Just found your video I've tried clawhammer style before but you have the best explanation of how to do it, after watching your video I finally got it.
Been playing guitar for six years, self taught with the help of youtube. picked up the banjo 5 days ago and started watching your videos. Never in the six years of me surfing through guitar tutorials have I found someone who explains things as well as you. These videos are a huge help, I've learned incredibly fast in the past 5 days because of them. Thank you, and keep up the good work!
Steve Harrison, I THINK you are CLEARLY an extraordinary 'Information Sharer'. Couple that with your knowledge and command of your instrument, and these posts become the MOST WORTHWHILE available! Grateful, Ted Furlo
Steve.. I know it's a few years since you posted this, but I just want thank you for the clarity. As a guitarist/mandolin player new ti the banjo and drawn to the clawhammer sound, this made everything so clear and shows me a way ahead. Thank you
Thank you for your informative posts Steve. Being a relative beginner in the UK, where clawhammer and even the tunes are "foreign", I hit a bit of a block with technique. I think your clips have helped me over it and made me a lot happier, which is great!
Get my 1st Banjo next week- been watching a grip load of videos and I’m putting down my PlayStation when it arrives and following your vids. Thanks for posting- I’m gonna annoy my family practicing!
Thank you. This is what I needed to here. Ive bounced back and fourth between clawhammer and 2 finger. Clawhammer is how I want to play the most and this information is incredibly helpful.
Thank you for sharing your technique and knowledge with us. I'm new to banjo playing and I was surprised that those beautiful ways of playing (claw hammer and fingerstyles) are separated. I think you answered that with this video. I tried to pick the strings with my middle claw finger, but I didn't remember to pick the strings with my thumb.
This is the best instructional video on ole timey banjo playing that i've come across so far. I'd still love an exercise played for about thirty secs slowly that would encompass a lot of the subtle facets of this style.I can play it put i keep noticing that i'm doing upstrokes to fill in the rhythm .Help !!!
Thanks for this. I agree with other commenters that you do an incredible job of explaining and demoing these techniques. This is so helpful. Thanks again!
I highly agree with Chris Rico.. Ive been watching your videos for a while now and think Ill be able to do much more with the banjo by watching your videos.. Id like to say "thanks!"
I enjoy listening to this, yet may I ask to see a video lesson of exactly what you were playing? I am wanting to learn how to play tge banjo. I'm thinking about learning how to play claw hammer. Someone has loamed me a banjo to study on.
My biggest problem is that being a guitar fingerpicked all my life my 3rd finger in right hand wants to play!!!its a real pain. You are a good teacher.
Thank you for making this video, Steve. I just bought a banjo today, so this is the first time I've been able to properly follow a lesson. I come from a guitar background, so I'm going to have to work a bit to break myself of my usual picking pattern habits. Muscle memory is strong with this one, as it turns out. lol
Good stuff! I can hear a Christmas tune coming out of the drop thumb really easy. I need to learn a song to play at Christmas. Traditional tune I mean.
Thanks, this was very helpful. I've always admired the way you mix in the drop thumb with your frailing, but I struggled trying to play that way. I stated over with the drop thumbing and it's making more sense. It is starting to fall into place.
hi, thank you very much for this video. come from Germany, started playing the banjo 3 weeks ago. I can't wait to get home from work to practice. (thx google translator) stay healthy merci, Sven PS: Andrea ist my wife
I've been trying to find a way to make my frailing sound cleaner. This is it. Thank you for making the video and please don't stop. Love your protest song too!
I bought a cheap banjo several years ago. I learned the basic bum ditty and enjoyed it for a while. I was actually making music. But I noticed my playing was missing something when I listened to all my favorite players. Enter the drop thumb. Needless to say, being absolutely stuck in the brush strokes, bum ditty, frailing strum rut, drop thumbing defeated me. I gave that banjo away and forgot about it. But a buddy of mine ended up giving me a cheap resonator banjo and I thought I'd learn two finger. Anything but drop thumbing. Well, I gave that banjo away too yet here I am watching banjo videos on RUclips again and thinking about buying a good banjo and trying again.
