I’m a 50 year old blues/rock player who has a 15 year old son that is on the cusp of being a monster flat picker/rhythm player(didn’t see that coming lol).I have flat out struggled trying to play with him.I struggle with the feel more than anything.I know I need to basically start from scratch “to be able to help him advance.This is exactly what I needed.Thank you
You're absolutely correct...I was the same to a degree, after years of rock playing, bluegrass flatpicking certainly does require a different approach and a solid knowledge in the open position...Good luck!!
I’m new to guitar and playing fastgrass is my ultimate dream. It’s been difficult to find good tutorials since i don’t know scales and music theory but this video is truly great.
Being brought up in Prog Rock and since hearing Billy Strings and enjoying that kind of bluegrassy music whilst trying to learn it, i found your video perfect and informative. Thanks.
Billy Strings is influencing me to pick up bluegrass! And also to never attempt it lmao xD I used to play guitar but gave up due to 'not getting it' but now that I know how to actually learn I feel much more confident about it
I have been playing classic 60s 70s R&R, blues,.country and some jazz for 60 years. I recently retired to pretty much bluegrass heaven. I figured it is time to get with the program. Thank you for the video, I have to admit Clarence White is my favorite guitarist and I did get to see him three times with the Byrds. I went to a lot of concerts with big name guitar players and I do believe he was the best I ever saw. He would have been a real monster, he was stretching out from his bluegrass roots and who knows what he might have become? I will practice and listen to some more bluegrass. When it is good, it kicks butt. I never got to play any. My dexterity is there, no problem. Subscription added, thumbs up.
@@pickinlessons I am finishing up a recording of a Chicago Style blues tune and the third example, to my surprise, worked just as well for a blues rift in the key of E. Click my avatar for some originals if interested.
Over here in Florida, both my wife and I half retired learning how to play and pick up bluegrass licks. Totally have been enjoying your tutorial thank you so much for sharing this. You made a very applicable and easy-to-understand. We thank you
Good man, that's me now going from G too C fs lol 😆 I'm two weeks in too getting there slowly after A LOT of repetition 😅 I took one look at this n was like "nope" lol but ur comment has made me want to try ❤
Really good lesson mate, I love a tutorial that just jumps into it without too much hand holding. Shows that you know who to target with the lesson and make the correct assumption that the viewer has enough know how to follow along.
This is really great, I'm into this,, been playing guitar for over fifty years, for some reason I'm drawn to the bluegrass style, your teaching approach is excellent..
This is just what I need to start really spicing up my songs! I’m playing live more and need some more tricks I learn my ear and am not good with tabs and such. Thanks
Fluency is understatement. Is it “Teke”? I’ve always been in awe of that clean, speedy fluency a good BG picker has. You have it but even better you are a great instructor, putting this over the plate so to speak, in a confidence inspiring manner. I have a strange desire for a Martin guitar…Salud mate!
Don’t wait to long for that Martin guitar. Life is short man. . A sweet sounding Martin D28 is expeNsive but being the richest man in the cemetery does you no good. Buy that guitar !
@@JohnnyRebKy I’ll second that! After 24 years of playing guitar, I finally went and bought myself a D28 last month. Almost brought me to tears… absolutely amazing guitar. I’ve had a lot of guitars over the years, and I wish I would have made the jump earlier. Still, many, many years left to enjoy this Martin’s sound!
@@JustinBeyerlin1HD-28 owner here. Waited too long to pull the trigger. I’ve had it for 3 years and bought it 21 years after starting. This thing is unreal.
Dude you just taught me something so awesome! People like you have their way about them that makes a person trust and easy to learn. You have very special gift. I pray you give to God the glory for your gift! Thank you thank you thank you
Cheers my man great lesson I’m a fingerstyle player this flatpicking takes some practice in the open positions I think I need to go ver my open scale s again !! Cheers from Ireland 🇮🇪 Brian 🎸🎸
The picking follows the rhythmic structure. The technique is alternate picking. There are other approaches, but the majority of pickers in this style would be approaching in this way. It’s a very solid and consistent technique.
Thanks for the lesson, it’s great and with a little work and practice I got it, The guitar sounds great. Can you tell me what guitar you are using? Brand, model, body size/type. Thanks again
Thanks :) Resolving licks = played and ends over the one chord - feels complete. Doesn't need to be a whole measure. Passing licks = not resolving. eg. lick plays over the D, but then resolves as you enter the G. You could string together many passing licks, not resolving the phrase for many chord changes down the road. No rules.
