🪕 How To Pick Irish Reels / Free Tutorial for The Wind That Shakes The Barley ⚡️

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  • Опубликовано: 19 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 35

  • @IrishTenorBanjo
    @IrishTenorBanjo  Год назад +1

    🥇 Support my Patreon Page for tons of exclusive banjo goodies, tune transcriptions, Discord, Zoom hangs, and more:
    www.patreon.com/endascahillbanjo

  • @KennethKing-y5s
    @KennethKing-y5s 29 дней назад +1

    Love the music!

  • @TheAlicehawk
    @TheAlicehawk 9 месяцев назад +1

    😊this helps so much! Thank you

  • @garymollenkopf5228
    @garymollenkopf5228 6 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent! Great clarification about picking direction.

  • @alastair6356
    @alastair6356 Год назад +2

    Another great tune with great ornamentation and great tips of knowledge. Thanks for sharing. 👍😊

  • @JonnyTwofifty
    @JonnyTwofifty Год назад +1

    That 'all the bells and whistles' is superb :)

  • @rykloske5273
    @rykloske5273 Год назад +1

    As always Enda .... Many thanks. 🪕🍀🙏

  • @JeremyPickett
    @JeremyPickett 7 месяцев назад +1

    Im pretty sure Barley is on one of the chieftens earlier records. And i think--dont quote me on this--uts in the Green Book. Wonderful tune, and an excellent ine to practice rolls on

  • @csgrinds
    @csgrinds Год назад +2

    "Mega-slow", love it

  • @2244574
    @2244574 Год назад +1

    That's just unreal playing Enda👌 Hopefully someday I'll be able to do some of that stuff you explained very well on my banjo 🪕 Keep up your great work 👍

    • @IrishTenorBanjo
      @IrishTenorBanjo  Год назад

      Thanks!! It’s all very easy really 😉

    • @2244574
      @2244574 Год назад +1

      @Irish Tenor Banjo with Enda Scahill you make it look easy, but I'm sure it's hard enough done 😁 Practice makes perfect, so I'm told👍

    • @IrishTenorBanjo
      @IrishTenorBanjo  Год назад

      @@2244574 it definitely helps! Knowing how to do it quickens the learning process too

    • @2244574
      @2244574 Год назад

      @Irish Tenor Banjo with Enda Scahill I'm sure it does 😊 Keep up the great work anyway & hopefully, I'll learn something along the way from your videos. Thanks

  • @rosswilson4196
    @rosswilson4196 Год назад +1

    Great lesson, lots of useful tips

  • @durmazon6963
    @durmazon6963 Год назад +1

    Keep up the good work.

  • @TheAlicehawk
    @TheAlicehawk 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @dannymccambridge7746
    @dannymccambridge7746 Год назад +1

    Great lesson Enda. I bought your 2 books with cds. Excellent information.
    Your banjo seems to have a long neck. Do you have to use thicker gauge strings to increase string tension? Thanks

    • @IrishTenorBanjo
      @IrishTenorBanjo  Год назад

      I use only slightly heavier strings and capo up to compensate

  • @erik.3
    @erik.3 Год назад

    Thanks 👍

  • @MacallisterProject
    @MacallisterProject Год назад

    Congratulations for this great tutorial!!! I have a question, Is there some trick o way to attack the strings on triplets, i say this because i stuck the pick doing triplets so frequently. I have other strings instruments and it doesnt happend to me so often but on banjo is more difficult to me doing triplets. i use a dunlop nylon 0.6 i dont know if it is a good pick. In the past I got discouraged on practicing with banjo for this reason. Perhaps i need more and more practice but i think there is something i am missing. I get along well with speed, technique and rhythm but triplets... Thank you so much you are a magnific musician and a great teacher. Greetings from Spain!!!

    • @IrishTenorBanjo
      @IrishTenorBanjo  Год назад +2

      hi! Triplets are all about pick hold, pick direction, a relaxed wrist, and picking angle. Good technique makes triplets very easy!

    • @MacallisterProject
      @MacallisterProject Год назад +1

      @@IrishTenorBanjo Thanx so much, i'll try diferent ways to attack the strings with your advices. A video explaining it would be very interesting. Thanx again.

  • @antoniomalacarne9562
    @antoniomalacarne9562 Год назад

    I always pick the triplets down-up-down and then down again as you say in the video. However, when the reel during the session starts to be very fast (112-120 bpm) I can't stay in it anymore. I've seen videos of J. O'Connor where he actually often alternates picking verse in the reel, hitting up after the triplet. My limit I guess it also comes from the way I hold the pick: between the last joint of the thumb and the last joint of the index finger.

    • @IrishTenorBanjo
      @IrishTenorBanjo  Год назад

      Pick hold can definitely be an issue as it creates tension and at higher speeds this causes problems. My suggestions for pick patterns and directions WILL work, but they can always be adapted to include DUD-U where necessary. My theory is that once a picking pattern is established and is comfortable we can change as needed because we're in control of what's happening

  • @pamelajomusic
    @pamelajomusic Год назад +1

    Does mandolin follow the same picking pattern convention as banjo?

    • @IrishTenorBanjo
      @IrishTenorBanjo  Год назад

      Yes, this absolutely works the same for mandolin

  • @milesnagopaleen
    @milesnagopaleen Год назад +1

    This might be confusing to Americans. In American parlance, a whole note is what we call a semibreve, a half-note is a minim, a quarter note is a crotchet, and an eighth note is a quaver. So what you refer to as a "whole note" is, in American terminology, a quarter note.

    • @IrishTenorBanjo
      @IrishTenorBanjo  Год назад +1

      Isn’t language wonderful! And confusing! Good thing I’m not talking about inches and centimetres, total confusion!!

    • @milesnagopaleen
      @milesnagopaleen Год назад +1

      @@IrishTenorBanjo The American terminology makes more sense. The note names describe their relative length & hence are easy to remember. The time signatures are self-explanatory: 4/4 means a bar has four quarter-notes; 6/8 means a bar has six eighth notes, etc. Easier than semi-demi-quavers!

    • @IrishTenorBanjo
      @IrishTenorBanjo  Год назад +1

      @@milesnagopaleen I was loosely basing it on the Irish model : 4/4 4 beats per bar, 8 half notes!! Music wins whatever way we count it