The fourth verse of lightning Hopkins's Annie's booty, we're going to go back to another variation of the boogie woogie rhythm that we played in the second verse. Let me play it for you one time and then we'll, we'll take it apart. And then we have our next verse, which begins with the stop time. So what we're doing here is we're doing the open string, bogie in the key of D, starting with an open sixth string fourth fret Six tracks, go to the second fret of the fifth string into the fourth fret and back check the tab for this, you can play this a lot of different ways you could play it straight single note. Or you could double up by including the open six string. If you listen to this verse in the lightning Hopkins version, he seems to do a little bit of both in this first, so the simplest way to play it is just the single string that's over the one.
When he goes to the four or the eight, he's going to do the same thing. But I hear in the original recordings, it's going to stay between the second fret and the fourth fret on the fourth string. So we got something like this or you could just play straight A single strike and then back to the one. And then when he wraps it up, he just uses the courts be seven. We're gonna have a stop time leading into the next verse. So let me play the whole fourth verse of lightning Hopkins and he's bogie slowly for you.
We'll take it from the end of the previous verse. So let me play the whole fourth verse of Andy's book before you take it from the one And then we're ready for the stop time and verse number five