Bluegrass Banjo For Dummies
Book image
Explore Book Buy On Amazon

Musicians take turns suggesting tunes to play in bluegrass jam sessions. Tunes like “Cripple Creek,” “Foggy Mountain Breakdown,” and “Fireball Mail” are high on the list of banjo players’ jam-session favorites, but fiddlers and mandolin players enjoy playing a different set of tunes that can sometimes be challenging for even experienced banjo players to play well.

If you’re at home playing the chord progressions to these more difficult tunes, you can play along at the jam and also lay the groundwork for working up your own solos. Here are the chord progressions to the ten most often played of these somewhat unfriendly-to-banjo jam instrumentals.

Make sure that for every two or three of these tunes you’re forced to play in your next jam that you’re able to expose your fiddlers and mandolin players to one of your more banjo-oriented favorites.

These chord progressions are all in 4/4 time with “/” marks separating one measure from the next. When two chords appear in one measure, they’re played for a half-measure each. For those tunes in the key of A, the chord progressions for the banjo are given in the key of G. Banjo players typically use their capos at the second fret to play in the key of A, using the playing techniques they’re more comfortable playing in the key of G.

  • “Arkansas Traveler” (key of D)

    ||: D / D / A / A / D / D / D / A D :||

    ||: D G /D A /D G / D A / D G / D A / D / A D :||

  • “Bill Cheatum” (key of A, capo second fret)

    ||: G / G / C / C / G / G / G C / D G :||

    ||: G C /D G / G C /G D /G C /D G /G / D G :||

  • “Cherokee Shuffle” (key of A, capo second fret)

    ||: G / G / G / Em / C / G / D / G :||

    ||: C / G / C / G / C / G / G / Em / D / G :||

  • “Gold Rush” (key of A, capo second fret)

    ||: G / G / G / G / G / G / G / D G :||

    ||: G / C G / G / G / G / C G / G D / G :||

  • “Ragtime Annie” (key of D)

    ||: D / D / D / A / A / A / A / D :||

    D / D / D / G / A / A / A / D

    D / D / D / G / G / D / A / D

  • “Red Haired Boy” (key of A, capo second fret)

    ||: G / G C / G / F / G / G C / G / D G :||

    ||: F / C / G / F / G / G C / G / D G :||

  • “St. Anne’s Reel” (key of D)

    ||: D / D / G / D / D / D / G A / D :||

    ||: D / Em / A / D / D or Bm / Em / A / D :||

  • “Soldier’s Joy” (key of D)

    ||: D / D / D / A / D / D / D A / D :||

    ||: D / G / D / A / D / G / D A / D :||

  • “Turkey in the Straw” (key of G)

    ||: G / G / G / D / G / G / G / D G :||

    ||: G / G / C / C / G / G D / G / D G :||

  • “Whiskey Before Breakfast” (key of D)

    ||: D / D / G D / A / D / D / G D / A D :||

    ||: D / D / Em / A / D A / G D / G D / A D :||

About This Article

This article is from the book:

About the book author:

Bill Evans has helped thousands of people to play the five-string banjo through his instructional workshops, music camps, DVDs, books, and recordings. He has performed on stages all over the world, his recordings have topped folk and bluegrass charts, and he has mentored many of today's top young professional players. Bill shares the shortcuts and secrets he has developed in more than 35 years of teaching to help all banjo players sound their best.

This article can be found in the category: