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Clawhammer Song of the Week: “Long Journey Home”

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 a Song of the Week 2-for-1! 🙂

I’ve spoken before about the odd separation that exists between the worlds of bluegrass and old-time banjos. Each has its own jamming traditions, and it’s uncommon for banjoists to crossover from one to the other.

In my opinion, this has almost everything to do with tradition and little to do with a lack of musical alignment. I say this as someone who began his banjo life in the world of bluegrass.

In some ways, this has become a self perpetuating cycle. The lack of clawhammerists in bluegrass jams may be taken to mean your presence would be unwelcome.​

With rare exception, I don’t find that to be the case. In fact, most bluegrass enthusiasts appreciate the change of pace, and in my experience are intrigued by the clawhammer sound.
​
So, if you find yourself with an interest in attending a bluegrass jam (or maybe that’s all that’s available around you), by all means go for it. If you’re totally new to that “scene,” here or some tips for an optimal experience: 

1. Understand the bluegrass jam structure. Unlike old time jams where folks play in unison, musicians in a bluegrass jam take turns playing lead “breaks,” or solos. And while one person solos, the others play backup (since the guitar and/or bass tends to form the backbone of bluegrass backup, banjoists can also just stay quiet during other solos).

2. Learn some popular bluegrass jam songs, like today’s selection. In the coming weeks, I’ll be covering some more good crossover songs.

3. Practice playing “backup.” Since traditional backup isn’t a standard part of old time jamming, it’s something clawhammerists may or may not have spent much time on. Although it’s pretty easy to get up to speed knowing just a few chord shapes and understanding typical chord progressions (this material is covered extensively inside the Breakthrough Banjo course)

I’ve even created some backup jam tracks for this week’s tune if you’d like to get some practice jamming in a bluegrass setting. Read below for details…

Long Journey Home

gDGBD tuning, Brainjo level 3

long journey home clawhammer banjo tab part 1

long journey home clawhammer banjo tab part 2

Bonus Tune! “Long Journey Home,” Fingerstyle Version (plus a new Fingerstyle course!)

As mentioned, this is a “2 for 1” tune of the week.

On March 21, I’ll be launching the long awaited Breakthrough Banjo course for fingerstyle banjo (based again on the Brainjo Method). The course will cover all the up-picking styles (3-finger bluegrass, old-time 2 and 3 finger, etc.).

(RELATED: I have a special opportunity for Founding Members who register before the launch date. Click here to learn more about becoming a Founding Member of the Fingerstyle Banjo course.)

Like the Breakthrough Banjo course for clawhammer, it will include “The Vault,” an expanding library of songs with tabs, tune tutorials, and jam tracks. You can see a sample of these by clicking the link below, and you can use the jam track to practice this week’s song:

Click here to preview the Fingerstyle Tune Tutorials and practice along with the Jam Tracks for “Long Journey Home.”

 

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”

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 Song of the Week: “Old Kentucky Home”

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


A captivating, memorable melody line, or “hook,” set to lyrics that evoke deep human emotions like heartbreak, longing, hope, and joy.

It’s a recipe for hit songwriting that has always worked, and that will always work as long as there are ears attached to human brains.

And it’s a recipe that was perfected – if not created – by the great Stephen Foster.

It’s on full display once again with this installment of the tune of the week: “Old Kentucky Home.” At its most basic level, “Old Kentucky Home” is a song about a longing for times and places that no longer exist.

Reportedly inspired by Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin, it’s also a song about the inhumane and unjust treatment of slaves in the pre-Civil War American South, one that was used by abolitionists to strengthen anti-slavery sentiment.

Like so many other Foster hits, it would ultimately become an inextricable swatch in the American cultural fabric.

Old Kentucky Home

aDADE tuning, Brainjo level 3-4

old kentucky home clawhammer banjo tab part 1

old kentucky home 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”

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 Song of the Week: “Come to the Bower”

Click Here To Get The Tab


When Breakthrough Banjo member Ryne M. suggested I tackle this song and linked to a YouTube sample, I wasn’t prepared for the rush of nostalgia that was about to ensue (click here to read Ryne’s “Banjo Breakthrough” story).

*I know that voice*, I thought.

