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The Clawhammer Core Repertoire Series: “Angelina Baker”

Episode 16: Angelina Baker

Some tunes can kill a jam.

And some tunes can save them.

Not only is Angelina Baker is a jam classic, it’s also a classic jam saver, perfectly suited for those moments when your friendly neighborhood jam seems to be losing steam. Perhaps a few tunes have gone by that left the less advanced players behind, or you’ve got a fiddler with a penchant for choosing obscure crooked tunes from Southwest Coweta County. The jam has fallen off the rails, and you need a tune to get it back on track. A tune that everyone can partake in, that’s virtually guaranteed to be rollicking along by the second or third run through.

Enter Angelina Baker (aka “Angeline the Baker”). With its strong, yet simple and memorable melody, straightforward chord progression, and common position in the repertoire of beginning old-time musicians, it meets all the criteria needed for injecting life back into a flagging jam.

I also think that if you’re trying your hand at playing a banjo-fiddle duet for the first time, Angelina Baker is a great tune to begin with.

Before we dig in, here’s a preview of my own final take on this tune:
IFrame

Step 1: Know thy Melody

As usual, there is to be no plucking of thy banjo until you can sing or hum the melody. And to sift the melodic essence from the baking Angelina, let’s take a listen to a few fiddler’s interpretations of this classic, courtesy of the Fiddle Hangout archives:

Fiddle One

Fiddle Two

Fiddle Three

Step 2: Find the Melody Notes

Okay, once you’ve listened enough times to have the melody firmly in mind, it’s time to set out and find it on the banjo. Angelina Baker is typically played in the key of D, so go ahead and get your 5-string into ADADE tuning (“double D”) before you go note hunting.

Here’s what I hear as the essence of Angelina (A and B part each played once through):

https://corerepertoire.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/Angelinamelody.mp3

 

And here’s what that looks like tabulationally arranged:

Step 3:  Add Some Clawhammery Stuff

Next up, we’ll create a basic arrangement suitable for any jam setting by simply adding a “ditty” strum after each melody note that falls on the downbeat (the notes in bold in the tablature).

Here’s what that looks like:

And it sounds as follows:

https://corerepertoire.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/Angelinabasicclaw.mp3

 

Alongside the fiddle, we find it plays very nicely:

https://corerepertoire.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/Angelinabf.mp3

Step 4: Add Flavor

Like any good baker, now it’s time to add your own personal stamp to this basic recipe. Spice it up with a few fretting hand notes with hammer ons, pull offs, or slides. Or sweeten it up by adding in the rest of the melody notes – since this isn’t a particularly notey tune, and since the melody notes are easy to grab in this tuning, it’s a good one for getting your feet wet with a more melodic style of playing. The simple melody here leaves lots of room for individual expression, so modify it any you way you please to suit your own tastes.

You can hear my final arrangement in the video above, and the tab for it is below:

Step 5: Practice Smart

Now it’s time to burn this one into your brain circuits. My favorite place to start doing so are the Beats for Banjo tracks (select tempo through the playlist icon on the upper right):

Go to the Core Repertoire Series Table of Contents

7 Reasons Why Clawhammer Banjoists Should Know Their Chords (plus the ones to know)

To Chord or Not to Chord, Is That The Question?

You may have encountered some debate as to whether clawhammer banjo players should learn or use chords in their playing. If you come from a guitar playing background – or any other stringed instrument for that matter – you may find it a bit strange that this could be an issue.

So why the debate?

It stems from the belief (likely true) that the earliest clawhammer banjo players didn’t think about or use chords, and probably weren’t even familiar with the concept – at least in terms of the way we think of them today.

The popularization of the guitar in the early 20th century is often cited as the moment when chords entered the consciousness of folk musicians in America.

What Are Chords, Anyhow?
Chords are simply a set of three or more notes (or, in some cases, just two) that we find pleasing when played together. At any given moment in a song or tune, there are a set of other notes that sound good when played along with the melody notes. The chords, or the chord progression, tell us precisely what those notes are at any given point in the song. The chord progression is a convenient and highly useful shortcut for finding where the harmony notes are.

