It has been a very, very busy last few months for me, and unfortunately my posting in this blog has suffered. I know you all missed me….
I thought I would share some of the things I have learned about how to arrange strange songs for the banjo in the last month. During the Christmas break, we had the wonderful opportunity to play three performances at a hotel and indoor waterpark, called The Great Wolf Lodge. It was a fantastically fun gig.
We spent hours going on waterslides, and figuring out how to corrupt the water cannons on the big water fort thing so that they would shoot MUCH farther than they were designed to. What fun it was to watch people cluelessly walking along, thinking that they were out of range of the water cannons. And then, BLAST! Their shocked and indignant expressions sent us into hysterics. Something about annoying random people is very attractive to us boys. Actually, annoying any people, in general, is our favorite pastime.
Anyway, the way this all relates to music and banjo, in particular, is that for this gig, we had to learn Christmas songs bluegrass-style. It sounds very simple doesn’t it? Most Christmas songs have really simple melodies, right?
No.
We had a rather difficult time bluegrasserizing several songs. Most were somewhat easy, but some were downright difficult. One of these was “Sleigh Ride.” I had learned the first part of it from a Bela Fleck recording, but the second part was a bit more elusive. It moves into a C#M7 chord, and just gets a bit weird. This is the reason the rest of the band decided that I should do it as a solo. My initial thought was that I wouldn’t be able to do it. Solo banjo is very easy: you are just playing by yourself. Good solo banjo is very hard. For some reason, the banjo just doesn’t sound quite as cool by itself (in other people’s opinion, not mine). You have to make it interesting. I had already learned the first part, and I had about three weeks to learn the rest, so I decided to give it a try.
The first thing I realized was that I had to stick very close to the melody. In the first part that was easy--Bela Fleck had done all of my work for me and did it much better than I would have. The second part, I just couldn’t get to sound very good. I tried and tried to figure it out by ear, but it just wasn’t happening. So, I pulled out the Christmas Carol book we had and transcribed “Sleigh Ride” note for note into banjo tab. I then went through and made the fingerings work. After that, I learned it, and tried to make it as banjoistic, as possible. Then I worked on trying to make it sound good all by itself. From watching other great players do solo pieces, I had decided to accent the melody so that people would first hear that, and then all of the other stuff.
I don’t really know how it turned out, but nobody booed. So, it must not have been horrible! Arranging something like that taught me more about my banjo neck, and being familiar with ways to overcome technical difficulties in fingering and picking. If you are bored with your playing, arranging unusual songs like that can give you some new ideas for your music. I know it gave me some.