3. Scale It Up!
Here’s what you’ll do in this module
Four new tunes:
- Oh Susannah
- Little Liza Jane
- Wildwood Flower
- Angeline The Baker (A Major)
Fingering the notes on the A string
Learn and practice the D Major Scale
Two-Note Intervals
Call-and-response practice with D Major notes
Module 3 Progress
Core lessons started in Module 3:
Core Lessons
Week 1
- Practice: Drone tuning the notes on the A string
- Video capsule tune*: Oh Susannah
- Technique: D Major Scale
*Make a video of this tune when you learn it. Make a second video 2-3 weeks later to see how it’s improved and what still needs work. Be kind to yourself.
Week 2
- Tune: Little Liza Jane
- Practice: How To Play Better In Tune With Interval Practice
- Tune: Wildwood Flower
- Technique: Interval Scale
Week 3
- Tune: Angeline The Baker (A Major)
- Practice: Call-and-response Exercises 3
- Review Set 3
As you get close to finishing this module, you may want to start listening to tunes you’ll learn in the next module: Daily Listening 4. Listen on the site or download and listen while you clean the house or walk the dog 🐶. You’ll hit the ground running if you already have the tune in your head 🧠.
Practice Tips
Alternate between practicing a tune and the D major scale 🔁
- If you do this, you will hear music in the scale. This will make skill practice more fun. You will also understand why skills are important if you do this practice.
- You will hear the scale in the tune. This is good because it will help you to learn tunes more easily.
- Learn more here: Alternate between a tune and its scale.

If you take note of what you practice today, you will go farther tomorrow 📈
- Write down what do you practice in a journal.
- Record yourself.
- Use a wall calendar or have a tracking app to track your daily practice.
- Taking note of what you practice will make it easier to review what you’ve done in the last month.
- Seeing the path you’ve travelled can be a great source of joy. It helps you to overcome The Emotional Challenge of Fiddling.
- Learn more here: Fiddling With A Music Journal
Bonus Lessons & Practice
Don’t feel obligated to do these bonus lessons.
The tunes complement the core lessons above, so they are a good way to supplement your learning.
Remember that it’s more important to do one thing well than lots of mediocre things.
Bonus tunes
- Lazy John
- Dargason
- Tennessee Waltz Duet
- Shortnin’ Bread
- Row Row Row Your Boat
- Wabash Cannonball
- Will the Circle Be Unbroken
- Camptown Races
Supplemental lessons
- The Slow Scale
- Interval Practice
- A1 (B) tuning exercises
- A2 (C#) tuning exercises
- A3 (D) tuning exercises
Note-reading lessons
If you’re interested in learning to read, I will teach it to you in a step-by-step manner as you work through the main course. You can also learn this later on in the Note-Reading For Fiddlers course.
❓ Common Questions
Do I really need to use a drone when tuning?
Nope! But once you try it, you might get hooked—like a fiddle-playing fish.
What if I forget what I practiced yesterday?
That’s why journaling helps! Even a few scribbled notes make a big difference.
Can I skip the scales and just play tunes?
You can—but scales are the secret sauce. They make your tunes sound better, faster.
Student Story
Student story: Dayved B. From San Francisco
My student Dayved was instrumental (pun intended) in the development of FiddleHed.

Back in the day, we would have a lesson at 8pm. By 9, I would be pretty hungry, ready to knock off and have a can of soup. But he always wanted to make a video of what we did at the end which meant that I had to spend an extra 5 minutes filming.
So I started filming the lessons in advance. That way, I could eat dinner at a reasonable hour. Instead of emailing him the videos, I just put them on Youtube. Other people started to watch them. Fast forward 8 years and now I’m doing FiddleHed full-time. Funny world!
In the clip above, we learned some mandolin chords and then strummed them on the fiddle. This is a way to visualize how to play double stops chords. It’s also technically easier and a more relaxing way to explore chords. Then we translated this to bowing the chords. I have a series of lessons on how to play chord backup on FiddleHed.
Start here: Drone tuning the notes on the A string >>