So some may say that to be true to the traditional music of clawhammer banjo, one should eschew chords. In some cases, chords – especially the ones “modern” musicians tend to favor – impose harmonies on the music that you wouldn’t have heard back in pre-chordal days. So, if you use them, then you’re not being historically accurate (a worthy consideration if historical preservation is your goal).

There are a few problems with this line of reasoning, in my view.

One is that not everyone who takes up clawhammer banjo is interested in replicating the music of the earliest clawhammer banjoists with perfect fidelity. In fact, I’d bet the vast majority have almost no interest in doing so.

Second, clawhammer banjo is just a technique – a technique that can be used to play any style of music you choose. And, for much of that music, chords are going to play a huge part.

Yes, the early clawhammer banjoists in the Appalachian south had a core body of tunes they played in this style. But every technique must develop within the context of some type of musical tradition. There’s no rule that states you can never extend that technique outside the confines of that tradition.

In fact, were such a rule to exist, then folks would’ve never started fiddling on their violins!

Third is that just because you’ve learned your chords doesn’t mean you have to use them. Ultimately, you can still choose when to use them and when not to. And for those tunes where historical accuracy is your goal, you can just leave them out. They’re just another tool in the toolbox.

But I think they’re an invaluable tool for the clawhammer banjoist. Here’s why:

 7 REASONS CLAWHAMMER BANJOISTS SHOULD KNOW THEIR CHORDS

Reason #1:  Better Background “Atmosphere”

The banjo is a highly resonant instrument, especially modern ones with metal tone rings and steel strings. This means that when the banjo is being played, there are all sorts of things vibrating on the instrument other than the string that’s just been struck. Including the other strings!

So, if those other strings aren’t in harmony with the note you’ve just struck, then things won’t sound quite right. If you’re fingering the notes of the chord of the moment, however, then when those other strings ring out, they will sound, well….harmonious.

 

Reason #2:  Your Mistakes Will Sound Better

If you’re fingering the notes of the chord of the moment and you happen to hit a note other than the one you intended, chances are it’ll sound just fine, since those other notes you’re fretting are, by definition, in harmony with the note you intended to hit. In some cases, you might even think it sounds better. A lot of great music has been the result of happy accidents such as this.

 

Reason #3:  Makes Picking Out New Tunes By Ear Much Easier

The chord progression for any piece of music provides a roadmap for where to find the melody for the tune you’re learning. Instead of having all the notes on the fretboard as possible spots to find the notes of the melody, you now have constrained your choices to just a fraction of that number.

In most cases – and this seems to be true of most musicians – I typically start learning a tune by first finding its chord progression. These form the anchor points, and with them in place it will greatly shorten the amount of time it takes to work up a new tune, and make it much easier.

 

Reason #4:  Makes Learning Tunes “On the Fly” Much Easier

If you’re encountering a tune you’ve never heard or learned before, and want to try picking it up “on the fly” (i.e. as the tune is being played), first finding the chord progression first can be a GREAT shortcut. In fact, once you know the chord progression, you could even just “bum ditty” your heart out and things will probably sound just fine (see Reason #2) above.

But, if you’ve spent some time learning new tunes by starting with the chord progression (see Reason #3), you’ll probably find that you’re able to pick out those melody notes (or at least most of them) pretty quickly.

 

Reason #5:  You Can Play In Any Genre

As I said earlier, while the earliest old-time music wasn’t chord based, most of the music you hear these days is, and much of it sounds great played in clawhammer style. Knowing your chords allows you to play that music – alone or with other musicians.

If you’re anything like me, you like all KINDS of music, and you’d love to be able to play as much of that music as you can on your banjo. There’s no sense in limiting the world of musical possibility from the get-go.

 

Reason #6:  You Can Play With Other Musicians In Any Musical Situation

Chances are, if you play an instrument for any length of time, you’ll find yourself in situations where you’re with other musicians who’d like to make some music with you. You may even be asked to be part of an impromptu band configuration (e.g. playing a couple songs for a church service, etc.). Sometimes these situations are unexpected.

And chances are, the music those folks will want to make will be chord based. You don’t want to be in the awkward position of saying “I’m sorry, but unless you know pre-20th Century southern mountain music in Myxolydian mode, I’m gonna have to sit this one out.”

That would be sad for everyone.

 

Reason #7:  The Old-Timers Would’ve Surely Used Them

Why didn’t the earliest clawhammer banjoists learn or think in terms of chords? Probably because they didn’t know about them.