I went though a Gypsy Jazz phase. I sucked at it…but it significantly changed and improved my picking skills. Gypsy Jazz is the same 50 songs written in the 1940s over and over. I love the melodies and tone of bluegrass so I am going to go down this rabbit hole. What is the “Minor Swing” of bluegrass? Meaning, what is the one song everyone works on first? The “Stairway to Heaven” of bluegrass (but without the stigma haha). By the way, Stairway is a great song. Maybe someone can tell me the top 3 beginner tunes to learn? I am an intermediate player. I can play ‘Windy and Warm’ and have some chops (usually in the pentatonic realm where us untalented people go to die haha). Thanks. I like Billy Strings and he’s what got me into this. Stephan Wembrel got me into Gypsy Jazz. A tune like ‘Dust in a Baggie’ would be my goal.
Nice work! Gypsy Jazz is awesome, you'll love bluegrass! You could look at the 'popular' session fiddle tunes first. Tunes like: Salt Creek, Red Haired Boy, Soldier's Joy, Arkansas Traveler, Black Mountain Rag, Big Sciota, Billy In The Low Ground, Cherokee Shuffle, Goldrush, John Hardy, Whiskey Before Breakfast...That'll get you started and pretty much every bluegrass picker you meet will know these standards.
@@pickinlessons Hey thanks for the list of standards. I really think I can do it. I have one video of me on RUclips but you can’t put links in comments. I will literally use this list. Thanks.
Question: On the second passage you're playing an open G note at the end but I don't see that in the tab. Where does that last note fall in the rhythmic scheme?
Do you reccomend learning how to read music or just watch videos like this over and over until you memorize it? My guitar has been collecting dust and its time i learn some but i have no idea where to start. I have no musical knowledge
Learn to read tab for a start. Don’t need notation, but understanding rhythm would certainly help. Although, nothing wrong with learning by ear either - depends on you really. Using both strategies would be beneficial. To start off, learn some tunes, that appeal to you and practice a few scales to help develop technique. Keep it interesting so you stop that guitar from collecting dust!!
@pickinlessons Thanks for the reply. Sounded a bit like Beaumont Rag at the start but knew it wasn't. Don't suppose you have tab for it? Really like it.
So I'm back again after a year, I see. Time flies. Well, I had the same question this year, but looking in the comments/answers I see we've been through this. HOWEVER, on closer examination I see you use both the 2 and 3 to play the 4th fret, but your explanation says you favor the 3 rather than bringing the 2 over. I guess it's the small changes that enable the speed required to make bluegrass sound proper
Fingering is all about context. Where you come from, but more importantly, what you need to play next. As long as it's efficient, and not clunky. Can be a personal choice, but IMO there are always 'better' options. BUT...Django did only use 2 fingers, so work with what you can!!
I use Elixir medium lights...although the guitar in this video is a Santa Cruz D-PW. The Martin's been in getting a neck reset and some other maintenance for the last several months, should be back any day now!
I'm confused by the fingering of the 3rd lick. Starting with the middle on the 3rd fret, then the Index on 3rd fret followed by the ring on the 4th fret. But the tab shows a 3-4 slide! Why wouldn't the index slide from 3 to 4? Or, if not the index slide, why wouldn't the middle come over to play the 4? Seems strange to see the ring right after the index with the middle stuck in between.BTW: Seems all the bluegrass licks I've studied never address the fingering. Thanks if you could explain the reasoning
G'day Doug, Great question! Fingering can often be a personal choice and there is usually more than one way of going about. Here is my approach & logic - we're playing in position 2, finger 2 starts out on string 1-fret 3 (G). We need to make use of finger 1 on string 3-fret 3 (Bb) to smoothly transition. This gives you 2 options for the hammer-on which comes next on to fret 4-string 3 (B) - your suggestion is fine with finger 2, my personal choice is finger 3, as this maintains the 2nd position fingering, and because we've just made use of the 2nd finger (on the first string) I personally feel it is easier to hammer on to the 3rd finger. Fingering choice is usually dictated by where you come from and what you are playing next. If the hammer-on was on it's own, your suggestion would be spot on. But we're in the middle of a series of notes, so not so straight forward. IMO :) Hope that helps shine some light on the subject. Cheers, Heath. Oh, and if you did alter the lick using a slide instead of a hammer-on, of course you would use the 1st finger :) But, considering we're about to move to the 2nd fret-4th string (E) and playing a fast tempo, a slide would only make it harder to play.