I started out long ago with a two finger thumb lead up-picking technique that I kinda made up myself, long before there was an internet. So the bum-pa-dit-ty rhythm come quite naturally to me. Later on I went whole hog into 3 finger Scruggs style. So that constant stream of eighth notes is kinda intuitive to me. I always struggled with clawhammer though. Accuracy with the downstroke, head noise, along with the bumditty underlying rhythm always resulted in a train wreck when I tried it. But just this last week I put some nylons on my little Gold Tone open back and slowed WAY down and played softly and relaxed as possible. Playing stupid simple tunes like Mt Dew as slow as I could possibly play them in time. Concentrating on getting that 1st note, the bum, clean, clear, and precise. After a day or two Im starting to get it now. Melody notes, hammers and pulls, are are starting to happen with thinking too much. Its starting to sound like music. Im pretty sure in a week or two I'll be dropping my thumb. Whichever way you approach it, my advice is to relax, go slow, play stupid simple, tap your foot, and SING ALONG. It wont take that long to make significant progress.
Steve, of the many "D" chords you don't mention the beginner "D", first finger, 2nd string, first fret,: second finger, 3rd string, 2nd fret. As an apprentice of Patrick C. who's taught me everything I know, your videos have opened my eyes to Dynamics in a profound way. Keep up the good work! & Thanks for sharing the gift!
Nathan Stack my pleasure! That chord you're talking about is the D7th which is definitely a good one for songs in G, too. Try playing G-D-D7-G in progression and you can hear the difference. Gives it a nice blues sound.
I really enjoyed this video, thanks, this will help a lot. I'm very much at the beginning stages of learning clawhammer and this video I believe is just what I needed at the moment. Keep them coming please!
Ive recently become a big fan of your page. Thank you so much for taking the time and teaching people how to pick. You can't find banjo teachers out here in California. At least not in my area. Do you have a patreon or any other support pages?
Hi Steve, Thank you for all of the videos so far - very informative and very well done! One big issue that I'm having with frailing banjo is the muted sound that I seem to get whenever I strike a string other than the first. I am fine with drop-thumb and I am fine striking the first string; as soon as I move away from that string (using my middle finger, of course), any other string that I strike only seems to give off a muted sound. Do you know what that could be, possibly? How can I fix it? Thank you!
Robert Shears you can use hammer-ons (and pull-offs) to break any quarter-note in half. So for bump-a-dit-ty, you could hammer the "a" or "ty". Mostly, with frailing, you're breaking the 1st and 3rd notes in half with the hammer, because the thumb breaks the 2nd and 4th note in half with the 5th string.
So what your saying is basically translating melodic style tunes into a clawhammer, eliminating the fillers. I can put on my picks and and do the same with Scruggs style. I appreciate that you are suggesting a broader attack, but getting away from the "bump dit-te" strum is just putting a Bill Keith spin on frailing.
Hélio Solar thanks! I’m still trying to make using both techniques second nature especially when jamming and improvising with other musicians. Gives you more ways to fit into the mix. 😊
I want to lean my 5-string so bad. I know this all comes down to repetitive learning, but I've got a dachshund who FREAKS at the first note of my banjo. I know it would be easier just to get rid of her, but DAMN! Just can't do that. ...yet.
Christine Weatherford I’m fundamentally a “frailing” banjo player, but I’m a big fan of Tom Collins RUclips channel in which he breaks down the melodic style really well. He’s got a Patreon where he publishes additional material, as well.
Christine Weatherford I don’t think there’s a formally different name, but the approaches are different. Some call it melodic clawhammer. Tom Collins emphasizes the thumb technique as the foundation. I’m still trying to mix it into my style. He treats the brush as something you add in for flourish. I love Clifton’s playing, as well. He’s really great at blending styles.
Hi Steve, I notice your strumming is not always hitting all the strings (when playing dum ditty dum rhythm), but sometimes only the first string, like from 5'37" onwards.. It sounds great and more transparent then when you would hit all the strings on beat 2 & 4.. Am I thinking right here?
Bart Vervaeck yep! I like to keep my strumming subdued. I may strum all the strings lightly or I may only strum a couple of strings. It adds to the dynamics allowing the primary melody to sit above the rhythm. When I do it right, anyway. 😁
I would suggest you first learn to play the 5th string on every backbeat before drop-thumbing. There's one gesture to learn : play the 5th string on the A and TY bum-A-diTY... when you're comfortable with that, try drop-thumbing....
