Guitar Techniques

ACOUSTIC COUNTRY

This month Stuart Ryan checks out the simple but poweful ‘pick and strum’ style of the original outlaw country star, the fabled Man In Black.

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Stuart Ryan gets into the pick-and-strum style of another American outlaw country legend, the mighty Man In Black, Johnny Cash.

Think of country music and it’s hard not to conjure up an image of the legendary ‘Man In Black’, original outlaw country legend Johnny Cash. His warm bassbarito­ne voice and relaxed yet tight strumming patterns are immediatel­y recognisab­le and laid the foundation­s for country rhythm guitar in the decades that followed. His mournful songs of heartache, struggle and trouble put him alongside Hank Williams on the pedestal of country fame. Growing up in Arkansas in the 1930s Cash started his working life in cotton fields at the age of five and would have learned the tradition of the ‘work song’ from an early age singing along with his family and fellow workers. Guitar lessons came courtesy of his mother and a friend and by age 12 he was already writing songs.

After a spell in the army Cash set out on his musical career in the early 1950s with the ‘Tennessee Two’, guitarist Luther Perkins and bassist Marshall Grant. Perkins’ country/rockabilly lead style married perfectly with Cash’s more traditiona­l stripped back, strumming-based accompanim­ent and although they started off performing gospel music soon they took on rockabilly as their main sound.

Listen to Cash staples like Folsom Prison Blues, I Walk The Line, and Ring Of Fire (actually written by June Carter and Merle Kigore) and you’ll hear Cash’s simple yet effective rhythm guitar parts at play. Driving, tight and often percussive he locked in with the snare to create a big sound that heralded the arrival of a harder approach to country music. Perkins’ lead guitar and fills were given the perfect foundation in Cash’s driving acoustic playing.

Cash’s rhythm playing initially seems simple, as there are open chords and a basic strumming pattern. There are challenges though, and while the alternatin­g basslines that punctuate each chord seem straightfo­rward, hitting the correct bass string each time is harder than it seems. His style demands a relaxed strumming hand and an even dynamic on each strum - lose control here and your playing will be all over the place dynamicall­y, and rhythmical­ly. You also need stamina to keep this part going so try playing this chord sequence for five minutes and see if any fatigue sets in on the strumming hand. This piece follows the classic Cash strumming sequence of ‘1 and 2 and a 3 and 4 and a’. Try the following pattern for this type of strumming - ‘down down down down up’. You almost want to view yourself as a percussive instrument when playing in this style, as if you are an extension of the drum kit. This style is ruthlessly efficient as a practice tool – put the metronome on or record yourself with my backing track and you may find some crucial timing issues are exposed. Simple isn’t always as simple as it seems

NEXT MONTH Stuart gets to grips with the iconic acoustic style of Bob Dylan

 ?? ?? Johnny Cash playing his legendary black Martin D-35JC
Johnny Cash playing his legendary black Martin D-35JC
 ?? ?? There’s no getting away from it, an American classic is first choice for this strumming style, and a big one at that! Of course, any acoustic will suffice. Cash was most often seen with Martin dreadnough­ts – D-28 and D-35 mainly, though he also played Gibsons and could be seen with a J-200 in the late 1950s. I recorded this on a Martin Custom Shop Expert 1937 D28.
There’s no getting away from it, an American classic is first choice for this strumming style, and a big one at that! Of course, any acoustic will suffice. Cash was most often seen with Martin dreadnough­ts – D-28 and D-35 mainly, though he also played Gibsons and could be seen with a J-200 in the late 1950s. I recorded this on a Martin Custom Shop Expert 1937 D28.
 ?? ??

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