great lesson @BanjoBen thanks
Discuss the Banjo lesson: Over in the Glory Land- Build-a-Break
As always —- a great lesson
oh yes, finally, I’ve been waiting for this lesson for a long time … sounds so great
Hey Joe! Welcome to the board! Hope to see you around.
Great lesson Bro Ben! Do you have the banjo backup tab to this song Sir?
I don’t but a couple folks have asked for that, lemme see what I can do.
hahahaha!
Hey Ben, just wanted to say thanks for including the words in the tab for this song. I find that very helpful and would enjoy seeing that more often when possible. Thanks!
This is the first lesson that I have purchased.Does anyone know if there is a way to filter or view only tracks that i have purchased? Thanks much. I love this series. I can work on my understanding of melody and see directly how more advanced licks work alongside basic ideas. I think that is one of the most enjoyable things about banjo
Sorry, not sure where to ask this question.
I don’t have the capo nails for the top string. Can I just play this in the Key of G. I’m assuming the fingering on the tab will work?
Looking forward to tackling this piece. Will stretch my capabilities.
Playing in G should work fine. Capo is only if you want to match other musicians preference.
Hi Steve @sjpetersen46 to @BanjoBen 's Forum. In this lesson you are not playing up the neck so you can tune your 5th string to A and capo the second fret. Don’t attempt to tune any higher than A or your likely snap the 5th string especially if your using light gauge strings…
Hi Ben. I just wanted to say that I answered my own question above - Where do i see my purchased lessons…Under My Account. I leaned that from the great job you did with the help. Very useful and well-put-together.
I am really having fun with Over in the Glory Land. I’m so glad that you are emphasizing mixing up simple melodies, quarter notes,(especially) as well as more “fancy” stuff. Much thanks!!!
Ok, the banjo backup tab is up at the guitar topic here
Ok, y’all! I posted the backup under the tab section on this lesson. It’s an updated version and should be really close, thanks! And thanks to @Dragonslayer for working on this!
My hat is off to you and Dragonslayer — the backup tab and TEF is a great help. For me it is sometimes hard to sync in the licks I hear people play and get it right. Ben – wonder if it would be too much work to do this more-- like just have the backup you play as a seperate sound track so we can get ideas on where to throw in the “good licks”. Thanks again — Merry Christmas
You sound just like @Archie! Hahaha! Yes, good suggestion. Honestly it is a lot of work but I’m about to be able to outsource more hours and things like this will be possible (@Dragonslayer wink wink)
Hi Joe, Let me just say that’s not a bad thing. We have ALL benefitted from my constant nagging to @BanjoBen about teaching meaningful backup . Some of the best lessons on this site have come about because I pointed out a need. No one was teaching banjo backup 8 - 10 years ago, Well that’s not quite true there were a few lessons on vamping and some rolls over chords but nothing you could call meaningful backup and most of that was buried in a boring book of TABs. At my suggestion Ben has pulled out all the stops and has produced some fantastic backup lessons. Checkout the Boogie Woogie Backup 1 & 2, Teardrop Backup, Also the lessons with Alan Mundie & Tony Wray.
I agree with you Joe, I’d like to see Ben do more banjo backup particularly when he plays it behind a Guitar or Mandolin Solo. I appreciate the extra work involved but If we had at the very least an isolated recording of the banjo backup that would be a big help because it would allow us to hear and identify the rolls, licks, phrases but more importantly the structure of how the backup is arranged.
The thing is if your a beginner / intermediate level student how can you hope grow your knowledge if you don’t know how this stuff is created.
I’d also really like to see Katy Lou do a few lessons on rolling backup whist singing. But that’s a topic for another day.
I am currently working on a backup lesson with Ned Luberecki on TrueFire and it has been interesting to see how he goes about arranging backup and applying that to what I already know. Quite a few Aa-hah moments .
Just you keep up the pressure Joe. There’s always room for more lessons on banjo backup since most of what a banjo player does is play backup.