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The Turknett Family Singers Christmas Video: “The Chipmunks Song” and “Rudloph the Red Nosed Reindeer”

Continuing a bi-annual tradition we first started in 2013, we present the latest edition of the Turknett Family Singers’ Christmas Video Extravaganza.

Merry Christmas!

The Chipmunks Christmas Song

gDGBD tuning (tuned to G# for the video), Brainjo level 2

chipmunks christmas clawhammer banjo tab part 1

chipmunks christmas clawhammer banjo tab part 2

For those who missed them the first time around, here are the videos from prior years:

2015 – “Carol of the Bells”

2013 – “Frosty Bells”

2 finger thumb lead banjo – a video demonstration

One of the reasons I love the banjo is because there are so many incredible ways to make music on it. When you take all the many variations on the banjo form, from the deep sounding gourd to the tone rung modern banjos, and combine that with all the various playing styles, learning the banjo is like getting 50 instruments for the price of 1.

I recently created the above ​​demonstration video of 2 finger thumb lead style for students of the Breakthrough Banjo course for fingerstyle banjo. I teach all styles of up-picking as part of the course, using the Brainjo Method, and that includes 2-finger thumb lead, which is considered one of the “old time” styles of picking.

It’s one of my favorite ways to pick a banjo. A perfect example of beautiful simplicity, and it’s also ideally suited for playing behind the voice. Perfect for accompanying yourself or someone else.

If you’re interested in learning the style (if you have any clawhammer experience, you’ll pick it up quickly!), you can click here to learn more about the course for fingerstyle banjo. ​​

Game of Thrones – solo version

Ask and ye shall receive!

For the last Tune of the Week I presented a video of the duet version of the theme to Game of Thrones on gourd and modern banjo.

Several of you said you would like a recorded rendition of the song on solo banjo, so here it is. Just click on the sound file below to give it a listen (tab also reposted below):

Game of Thrones (solo banjo version)

gCGCD tuning, Brainjo level 3-4

game of thrones clawhammer banjo tab part 1

game of thrones clawhammer banjo tab part 2

game of thrones clawhammer banjo tab part 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

Thoughts on the New Year

Happy New Year!

For those who want the short version of this post, here it is: thank you.

For those who want the longer version, read on. I’ve spent a bit of time these past days reflecting on this past year, so I hope you’ll indulge me for a few philosophical moments.

As I’m sure is quite clear, I love the banjo. And music.

I also have developed Brainjo, a learning system that incorporates the latest insights from the science of learning and neuroplasticity to help us maximize the musical potential of the natural marvel that sits inside our skulls. And much of Brainjo is delivered digitally.

On the surface, brain science, digital technology and the banjo may seem like a strange union. Science and technology conjures visions of the future, of relentless forward movement, the persistent march of human “progress” towards the next big thing. As if the past, or even the present, just isn’t quite good enough, and is in need of improving.

From this perspective, technology is the species-level version of the hedonic treadmill.

The banjo, on other, symbolizes a simpler era. It nurtures our yearning for a past that was less complicated, when the living was slower, when attention spans were measured in hours, not milliseconds.

And if you’re like me, you feel pulled in two seemingly opposing directions.

Pulled on the one hand towards the potential promise of technology to solve real problems, to do really cool things, and to make lives better for everyone.

Pulled on the other hand by a desire to unplug from it all so as not to miss this incredible real world we inhabit. And to distance yourself from the ways in which technology has made our world more contentious and unpleasant.

Often I must remind myself that these two feelings needn’t be in opposition, that I don’t actually have to pick a side.

While it may be true that, as our recent US election exemplifies, the explosion in connectivity brought by the information age can be used to highlight our differences, to divide us by focusing on the few ways we’re different while blinding us to the many ways in which we’re alike. This does NOT feel like progress. And I’d like there to be a whole let less of it.

But it’s also true that our ability to connect to each other through the ether can also be used to bring us together in ways we could’ve never previously imagined. To gather around a common interest and feel a real, authentic kinship to people halfway around the world. This does feel like progress. And I’d like there to be a whole lot more of it.

It’s also my opinion that the very best digital technologies are the ones that use the virtual world to enhance and enrich the stuff we value most in the real world. This, in fact, is one of the central missions of Brainjo.

Playing music, and playing the banjo, will always be primarily a real world activity. Many times it’s an activity performed with or for others. Moreover, it’s an activity that can instantly forge connections between us that transcend race, religion, gender, age, and geography.

Music has a way of cutting away all the silly trivial stuff that the lizard part of our brain tries to convince us is important, and, in a flash of clarity, realign us with the only things that really matter. For me, nothing is quite like music for doing this sort of thing (stargazing may be a close second).

It is my hope that Brainjo ultimately helps you bring more of that into your life.

Technology will not slow down. It has no central command center, and is a direct byproduct of the indomitable human spirit of creativity, ingenuity and determination.

How we use that technology is up to us.

Thank you for being part of the Brainjo family.

Here’s to an outstanding 2017.

Josh

Japanese Grand March – get the tab

Click Here To Get The Tab


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