Acoustic Instrument
Primers

What Kind of Guitar
Should I Start On?

What Kind of Banjo
Do I Want?

Evaluating and
Buying Used
Guitars

Setting Up
Fretted Instruments

Whatever Happened
to the Banjo?

Beginning Five-
String Banjo

6-String Banjos
Banjo Pickups
Axes in my Life
What is a
Bluegrass Banjo?

Dean "Backwoods
Six" Shootout


Music Theory
Primers

Introduction
to Scales

Introduction
to Chords

Circle of Fifths

Other Articles
About Music

How to Give
Guitar Lessons

Musician or
Wannabe?

Did God Really
Give Rock &
Roll to You?

Are You a
"Brand Bigot"?

Who Owns Folk Songs?

Historical Links
About the
National Road

The Story Behind
the Story - Real
People, Places,
and Events


About the Play
Play Home
What's New
Overview
About the
Music

About the
History

About the
Logistics

About the
Cast

Synopsis
About the
Set

About the
Author

Contact Us
Home


Play an MP3 clip of 'If the Creek Don't Rise' as arranged for banjo.

Written by Paul Race for Creek Don't RiseTM

Click to go to home page.You Can't Take the Sky From Me Banjo Tab

A banjo player who wants to remain nameless for fear of the Alliance asserting copyright protection over something they never bothered to publish wanted to play a certain cancelled science fiction TV show's theme convincingly on the 5-string banjo. In late 2014, he stumbled across an old fan site on which a fellow mentioned he had transcribed the solo. (We would gladly give that fellow credit, too, except we're afraid we will put the Alliance on his trail as well.)

When the banjo player downloaded the hand-scrawled version, he found that it was written in C (the key used in the theme). However, the banjo player prefers to play this song in D. In his research, he also came to the following conclusions:

  • The guitar is playing in D, but it's tuned a step down, so that it sounds in the key of C.

  • The banjo on the recording may not be a five-string banjo - the drone string never sounds. Which means that the banjo solo could be played on a 4 or 6-string banjo just as easily. To play the whole violin solo on banjo would require either transposition, a 6-string banjo, or a four-string banjo (tuned an octave down from mandolin).

  • Other folks interpret the chords and time signatures a little differently. So if you think the chords or anything else in the following resources are wrong, feel free to play and/or sing the song however you want.

Click to learn about our newsletter for acoustic, Americana, folk music and more.The banjo player started by entering the song note by note into Cakewalk Sonar, starting with the key of the original transcription (C). Then he transpose it to D and published both versions as PDFs and mp3s for other folks who might want to try playing them. He also saved a .mid version of each version so folks with sequencer software could transpose to other keys if they wanted.

Making it Work on 5-String

Then he tried to figure out how to play the song on banjo. He wanted to work in as many of the parts from the "lead" as possible, but still make it sound like a legitimate banjo part. One problem was that several of the notes in the lead are lower than the lowest note on a five-string. He could have put everything up an octave, but that would made some of the other parts too high. So the first compromise was to transpose those really low phrases up an octave and leave the rest.

Then he inserted a banjo roll (picking pattern) that used aDGBD tuning (the high string is tuned up a whole step), maintaining the phrases from the instrumental solo as much as possible.

Chords Used (Or Implied)

He also decided that since the song's key signature is ambiguous, "D no 3rd" works better than a true D chord or D minor chord for most of the song. (It's also easier to play). Unfortunately Sonar's chord symbol library only allows for 6-string diagrams - an inexcusable oversight for those who want to use the software to write banjo or mandolin instructions.

So we're publishing the chord charts for the chords he used in the D version of this song. (If you want to play this on 5-string banjo in C you're own your own.)

Note: If you use the tabulature note-by-note, you won't actually be playing the whole chords on most measures, so don't get hung up on the fact that the chord charts show more strings being fretted than you may actually be playing on any given beat. On the other hand, if you want to strum through the song a few times before you attack the tab itself, you'll appreciate having the whole chord diagram.

The 5-string banjo chords used in the tabulature for the banjo part in D.

Notes about the tab:

  • This tab is for advanced players. It will require both "hammering on" and "pulling off" in several places where two sixteenth notes are played consecutively on the same string.