From where though?

Ah yes, the Pogues, that’s where!

Back in my teen years when I and my small circle of friends were feverishly searching for obscure music our top 40 loving peers would’ve never heard of, the Celt trad-punk band the Pogues, fronted by lead singer Shane McGowan, were a treasured find.

[Aside: Shane MacGowan, Blarney, Dungannon,…it’s really not fair. How did such a small island country end up with all the best names?]

 

So when Ryne’s link led me to MacGowan’s rendition of this week’s song, Come to the Bower, I took it as a sign, and got to work.

The song itself, a patriotic anthem of sorts, was written in the 19th Century as a call for Irish exiles in Europe and America to return home (the “Bower” here refers to Ireland).

I was tempted to render my best impersonation of MacGowan’s rough, 3-sheats-to-the-wind sounding brogue, but thought better of it.

Thanks again to Ryne for suggesting this fantastic song as an addition “The Vault.”

(click here for a current list of all the clawhammer songs and tunes currently available inside of The Vault)

 

Note on the video: Some of you may recall that last fall my wife visited the Bower, taking a week-long bike trip around the Ring of Kerry. The pics used in the background of the video were a few from that trip of a lifetime.

Come to the Bower

aDADE tuning, Brainjo level 3

come to the bower clawhammer banjo tab part 1

come to the bower 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”

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 Song of the Week: “Big Rock Candy Mountains”

Click Here To Get The Tab


Lakes of stew.

Rubber-toothed bulldogs.

Ambulatorily challenged law enforcement.

Permanent socks.

Mountains made of rock candy.

This is the stuff of the hobo’s dreams. Who am I kidding, this is the stuff of anyone’s dreams!

First performed by Harry “Mac” McClintock in 1928, “Big Rock Candy Mountain” is another gem thrust back into prominence thanks to its inclusion in the Oh Brother Where Art Thou soundtrack – and one of the best set of lyrics ever penned. I defy you to play, sing, or listen to it without cracking a smile.

Thanks to Breakthrough Banjo member Anton M. for suggesting this as an addition “The Vault” (click here for a current list of all the clawhammer songs and tunes currently available inside of The Vault)

Big Rock Candy Mountains

gCGCD tuning, Brainjo level 3

big rock candy mountain clawhammer banjo tab part 1

big rock candy mountain clawhammer banjo tab part 2

big rock candy mountain clawhammer banjo tab part 3

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”

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 Song of the Week: “City of New Orleans”

Click Here To Get The Tab


This week’s Song of the Week installment comes courtesy of Breakthrough Banjo member Joe G.

Like some of the prior suggestions, “City of New Orleans” was familiar to me as part of American cultural iconography, but one I doubt I’d have ever considered for a banjo adaptation.

So I’m very glad to have been nudged to do so!

While it’s outside of the traditional banjo canon of material, it covers territory that fans of the traditional stuff can easily relate to: trains, the passing of the railroad era and, more broadly, a way of life.

Just about every fan of the five can relate to these sentiments, as we all attempt to balance a desire to change, grow, and create with the desire to stay rooted in and preserve what we love most about the past. The struggle between old and new is one that promises to never go away.

It’s also just a wonderfully crafted bit of songwriting, written by Steve Goodman in 1971 and first recorded by Arlo Guthrie (Goodman reportedly bribed Arlo with a beer so he’d sit down long enough for him to play it for him), and covered widely since (Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash, Chet Atkins,…).

In the end, just as old time music enthusiasts have rescued many a great tune from obscurity, the declining “City of New Orleans” rail line was ultimately saved by Amtrak (click here to book your ticket!)

 

Notes on the arrangement: I play the song here out of double D (aDADE, or gCGCD raised 2 frets).. Those familiar with the tuning may still find an opportunity to learn some novel fingering positions, necessary to grab some of those newfangled chords in this more “modern” banjo song. 🙂

City of New Orleans

aDADE tuning, Brainjo level 3-4

city of new orleans clawhammer banjo tab part 1

city of new orleans clawhammer banjo tab part 2

city of new orleans clawhammer banjo tab part 3

 

Click here for a current list of all the clawhammer songs and tunes currently available inside of The Vault

 

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”

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

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