time jam, and fingerstyle banjo in a bluegrass jam.

But there’s no reason this should be so, the occasional prickly “purist’s” point of view notwithstanding.

So if you’re a clawhammer enthusiast, fear not the bluegrass jam. Yes, the protocol is slightly different, but otherwise there’s no reason you shouldn’t feel right at home. More than likely, your co-jammers will embrace the refreshing change of pace.

I’ve been known to play 3 finger banjo in an old time jam, and clawhammer in a bluegrass jam, and have lived to tell about it. It usually works out great, especially if there are other banjoists already filling out the traditional role.

Songs, like this week’s classic, popularized by Flatt and Scruggs, are also more common in bluegrass circles. And there will be many more selections from the Song of the Week that double as bluegrass fare (along with prior selections “Ain’t Gonna Work Tomorrow,” “Grandfather’s Clock,” and “I’ll Fly Away”).

Roll In My Sweet Baby’s Arms

gDGBD tuning, Brainjo Level 3

roll in my sweet baby's arms clawhammer banjo tab part 1

roll in my sweet baby's arms clawhammer banjo tab part 2
Notes on the Tab

In the tab above, you’ll note I’ve tabbed out both a “lead break” (something to play in between verses) and the “vocal backup” (what I play while I’m 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”

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 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: “Big Sciota”

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


Big Sciota. Or Scioto. Or Scioti. Or Scioty….

The only point over which everyone seems to agree is that the “c” should be silent. I think.

Regardless of what trisyllabic moniker you choose to refer to it by, it remains a 231-mile stretch of river in Ohio, one that was important to many Native American cultures (from which the orthographically contentious name for it was derived)

“Big Sciota” began life as an instrumental fiddle tune, credited to Burl Hammons. Somewhere along the way a lyrical tributary was added. My research indicates that Ritchie Stearns was the first to attach words to this melody. Later on, the song was covered by Old Crow Medicine Show, sending it semi-mainstream (ahh, wordplay).

As such, these days you may hear it in multiple circles. It’s a staple in bluegrass jams, but is equally at home amongst those with old-time, folk, and Americana-ish tendencies.

The melody for the sung version differs slightly from how it’s typically rendered on fiddle. Here, I’ve kept the banjo solos more in line with the fiddle melody, in hopes of keeping the best of both worlds.

Big Sciota

gDGBD tuning, Brainjo level 3-4

big sciota clawhammer banjo tab part 1

big sciota clawhammer banjo tab part 1

Notes on the Tab

In the tab above, you’ll note I’ve tabbed out both a “lead break” (something to play in between verses) and the “vocal backup” (what I play while I’m 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”

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 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: “Yellow Barber”

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


On an otherwise ordinary day, Mike, the protagonist in this opening parable, happens upon someone playing clawhammer banjo. Captivated by its rhythmic, driving sound, and the pleasing drone of the 5th string, he decides he MUST learn how to play it.

He happens upon some instructional materials, and begins his studies in earnest. After getting some fundamentals under his belt, he takes a stab at some more advanced arrangements.

Yet, once he begins to play them, he notices something peculiar. Despite being more complex and “advanced,” something seems to be missing. Like the foot-tap-inducing, hypnotic drive that sucked him into clawhammer in the first place.

And the 5th string drone seems to have vanished without a trace.

 

Mike’s story is not uncommon: a player progresses to learning more “advanced” clawhammer arrangements and find things sound different, perhaps worse.

What’s happening here? More than likely, Mike is learning arrangements in the “melodic” style of playing.

For those unfamiliar, “melodic” style is when a banjoist tries to include as many of the melody notes as possible when playing a tune.

Melodies that have been written for the human voice (i.e. a song) tend to have their fair share of space. Aside from the occasional auctioneering outlier, there’s a limit to how fast we can sing.

So, when adapting songs for clawhammer, it’s usually not too difficult to include most, if not all, melody notes while still maintaining the driving sound of a downpicked banjo.

On the other hand, melodies written for instruments capable of producing a lot of notes per unit time – like the fiddle – tend to be quite busy. Adapting these melodies for clawhammer requires you to make decisions.

Decisions about when to leave out a melody note in favor of preserving drive, and when to leave them in favor of preserving something melodically essential.

Take this week’s tune, Yellow Barber, as an example. The original is a busy little beast of a fiddle tune by Kentucky fiddler Buddy Thomas, who was known for playing busy little beasts of fiddle tunes.

In sitting down to arrange this for banjo, there weren’t many instances where I felt that dropping a melody note wouldn’t sacrifice too much of the tune’s essence.

In other words, there weren’t many melody notes I felt I could cut from “Yellow Barber” (pun fully intended). As a result, I ended up with about as “melodic” an arrangement as you’ll typically see from me, and one that serves as a great example of “melodic” clawhammer.

(RELATED: For more on the distinction between melodic and other styles of banjo, check out the melodic-style arrangement of Soldier’s Joy from the “Round Peak Recipe” post)

As discussed above, you’ll find that the thumb, when employed, is now typically called into the service of melody over drone. And the 5th string only makes an occasional cameo.

You may also hear a bit less drive. For me, for this particular tune, that’s ok. “Yellow Barber” is more baroque than breakdown.

Of course, these finite categories only exist in our collective imaginations. Every arrangement can be plotted on a continuous spectrum from “rhythmic” to “melodic,” with the dividing line between the two existing only in the ear of the beholder.

(RELATED: learn how to arrange any tune anywhere along the “rhythmic to melodic” spectrum as part of the “How To Play By Ear” module in the Breakthrough Banjo course.)

So what about you? Do you like clawhammer banjo that’s mellifluous and melodic, driving and droning, or somewhere in the middle? Let me know in the comments section below.

Yellow Barber

aDADE tuning, Brainjo level 3-4

yellow barber 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.

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.

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 Song (and Tab) of the Week: “Baltimore Fire”

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


This week’s song is another gem mined from the recordings of Charlie Poole and the North Carolina Ramblers.

I’d already put it on my list as a future Song of the Week selection before our family had a conflagration of our own, so I have a renewed appreciation for its powers of rapid destruction.

Baltimore Fire, recorded in 1929, was written in commemoration of the Great Baltimore Fire of 1904. That fire raged for over 30 hours, spanning 70 city blocks, and destroying 1,545 buildings, doing an estimated $3.84 billion in damage in today’s dollars.

Sounds about right.

It makes for a great banjo song. And knowing the backstory may lead to an extra chill or two up your spine when singing it.

It surely does mine!

Baltimore Fire

gDGBD tuning, Brainjo level 2

baltimore fire clawhammer banjo tab part 1

baltimore fire clawhammer banjo tab part 2

Notes on the Tab

In the tab above, you’ll note I’ve tabbed out both a “lead break” (something to play in between verses) and the “vocal backup” (what I play while I’m 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”

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 Breakthrough Banjo

 

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