Sunday 29 March 2009

Music Lessons part two


Earlier in the year I started having music lessons as a way of trying to understand why I was playing the notes and chords that are in the tuition manuals that I've been using. I started taking lessons with Stan Gee (see links) and it's really helped my understanding of the fretboard.

Starting out from the chromatic scale, which is basically all 12 notes, we've moved onto the looking at the major scales and their structure. Understanding the pattern that each mode/scale has means you don't have to know all the notes in the scale to play in it. You can just follow the shape of the scale on the fretboard. Also knowing that a scale may be present at several different places and shapes on the neck has clarified why I've been playing notes in particular songs.

In the last lesson we started to look at harmonising the scale, understanding which notes harmonise with each other and which chords relate to notes in the scale. Although I haven't got my head round it completely it has made a lot of sense of chord progressions in songs and I think it will lead on to how to construct chords.

This might all seem very theoretical and has had to go hand in hand with practicing technique but what it has done is make more sense of the banjo and made it easier to start playing other instruments. Got myself a very cheap and nasty ukulele yesterday and although it won't stay in tune - think it needs some proper strings - I didn't have that feeling of total bewilderment that I had when I first picked up the banjo.

Duelling Banjos and Foggy Mountain Breakdown

MC Clawhammer is working on his bluegrass rolls and considering he's only been playing banjo since December is making real progress.

Duelling Banjos


Foggy Mountain Breakdown

Saturday 21 March 2009

Saturday Morning Jam

Went to see Barrett, Broad and Rossiter last night and got inspired. This is me on banjo and Carlos the Jackal on guitar, recorded at 8am Saturday morning in the summer house in the garden.

Wildwood Flower


Cripple Creek


Worried Man Blues


Jesse James

Wednesday 11 March 2009

Camptown Races

I haven't posted any audio for a while, so here's a version of Camptown Races.

It was written by Stephen Foster in 1850. Foster was a pioneering proffessional songwriter who died tragically young at the age of thirty-seven after writing a body of songs which are still popular today, Oh Suzanna, Beautiful Dreamer, Swannee River etc.

Sunday 8 March 2009

Serious Sam Barrett

The Female Drummer

Here's a little taster of Sam Barrett in action. He'll be playing In The Dock at the Old Courthouse, Thirsk on March 20th, but if you haven't got tickets... too late it's sold out!

Girls vs Boys - 20th March The Old Courthouse, Thirsk

Kate from In The Dock sent:




















A humdinger of an evening in prospect with boys versus girls. Opening with Serious Sam Barrett, David Broad and Michael Rossiter. Each an amazing performer in their own right they come together in a guitar, banjo and washboard picking frenzy with inspiring vocal confidence and a real joy in their old time Americana influences.

This year saw Australian Emily Barker and her all girl band perform at Glastonbury, Cambridge Folk Festival and also support Jose Gonzalez. Emily and co bring the intimate sounds of guitar, violin, cello, accordion and flute to a captivating night of alternative country at The Courthouse. If you happened to have caught BBC1’s drama ‘Wallander’ starring Kenneth Branagh you will have heard Emily Barker. Her track ‘Nostalgia’ was used as the title music for the series.

Fans of Lucinda Williams, Martha Wainwright and Gillian Welsh should not miss this unique billing.

TICKETS, CAN NOW BE BOUGHT ONLINE BY VISITING http://www.inthedock.net/