    • When you need to play a note, then a higher note on the same string, you "hammer on." That is, you play the first note, then you fret the higher note hard.

    • When you need to play a note, then a lower note on the same string, you "pull off." That is, you finger both notes (if the second note is not open). Then you play the top note, and when it's time for the second note to sound, you pull the left finger that makes that note away with enough force to "pluck" the string (or at least allow it to keep vibrating).

  • There's a trill on the last two beats of measure 3. It may sound bad in the sound bytes, but the banjo player left it in to give you an idea of what is supposed to be there.

What's In the Resource?

To download the following files rather than playing or opening them, please right-click on the file name and select "Save Target As."

The files included in this this resource include:

Conclusion

The zip file version of this includes the hints and all the files in about 2 meg. So please feel free to download the whole thing and use the bits you can. Also, the banjo player who put this together in the first place has given his permission to repost this anywhere appropriate. He figures that if it's posted about a thousand different places, it'll be harder for the Alliance (or their Magistrates) to keep shutting down.

By the way, this permission does NOT apply to the rest of the text or graphics of any sites this may wind up on. It also doesn't give you permission to claim authorship or charge for making these files available.

The web is turning into a great place for keeping musical traditions alive. Many folks have spent many hours trying to share their own "lessons learned." If you're finding our resources or those we link to helpful, the best thing you can do is to learn what you can and pass on what you learn.

Return to our 5-String Tabs and Instructions index page.

Return to our Tabs and Instructions index page.

Please get in touch.if you have found a resource you'd like us to add, if you'd like to ask questions, or if you'd like to sign up for our newsletter.

- Paul Race


All material, illustrations, and content of this web site is copyrighted © 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006,
2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014 by Paul D. Race. All rights reserved.
Creek Dont' Rise(tm) is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising
program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com.

For questions, comments, suggestions, trouble reports, etc. about this play or about this web page, please contact us.


Visit related pages and affiliated sites:
- Music -
Heartland-inspired music, history, and acoustic instrument tips.
Best-loved railroad songs and the stories behind them.
Visit musings about music on our sister site, School of the Rock With a few tools and an hour or two of work, you can make your guitar, banjo, or mandolin much more responsive.  Instruments with movable bridges can have better-than-new intonation as well. New, used, or vintage - tips for whatever your needs and preferences. Check out our article on finding good used guitars.
Carols of many countries, including music, lyrics, and the story behind the songs. X and Y-generation Christians take Contemporary Christian music, including worship, for granted, but the first generation of Contemporary Christian musicians faced strong, and often bitter resistance. Wax recordings from the early 1900s, mostly collected by George Nelson.  Download them all for a 'period' album. Folks with Bb or Eb instruments can contribute to worship services, but the WAY they do depends on the way the worship leader approaches the music. Different kinds of music call for different kinds of banjos.  Just trying to steer you in the right direction. A page devoted to some of Paul's own music endeavors.
- Trains and Hobbies -
Free building projects for your vintage railroad or Christmas village.
Visit Lionel Trains. Click to see Thomas Kinkaded-inspired Holiday Trains and Villages. Big Christmas Train Primer: Choosing and using model trains with holiday themes Building temporary and permanent railroads with big model trains Click to see HO scale trains with your favorite team's colors.
- Christmas Memories and Collectibles -
Visit the FamilyChristmasOnline site. Visit Howard Lamey's glitterhouse gallery, with free project plans, graphics, and instructions. Click to return to the Old Christmas Tree Lights Table of Contents Page Click to sign up for Maria Cudequest's craft and collectibles blog.
Click to visit Fred's Noel-Kat store.
Visit Papa Ted Althof's extensive history and collection of putz houses, the largest and most complete such resource on the Internet..
- Family Activities and Crafts -
Click to see reviews of our favorite family-friendly Christmas movies. Free, Family-Friendly Christmas Stories Decorate your tree the old-fashioned way with these kid-friendly projects. Free plans and instructions for starting a hobby building vintage-style cardboard Christmas houses. Click to find free, family-friendly Christmas poems and - in some cases - their stories. Traditional Home-Made Ornaments