I love this tune so much I play it all the time. It is my first break from the note-by-note AABB fiddle tunes. (Yes I'm new!)
Any other tunes like this come to mind? If so please tell me I'd like to hear them so I can learn and play them.
Thanks!
I love this tune so much I play it all the time. It is my first break from the note-by-note AABB fiddle tunes. (Yes I'm new!)
Any other tunes like this come to mind? If so please tell me I'd like to hear them so I can learn and play them.
Thanks!
I haven't completely learned Angeline the Baker yet, but every time I hear it, it reminds me of "Handsome Molly"...maybe you could learn Handsome Molly.
The "Angeline" I do is an AABB fiddle tune. If you could be more specific about what you like about it, I will probably have a lot of titles for you. Do you want stuff that sounds similar? The same key? Similar tempo? Same level of difficulty?
Mando Johnny: I like the sound of it mostly. One thing I liked was the hitting multiple strings at once. That seemed to give it a fullness that I found satisfying. In all of the other tunes I know it's mostly a string of single notes with the occasional doublestop. This sounded more "chordy" kind of like rhythm guitar with melody notes - excuse my crude terms I'm not really a musician (yet)!
I don't care about the key so much. I did kind of like the tempo. I didn't find it too difficult. I'd say tempo/overall sound and the fullness/richness of the sound.
Oh - this version that I play is from the Joe Carr "Picking Tunes" book (sorry I can't remember the exact title). It was really the only tune out of that book that blew me away.
Please feel free to give me all kinds of suggestions!
JiminiPickit: Thanks! I'll give Handsome Molly a go... I'm off to locate some tab. Is there a particular version I should look for?
Try "little Rabbit"
I borrowed this but it is still as powerful
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I always put Sally Ann in sort of the same catagory as Angeline the Baker, just a simple but really pretty little ditty.
Thanks, I'll try Sally Ann.
Doing the double-stop rhythm/chord thing is more an indication of the arrangement of the tune, a player's individual choice and the player's ability. You can, in theory, do that with any tune. If you listen to the Buckhannon Brothers, Curtis B. plays every tune that way, all the way through, becoming a "one-man band." If you listen to Clyde Curley and the Oxymorons, Clyde only uses that mode for brief emphasis. He chooses instead to play single notes with incredible timing and precision.
Some tunes, though lend them themselves to the mode you describe more than others. Here a few tunes from my playlist that I think lend themselves at least partially to what your are talking about and also have distinctive sound as "Angleine" does:
Bile Em Cabbage Down (ADAEADAEA)
Horse and Buggy-O (AEA DEADA)
Little Dutch Girl (AEA AEDAEA)
Old Joe Clark (AEAEA AGAEA)
Saddle Up Kate (AEADEA AEADEA)
Sandy Boys (AEA ADADAEA)
Stay All Night (AEADAEA ADAEA)
Bonapartes March (Am & G)
Cumberland Gap (DGDAD/DG DGDAD)
Dry and Dusty (D and A)
Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss (DA-DGDA DGDAD)
John Lovers Gone (D - ADAD)
Julianne Johnson (DA GDGA/GDGAD)
Martha Campbell (D & A)
Old Molly Hare (DGDA/DGDAD - DGDA/DGDAD)
Paddy Wont You Drink Some Cider (DGDA both parts)
Shady Grove (D Em G D Em D Em)
Step Around Johnny (DAD DGDAD)
Lazy John (GDGDG GCDG)
The Wedding of Nancy Ann (GCGDG GDGDG)
Golden Slippers- lots of double strings and easy- the Roland White book has it.
enjoy,
gw
Be yourself, everyone else is taken.
Favorite Mandolin of the week: 1917 Gibson A4
Angeline the Baker is one of my favorite tunes to
play, it's got such a great rhythm, then you
can improvise the 2nd time around.
On my top 3 list, along with Angeline the Baker,
are Old Joe Clark and Little Liza Jane.
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