Green, Green Rocky Road
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Duration: 00:02:13
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Duration: 00:02:13
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This traditional song is most associated with David Van Ronk, who learned it in Greenwich Village in the early 1960s. But this version--emphasizing the VII chord in the chorus--owes more to Karen Mueller's version on the autoharp. She "collected" this song from a children's playground somewhere in the southeast. (Ask her for more details; I can't remember.)I am playing a lacewood Modern Mountain Dulcimer tuned DAd with a capo at the 4th fret, putting me in the key of A.
Thanks for listening, Carolyn,
Really enjoyed this song.
Karen, as I mentioned, I got this version of the song from Karen Mueller's autoharp rendition. It differs from David van Ronk's not only in the lyrics, but also because she sticks a VII chord in the chorus, which I think works great. That would be a C in the key of D but here I play it in A, so the VII chord is a G. Below are the lyrics Karen sings. As you can see, I used the last verse here but the other ones I put together on my own. Since each verse only has two lines (the first sung 3 times), it's pretty easy to come up with lyrics on the fly that work well.
I was born in Tennessee (3x)
Miss my friends and they miss me
Green green rocky road
Promenade in green
Tell me who you love
Tell me who you love
I'm going back to Baltimore (3x)
Been that way ten times before
(chorus)
Follow that bird up in the sky (3x)
He don't walk; he just fly
(chorus)
Ain't no use to sit and cry (3x)
Things get better by and by
(chorus)
Marion, Guy, and Helen, thanks for listening and taking the time to comment.
Marion and Helen, my basic flatpicking style is a standard guitar technique. If you count 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 &, I basically go out on the numbers and in on the &s. Sometimes I strum, sometimes I play a single note, and sometimes I skip a beat, but my hand keeps that same pattern throughout. I put together a three-part lesson on it if you are interested. The video quality is pretty mediocre, though. The first part deals with developing a basic back-and-forth eighth note strumming pattern. The second part introduces a variety of techniques (muting, skipping beats, etc.) that add rhythmic complexity to that strumming pattern. And the third part examines how to begin playing single notes instead of strumming them all while still keeping the same pattern going.
Beautifully played and sung.
Thanks, John and Rob.
Got it Dusty, thanks!
That was great stuff, Dusty. Enjoyed it immensely. Don't put your voice down; it's good.
Dusty, this is great stuff!
Thanks everyone for listening and commenting. I'd been singing this for a few days, tried it on the guitar, and then the dulcimer. It's really repetitive but lots of fun.
Nila, you are absolutely correct. The first melody line is identical to Jonathan Edward's "Sunshine Go Away Today."
Karen, the lyrics I sing here I mostly made up. The last verse does come from Karen Mueller's version but the first two are just kind of generic blues/folk lyrics. If you Google this song you will find the lyrics that David Van Ronk used to sing. I'm out-of-town on business right now, but when I get back I'll post the full lyrics that Karen Mueller sings.
Geekling, it's true that until recently I almost never sang, at least not publicly. Privately, I've been strumming guitar and singing for as long as I could remember, but I never really liked the sound of my own voice. Last fall I did my first public performance and sang one song (my bluesy version of John Henry which I posted here, too). When I heard the CD that the sound guy made of the show I realized that my singing was far from the worst part of my performance. And that song was one of the best ones we did. I think as I've gotten older I've learned how to choose material that works for a voice that has no range and no expressiveness either. A lot of learning to play is learning your own limits and staying within them.
Cynthia, thanks for your comments. I will definitely see you at the Ruth Barrett workshop in February. I already sent in my registration to DJ.
Dustin: I love your version of this song. You are so very talented, nice, and skillful. Look forward to seeing you soon at the Ruth Barrett workshop.
Love this song Dusty and the way that you played it. I know a lot of children's songs, but have not heard this one. Can you post the lyrics, I would like to learn it. Great job!
Dusty, that was great!!!
Thanks, Louis. David Van Ronk does this as a slow, fingerpicked tune on the guitar with an alternating bass that drives everything. Karen Mueller's autoharp version is all about strumming chords, obviously. The left hand fingering is immensely easy. It's the right hand that controls the rhythm, and that's the key. There's a bunch of syncopation in the melody.
And this is one you can just add your own words to. I got the third verse here from Karen's version; the other two just emerged spontaneously from the recesses of my musical memories, meaning they probably mimic other folk and blues tunes.
I can't sing this tune in the key of D, but you need to have the equivalent of a 1+ fret to get that VII chord in the chorus. Putting the capo on the 4th fret lets the 6th fret act as a 1+ fret and changes the key to A.