- Cripple Creek (key of A, fast)
- Cripple Creek (key of A, normal)
- Cripple Creek (key of A, slower)
- Cripple Creek (key of A, slow)
- Cripple Creek (key of A, woodshed)
- Cripple Creek (key of G, fast)
- Cripple Creek (key of G, normal)
- Cripple Creek (key of G, slower)
- Cripple Creek (key of G, slow)
- Cripple Creek (key of G, woodshed)
I used a MIDI bass. I played my Cort acoustic guitar. I added a Fruit Shaker audio loop.
This was the first song I ever learned to play on the banjo, back in the early 1990's. I lived in Chicago at the time, before there was a public internet. I had bought some learning books by Janet Davis and Jack Hatfield, but without having any fellow banjo enthusiasts to watch and learn from, I lost interest in the banjo.
It wouldn't be until 2018 that my youngest daughter on Guam took an interest in the banjo, that I discovered Dave Hum while searching the internet, and the rest is history. The first song I heard Dave play was The Ballad Of Jed Clampett. I had never heard anyone play the banjo like that before, and I was impressed and emotionally moved so much that I actually cried. I lived on the island of Guam for 17 years (2004 to 2021). I ordered a Recording King Elite 85 (maple neck) banjo in 2018 from Ross Nickerson for $1,795. It has a longer than normal 27 3/8" maple neck (most banjos have a 26 1/4" neck length). The RK Elite is okay, but in hindsight it lacks the resonance and lush tone of a professional banjo. My new Deering Calico and Golden Wreath banjos blow the RK Elite away in tone! I love Deering's 06 tone ring!
I bought my daughter a Recording King Madison. I think I paid $1,099 from Amazon. It has a standard length mahogany neck. From my own firsthand experience playing them, I personally don't like Recording King banjos. I think they lack tone. My Deering Calico is the nicest sounding banjo I've ever played. I bought it new at a 15% discount from Fuller's Guitar in Houston, Texas, for only $4,436. But they don't install railroad spikes. I went to HomeDepot this week and bought a small Dremel Stylo+ kit, and used a 1/32" drill bit to install the spike on my Deering Golden Wreath. It went very well. Here's some helpful things to keep in mind if you install your own railroad spike.
Dave Hum (1966-2012)
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