@@pickinlessons I think I don't know the fret assignments for position 2. By your explanation I am guessing 1 2 3 4 fingers are should line up with 2 3 4 5 frets on the high E? If that's the case then I can see where finger 3 works on the 4th fret. Possibly you can direct me to a discussion of positions? Thanks
You are correct. 1st finger begins at the position you're in, and each finger takes a fret from there. Everything is open to variation, but that should be your guide.
No triplets in the rhythm, but lots of syncopation. Picking direction is always following the down/up beat pattern. For example, in the 4th preparation lick, the 3 up pick strokes all fall on the off beat.
I’m a 50 year old blues/rock player who has a 15 year old son that is on the cusp of being a monster flat picker/rhythm player(didn’t see that coming lol).I have flat out struggled trying to play with him.I struggle with the feel more than anything.I know I need to basically start from scratch “to be able to help him advance.This is exactly what I needed.Thank you
You're absolutely correct...I was the same to a degree, after years of rock playing, bluegrass flatpicking certainly does require a different approach and a solid knowledge in the open position...Good luck!!
Stop doing drugs with your son Harold.
I’m new to guitar and playing fastgrass is my ultimate dream. It’s been difficult to find good tutorials since i don’t know scales and music theory but this video is truly great.
Its bluegrass, its always fast. No need to Gen Z rename everything that already has a name.
😂👊🏻@@VonHanzee
Come back when you have a TON more experince. This shit is advanced as hell.
Being brought up in Prog Rock and since hearing Billy Strings and enjoying that kind of bluegrassy music whilst trying to learn it, i found your video perfect and informative. Thanks.
Excellent!
Billy Strings is influencing me to pick up bluegrass! And also to never attempt it lmao xD I used to play guitar but gave up due to 'not getting it' but now that I know how to actually learn I feel much more confident about it
I have been playing classic 60s 70s R&R, blues,.country and some jazz for 60 years. I recently retired to pretty much bluegrass heaven. I figured it is time to get with the program. Thank you for the video, I have to admit Clarence White is my favorite guitarist and I did get to see him three times with the Byrds. I went to a lot of concerts with big name guitar players and I do believe he was the best I ever saw. He would have been a real monster, he was stretching out from his bluegrass roots and who knows what he might have become? I will practice and listen to some more bluegrass. When it is good, it kicks butt. I never got to play any. My dexterity is there, no problem. Subscription added, thumbs up.
How cool to have seen Clarence! Sounds like the bluegrass bug has bit!
@@pickinlessons I am finishing up a recording of a Chicago Style blues tune and the third example, to my surprise, worked just as well for a blues rift in the key of E. Click my avatar for some originals if interested.
Over here in Florida, both my wife and I half retired learning how to play and pick up bluegrass licks. Totally have been enjoying your tutorial thank you so much for sharing this. You made a very applicable and easy-to-understand. We thank you
You’re very welcome ☺️. Good luck with your picking 👍
John, where in Florida? There's lots of places to jam around the state.
I’m two weeks into my guitar journey, I had to play the first lick 100+ times before it made sense to me, thanks so much for an awesome lesson buddy!
Good man, that's me now going from G too C fs lol 😆
I'm two weeks in too getting there slowly after A LOT of repetition 😅
I took one look at this n was like "nope" lol but ur comment has made me want to try ❤
Great lesson. Beautiful how running them together works
Cheers, Dave.
Really good lesson mate, I love a tutorial that just jumps into it without too much hand holding. Shows that you know who to target with the lesson and make the correct assumption that the viewer has enough know how to follow along.
Thanks. Glad you enjoyed 🙏
This is really great, I'm into this,, been playing guitar for over fifty years, for some reason I'm drawn to the bluegrass style, your teaching approach is excellent..
WOW ! Thank you for your commitment and energy level as a teacher .
You’re welcome, and thank you for your feedback 😊
Im a 69 yr Jazz/Blues singer and gùitarist. You teach very well and have an open mind approach. (Subscribed )
Thank you 😊
You are a great teacher! Explaining the essence and keeping it interesting ❤
Nice, very tuneful and melodic, great to hear something different from the dreaded minor pentatonic "Boring Blues" scale, well played.
