
The blues is a distinctly American style of music. Many popular genres such as jazz, rock, and country music draw upon basic blues concepts. Consequently, it is advantageous for any guitarist to study the blues.
Lesson 1
In this lesson, Orville introduces one of the basic fingerstyle techniques - the alternating bass technique.
Length: 14:49 Difficulty: 2.0 Members OnlyLesson 2
Orville Johnson teaches his interpretation of the piano-based song "Winin' Boy Blues" by Jelly Roll Morton.
Length: 29:33 Difficulty: 3.0 Members OnlyLesson 3
Orville Johnson introduces turnarounds and provides great ideas and techniques.
Length: 16:30 Difficulty: 2.5 FREELesson 4
Orville Johnson teaches the fingerstyle blues song "Payday Blues."
Length: 19:04 Difficulty: 2.5 Members OnlyLesson 5
Orville Johnson demonstrates how to play a walking bass line in conjunction with chordal accompaniment.
Length: 18:33 Difficulty: 2.5 Members OnlyLesson 6
Orville Johnson teaches his take on a blues standard entitled "One Dime Blues."
Length: 13:46 Difficulty: 2.5 Members OnlyLesson 7
Orville Johnson teaches the classic gospel tune "I'll Fly Away" in the Piedmont style.
Length: 18:40 Difficulty: 2.5 Members OnlyLesson 8
Orville Johnson teaches the classic gospel song "Beulah Land."
Length: 12:40 Difficulty: 2.0 Members OnlyLesson 9
Orville Johnson teaches "Make Me a Pallet on the Floor" in the Piedmont style.
Length: 17:58 Difficulty: 2.5 Members OnlyLesson 10
Orville teaches the a fingerstyle version of the classic blues number "How Long, How Long."
Length: 23:31 Difficulty: 2.5 Members OnlyLesson 11
Orville Johnson teaches a common blues melody that has been used in several classic songs including "Louis Collins."
Length: 15:09 Difficulty: 0.0 Members OnlyLesson 12
Orville Johnson reviews an original tune he calls "St. Johnny" in this lesson.
Length: 44:09 Difficulty: 2.5 Members OnlyLesson 13
In this lesson, Orville Johnson takes a look at the style of Blind Blake with some fun tips and tricks.
Length: 12:50 Difficulty: 2.0 Members OnlyLesson 14
In this Fingerstyle Blues lesson, Orville Johnson uses the 12 bar blues in C to talk about chord substitutions.
Length: 35:34 Difficulty: 3.0 Members OnlyLesson 15
To demonstrate the relationship between gospel and blues, Orville Johnson teaches an arrangement of an old gospel tune called "Softly and Tenderly, Jesus Is Calling".
Length: 20:22 Difficulty: 2.5 Members OnlyLesson 16
Orville Johnson is back with another fantastic lesson on chord substitutions, this time in a minor key.
Length: 19:03 Difficulty: 3.0 Members Only
About Orville Johnson
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Orville Johnson was born in 1953 in Edwardsville, Illinois and came up on the St. Louis, Missouri music scene, where he was exposed to and participated in a variety of blues, bluegrass and American roots music. He began singing in his Pentecostal church as a young boy, in rock bands in middle school, then took up the guitar at 17,with early influences from Doc Watson, Rev. Gary Davis, Mississippi John Hurt, and Chuck Berry. In the early 1970's, Orville spent several seasons playing bluegrass on the SS Julia Belle Swain, a period-piece Mississippi river steamboat plying the inland waterways, with his group the Steamboat Ramblers.
Orville moved to Seattle, Washington in 1978, where he was a founding member of the much-loved and well-remembered folk/rock group, the Dynamic Logs. Other musical associates include Laura Love, Ranch Romance, File' Gumbo Zydeco Band, Scott Law, and the Twirling Mickeys. Johnson, known for his dobro and slide guitar stylings and vocal acrobatics, has played on over 100 albums. He has appeared on Garrison Keilor's Prairie Home Companion, Jay Leno's Tonight Show and was featured in the 1997 film Georgia with Mare Winningham. His musical expertise can also be heard on the Microsoft CD-ROMs, Musical Instruments of the World and the Complete Encyclopedia of Baseball. He teaches as well at the International Guitar Seminar, Pt. Townsend Country Blues Week and Puget Sound Guitar Workshop.
Orville released 4 recordings in the 1990's: The World According to Orville (1990) Blueprint for the Blues (1998) Slide & Joy (1999) an all-instrumental dobro tour de force and Kings of Mongrel Folk (1997) with Mark Graham. He also appeared on 4 discs with the File' Gumbo Zydeco Band and produced Whose World Is This (1997) for Jim Page and Inner Life (1999) for Mark Graham. In the 21st century, he has released Freehand, a new Kings of Mongrel Folk disc, Still Goin' Strong, and been featured in the soundtracks of PBS' Frontier House and the Peter Fonda flick The Wooly Boys as well as the compilation cd Legends of the Incredible Lap Steel Guitar.
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Member Comments about this Lesson
Discussions with our instructors are just one of the many benefits of becoming a member of JamPlay.Hi Orville, Olive the song . After two weeks. I can play it in slow Motion. I can not find the full performance either, Could you post lyrics together with notes? That would help.
For the full performance go to the Entertainment section>Licks and ?> Songs with Orville- and you'll find it.
Licks and riffs
I love this song, I can now play it all the way through and now I just need to learn the words. Thanks. Dancer
Love this song, too. but I'm a little frustrated with the tab not matching Orville's playing in some spots. The 7th and 16th measures have a bunch of notes that Orville does not play. Also, I struggle with exactly how to fit in the lyrics. Wonder if sheet music for this song that integrates the lyrics exists?
thanks Orville the difficulty is to play between (syncopated) with the thumb always on the same rhythm. Have you some advice for practising this technique.
It's just something you have to repeat until it comes to you. It may seem frustrating, but if you keep at it you'll get it.
This is one of my favorite songs. How does this arrangement compare to Mississippi John Hurt's version?
It is based on John Hurt's version of the tune. He, of course, plays several variations on what I've boiled down into one verse to teach you.
I did a performance when we taped but I think nessa just hasn't gotten to it yet. Keep coming back! Lots more stuff to come!
I haven't edited all of Orville's tapes yet Larry, but so far no performance. I think he probably does a performance of this song on one of the upcoming tapes I have yet to edit. If Orville sees this perhaps he can chime in. =)
Ok Thanks 'nessa. I just wanted to be sure I wasnt overlooking it somewhere on the site. Can you play this one? :)
Love this Song Orville. Your lesson makes it easy and its a great intro to Open D tuning too. At about 1:48 of scene II you mention a full performance version of this song. Has it not been posted yet, or am I just not searching hard enough?