Chris stapleton

2 min read

For this month’s acoustic outing Stuart Ryan shows you the fingerpicking style of this very fine guitarist and modern country icon.

Chris Stapleton with a Gibson-built Epiphone Frontier

One of the biggest stars in today’s country scene, songwriter-guitarist Chris Stapleton is a great example of an artist who not only writes great songs but great guitar parts too. Whereas many modern songwriters simply strum chords or hire A list session players to take care of guitar duties, Stapleton’s parts are interesting and memorable…and all created and played by him!

Most musicians gravitate to Nashville to kickstart their musical career as a session player or songwriter. Stapleton’s impetus for his Nashville move was actually to study an engineering degree! Thankfully for we listeners his songwriting took precedence over studies and he soon signed a publishing deal that set him on his way. His performing career started in 2007 when he joined Bluegrass group The Steeldrivers. But by 2010 his focus had shifted to a country-rock sound as he formed a new band, The Jompson Brothers. In 2013 he signed with Mercury Nashville and embarked on the solo career that was to make him a star.

Although commonly seen toting a Fender Jazzmaster, Stapleton spends just as much time playing and writing on acoustic. His influences range from soul stars Aretha Franklin and Ray Charles to country legend Willie Nelson and rocker Tom Petty and his lead playing draws from blues giant Freddie King among others.

He’s a great strummer and a really solid finger picker and in this lesson we’ll focus on how he will play through a slow ballad sequence using fingerpicking, simple open chords and tasty embellishments. This month’s piece is in G Major and focuses on the open position with some challenges along the way. First there is the alternating bass line on the sixth and fourth strings or fifth and fourth strings depending on the chords. The thumb takes care of these notes but the challenge is to play the other strings over the

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