Rice's arrangement of Devil's Dream requires you to switch back and forth from finger-lead to thumb-lead.
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This is a good exercise. Though I don't play much banjo, anymore, I recall that this one gave me particular trouble because it switches from the index finger taking the lead to the thumb taking the lead....and back again.....and odd-feeling that takes some mental adjustment.
Right - it throws a wrench into the old clawhammer patterns.
I don't see it as thumb lead. I see "Strikes". The "1 x" motion continues beautifully, with the note displaced in that second phrase. Your hand still comes down to lay out the strike, or combination. Converse may have later changed out a few thumbs for a Hammer Stroke, but this is so congruous to good Stroke technique....a fine example. The Strike is often displaced over strong beats..as Rice describes in triplets, but that continual motion gives this music the different edge it has.
I haven't really investigated this in a few years and I'm not sure if this is what you're saying, Tim.
I just tried it and if I use the index finger for the first two notes in the third measure (instead of using the thumb for the first note), it seems to flow so much easier!
What would you recommend would be the best way to learn this? I can kinda see what your doing, but its up to speed. On youtube there are plenty of clawhammer lessons where they brake it down slow. But minstrel banjo in the style you playing with the syncopated notes are just videos of people playing up to speed. Awesome job and nice sound :)
For what it's worth, you can view most if not all YouTube videos at half speed (with sound) or quarter speed (no sound) by clicking on the little gear icon you see at the bottom when you mouse over the video, then clicking 'Speed' to choose the speed you want.
Andy, I never knew of that function. Pretty cool. Slow banjo is wild.
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