Description
In this week’s guitar lesson, you’ll learn how to play the song “Shady Grove” by yourself on guitar (no jam track needed). This lesson includes 2 levels of difficulty. Level 1 is easier (all down strokes), Level 2 is a little more difficult with alternate picking and upstrokes for the right hand.
Part 1 - Free Guitar Lesson
Part 2 - For Premium Members
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Slow Walkthrough - Level 1
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Slow Walkthrough - Level 2
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Video Tablature Breakdown
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Hi Brian,
I am sure this will be a great thing to get upsides with. Getting it to sound well will take a bit of practice. I think it will make for a great exercise too. A very useful lesson.
JohnStrat
Hey Brian, great lesson! I’ve got a request. Would you do another John Fogerty style lesson? I loved your last one from several years ago.
I agree MORE Fogerty
I’d like some blues, to delta blues
Love the bluegrass!
Very nice. I hope you will consider “Gypsy Waltz” in Gm. Meanwhile, you have given me plenty to work on. Thanks, Joe (:
Brian has a lesson on “The Gypsy Waltz” in Gm.
https://www.activemelody.com/lesson/gypsy-waltz-guitar-lesson-g-minor-blues-ep154/
Or, go to the Weekly Lessons and search for “Gypsy Waltz”.
My error. I meant Wayfaring Stranger. Thanks I did that one.
I meant Wayfaring Stranger. Sorry
Joe
Sounding great on the CEO7 Brian. Was just playing along on the electric and getting some interesting rhythm ideas.
Sorry, I meant Wayfaring Stranger in A minor. You did Gypsy Waltz I loved it. Thanks, Joe
Yes! Love me some flatpicking…great change of pace. Brian, you are so versatile!
Your original compositions are wonderful. However, I appreciate seeing some lessons that add to recognizable pay list. You are the master at making great teaching moments with any tune you choose to play. I love the traditional folk tunes. Thanks Brian…keep it it going.
Love this. And yes I too would love to learn some recognizable old counrty!
Brian – fun lesson!
Curious about squeaking strings. Hear it when you’re moving from the 5th to 7th fret positions. Notice a lot of it when I move around the fretboard. Do you mind it? Know/try any thing to minimize it?
Thanks,
Jim
Hi Jim
You might want to try Elixir strings, they have a coating on them which gives them a long life and reduces squeak. I use them a lot
They make playing a little easier too ( I am nothing to do with Elixir strings, by the way !)
Cheers
Ian
Hi Ian,
Thanks!
Best,
Jim
D’Addario Flat tops get rid of the squeaking . I’ve used them for over 10 years. They’re easier on the fingers too.
Kind of pricey, but deals can be found online. I only change strings once a year, not much of a problem & I play every day also
Some people don’t like them, but we all have different likes/dislikes. Pretty much have to try strings to see if you like them.
Paul
Brilliant lesson Brian! Can’t wait to get started on this! And I am with you on transposing it into A minor: I too love the darker sound of songs in A minor.
I am blown away with how you consistently put out such varying styles of lesson week after week. As parsonblue says, you are so versatile.
Interesting that blues46 mentioned Wayfaring Stranger… I am currently learning that song… but not this brilliant version by Ed Shheran! Would not know how to do this on guitar!
https://youtu.be/buAzVkcH4YI
Brain,
Great lesson very enjoyable, happy days 🙂
Malcolm..
Brian – excellent lesson! Thank you. I’m a big fan of Doc Watson and the bluegrass genre in general. Appreciate your ongoing efforts to keep the lessons interesting and varied. Now time to practice! Thanks again
Brian, keep posting tab on the bottom of the video… it is super helpful. It is also great when you give us both an open string verse and transposable verse.
Lessons like this both add to my vocabulary and help reinforce previous material. Thank you Brian!… another great lesson.
Nice change of lesson content Brian.
Thank you for this Brian! This is a great tune for us to learn for a lot of reasons. Its fun and it leaves lots of room for further improvisations or embellishments.
It s also great with a side order of fiddle or mandolin.
Scott
Hey Brian! Great lesso I have listened to Doc for years ,love his style of music .He would be very proud! Question what kind of pick do you use? maybe a short lesson on how you hold your
pick and use it. Again thanks for all these great lessons! I have learned so much!!!
Thanks Dan
Bluechip TP40. that is THE pick for me. and i’ve tried them all.
Great lesson, was listening and thought I know that tune but have never heard Shady Grove. Being from the UK I know it as the old folk song Matty Groves and worked out a version of it the other day, in Am and G… With this I should be able to add some things I didn’t think of and come up with something. Thank you.
Very enjoyable lesson !
The two levels are very helpful in leaning the song.
I love it! Thanks Brian
Enjoyable for sure.
Hi, Brian,
Another great lesson using a traditional tune, arranged to be played unaccompanied on an accoustic.
Excellent! We don’t see enough of this type of instruction in these times.
Thanks, and keep up the great work!
Robert
This sounds a lot of fun to play and I am looking forward to trying it. The song is new to me but I imagine this version would be a good basis for extending with new variations and improvisation.
I love this piece – great arrangement Brian. The only problem I have is sounding the D on the third string under the fleshy part of my index finger when barring the G chord at the 7th fret. This always seems to cause me problems. does anyone have any tips to help me improve the quality of my fretting?
One of your best lessons yet. Thanks, Brian.
