One of my favourite Simon & Garfunkel songs. Beautifully sung.
What non-Bluegrass/Country Music you play
For current non-Bluegrass playing, I like Mississippi/Delta/Country blues, Neil Young, G Welch/D Rawlings, J Taylor and Norman Blake stuff; Great Western Dance by Brashear & McLaughlin, Dreary Black Hills as done by Jim Ringer; and I’m working on the Surfer Girl cover by Bill Frisell and Bert Jansch’s cover of Jackson C Frank’s Blues Run the Game. For some of these, I try to apply Ben’s teaching on building breaks, etc. When I’m still in a non-Bluegrass mood, I practice BWV 998 by JSB.
Good question,
I’ve wondered what other folks here on the site play besides the usual bluegrass stuff myself. Taking it even further, I wonder what some of the pros play outside of what we hear from them. Like… has anyone ever heard or seen Tony Rice play anything other than a dreadnought acoustic guitar? With that kind of talent, what could he do with an electric guitar, or a mandolin, banjo or any other instrument?
I primarily flat pick acoustic bluegrass guitar, but I also have a Gretsch hollowbody electric that I run through a Fender Blues Jr. tube amp with a nice delay pedal. With that setup, I love to play Rockabilly. (Brian Setzer style). I go for a cleaner tone (less overdrive). Nothing else sounds like a Gretsch played through a clean tube amp with a little bit of slapback delay!
Anyway, I’m assuming this is what you were looking for with your question.
Thanks,
J.W.
Keep em comin! Is this you r wife and son?
Look at Mumford and Sons.
Yep, that is my wife and son about a year or so ago. We still play gigs together as much as possible (though we all work full time at separate jobs). I’m hoping we get a few jobs playing out together this summer.
Speaking of summer, here comes the sun…
Fantastic version of the Boxer. What a CLASSIC SONG - I only wish I could contribute to an ensemble like that. GREAT JOB!
Beautiful family…You’re blessed. Great segue into the video.
Love playing acoustic crowd pleasers… Zac Brown, Jimmy Buffet, etc… Also play a ton of old timey stuff like from Norman Blake for example.
Beyond that - I was a metal head in the 80’s…a great time to grow up! I have an old early 80’s Charvel, an 88’ BC Rich and a Mesa Boogie Mark IIc that I love to rock out on. Also have a Strat and Fender Blues Deluxe I like to play some SRV, Buddy Guy and the like…
Growing up I would always try to play Skynyrd, ZZ Top, SRV, Hendrix, David Allen Coe, Hank Jr, etc. I still love blues electric and acoustic guitar.
This is one that I really like. Too bad I can not play either part yet.
Dan Walsh & John Dowling from the UK. I had the pleasure of meeting and listening to Dan playing a few years back at the Edinburgh Banjo Club.
Brilliant. I really like his claw hammer style more than most. This is the best combination of three finger and claw hammer that I have heard. It seems the two do not go together easily but John and Dan really made this fantastic especially un-accompanied by any other instruments. Congrats on meeting Dan. Do you have any of his albums?
Hi Cliff
No I don’t buy many albums these days.
Dan is a phenomenal clawhammer banjoist check out his website https://www.danwalshbanjo.co.uk/
The guy on the right is “in the zone”. Bigtime!
I used to play stuff like this:
Yeah man!
Love it! What is the chord progression? Are you using the major scale with the lead?
The tune is in the key of A minor, so the first choice scale is A natural minor (aka Aeolian). However, I like to work around adding the blue note b5, and also play around with the B diminished arpeggio and throw in the G# note when the progression hits the V chord.
That is basically what I am thinking. Past that, I like to layer arpeggios of chord extensions over other chords sometimes (like Cmaj7 over Am) just for fun while trying to keep the melody in my ears.
I guess that was more than you asked… sorry.
Thanks Jerry, though I must confess, the vast majority of that went right over my head.