Yeah, in that sense, the basic frailing strum is a welcome alternative. I always go back to that familiar “bum-ditty” when things get too complicated. 😊
@@StevePlaysBanjo last night I finally started to get the feel for it! Your videos explain things much more in depth. It took a minute to comprehend the rhythm
Just found your video I've tried clawhammer style before but you have the best explanation of how to do it, after watching your video I finally got it.
Been playing guitar for six years, self taught with the help of youtube. picked up the banjo 5 days ago and started watching your videos. Never in the six years of me surfing through guitar tutorials have I found someone who explains things as well as you. These videos are a huge help, I've learned incredibly fast in the past 5 days because of them. Thank you, and keep up the good work!
Oh man, those are some very kind words! I’m real happy you find ‘em useful!
Brilliant you don’t know how good you are
Thank You for posting this Steve! This video has opened up new doors for me with the clawhammer style banjo.
Steve Harrison, I THINK you are CLEARLY an extraordinary 'Information Sharer'. Couple that with your knowledge and command of your instrument, and these posts become the MOST WORTHWHILE available!
Grateful,
Ted Furlo
Steve.. I know it's a few years since you posted this, but I just want thank you for the clarity. As a guitarist/mandolin player new ti the banjo and drawn to the clawhammer sound, this made everything so clear and shows me a way ahead. Thank you
Thank you for your informative posts Steve. Being a relative beginner in the UK, where clawhammer and even the tunes are "foreign", I hit a bit of a block with technique. I think your clips have helped me over it and made me a lot happier, which is great!
Greatly explained I'm watching different teachers yours helped thanks bro
Get my 1st Banjo next week- been watching a grip load of videos and I’m putting down my PlayStation when it arrives and following your vids. Thanks for posting- I’m gonna annoy my family practicing!
Thank you. This is what I needed to here. Ive bounced back and fourth between clawhammer and 2 finger. Clawhammer is how I want to play the most and this information is incredibly helpful.
Steve, you've sold me on both techniques! I've got my work cut out for me! Thank you 😊
Great refresher on claw hammer banjo. Thanks Steve! Nice lesson!
You play with the middle finger like me! So many people play with the index that its nice to see someone do the same
Thank you for sharing your technique and knowledge with us. I'm new to banjo playing and I was surprised that those beautiful ways of playing (claw hammer and fingerstyles) are separated. I think you answered that with this video. I tried to pick the strings with my middle claw finger, but I didn't remember to pick the strings with my thumb.
Just got a banjo and this vid really solidified what the clawhammer is! Excellent work sir!
This is the best instructional video on ole timey banjo playing that i've come across so far. I'd still love an exercise played for about thirty secs slowly that would encompass a lot of the subtle facets of this style.I can play it put i keep noticing that i'm doing upstrokes to fill in the rhythm .Help !!!
Thanks for this. I agree with other commenters that you do an incredible job of explaining and demoing these techniques. This is so helpful. Thanks again!
amazing video.
Partly from watching your videos Gave me the confidence to go get a banjo. We don’t see much banjo here in the UK.
Sir, you are a natural born teacher! I look forward to revisiting all your video's regularly as I take up clawhammer banjo.
I like that technique a lot. Thank you for sharing this.
Fantastic video. Very helpful to a beginner.
Hey Steve your so cool teaching thank you so much 💖❤️ 💖❤️
5:30-6:30 is so cool. Cool video, glad i came across it!!
You've got a nice, calming speaking voice. Very informative video!
I highly agree with Chris Rico.. Ive been watching your videos for a while now and think Ill be able to do much more with the banjo by watching your videos.. Id like to say "thanks!"
Thank you for this great moment
I enjoy listening to this, yet may I ask to see a video lesson of exactly what you were playing? I am wanting to learn how to play tge banjo. I'm thinking about learning how to play claw hammer. Someone has loamed me a banjo to study on.
My biggest problem is that being a guitar fingerpicked all my life my 3rd finger in right hand wants to play!!!its a real pain. You are a good teacher.
Thank you for making this video, Steve. I just bought a banjo today, so this is the first time I've been able to properly follow a lesson. I come from a guitar background, so I'm going to have to work a bit to break myself of my usual picking pattern habits. Muscle memory is strong with this one, as it turns out. lol
Haha same boat. Tell me it gets better by 3 years in 🙏🏾
Great lesson Steve, it helps me a lot. Thanks !