Brian, Really enjoying these bluegrass lessons along with all the other..Was always a rocker and country player but now enjoying all kinds thanks to you..Keep up all you are doing. Thanks
Dave.
Great lesson, I like the bluegrass feel – and that you are taking it up the neck.
Love it, so fun!
Love the Martin CEO7, my dream guitar I hope to find and get some day. Awesome lesson, thx
Very nice. This song was in my song book in elementary school, in Eastern Kentucky, as well as many other traditional ballads, including wayfaring stranger. Another awesome lesson . Thanks Brian
That was a lot of fun. I worked on both positions in Am and I worked on it in Dm AND then I got out the Mandolin to make sure I could play it everywhere. FUN!
Cool song! Jamming over the track is a lot of fun also.
Really nice lesson Brian! For those interested in traditional music take a look at Omie Wise covered by Cass Mccombs
This is a great tune to play all the caged chords all the way up the neck. Love how you use just a couple of notes in each chord to draw out the chord. This is a good tune to show different ways to build a chord and make a melody at the same time. Thanks Brian, keep them coming.
A more recognizable song really helps bc the Melody is already inside . Any other “old and in the way tunes” what be great.
Fabulous lesson! Would love more flatpicking like this.
I like everything about this one. I like all of the lessons and learn something from each, but this particular one spoke to how I like to play.
Peebles needs you “B”
Thanks Brian. Another exciting lesson.
This is a great traditional song….also the theme from Gilligans Island. You have to listen closely.
This is a really nice song that I would like to learn for sure. Thanks, Brian. Love that Martin guitar you are playing as well
It was a beautiful clear night, the horses were in the paddock and lonesome cowboy Slim sat at his campfire, his trusted Martin guitar by his side…… Love it, Brian!
Hey Brian!
Great little traditional piece and nice rendition.
Given it comes from the Appalachian country and the rhythm I would guess it has Celtic origins (Scot or Irish).
My Celtic side is on my mother’s whose folks hail back to the the very early days in that “neck of the woods” (Virginia/West Virginia).
Maybe it’s in the soul as that dark minor sound just feels right to me. 🙂
Cheers!
Hi Mike, I’m from the UK and know it as Matty Groves made famous by Fairport Convention. There version is great have a listen if you don’t know it. I looked up the history of the song and most sources think it is Northern English around 1600 but maybe Scottish, and was first written down around 1680.
Great lesson Brian. I am trying to link singing this song and was wondering if anyone out there help me with when the verse and chorus start. Not being very musical I can’t figure it out. Never heard this song before but I really love it
Thanks, Rob
Great lesson Brian. Love the melody + rhythm combo. I’ll definitely check out EP 154 as mentioned above. Thanks to y’all.
Another stellar lesson!
That was great! I loved it. Now I am going to get my black hat, buckle up the smokewagon and stickup the 10;15 Phoenix to Yuma stage! 😉
Brian – how long have you been playing the Martin CEO7? I have been considering ordering one also what are your impressions of the Guitar?
Brian
I love playing in A-minor with solo embelishments – so this was a real treat.
Thank you for this lesson
Love shady grove Brian.
The best version of this I’ve heard is by Tom Petty’s “other” band, Mudcrutch.
Thanks for the great lesson.
Hi Brian,
Great lesson. Love playing / practicing it. Though repetitive it‘s just cool. Plus lots of takeaways! I have got the feeling level two version is even more intuitive than level one. Thanks a lot
Cheers Tom
Greeeat work as always
I love this song! Thanks for teaching it!
Love the bluegrass style stuff.
Just what I needed to keep my guitar journey interesting.
I’m a new member. Great site. I like being able to search the lessons.
My one comment would be to add a “C” before the second “G”. There are normally 3 chords in
Shady Grove. But it works either way. Thanks.
Great Lesson this Brian – more like this please!
Hey there –
I like the Am approach! Thanks! Would love to see you do “Summertime.” I can only imagine the melody you compose would be great. Thanks again for your lessons!
Hi Brian,
Been coming to your site pretty much daily for a couple of years, so I’m obviously hooked; your teaching style is terrific. Never been much of a “poster” but did want to give you some feedback from an old guy’s perspective. (At 71, I come from the ossified wing of the Active Melody school.) The brain loses its plasticity as we age so constantly learning new tunes can be a problem as any long-term memory cells I have remaining are in precious short supply, so it was really great having the basic melody already stashed. Really enjoyed the Shady Grove tutorial and I think that’s the reason why I liked it so much. I know folks my age aren’t your primary target audience, but I hope you come back to this format from time to time. Thanks
I’m almost there (ossified wing). I just want to applaud again having songs like this in the weekly lessons. Combined with the theory, definite “favorites”.
Love the bluegrass style. Great job teaching us Brian!
Do more of these songs that are in the public domain! I really appreciate getting the theory AND a song that my friends might have heard. Bravo.
This is the best. I love the named tunes like this, Amazing Grace, and others that you can play when someone says “play something for me”. Be cool to see all the lessons named something other than EP###
This is great.
Thanks a lot.
I’d love more traditional tunes…
Whilst getting this underhand my brain kept thinking “wouldn’t it be good if Brian did a similar beginner/intermediate version of Plastic Jesus”. That aside, this lesson has done wonders for my picking out single strings in rhythmic strokes. I’ve added more upstrokes than the lesson suggests based on the groove in my head. So much fun.
This style of playing has really really helped my timing . A lot of fun too when you start picking it up .