Ralph McTell

How Ralph McTell twisted my fingers

I once had a bruising encounter with the legendary folk singer Ralph McTell.

Ralph McTell Andy F

Ralph McTell

Ralph is a peaceful man but he twisted my fingers all over the place - all because of his classic song, The Streets of London.

Ralph accompanies the song by picking out the melody on the guitar.

Ralph McTell playing Streets of London

 

Learning to play Streets of London

When I was 16, I was really taken by the accompaniment and set myself the task of learning how to play it exactly as it sounded on the record.

This was back in the 1970s, long before the days of video tutorials, lessons on YouTube or even decent tablature books.

I very quickly ran into problems. When I put the record on my Dansette record player I was disappointed to find that Ralph was playing in what seemed to be D Flat.

I had no idea how to play a D Flat chord

I had no idea how to play a chord like D Flat but I was determined to play the song exactly as recorded so I set about working out all the chords.

I then had to work out how to play the melody at the same time as getting that nice bass sound.

It was impossible. Having to bar across to get create weird chords in the key of D Flat meant I didn’t have enough fingers to do the clever stuff. I started to think Ralph McTell must be some kind of superman.

Disheartened, I gave up for a while and only came back to it after a chance meeting with a guitarist when I first visited a folk club.

Revelation when first heard of a capo

He put me straight in seconds. He told me McTell played the song in D and if my record player turned that into D Flat then it wasn’t spinning at the right speed and I should buy a new one.

Just as importantly, he pointed out that McTell played the song by putting a capo on the second fret and then played the song as if it was in C Major.

This was like a revelation to me. I’d never heard of a capo until then but I bought one the next day. I started to play the song as if it was in C and the whole thing became so much simpler.

Melody fell easily under the chord shapes

The melody fell easily under the chord shapes and it almost seemed effortless.

It meant I could join the legion of wannabe folk singers in the seventies who had learnt to play Streets of London as a rite of passage and who subsequently went on to flog it to death in the folk clubs.

Sorry about that Ralph.

The point of all this I suppose is to show how so much time and effort can be wasted for the sake of just a tiny bit of knowledge.

Many guitarists know little about transposing keys

There’s a lot more information available nowadays, of course, but I still come across talented guitarists who know very little about how to change keys, how best to use the capo etc.

That’s why we’ve written up some pages giving practical advice on how to transpose keys easily, with or without a capo, and how to use the capo to its best effect.

Take a look when you’ve a spare minute. I want to make it as helpful as possible so please let me have any feedback you have.
Click here for Key Converter home page.

Happy playing.

Comments

Posted On
Sep 14, 2011
Posted By
R T Reeder

Thanks for the tips on playing Streets of London and other Irish songs.
Hi to Ralph May (which is more Irish than Blind Willie McTell)

Posted On
Nov 06, 2011
Posted By
Ralf Schlapp

Hi,thank you for this nice article and information ! Greetings from Germany :-)

Posted On
Jan 02, 2012
Posted By
Pat Kehoe

Glad you like it. And it’s good to know Irish music is still so popular in Germany. Slainte.

Posted On
Nov 29, 2011
Posted By
TradFest 2012

If you are a fan of Ralph McTell come and see him perform at Dublin’s Christ Church Cathedral on Wednesday 25th January at the Temple Bar TradFest 2012. Dublin’s biggest and best festival of Irish Music and Culture. For Tickets and more information visit http://www.templebartrad.com

Posted On
Dec 30, 2011
Posted By
IrishAncestor

I was lucky, I had a record player with a variable speed controller. I was never able to get the speed right for Dubliners LPs though? When CDs arrived I had the same problem, never could find the right key for Dubliners tracks. I finally decided they set their recording speed at a rate that would render the final song a quarter tone out, it then made no difference whether you knew how to use a capo or not - capos adjust in half tones, so a quarter tone beats them. That problem doesn’t exist nowadays - record the track you want to learn into any half decent audio programme (try Audacity) and you can infinitely vary the tempo and key. Didn’t have that when I was learning Streets of London!

Posted On
Jan 02, 2012
Posted By
Pat Kehoe

Yes, the Dubliners were always difficult to pin down. As you say, it’s easier these days thanks to modern technology…which may help explain why there are so many good, young musicians out there…it’s wonderful to see young people from all over the world playing Irish music so well.

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