lessons | minstrel melodies


Learn to play a minstrel melody on your guitar.

Scott Nygaard, Acoustic Guitar magazine's editor, is an accomplished guitarist with more than 25 years' experience. He has performed and recorded with Tim O'Brien and the O'Boys, Chris Thile, David Grisman, and Jerry Douglas; released two solo albums, No Hurry and Dreamer's Waltz (Rounder Records); and been nominated for a number of Grammies for his work on other artists’ CDs. He lives in San Francisco and performs in the Improbables with violinist Darol Anger (www.darolanger.com).

To hear the examples, you need the RealPlayer plug-in. Enjoy your lesson, and check out the instructional book/CD, Fiddle Tunes & Folk Songs for Beginning Guitar

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Tune up

The American folk tradition known as old-time music is a mixture of styles that were popular in rural southern communities in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Fiddle tunes and ancient ballads from the British Isles, African-American blues and minstrel music, and sentimental pop songs gleaned from sheet music all contributed to this music, which began to leak out of the mountain hollers and be recorded and codified in the 1920s.

While many people acknowledge the Celtic and blues influences on old-time music, few see minstrel music as an obvious progenitor of the old-time canon. Minstrel music was popular in the U.S. in the mid-1800s and typically featured troupes of white musicians done up in blackface imitating the music of southern blacks (in an often derogatory fashion). Some minstrel songs, like Stephen Foster's "Hard Times Come Again No More" and "My Old Kentucky Home," have become favorites of 21st-century trad balladeers, but many other minstrel tunes have survived primarily as instrumentals. "Golden Slippers," written by the popular African-American minstrel composer James A. Bland, and published in 1879 by John F. Perry and Co. of Boston, is one of these. Perhaps the melody works well without any lyrical embellishment, or, more likely, modern tongues trip over lines like, "Oh, dem golden slippers / Golden slippers I'm gwine to wear / Upon de golden street." For whatever reason, "Golden Slippers" has become a favorite among fiddlers and guitarists alike. It seems to work particularly well on the guitar, as players like Jon Sholle and Wyatt Rice have ably demonstrated.

"Golden Slippers" can be comfortably played on the guitar in a few different keys. G is particularly popular, but playing it in the key of C allows you to easily reach the melody in two octaves in first position. Playing the tune in a different octave is a common way to vary the melody without deviating from it too much

In the version of "Golden Slippers" below, I've begun in the lower octave. The A part is eight bars long and is played twice, but the B part, while seeming to want to repeat after eight bars, veers off halfway through the repeated melody and ends differently. Notice that bars 18–22 are similar to bars 10–14. In measures 18 and 20, though, I've added quick chord strums to fill out the melody. They may be a little tricky, so if you have trouble with them, just play the first note of the measure as a half note (hold it for two beats) and ignore the chord.

The melody jumps up to the higher octave in measure 26, hanging out mostly on the E and B strings. The A part is virtually a repeat of the lower-octave A part, but in the B part I've imitated old-time fiddlers' slides into doubled open strings. Notice that in measures 35–36 and 42–44, a slide into the E note at the fifth fret of the B string is followed by the open E string. I've also added a couple of quick chord strums to the melody in measures 43 and 45.

Golden Slippers
Golden Slippers (played slowly)


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© 2002 String Letter Publishing, Inc., David A. Lusterman, Publisher.