Tracy Schwarz, of New Lost City Ramblers renown, offers instruction on playing the fiddle on this 1965 release. He takes a simple tune (the old-time classic, "Cripple Creek") and walks listeners through different ways to add variations, including adding more notes, drones (playing on two strings), or changing bow strokes. He also demonstrates different techniques such as vibrato. Liner notes include a transcription of the song text, illustrations of scale finger patterns for different musical keys, and an essay by fellow Rambler, John Cohen, on bluegrass, country, and old-time music and their growing popularity in cities and on college campuses.
12 Cripple Creek Using Combined Nashville Shuffle and Saw Strokes
13 Long Bow Stroke
14 Cripple Creek Using Only the Long Bow Stroke
15 Combining the Long Bow and Saw Strokes
16 Combination of Long Bow and Nashville Shuffle Strokes in Old Joe Clark
17 Combination of Long Bow, Saw, and Nashville Shuffle Strokes in Cripple Creek
18 Base, Unison, and Octave Notes in G
19 Leather Britches in G
20 Key of D
21 Ragtime Annie in D
22 Key of C
23 Texas Waggoner in C
24 Double Stops in G
25 Double Stops in D
26 Double Stops in a
27 Double Stops in C
28 Country Vibrato
29 Sliding Into Notes
30 Open G and a Tunings
31 Black MT. Blues a Tuning
32 Black Mountain Blues
33 Bonapart's Retreat (D Tuning #1)
34 Bonapart's Retreat
35 D Tunings #2 and #3
36 Rocking the Bow
37 Jolly Blacksmiths in a
38 Trills
39 Soldier's Joy in D with An Old Time Start
40 Single String Runs
41 Bluegrass Fiddle in 3/4 Time
42 Bluegrass Fiddle Lead in 4/4 Time
43 Fiddle Tune Type Lead in 4/4 Time
44 Bluegrass Vibrato
45 Double Shuffle
46 Banjo-Fiddle Music
47 Guitar-Fiddle Music
48 Guitar-Banjo-Fiddle Music
Tracy Schwarz, of New Lost City Ramblers renown, offers instruction on playing the fiddle on this 1965 release. He takes a simple tune (the old-time classic, "Cripple Creek") and walks listeners through different ways to add variations, including adding more notes, drones (playing on two strings), or changing bow strokes. He also demonstrates different techniques such as vibrato. Liner notes include a transcription of the song text, illustrations of scale finger patterns for different musical keys, and an essay by fellow Rambler, John Cohen, on bluegrass, country, and old-time music and their growing popularity in cities and on college campuses.