Friends:
My summer has come to a close but I felt like doing something special to celebrate our 5 year anniversary on Patreon. I hope everyone is excited for a double drop this month.
"Sunflower River Blues" may be the most popular piece from Fahey's repertoire. I wrestled with which version to transcribe, but ultimately had only a few days to rehearse and record so I had to go with the version most familiar to me.
This comes from Fahey's second LP, Death Chants, Breakdowns, and Military Waltzes. The first version of the record was released in 1963. Similar to Blind Joe Death, most of the compositions were re-recorded and reissued on a later release of the LP in 1967. You can hear the first version of "Sunflower River Blues" here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nLsh_4D_rMs
And here is the re-recorded version that this transcription corresponds to: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tRyne6rjF1g
Although there are endless covers and lessons available on this piece, I still think doing a proper transcription that accurately documents Fahey's performance is worthwhile, and perhaps some here will still pick up a few tricks that bring their performance of the piece to the next level.
The introduction uses moving octaves on the inner strings and features Fahey's unique method of strumming upward with the index and middle fingers to create chords with a shimmery, delay-like quality. The A section is characterized by moving octaves and slow dragging slides. The B section introduces a sweet melody on the top two strings, and the C section rocks pretty hard with only three descending dyads. This could be a first great performance piece for technically proficient beginners or early intermediate players.
My lesson video for supporting Patrons can be accessed here: https://youtu.be/Kx2lD56krds
A score that has been refreshed from a 15-year-old copy that I created as a graduate student is attached below. This is a little different from other scores on here because it also includes the standard notation. Enjoy!
Edit: 4:00pm Sep 1, it dawned on me that I had one position incorrect in the introduction, this has been corrected and a new score has been uploaded.
Andrew Lardner
2024-10-09 13:47:20 +0000 UTCKush
2024-10-09 02:29:16 +0000 UTCmark blomquist
2024-09-19 16:14:14 +0000 UTC