Exactly the same here! I want bluegrass adventure, to rest from pentatonic 👍
Wow this is a great tutorial. Just subscribed and I will be diving into these lessons.
Great lesson mate. Keep doing what you do
Thanks Jaysah 😊
This is just what I need to start really spicing up my songs! I’m playing live more and need some more tricks I learn my ear and am not good with tabs and such. Thanks
Good luck and enjoy!!
Learning by ear beats tabs by a mile or 10👍
Fluency is understatement. Is it “Teke”? I’ve always been in awe of that clean, speedy fluency a good BG picker has. You have it but even better you are a great instructor, putting this over the plate so to speak, in a confidence inspiring manner. I have a strange desire for a Martin guitar…Salud mate!
Don’t wait to long for that Martin guitar. Life is short man. . A sweet sounding Martin D28 is expeNsive but being the richest man in the cemetery does you no good. Buy that guitar !
@@JohnnyRebKy I’ll second that! After 24 years of playing guitar, I finally went and bought myself a D28 last month. Almost brought me to tears… absolutely amazing guitar. I’ve had a lot of guitars over the years, and I wish I would have made the jump earlier. Still, many, many years left to enjoy this Martin’s sound!
This one is a Santa Cruz....
@@JustinBeyerlin1HD-28 owner here. Waited too long to pull the trigger. I’ve had it for 3 years and bought it 21 years after starting. This thing is unreal.
Great playing. I love learning new bluegrass licks. 🤓👍🏴🎸
Me too!
Wowwwwww🎉❤🎉❤🎉❤🎉❤🎉❤🎉❤🎉🎉❤ que hermosura gracias hermano eres muy generoso compartiendo esta belleza uffffffff eres un genio total !!!!!
This is fantastic, thank you for what you are doing! I keep learning….
That opening!!! WOW!!!
Excellent lesson! Thank you SO much!
Thank you!! Just bought an expensive guitar... now I've got to learn to play the damn thing. This is a huge help!
Nice work, Keith, done well Mate, love this stuff.
Thanks, Greg! Cheers, Heath 😊
Awesome flat pickin', my friend!!!
Dude you just taught me something so awesome! People like you have their way about them that makes a person trust and easy to learn. You have very special gift. I pray you give to God the glory for your gift! Thank you thank you thank you
You’re very welcome ☺️
Lovely
Love this style of music!!! Wish I could play it. But…someone has to be the listener
😎👍
I’ve been trying to play this music for 40+ years. I’m still a better listener than player. 😜
Outstanding lesson! Keep em coming! Subscribed and Liked
great video
Great lesson. Thanks
My pleasure!
Cheers my man great lesson I’m a fingerstyle player this flatpicking takes some practice in the open positions I think I need to go ver my open scale s again !! Cheers from Ireland 🇮🇪 Brian 🎸🎸
Yeah, for sure. The open position can be surprisingly challenging at first. Enjoy!
Feint greet playing
Great lesson sir
Australian bluegrass music?? Amazing!
Is there an advantage of using your placement of down and up strokes?
The picking follows the rhythmic structure. The technique is alternate picking. There are other approaches, but the majority of pickers in this style would be approaching in this way. It’s a very solid and consistent technique.
Useful and clear!
very good
super leçon merci professeur lointain
You’re very welcome ☺️
Thanks for the lesson, it’s great and with a little work and practice I got it,
The guitar sounds great. Can you tell me what guitar you are using? Brand, model, body size/type. Thanks again
Great job! The guitar is a Santa Cruz D/PW dreadnought.
@@pickinlessons Thanks for the Info. I'll be working on the licks on Vol.2 &3 and subscribe
Good Teacher,THANK YOU
You’re welcome ☺️
thanks
Just what I needed many thanks
What do you mean by resolving and passing licks? Awesome lesson btw!
Thanks :)
Resolving licks = played and ends over the one chord - feels complete. Doesn't need to be a whole measure. Passing licks = not resolving. eg. lick plays over the D, but then resolves as you enter the G. You could string together many passing licks, not resolving the phrase for many chord changes down the road. No rules.
