I'm looking on you a variation on the typical verse for little son Jackson's blues come to Texas goes like this, let me play it through one time. So everything was pretty much the same. But what I did differently at the beginning is I started out with that lick. Now again, I'm not sure this is what he's playing in this Tim, this is what I play. That makes sense. And if I'm playing it as an instrumental then this kind But what I'm doing differently is right after I do that second I'm gonna slide.
Play that lick again, like we did during the intro, the timing, if you listen to the original recording, it's kind of tough. So I've just put it in a simple time in the works. So we do this. And then when it goes to the four, we can go to the D seven and just play that. That's the simple version. One thing I should show you here is I think, at least once in the song instead of going to that D seventh here, he's going to go into another leg.
He does that. Why? And then into the air. So what I'm doing is sliding 30 slides bending up and kind of holding the base and then coming back to that a or we could slide into it like that and then we got to do it again and the rest of it so that's that's a little variation where we're throwing this into the verse the same like we played in the introduction. So let me play that through one more time for you. And this time when I get over the four, I'll play that that variation that I talked about there.
So we got this. When I played it through that time I did this. I just stayed on the mountain. You could do that. But he does. Does that lick right there.
So there is a couple different Verse that you can play if you're singing that tune or playing it like an instrumental. And you can mix us up in all kinds of ways, you know, these licks here. play them differently, you know, all the way through, add a little something, take something off, stay on the beat, do whatever you want there. But that's really the gist of what he's playing on this tune. The n tag for little son Jackson, please come to Texas, he's gonna wrap it up, he gets to the five. What I hear him doing is sliding into a seventh double stop.
Check the tab, slides on the second string and then picks up and I hear both strings but then he goes single string fourth fret third fret and then he's gonna get kind of a partial a chord, just the second and the third string. So we got this and then he's gonna pick that a with the first finger getting the first string at the second fret and then into an a seventh. So that turnaround slowly all by itself, intact by itself. So let's play it slowly in context. There you have enough to play a little song Jackson's blues, come to Texas.