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The Dark Girl Dressed in Blue, Part 1

This lesson is part of the course Irish Fiddle with Dale Russ.
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About This Course
 
Learn traditional Irish fiddle, with an emphasis on playing the dance music of Ireland, including jigs, reels, polkas, slip jigs, hornpipes, and more, with an Irish feel and ornamentation.
 
 
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The Tar Road to Sligo
 
In this lesson, you’ll learn one of the most distinctive ornaments in Irish music, the “roll,” which combines grace notes and slurs. Dale explains the roll, and shows you a roll on different fingers and strings. He recommends practicing them slowly and repeatedly with a metronome so that the motion becomes natural, and he shows how you can use rolls in jigs whenever the first and third note of a three-note pattern are the same. You can also roll on the first notes of arpeggios, as in the last phrase of the B part of “The Tar Road to Sligo.”
 
 
 
The Irish Fiddle Subscription Includes:
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  • Technique lessons on ornamentation for both hands
  • High-quality video with multiple camera angles so you can see closeups of both hands in action
  • Play-Along Tracks so you can practice what you’ve learned
 
 
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The Dark Girl Dressed in Blue  
 
The Dark Girl Dressed in Blue  
 
The Dark Girl Dressed in Blue, Part 1
The Dark Girl Dressed in Blue, Part 1
 
The polka “The Dark Girl Dressed in Blue” is a little different than the other polkas you’ve learned so far. Both “The Top of Maol” and “The Man in the Moon” are played with a bowing style where the bow changes on the downbeats. But to play “The Dark Girl Dressed in Blue” you’ll learn to use single bows on almost every note. This is more of a County Clare or American style polka and is used more for couple dances as well as beginning step dancers. It also has a march quality. You’ll learn the melody of the first part of “The Dark Girl Dressed in Blue” in this video.

  "The Dark Girl Dressed in Blue" (Available to subscribers)
 
 
 
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All-star band of Peghead Nation instructors Bill Evans, Chad Manning, Sharon Gilchrist, and John Reischman, along with Darol Anger and Jim Nunally, play one of John’s new original tunes.
 
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    ● Courses
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    ● Instructors
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    ● Notation Guide
    ● For Beginners
 
 
    ● Vintage Vault
    ● New Gear
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