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Banjo Lessons for the Adult Beginner

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Clawhammer Banjo Tune of the Week: “Cherokee Shuffle”

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.

Some tunes grow on you with repeated listens. Others grab you the first time through.

Cherokee Shuffle is in the latter category. Which is probably part of why it’s become a “crossover” tune, equally likely to crop up in an old-time, bluegrass, or any other manner of traditional music jam setting. Great melodies have a way of doing that.

Some of you may know that Cherokee Shuffle is closely related to the tune Lonesome (or Lost) Indian, and the relationship between these two tunes is one of the most mindbending stories in all the land of old-time and folk music, which is saying a lot.

Not to mention that there are entirely unrelated tunes by the name “Lost Indian” wandering around (ouch, sorry).

Suffice to say that if someone calls out either of these in a jam, it’s best to first ask what key you’ll be playing it in, whether it’s the square or crooked version, and then remember that things are still likely to crash and burn before everyone gets on the same page.

All that said, whatever version you end up playing, it’s bound to sound pretty great in the end.

Here’s the tab:


Cherokee Shuffle

aDADE tuning, Brainjo Level 3

 Notes on the tab

Alternate string hammer-ons: There are several alternate string hammer-ons in this arrangement, noted where you see a number underneath tab with a circle around it. The number represents the finger I typically use to execute the hammer-on.

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
 

8 Great First Clawhammer Banjo Songs (with videos)

In my last post, I mentioned I’d be using the Brainjo Level system for any clawhammer banjo tabs and arrangements I release going forward, to make it easier for you to select and learn tunes that are appropriate for your current ability. To that end, I’ve just released a book of Level 1 arrangements for clawhammer banjo.

You can hear how all these sound in the video playlist below.

The songs in the book are:

  • Bile Dem Cabbage Down
  • Bury Me Beneath the Willow
  • Cripple Creek
  • Darling Nellie Gray
  • Long Journey Home
  • Worried Man Blues
  • Will the Circle Be Unbroken
  • You Are My Sunshine

As stated, these are all Brainjo Level 1 arrangements, meaning they draw only upon techniques covered in the “Clawhammer in 8 Essential Steps series“.

They’re targeted towards those in the earlier phases of the learning process, but they still sound great. I’ve also included the words to each of the songs, as I encourage you to sing the melody before you start trying to learn it.

Level 2 arrangements for these songs are taught as part of the Breakthrough Banjo course if you tackle these and want to take things even further.

If you’re part of the 8 Essential Steps to Clawhammer newsletter, then you should have received an email with the link to download the book. If you’re not a subscriber yet, click the button below to grab It now:

Get the Songboook


 

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

The Brainjo Tune Learnin’ System: Learn, Memorize, and Avoid Jam Failure!

“How bout we play a couple of tunes together?”

“Sounds great!” I replied, trying my best to project confidence while my stomach contents began migrating their way up my esophagus.

It was my first banjo camp. I’d been playing the banjo (bluegrass style) a little over a year , and one of my favorite players – a camp instructor and master banjoist with decades of experience – had just asked ME to jam with him. How I could I refuse that?

“What do you want to play?” he asked.

I mentally searched my small repertoire of tunes, looking for one I knew I could play in my sleep. I really wanted to nail this, to impress him with just how far I’d come in such a short time.

“Fireball Mail?” I suggested.

“Great. I’ll kick it off and then back you up first.”

Here we go, I thought. Time to show him what I can do.

He played a quick pick-up measure, and, with a mixture of excitement and terror, I launched into my solo. A solo I’d probably played at home somewhere north of 36,000 times. One I knew like the back of my hand, one that I thought really showcased my skills.

It didn’t take long for me to realize things were not going well. For starters, my timing was terrible. For the life of me, I couldn’t get my playing to sync up with his. Was he the problem? Was he just not good a keeping time?

Not likely.

And it didn’t get better from there.

Anxiety quickly turned into blind panic. Beads of sweat from my forehead began making their way down my brow, searing my eyeballs. My heart was in my throat. Trying to cleanly pick a string felt about as easy as hitting a bullseye from 8 miles away. Besides, by this point I could barely remember how to breathe, much less focus on what I should be doing with my fingers.

Finally, I just stopped. “I’m sorry,” I said, “I guess I need to practice that one a little more.”

“Yeah,” he said, with a look of pity that made me want to vanish into thin air.

“Just keep at it. You’ll get there,” he replied mercifully.

What on earth had just happened? I’d practiced this tune so many times. I thought it was one of my best, and it always sounded so great when I played it at home.

I was embarrased. And demoralized.

All that practice, and that was the best I could muster? Had it all been for naught?

 

MAKING SURE THIS NEVER HAPPENS AGAIN

After licking my wounds, my next step was to figure out just why that had just happened to me.

If that was the best I could do in spite of all those hours spent practicing, then something must’ve been wrong in my preparation. This was one of those experiences that led me to overhaul my process for learning to play music, including how I went about learning new tunes.

I wanted to make sure that what happened to me that day would never happen again.

I ultimately landed upon a process that has done just that, heretofore referred as the Brainjo Tune Learnin’ System (and it’s now the method I use for all the tunes in the Breakthrough Banjo course). It’s a system that allows me to both learn and memorize tunes faster and play them better.

And, last but not least, it allows me to know that when it’s time to sit down with someone else and play it together, I’m ready.

Check it out in the video below, the second bonus installment in the “How to Play Clawhammer Banjo in 8 Essential Steps” series. And after you’re done, see the system in action with the backing tracks for “Long Journey Home” (which was taught in the first bonus installment).

In Part 2 of the bonus installment (below), we learn our next tune: “Will the Circle Be Unbroken.”

The Brainjo Tune Learning’ System

Will the Circle Be Unbroken Tutorial

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

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