My pleasure! These videos help me sort out my thoughts on playing. :)
Good stuff! I can hear a Christmas tune coming out of the drop thumb really easy. I need to learn a song to play at Christmas. Traditional tune I mean.
I hear that, I really should work on a Christmas song or two
Thanks, this was very helpful. I've always admired the way you mix in the drop thumb with your frailing, but I struggled trying to play that way. I stated over with the drop thumbing and it's making more sense. It is starting to fall into place.
Another excellent lesson. Thank you Steve!
-Smoove
I just started, so I'll go with the bump-ditty for now, but your drop thumb style sure sounded pretty.
hi, thank you very much for this video. come from Germany, started playing the banjo 3 weeks ago. I can't wait to get home from work to practice. (thx google translator) stay healthy merci, Sven
PS: Andrea ist my wife
I've been trying to find a way to make my frailing sound cleaner. This is it. Thank you for making the video and please don't stop. Love your protest song too!
Thanks! I just listened to your version of Folsom Prison Blues. It's pretty clean. I'll keep makin videos as I think of stuff. :)
Wow! Thanks Steve! That is so incredibly cool.
My dad used to say there's two ways to do everything...nice job
Really good info, enjoying your presentations! Keep them coming please. Regards, Jomp
nicely done. Best explanation to date...please more.
I bought a cheap banjo several years ago. I learned the basic bum ditty and enjoyed it for a while. I was actually making music. But I noticed my playing was missing something when I listened to all my favorite players. Enter the drop thumb. Needless to say, being absolutely stuck in the brush strokes, bum ditty, frailing strum rut, drop thumbing defeated me. I gave that banjo away and forgot about it. But a buddy of mine ended up giving me a cheap resonator banjo and I thought I'd learn two finger. Anything but drop thumbing. Well, I gave that banjo away too yet here I am watching banjo videos on RUclips again and thinking about buying a good banjo and trying again.
I started out long ago with a two finger thumb lead up-picking technique that I kinda made up myself, long before there was an internet. So the bum-pa-dit-ty rhythm come quite naturally to me. Later on I went whole hog into 3 finger Scruggs style. So that constant stream of eighth notes is kinda intuitive to me. I always struggled with clawhammer though. Accuracy with the downstroke, head noise, along with the bumditty underlying rhythm always resulted in a train wreck when I tried it.
But just this last week I put some nylons on my little Gold Tone open back and slowed WAY down and played softly and relaxed as possible. Playing stupid simple tunes like Mt Dew as slow as I could possibly play them in time. Concentrating on getting that 1st note, the bum, clean, clear, and precise. After a day or two Im starting to get it now. Melody notes, hammers and pulls, are are starting to happen with thinking too much. Its starting to sound like music. Im pretty sure in a week or two I'll be dropping my thumb. Whichever way you approach it, my advice is to relax, go slow, play stupid simple, tap your foot, and SING ALONG. It wont take that long to make significant progress.
You are really good at these tutorial videos
Thanks! I try to think of it as just having a conversation with all my other banjo playing friends. I figure I’m learning along with all o you. 😊
Great lesson man!!! I learned allot.
Steve, of the many "D" chords you don't mention the beginner "D", first finger, 2nd string, first fret,: second finger, 3rd string, 2nd fret. As an apprentice of Patrick C. who's taught me everything I know, your videos have opened my eyes to Dynamics in a profound way. Keep up the good work! & Thanks for sharing the gift!
Nathan Stack my pleasure! That chord you're talking about is the D7th which is definitely a good one for songs in G, too. Try playing G-D-D7-G in progression and you can hear the difference. Gives it a nice blues sound.
Thank you!
Thanks it helped me a lot!!!!
Great video, thank you very much for making this!
Have you ever done a video about how to use a metronome?
I really enjoyed this video, thanks, this will help a lot. I'm very much at the beginning stages of learning clawhammer and this video I believe is just what I needed at the moment.
Keep them coming please!
Ive recently become a big fan of your page. Thank you so much for taking the time and teaching people how to pick. You can't find banjo teachers out here in California. At least not in my area. Do you have a patreon or any other support pages?