I went though a Gypsy Jazz phase. I sucked at it…but it significantly changed and improved my picking skills. Gypsy Jazz is the same 50 songs written in the 1940s over and over. I love the melodies and tone of bluegrass so I am going to go down this rabbit hole. What is the “Minor Swing” of bluegrass? Meaning, what is the one song everyone works on first? The “Stairway to Heaven” of bluegrass (but without the stigma haha). By the way, Stairway is a great song. Maybe someone can tell me the top 3 beginner tunes to learn? I am an intermediate player. I can play ‘Windy and Warm’ and have some chops (usually in the pentatonic realm where us untalented people go to die haha). Thanks. I like Billy Strings and he’s what got me into this. Stephan Wembrel got me into Gypsy Jazz. A tune like ‘Dust in a Baggie’ would be my goal.
Nice work! Gypsy Jazz is awesome, you'll love bluegrass! You could look at the 'popular' session fiddle tunes first. Tunes like: Salt Creek, Red Haired Boy, Soldier's Joy, Arkansas Traveler, Black Mountain Rag, Big Sciota, Billy In The Low Ground, Cherokee Shuffle, Goldrush, John Hardy, Whiskey Before Breakfast...That'll get you started and pretty much every bluegrass picker you meet will know these standards.
@@pickinlessons Hey thanks for the list of standards. I really think I can do it. I have one video of me on RUclips but you can’t put links in comments. I will literally use this list. Thanks.
@@pickinlessons ruclips.net/video/QgtEqkRQInQ/видео.htmlsi=ijbShpQj1mBVkian
This was 12 years ago and was the first tune ever learned.
Love it!!
I live in Bluegrass of Kentucky and an English dude teaches me Bluegrass.
Australian I think
Spot on 😊
Same here 😂
Actually I believe his accent is Austrailian
I think he's from Australia....
Question: On the second passage you're playing an open G note at the end but I don't see that in the tab. Where does that last note fall in the rhythmic scheme?
I just figured it out; it's the first note in the next passage.
Each of the first 4 licks resolve/conclude on beat 1 of the following measure 👍
So glad I came across your RUclips vids. Thank you so much.
Thanks, Gregory 😊
My goodness, I wasn’t expecting an Aussie voice!
😌
That Santa Cruz man... it's gorgeous!!
Thanks man! It’s very sweet to play
Great lesson!
Glad you liked it!
Wonderful Thank You
You’re welcome ☺️
How nice to click on a guitar video and the presenter is another Australian!
This video helps a lot. But the people that made the actual licks blows my mind
Awesome!!❤🎉
these are fun and i can actually do them!
Nice 👍
Is the first bar/lick tab missing the final open G note you verbally mentioned? The last open note is in the D string.
Nope, the G is played on the first beat of the 2nd measure. The lick resolves on beat 1 - not on the 4+.
@@pickinlessons Got it. Thank you.
You’re welcome ☺️
Great lesson, what type of guitar are you playing.
Thank you 😊. This guitar is a Santa Cruz D/PW.
Do you reccomend learning how to read music or just watch videos like this over and over until you memorize it? My guitar has been collecting dust and its time i learn some but i have no idea where to start. I have no musical knowledge
Learn to read tab for a start. Don’t need notation, but understanding rhythm would certainly help. Although, nothing wrong with learning by ear either - depends on you really. Using both strategies would be beneficial. To start off, learn some tunes, that appeal to you and practice a few scales to help develop technique. Keep it interesting so you stop that guitar from collecting dust!!
What song are you playing at the beginning?
Just a generic bluegrass progression, not any particular song 😊
@pickinlessons Thanks for the reply. Sounded a bit like Beaumont Rag at the start but knew it wasn't. Don't suppose you have tab for it? Really like it.
I have the book Hot Licks For Bluegrass Guitar. Maybe I should spend more time looking at it!
Yeah, the tab for the example solo is available on the website. You can find the link in the description.
So I'm back again after a year, I see. Time flies. Well, I had the same question this year, but looking in the comments/answers I see we've been through this. HOWEVER, on closer examination I see you use both the 2 and 3 to play the 4th fret, but your explanation says you favor the 3 rather than bringing the 2 over. I guess it's the small changes that enable the speed required to make bluegrass sound proper
Fingering is all about context. Where you come from, but more importantly, what you need to play next. As long as it's efficient, and not clunky. Can be a personal choice, but IMO there are always 'better' options. BUT...Django did only use 2 fingers, so work with what you can!!
please?what reed do you use?