The truth is, chords are an extraordinarily useful concept, and if there’s one thing that’s common to many of the earliest banjoists, it was that they loved to find ways to simplify their playing. This is one reason that the early players searched for and used so many alternate tunings – to make playing the banjo easier and more efficient.

If someone had introduced them to concept of chords back in the day, I’m quite certain they’d have quickly recognized their value, and started using them in a heartbeat. So, if your view of authenticity includes honoring the spirit of the earliest clawhammerists, then availing yourself to any and all avenues for simplifying music making is part of that.

 

What Chords Should You Learn?

So, what does learning chords mean exactly? You’ve probably seen those soul crushing, encyclopedic chord diagrams listing out all the possible chords in every key and so forth. Is that what you have to learn?

And if you’re a banjo player using multiple tunings, do you have to learn them all in every possible tuning you use?!

Not at all.

You’ll get most of your mileage from just knowing the positions for a few chords. This is an example of the 80/20 principle at work, or perhaps in this case the 95/5 principle (even the Beatles, known for their penchant for unusual chords, still relied mainly on 3 or 4 chords in their music)

So what are those few chords you should learn? Well, for the clawhammer banjoists, it’s just a few basic ones for whatever key your banjo is tuned to (i.e. G for standard G, C for double C, etc.).

These are the I (or “tonic”) chord, which will be the most commonly used chord in any key, the V (or “dominant”) chord, which will be used second most commonly, the IV (or “subdominant”) chord, which will be used third most often, and then perhaps the vi chord, which is the most common minor chord employed in any given key.

If that sounds like gobbledygook, not to worry. In the key of G, that’ll be G major, D major, C major, and E minor. So these are the main ones to familiarize yourself with in standard G (gDGBD) tuning.

In the key of C, that’ll be C major, G major, F major, and A minor. So these are the main ones to familiarize yourself with in “double C” (gCGCG) tuning.

With just these chord positions in these two tunings and a capo, you’ll be able to play the most commonly used chords in just about every key (though most traditional banjo tunes are gonna be in the keys of G, A, C, and D). You may pick up a few more as needed on a tune by tune basis, but these first few will take you a long way.

(If you’re going to be playing in a lot of musical contexts where banjos aren’t commonly found, then you might also benefit from learning the chords in “drop C” tuning, which is gCGBD.)

Two tunings, four chords in each, and a whole world of possibility opens up. Well worth it, I’d say.

Here’s what those chords look like in standard G and double C tuning (click here to download a PDF of these)

 

Chords In Standard G (gDGBD) Tuning:

(chord in parentheses is if you’re in aEAC#E tuning)

Fingering notes: 1=index finger, 2=middle finger, 3=ring finger, 4=little finger



Chords In Double C (gCGCD) Tuning:

(chord in parentheses is if you’re in aDADE tuning)

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

Clawhammer Banjo Tune of the Week: “Deck the Halls”

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.

Each year when December rolls around, I often find my banjo making new, but familiar, noises. Tunes about chickens and whiskey start to fade, supplanted by ones about eggnog and figgy pudding.

Though I’m quite certain I’ve never even eaten figgy pudding, nor would recognize its presence at the tip of my spoon. But that’s besides the point.

The point is that I love the music of the holidays. Every year, it’s the same tunes. Yet, somehow they don’t get old for me.

And I love playing them on the banjo.

So, since I can’t help myself anyhow, I figure I’ll bring you along for the ride this time around. For this week’s “Tune of the Week”, then, I present: “Deck the Halls.” And this also happens to be the inaugural tune for the “12 Days of Banjo” series.

Starting Monday, I’ll be posting a new tune each day until I hit 12, or until you hit me with a blunt object.

Who knows, I might even make it a baker’s dozen when all is said and done.

You can track all of them as they appear over at clawhammerbanjo.net/12days.

Deck the Halls

gDGBD tuning, Brainjo Level 3

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

 

Clawhammer Banjo Tune of the Week: “Clinch Mountain Backstep”

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.


I’ve never much cared for the separation that exists between bluegrass and old-time/clawhammer banjo players. The division, more an artifact of history than anything more deliberately construed, keeps the two styles in relative isolation from one another. And that’s a shame because:

a) banjo players need to stick together

b) all this music springs from the same well

c) the average listener couldn’t care less

d) there’s lots more great tunes to play and licks to steal if you’re willing to leap across genres!

