Posts Tagged ‘to’
Badass Female Guitarist – Orianthi Panagaris
Badass chick guitarist rippin it up. Shes played with Santana, opened for Steve Vai, and played at Claptons’ Crossraods. Shes also played with Carrie Underwood at the Grammys. She was going to be the guitarist for Michael Jackson’s new tour and can be seen in his concert movie This Is It. She also has a hit song out titled According to You. check it out.
Duration : 0:8:33
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Changing your banjo head
Very useful video if you need to replace your banjo head, showing you step-by-step how to do it, with me, Mississippi Feller, as your personal instructor.
For the first couple of years I never messed around with my banjo, for fear of breaking it, or mess it up somehow. But if you read about it a little, you’ll find out that tinkering with your banjo is very good for you, and the banjo itself. You get to learn and understand how it works, gets closer and more intimate with your skin box, and as for your banjo, well, it can sound and even look a lot better. And you might could save money as well.
Here, I replace a high crown, originally cloudy, but painted banjo head with a low crown, fiberskyn banjo head. The banjo itself is a very budget instrument, known as the Washburn B-8, which comes with a cheap “Beginner Pak”.
Fiberskyn banjo heads are known for their mellow sound and are the head of choice of a lot of clawhammer folk. I’m a Scruggs-style picker, however I plan on learning clawhammer in the future. Besides, as I have recently purchased a fancy Washburn B-17 with a very loud, bright and crisp sound, so a mellow, lower-sounding banjo is perfect for practice, besides of being light enough, and cheap enough to carry with me to rough places.
The tension was also way too high, and the banjo was nearly impossible to play. So I installed a new 1/2″ low bridge and carefully (and slowly) adjusted the truss rod until the strings were closer to the fretboard. The result was a low action, which made the banjo a lot easier and more pleasant to play, especially at high speed. The 3rd string was buzzing, and I fixed that by placing a very tiny piece of paper on the notch of the 3rd string in the nut (the piece between the peg head and the neck/fretboard), reducing the gap size between the walls of the nut notch and the string, which eliminated the noise completely. That procedure and cheap fix is sometimes useful in the 5th string slot and the bridge as well.
A little reminder: do NOT paint a fiberskyn banjo head. The ideal heads to paint would be the white head, or even frosted, clear or cloudy, painted like a canvas, or a clear banjo head painted from the underside. I might upload instructional videos on painting banjo heads in the future, in similar fashion to this one.
If you have any questions, leave comments and I will reply to them as soon as I can, it’s my pleasure to help. Again, I also recommend the Banjo Hangout website for all your questions and doubts about all-things banjo and good, friendly professional advice. I’m by no means a professional, but I hope I was able to help y’all. Thanks for watching.
– Comments are subject to approval. Anti-Confederate, anti-Southern and anti-Scottish remarks will definitely not be tolerated. Political debates, personal attacks, excessive profanities, accusations of “racism”, unnecessary bitching, anti-white behavior and other sorts of nuisances will also not be tolerated and comments will be ignored, or removed if necessary. There’s a time and a place for everything, folks.
- Songs, instruments and musicians featured in this video:
SONGS AND INSTRUMENTS:
Dixie (Banjo), Burnette’s Lament (Appalachian Dulcimer), Turkey In The Straw (Dobro), Cajun Fiddle (Cajun fiddle and pedal steel guitar), Buckaroo and Love’s Gonna Live Here (medley on pedal steel guitar), The Resolian (bottleneck parlor guitar), Fireball Mail (Banjo) and Foggy Mountain Breakdown (Banjo).
SONGS AND PERFORMERS:
“Dixie” – performed by “Mississippi Feller”, composed by Dan Emmett
“Burnette’s Lament” — performed and composed by “VaDulcimer”
“Turkey In The Straw” – performed by Martin Gross, traditional
“Cajun Fiddle” — performed by Don Rich & The Buckaroos and Buck Owens, composed by Don Rich
“Buckaroo / Love’s Gonna Live Here” — performed by David Hartley, composed by Bob Morris / Buck Owens
“The Resolian”– performed by “Bottleneck John”, jammin’ for Republic guitars sound sample
“Fireball Mail” — performed by “Mississippi Feller”, composed by Floyd Jenkins (aka Fred Rose)
“Foggy Mountain Breakdown” — performed by “Mississippi Feller”, composed by Earl Scruggs
All rights reserved to owners of the songs, no copyright claims made in this video.
Video proudly made in Scotland.
Duration : 0:11:19
Like A Rolling Stone – Bob Dylan (Easy Guitar Songs Beginner Guitar Lesson BS-609) How to play
In this Guitar lesson we will Learn how to play Like A Rolling Stone by Bob Dylan. Awesome tune with some fun fancy bits you can add in to make it sound real sweet.
The Justin Guitar Beginners Songbook contains 100 songs specifically structured for beginners and there are 10 songs for each stage of the Beginners Course. See the web site for the beginner lessons and more info including full song list, sample songs and order details. You can also order the book from your local music store!
Taught by Justin Sandercoe.
Full support at the justinguitar web site where you will find hundreds of lessons on a wide range of subjects, and all the scales and chords that you will ever need! There is a great forum too to get help, no matter what the problem.
And it is all totally free, no bull. No sample lessons, no memberships, no free ebook. Just tons of great lessons
To get help with this lesson (and for further info and tabs), find the Lesson ID in the video title (like ST-667 or whatever) and then look it up on the Lesson Index page of justinguitar.com
http://www.justinguitar.com
Have fun
.
Duration : 0:14:26

This is part two of a
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EHtRSVEUf8A – (!) more important beginner’s guitar info at this video here.