Hi, what are you referring to?
@@pickinlessons the pick
@@pickinlessonsHow many millimeters is the reed you play?
No worries, I use a 1.4mm (TAD 50) Bluechip 👍
Obrigado
Great lesson! What kind of strings do you have on that Martin? Sounds great!
I use Elixir medium lights...although the guitar in this video is a Santa Cruz D-PW. The Martin's been in getting a neck reset and some other maintenance for the last several months, should be back any day now!
Great lesson. Thanks. 🙏
My pleasure!
And thanks again ✌🏼
Can a finger picker do this? Never used a pick.
To achieve the speed, clarity and tone - unlikely. You could certainly use the ideas differently and approach it with you fingers :)
EXCELLENT !!!! New sub!!
This is a great video AND you like like Eric Idle in disguise.
Yes! Thank you!
I'm confused by the fingering of the 3rd lick. Starting with the middle on the 3rd fret, then the Index on 3rd fret followed by the ring on the 4th fret. But the tab shows a 3-4 slide! Why wouldn't the index slide from 3 to 4? Or, if not the index slide, why wouldn't the middle come over to play the 4? Seems strange to see the ring right after the index with the middle stuck in between.BTW: Seems all the bluegrass licks I've studied never address the fingering. Thanks if you could explain the reasoning
G'day Doug,
Great question! Fingering can often be a personal choice and there is usually more than one way of going about. Here is my approach & logic - we're playing in position 2, finger 2 starts out on string 1-fret 3 (G). We need to make use of finger 1 on string 3-fret 3 (Bb) to smoothly transition. This gives you 2 options for the hammer-on which comes next on to fret 4-string 3 (B) - your suggestion is fine with finger 2, my personal choice is finger 3, as this maintains the 2nd position fingering, and because we've just made use of the 2nd finger (on the first string) I personally feel it is easier to hammer on to the 3rd finger.
Fingering choice is usually dictated by where you come from and what you are playing next. If the hammer-on was on it's own, your suggestion would be spot on. But we're in the middle of a series of notes, so not so straight forward. IMO :)
Hope that helps shine some light on the subject.
Cheers, Heath.
Oh, and if you did alter the lick using a slide instead of a hammer-on, of course you would use the 1st finger :) But, considering we're about to move to the 2nd fret-4th string (E) and playing a fast tempo, a slide would only make it harder to play.
@@pickinlessons I think I don't know the fret assignments for position 2. By your explanation I am guessing 1 2 3 4 fingers are should line up with 2 3 4 5 frets on the high E? If that's the case then I can see where finger 3 works on the 4th fret. Possibly you can direct me to a discussion of positions? Thanks
You are correct. 1st finger begins at the position you're in, and each finger takes a fret from there. Everything is open to variation, but that should be your guide.
can i play without using a pick?
It would be very difficult, but not impossible.
YEAH!!!!
Great people show you how play licks in blue grass on guitar.
😊
Muy buen anal hermano!!
Gracias!
Ya suscripto.
GraCiAs!!
👍👍👍
Graandee!!
I suck at guitar.
Thanks for helping me suck a little bit less.
🤣😆😂
You’re welcome 😌 stick at it!!
Why the picking pattern? Its like youre playing triplets instead of swung 8th notes
No triplets in the rhythm, but lots of syncopation. Picking direction is always following the down/up beat pattern. For example, in the 4th preparation lick, the 3 up pick strokes all fall on the off beat.
Gary oldman!?
😂
@@pickinlessons 😆, but in all seriousness, I’m so glad I found your channel! You do a great job, keep it up 😁 !!!
Thanks man 👍
I bought a guitar...can I be saved? My excuse is that it will make it easier to follow a guitarist on my banjo 😆
It’s a good plan!!
Wait a minute, your ain't no hillbilly.
Nope 🤠
Not that there's anything wrong with that.
Exactly 👍
THAT'S TOTALLY *NOT* THE KIND OF *ACCENT* THAT I *EXPECTED* TO HEAR!!!
😮😮😮HAHAHA😂😂😂
😂😎
It kills me how so many of the best players of American guitar styles aren't even American lol.
Well i hate country. But bluegrass is magic
I have a feeling that when you say "country" you're probably thinking of bad rock with an accent.