![]() ![]() There are many Scruggs, melodic and bluesy licks in these three banjo Grandfather's Clock tablatures, which can be used to personalize each arrangement into your liking. Lastly, you can check out the Backup arrangement, which shows you how to play behind others while they are soloing. Next, move on to the Melodic arrangement to learn how to play the melody for Grandfather's Clock using scales and up the next positions. We recommend that you get started with the Scruggs style version, where you’ll learn basic roll pattern and left hand articulations like slides, hammer-ons, and pull-offs. Learn 3 different versions of Grandfather's Clock, which are all shown on this page. The clock stops unexpectedly after the grandfather dies, and never operates again. Yet the clock seems to understand eerily the good and bad things in the life of the grandfather–as it sounds 24 chimes when the grandfather takes his wife into his home, and before his death, it seems an unsettling warning that the community knows as indicating that the grandfather is the near end and gathers by his side. On the morning of the grandfather's conception, the watch is bought and works perfectly for 90 years, demanding only that it is wound at the end of each week. The album told from a grandchild, is about the clock of his grandmother. The Oxford English Dictionary says that for a longcase clock, the song was the source of the term "grandfather clock." Harry Macdonough and the Haydn Quartet (then known as the "Edison Quartet") played the earliest known performance of this song in 1905. ![]() Male choruses, such as the Robert Shaw Chorale, also sang it. It is a staple for British brass bands and colliery bands and is popular in the bluegrass category as well. "Grandfather's Clock" is a song written by the author of "Marching Across Georgia" Henry Clay Work in 1876. ![]()
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