Here's a cool Django lick featuring some really fast sweep-picking triplets up at frets 12-17 on a G9 - C9 pattern.
I know Django is supposed to have had limited use of his third and fourth fingers, but I'd like somebody to explain to me how he played this passage with just two fingers? I just don't see how that's possible.
Will
PS Most folks here probably know this already, but just in case you don't--- in QuickTime, you can slow passages down by going to Window>Show A/V controls.
So far I can just barely manage this at 75%... makes a great workout, anyway!
Paul Cezanne: "I could paint for a thousand years without stopping and I would still feel as though I knew nothing."
Edgar Degas: "Only when he no longer knows what he is doing does the painter do good things.... To draw, you must close your eyes and sing."
Georges Braque: "In art there is only one thing that counts: the bit that can’t be explained."
Comments
Off the top of my head:
[code]
---[17--13----------------13]--[17--13----------------13]--17-12---------------12--17----12--15--13----------------
------------15--12---15----------------15--12--15-----------------13--11-13---------------------------13------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------14----
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------15-
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[/code]
As for the pick strokes: [d---u---d----u----d--d]-----[d---u---d--u--d--d]--- etc
Hope that helps
Edgar Degas: "Only when he no longer knows what he is doing does the painter do good things.... To draw, you must close your eyes and sing."
Georges Braque: "In art there is only one thing that counts: the bit that can’t be explained."
I don't understand that notation. Can you explain or post it in regular tab?
Thanks!
It's just regular tab but because only the first four strings are used in this lick and I'm too lazy I didn't write the 5th and 6th strings.
Just fixed it, hope it's clear now.
I wrote the brackets [...] to help match up the picking with the notes.
BTW d=Downstroke, u=upstroke
It's such a great lick and one that can be easily modified to fit other changes.
I was having trouble reading the TAB using Safari (on a Mac) not because strings were missing, but because for some reason the columns weren't lining up. I opened the page in Firefox and it looks fine. So if you're on a Mac and it's still incomprehensible, you might try using a different browser.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1-
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----[17---12----------------12]--17----12--15--13----------------
-------------13--11--13---------------------------13------------
--------------------------------------------------------14----
------------------------------------------------------------15-
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hope that's better
I didn't hear the sound clip and since it's been a while since I transcribed the solo I guess I must have changed it or got it wrong from the start and just remembered it that way.
Thanks to Tom for correcting me.
I'll fix the TAB right away
Thanks,
Will
Niagara-On-The-Lake, ON
Edgar Degas: "Only when he no longer knows what he is doing does the painter do good things.... To draw, you must close your eyes and sing."
Georges Braque: "In art there is only one thing that counts: the bit that can’t be explained."
---------------2--3---------------3-4-------------4-5-----------5-6-------------------------------------
-----------3------------------5----------------6--------------7----------------------------------------------
--------2-----------------3----------------4---------------5----------------------------------------------------- ---0-3---------------0-5--------------0-6------------0-7----------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------6-7----------7-8-------------8-9-10-------------------------------------------
---------------------------------8------------9--------------10----------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------6------------7---------------8---------------
------------------------0-8----------0-9-----------0-10----------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Picking: d-u-d-d-d-u
Fingering:0-M-I-M-I-M or could be 0-M-I-M-I-I sliding your index up a fret at the end
d= downstroke, u= upstroke, 0= open string, M= middle finger, I= index finger
Note that the first arpeggio is a different shape than the others. I'm not sure but I think he might have meant to play an F# as the second note but I hear an F so the pattern is all diminished arpeggios with a pedaling D open string and lots of sweeps on the right hand.
As for the left hand fingering:
As Sherlock Holmes used to say: "After you eliminate the impossible, what's left must be the truth"... or something like that.
When in doubt try playing stuff with just your index and middle fingers re-arranging the notes until it's possible to play it . Often you'll arrive at something very simple and relatively comfortable, getting a glimpse of how Django visualized the fretboard in the process.