On that last note I bring you this week’s tune: “Clinch Mountain Backstep”.

Clinch Mountain Backstep, considered one of the great Ralph Stanley’s signature banjo tunes, is a staple in bluegrass circles. Yet, with its modal scale and crooked configuration (note the extra half measure in the B part), it certainly feels like it could’ve originated long before banjoists donned their first fingerpicks.

Not that you need an excuse to play it. Good music is good music, and “Clinch Mountain Backstep” is no exception. It sounds great played clawhammer style, and I think you’ll have a lot of fun with this one.


 

Clinch Mountain Backstep

aEAC#E tuning, Brainjo Level 3

Clinch Mountain Backstep clawhammer tab

 Notes on the tab

Skip notes: The notes in the shaded box are “skip” notes, meaning they’re not actually sounded by the picking finger. Instead, you continue the clawhammer motion with your picking hand, but “skip” playing the note by not striking it (this is a technique used to add space and syncopation). The fret number you see in the shaded box is the suggested note to play should you elect to strike the string.

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

Clawhammer Core Repertoire Series: June Apple

Episode 15: June Apple

Wish I was a June Apple,
Hangin’ on a tree,
Every time a pretty gal passed,
She’d take a little bite of me

Indeed.

Whether you share a wish to transmogrify yourself into a sweet, pomaceous fruit to attract the attention of pulchritudinous passersby, or you simply want to learn another great tune on the banjo, you’re in luck! For this installment of the Core Repertoire Series, we’ve got another classic of a tune: June Apple.

June Apple is often grouped under the “modal” tune umbrella, meaning it’s got a bit of that eerie quality that makes it feel ancient. It also means it gives you an excuse to use the word “Mixolydian” in ordinary conversation, upon which you’ll be immediately bestowed 20 additional IQ points by anyone within listening distance, regardless of whether you’re capable of elaborating further on the topic.

So now that you’re sold on its merits, let’s learn it!

First up, a multisensory presentation of the final arrangement:

Step 1: Know Thy Melody

If you’ve followed along this series at all, you know that there’s no passing go till you’ve got the tune in your noggin’. Which means if you’re not familiar with June Apple, or need to re-acquaint yourself, then you’ve got some listening to do first. As always, I prefer to hear how these fiddle tunes sound on the fiddle, and then adapt them for clawhammer banjo.

So, here are a few for your auditory pleasure, compliments of the fine folks at the Fiddle Hangout. Listen until you can hum or sing the melody, and have a good sense of the apple’s essence.

Version One

Version Two 

Version Three

Step 2: Find the Melody Notes

Now let’s seek out them melody notes on the fretboard. First off, get yourself in our favored tuning for A tunes, aEAC#E. Now, here’s what I hear as the stripped down melody of this one.

Basic Melody:

https://corerepertoire.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/junemelody.mp3

And in tabulational format, it looks thusly:

Step 3:  Add Some Clawhammery Stuff

Now, to get a basic clawhammer arrangement that will sound quite nice paired with a fiddler, let’s add a “ditty” stroke after each of those downbeats from our melody above (the notes in bold). Here’s what that looks like:
And here’s what it sounds like:

Clawhammerated Apple:

https://corerepertoire.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/junebasicclaw.mp3

And, as I said, if we pair this version with June Apple on the fiddle, we have something quite nice sounding:

Fiddle Added:

https://corerepertoire.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/junebandf.mp3

Step 4: Spice the Apple

Here’s where you can add your own personal stamp by dressing up this basic outline any way you see fit. Add in more of those melody notes, or embellish with some well timed hammer ons, pull offs, or syncopations. As you do so, just remember not to sacrifice rhythm at the altar of fanciness.

You can hear my final rendition in the video above. You’ll note that I tend to favor a fairly rhythmic style for this one, but that’s just personal preference. Here’s the final version in tab:

Step 5: Practice Smart

Now it’s time to burn this one into your brain circuits. My favorite place to start doing so are the Beats for Banjo tracks (select tempo through the playlist icon on the upper right):

Go to the Core Repertoire Series Table of Contents

 

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