To Thread - Forum Home

The Mudcat Café TM
https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=108357
11 messages

Daily Guitar Podcast

04 Feb 08 - 06:58 PM (#2253597)
Subject: Daily Guitar Podcast
From: Patrick-Costello

I've been podcasting daily banjo exercises for a while now with The Daily Frail so I decided to start producing a similar series for fingerstyle guitar.

Crisfield Guitar launched today with a simple thumb-brush exercise. In the weeks and months to come we will build on that thumb brush pattern to create rhythmic and melodic licks.
Crisfield Guitar 2/4/08


05 Feb 08 - 01:02 AM (#2253800)
Subject: RE: Daily Guitar Podcast
From: HarleySpirit

Hi Patrick,
We "Newfies" here in Canada, have been following your banjo lessons, converting the "banjo frailing" technique
to "guitar frailing", with some "Travis Picking" mixed in as well.
Wow! The "Crisfield Guitar" series sounds like a great opportunity for all fingerstyle guitar players to learn from.
Check it out Folks! A link to Patrick's web site can also be found at my alternate tuning chord charts page: here

Harley


05 Feb 08 - 03:45 AM (#2253843)
Subject: RE: Daily Guitar Podcast
From: Richard Bridge

Funny, I just posted and here it isn't.

I think this might be going to be interesting. Certainly I have always takenit as a matter of faith touse seperate fingers for the bottom two notes (G and C) inteh C chord, thather than "keeipng the pinky free".

However, is my ear deceiving me, or is his guitar just a smidgeon off-tune?


05 Feb 08 - 05:52 PM (#2254471)
Subject: RE: Daily Guitar Podcast
From: Richard Bridge

refresh


06 Feb 08 - 10:35 AM (#2254978)
Subject: RE: Daily Guitar Podcast
From: Patrick-Costello

> I have always taken it as a matter of faith to use separate
> fingers for the bottom two notes (G and C) in the C chord,
> rather than "keeping the pinky free".

Sometime in the next few weeks we will start using the little finger to play the notes of a scale while holding the chord form.

-Patrick


06 Feb 08 - 11:09 AM (#2254999)
Subject: RE: Daily Guitar Podcast
From: Richard Bridge

Yes, I figured that was the purpose. However my two best guitars have relatively wide string spacing, and with a little care I can get my ring finger onto the fretboard without muting either (!) so fretting both is not an option. I'm going to have to take some of my other guitars of the wall and see if I can get both strings while keeping the finger upright. At the moment I'm having more success with a back-bend.


06 Feb 08 - 12:08 PM (#2255052)
Subject: RE: Daily Guitar Podcast
From: Patrick-Costello

Before you switch guitars, watch the Folk Song of the Day workshop from 11/19/07 where I cover multi-string fretting.

http://youtube.com/watch?v=55AcIuutL5c

-Patrick


06 Feb 08 - 12:19 PM (#2255063)
Subject: RE: Daily Guitar Podcast
From: NormanD

Patrick, can you subscribe to the daily guitar podcast? If so, what is the link please?

Thanks


06 Feb 08 - 02:10 PM (#2255165)
Subject: RE: Daily Guitar Podcast
From: Patrick-Costello

I went ahead and generated a podcast feed for the first three episodes:
http://funkyseagull.com/crisfield-guitar.xml

If you want something more in-depth check out some of my earlier projects:

Folk Guitar video

Subway Shuffle video

Subway Shuffle audio

The How and the Tao of Folk Guitar

-Patrick


06 Feb 08 - 06:02 PM (#2255382)
Subject: RE: Daily Guitar Podcast
From: Richard Bridge

Thank you for the other link. I can do the Em, Emajor, and Am with more or less ease on all my 6 string guitars - those use my second finger (the largest). The C and G in the C chord (with the smaller ring finger) are possible on (in order, starting with the easiest) my (campfire guitar) Morris, friend's Gibson J-45, my second best Hagstrom, my Mugen (Daion) THE78, and difficult but possible on my Martin OM-1.

Not possible on any of my 12-strings.

I have another Hagstrom out on loan to a friend. Yes, I have GAS.


My best Hagstrom J-45 has had the string spacing widened a fraction at the nut, by a luthier, more on the bass side than the treble. My ring finger will not make the bridge on the two bass strings.

Even on that guitar however, which does have a wide neck, I use a one-string thumb-over to give me a 6-string B7 chord, and I note you don't do that in St James Infirmary which I do do but slightly differently.

I find the two string thumb-over (advised as occasionally useful by the late Rick Fielding) very hard work.


07 Feb 08 - 07:33 PM (#2256429)
Subject: RE: Daily Guitar Podcast
From: Patrick-Costello

My advice would be to stick to one guitar.

-Patrick