![]() ![]() ![]() Once you’re finished learning with the tab use the "Memory Train" tool to commit the song to memory. Want to learn some of Lonesome Road Blues by ear? Use "Hide Notes" to hide some or all of the notes in the tablature. These tools can be found in the "Tools" menu at the bottom right of your screen. Be sure to check out all of the great learning tools that Tunefox has to offer such as "Hide Notes", "Memory Train", and "Speed Up". ![]() You can also click the "Shuffle licks" button at the bottom of the page to randomly change all of the licks in the tablature and create a wholly unique arrangement of this song. To change measure into different arrangement, just click on the "Original Measure" text above the measure and select a different lick. There are many Scruggs, melodic and bluesy licks in these three banjo Lonesome Road Blues tablatures, which can be used to personalize each arrangement into your liking. Finally, the Backup arrangement will show you how to play this song with others and sound like a pro doing it. feeling confident with that try your luck with the Melodic style solo, which will teach you how to play the melody for Lonesome Road Blues using up the neck scales. The Scruggs style arrangement will get you started learning slides, hammer-ons, and pull-offs. Here are 3 killer arrangements of Lonesome Road Blues for you to share with friends at your next jam. The autobiography of Shilkret contains a brief account of the motivation in the film to use the song. Bass-baritone Jules Bledsoe, who had played Joe in the musical's original stage version, provided the singing voice of Fetchit. Stepin Fetchit's done it onscreen as the Joe deckhand. In the final of the 1929 part-talkie film version of Edna Ferber's novel Show Boat, the structure was used especially as a replacement for Ol' Man River. There were more than two hundred "Lonesome Road" recordings, including versions by Frank Sinatra, Louis Armstrong, Bing Crosby (recorded on December 12, 1938), Ted Lewis, Stevie Wonder, Sam Cooke, Ace Cannon, Chris Connor, and Dick Dale. Austin, supported by Shilkret directing the Victor Orchestra, initially recorded it on September 16, 1927. No credible sales figures can be used to confirm or refute any of the above projections. Joel Whitburn mentions performances in Numbers 10, 12, 3, and 10 by Austin, Bing Crosby, Ted Lewis, and Shilkret (see the collection of recordings below). Gene Austin estimated that he sold 80 million records, and Nathaniel Shilkret's son was very popular recording artists. Both the lyricist and the composer were extremely popular recording artists. It was written in the style of an African-American folk song. The song is also called "Lonesome Road", "Lonesome Road Blues" among some other catchy titles. The Lonesome Road is a song with Nathaniel Shilkret's music and Gene Austin's lyrics, done in 1927. ![]()
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