Great video! What kind of Deering banjo is that?
You are awesome
Awesome tutorial! Thank you
U may mix all the techniques. This is a good method. There is so much more
Thanks man!
Nice steve great explanation 😎👍
Very helpful video. Also nice Rick and Morty shirt
Really good, thanks Steve.
Hi Steve,
Thank you for all of the videos so far - very informative and very well done!
One big issue that I'm having with frailing banjo is the muted sound that I seem to get whenever I strike a string other than the first. I am fine with drop-thumb and I am fine striking the first string; as soon as I move away from that string (using my middle finger, of course), any other string that I strike only seems to give off a muted sound.
Do you know what that could be, possibly? How can I fix it?
Thank you!
You explain the timing of the bum-dit-ty very well, but where precisely in that sequence do you apply the hammer on? On the dit?
Robert Shears you can use hammer-ons (and pull-offs) to break any quarter-note in half. So for bump-a-dit-ty, you could hammer the "a" or "ty". Mostly, with frailing, you're breaking the 1st and 3rd notes in half with the hammer, because the thumb breaks the 2nd and 4th note in half with the 5th string.
Hi Steve - I love the sound of Your banjo. I was wondering what kind of strings your are using?
Steve aren't you doing anymore lessons?
Sarah Quick yep. I’m still recovering from surgery on my thumb from trigger finger, but my playing is slowly getting back to where it used to be. 😊
We can't see out teacher, we could use a face, so we all know who we are learning from. Thankyou sir.
So what your saying is basically translating melodic style tunes into a clawhammer, eliminating the fillers. I can put on my picks and and do the same with Scruggs style. I appreciate that you are suggesting a broader attack, but getting away from the "bump dit-te" strum is just putting a Bill Keith spin on frailing.
Wow, struggle? You did amazing
Hélio Solar thanks! I’m still trying to make using both techniques second nature especially when jamming and improvising with other musicians. Gives you more ways to fit into the mix. 😊
I want to lean my 5-string so bad.
I know this all comes down to repetitive learning, but I've got a dachshund who FREAKS at the first note of my banjo.
I know it would be easier just to get rid of her, but DAMN! Just can't do that. ...yet.
How does drop thumb differ from round peak?
Williams Stream on Adult Swim brought me here lol
Wubba lubba dub dub!
You can accomplish the same thing, pretty much, by learning two finger thumb lead style
Videos on this?
Does this apply similarly to the banjolele?
Do you have any other videos going over the second method?
Christine Weatherford I’m fundamentally a “frailing” banjo player, but I’m a big fan of Tom Collins RUclips channel in which he breaks down the melodic style really well. He’s got a Patreon where he publishes additional material, as well.
What is that style called? I am interested in claw hammer without the brushing stroke...for a different sound
Also interested in learning two finger style thanks to Clifton :)
Christine Weatherford I don’t think there’s a formally different name, but the approaches are different. Some call it melodic clawhammer. Tom Collins emphasizes the thumb technique as the foundation. I’m still trying to mix it into my style. He treats the brush as something you add in for flourish. I love Clifton’s playing, as well. He’s really great at blending styles.
Hi Steve, I notice your strumming is not always hitting all the strings (when playing dum ditty dum rhythm), but sometimes only the first string, like from 5'37" onwards.. It sounds great and more transparent then when you would hit all the strings on beat 2 & 4.. Am I thinking right here?
Bart Vervaeck yep! I like to keep my strumming subdued. I may strum all the strings lightly or I may only strum a couple of strings. It adds to the dynamics allowing the primary melody to sit above the rhythm. When I do it right, anyway. 😁
@@StevePlaysBanjo thx for answering!
I would suggest you first learn to play the 5th string on every backbeat before drop-thumbing. There's one gesture to learn : play the 5th string on the A and TY bum-A-diTY... when you're comfortable with that, try drop-thumbing....
thanks!
hard?
This clawhammer stuff is going way over my head. The rhythm just feels so unnatural
Yeah, in that sense, the basic frailing strum is a welcome alternative. I always go back to that familiar “bum-ditty” when things get too complicated. 😊
@@StevePlaysBanjo last night I finally started to get the feel for it! Your videos explain things much more in depth. It took a minute to comprehend the rhythm