If you don’t have “Emotionalism” or “I and Love and You” yet, you are missing two of the best albums of the last few years. Great harmonies with a punk attitude ascribed to folk. This is a great, easy tune to learn and you can add as much detail to it as you like with your own riffs or use the ones I have offered here.
*Because I am capoed on the 4th fret, we are actually playing in the Key of B major. Let’s talk about it as if it is in the key of G, since that is the notation I used.*
Lowercase roman numerals denote minor, uppercase major:
Intervals I ii iii IV V vi vii*
Notes G A B C D E F#
Chords G Am Bm C D Em F#*
This song is largely diving back and forth between the I and IV chords, G and C. The Avett Brothers know this and to spice it up, the riffs below are used to create movement within each chord (Riff 1), and to build from one chord to next (Riff 2 & 3). I found that the subtle changes in the chords guided my voice to the melody the first few times I sang it. The E/G6 adds a middle E (second-fret 4th-string) to the G, while the C6 emphasizes the 2nd-fret 3rd-string A note, and the Cmaj7 adds a high B on the open-2nd string.
The Em-D-G-E/G6 breakdown at the end is a vi-V-I-iv, as E/G6 is like a fancy way of saying “inverted C major chord”. Or maybe that is more fancy, I don’t know.
One of my best art teachers over the years told me once that she does one self portrait a year, and it’s a good way of staying in touch with where you’ve been/you are/you’re going. Wanting to explore Live Paint and the Blob Brush in Illustrator today yielded my first self-portrait in going on 5 years now… very interesting. Want to start another one now!
Had a lil fun at the end of my day today working through some tutorials on the tutsplus.com network, and decided to clean up my virtual desktop as countless hours of projects with no filing had caught up with me… nice to have a change. This site rocks most of the time for graphic design tutorials with an emphasis on quality and depth… I learn a lot whenever I dip in (and without tooting my own horn, I am in Photoshop and Illustrator more than I sleep on a daily basis). Kudos guys! It’s only 9 bones a month and you get access to a ton of high res files and step by step info for Illustrator, Photoshop, Web Design, Flash, Audio, etc. etc. I use PSDTUTS and VECTORTUTS the most.
Here’s one I had fun with in roughing out some wallpaper for my dual monitors at work, it deals with using the Average command in Illustrator, custom art brushes and multiple strokes on one object to get a hand drawn effect on type or any shape:
I have been playing guitar with a new set of plastic & metal fingerpicks for the past month or so. The metal ones in particular have really accelerated my finger-picking learning curve since before I got them I was using the tips of my fingers, which had a tendency to get much too tender too fast for me to make the progress I wanted to make in each practice session. The volume and response I get out of these relative to my old method just blows away the results I was getting before. I have been playing roughly 4 hour sessions 4-5 times a week for the last month and a half and IT JUST CLICKED after 6 months of working trying to get my fingers to do what my brain already knows how to do with a pic in standard tuning on steel-string guitar.
Without further ado, here is my first featured lesson with video, Radiohead’s “Airbag” distilled down to one acoustic guitar.
2) Dm (D-F-A) with a suspended 2nd (E) added 6th (B).
The high fret 10 and fret 12 on the B-string complicate the chord voicings and add a lil flavor in my mind. The tension here is between the shifting dissonance in the melody from F (Dm) to E (A major). The omnipresent high drone E note (on the open high E string) hammers this dissonance home, while the B (sus2 in the A/6th in the D) over both chords reacts harshly but beautifully to the F. These two notes are tritones, a intervallic relationship that is considered to the most dissonant in music theory.
Dm6 Dm6(2) Asus2 Asus2(2)
—0——-0——-0———-0——–
—0——12——-0———10——–
–10——10——-9———-9——–
–12——12——11———11——–
—0——-0——-0———-0——–
—————————————-
Riff 2
Keep the 4 highest strings ringing via fingerpicking while moving the bass notes above it by fretting with your ring finger and picking with your thumb. This takes some time but is so rewarding; one of my favorite riffs ever.
Asus2
—0———————————————
—0———————————————
—6———————————————
—7———————————————
—0-7-8———0–7-8——–0—————-
———–8-7-9———-8-7——–9———-
Riff 3
This nice descending figure goes chromatically (notes that are adjacent to each other, one half step apart) from E-Eb-D-C#. The Asus2 has the E, the A (flatted fifth) has the Eb which is technically not found in the A major scale and is derived from flatting the 5th scale degree, E. The D obviously has the D in the root and takes a dissonant turn into Dm which is irregular in the key of A major as well. The closest “legal” note in traditional A major is the 6th, F#. By flatting the 6th scale tone (also known as sharping the 5th) the high drone E clashes with the sharped fifth (F) creating a very interesting Dm. The B (D’s 6th) makes it an unusual Dm6(2).
Asus2 A(b5) D6 Dm6 Dm6(2)
–0——–0—–0—-0——-7————————-
–0——–0—–0—-6——-6————————-
–6——–8—–7—-7——-7————————-
–7——–7—–7—-7——-7————————-
–0——–X—–0—-0——-0————————-
———–7——————————————–
Chorus
This clever change may have been inspired or is at least reminiscent of The Beatles’ “You Won’t See Me” in it’s slow meandering largely chromatic march down from E-Eb-D-C#-B-A. Once again, Eb is a flatted 5th in the key of A and it is the major 3rd of B7, which is made up of B-Eb-A-F#. In this voicing, the F# is absent but it can be added to taste by fretting the 2nd fret of the highest string, replacing the open E note below. Note that it is optional as the E and Eb together in one chord together create desired dissonance and the first two steps of the chromatic (read: adjacent notes with no respect to scale) progression. Landing on the Dominant 5th (the E following Esus4) with it’s Major 3rd (a G#) at the end of the chorus launches the song with great momentum back into the tonic (read “home”) note of the song, A. Anytime you play the note immediately adjacent and below the tonic note of a song you are creating a great urge to resolve to the key you are in, in this case A major.
B7 D Dmaj7 D Dmaj7 Esus4 E
–0—0—0—0—0—–0—-0————————————-
–0—3—2—3—2—–0—-0————————————-
–2—2—2—2—2—–2—-1————————————-
–1—0—0—0—0—–2—-2————————————-
–2—0—4—0—4—–2—-2————————————
–x—x—x—x—x——0—-0————————————
Solo
Keep the highest three strings ringing with your index middle and ring fingers on the picking hand, while the moveable octave shape slides from note to note. The open high B and E strings provide needed dissonance and duplicate fretted consonance, and make it seem like much more is going on than you are actually playing. See if you can hear the implied A major and Dm6 chords below the wave of notes as the A major scale (A-B-C#-D-E-F#-G#-A) gives way to the A minor scale over Dm6 (A-B-C-D-E-F-G-A) and then washed back over when it descends from E to D (present in both scales) to C# (present only in major scale).
Decided to bring my old Canon Rebel DSLR to Irvine for some good peeps, eats, drinks, and shots (camera shots) for one of my best friends’ wedding… Had some fun with lens filters in post processing afterwards and tried to really punch out the focal points with some “wet” edges.
I think I have finally taken 18-55mm kit lens as far as it can get me, but I know it so well. I think it is time for a super low aperture wide angle so I can further explore…
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