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Banjo

The banjo is a stringed instrument with a thin membrane stretched over a frame or cavity to form a resonator. The membrane is typically circular, in modern forms usually made of plastic, originally of animal skin. Early forms of the instrument were fashioned by African Americans and had African antecedents.[1][2] In the 19th century, interest in the instrument was spread across the United States and United Kingdom by traveling shows of the 19th century minstrel show fad, followed by mass-production and mail-order sales, including instruction method books. The inexpensive or home-made banjo remained part of rural folk culture, but 5-string and 4-string banjos also became popular for home parlour music entertainment, college music clubs, and early 20th century jazz bands. By the early 21st century, the banjo was most frequently associated with folk, bluegrass and country music, but was also used in some rock, pop and even hip-hop music.[3] Among rock bands, the Eagles, Led Zeppelin, and the Grateful Dead, have used the five-string banjo in some of their songs.

Banjo
A five-string banjo
String instrument
Hornbostel–Sachs classification321.312 (resonator) or 321.314 (open-backed)
(Composite chordophone with a neck that passes diametrically through the resonator, sounded by plectrum, finger picks, or the bare fingers)
Developed18th century
Sound sample


Historically, the banjo occupied a central place in Black American traditional music and rural folk culture before entering the mainstream via the minstrel shows of the 19th century.[4][5][6][7] Along with the fiddle, the banjo is a mainstay of American styles of music, such as bluegrass and old-time music. It is also very frequently used in Dixieland jazz, as well as in Caribbean genres like biguine, calypso and mento.

History

Early origins

 
The Old Plantation, c. 1785–1795, the earliest known American painting to picture a banjo-like instrument; thought to depict a plantation in Beaufort County, South Carolina
 
The oldest known banjo, c. 1770–1777, from the Surinamese Creole culture.

The modern banjo derives from instruments that have been recorded to be in use in North America and the Caribbean since the 17th century by enslaved people taken from West and Central Africa. Their African-style instruments were crafted from split gourds with animal skins stretched across them. Strings, from gut or vegetable fibers, were attached to a wooden neck.[8] Written references to the banjo in North America and the Caribbean appear in the 17th and 18th centuries.[8]

The earliest written indication of an instrument akin to the banjo is in the 17th century: Richard Jobson (1621) in describing The Gambia, wrote about an instrument like the banjo, which he called a bandore.[8]

The term banjo has several etymological claims, one being from the Mandinka language which gives the name of Banjul, capital of The Gambia. Another claim is a connection to the West African Akonting: The akonting is made with a long bamboo neck called a bangoe. The material for the neck, called ban julo in the Mandinka language, again gives Banjul. In this interpretation, Banjul became a sort of eponym for the Akonting as it crossed the Atlantic. The instrument's name might also derive from the Kimbundu word mbanza,[9] which is a loan word to the Portuguese language resulting in the term banza. Its earliest recorded use was in 1678 in the Caribbean (Martinique) by enslaved Africans.[8]

The OED claims that the term banjo comes from a dialectal pronunciation of Portuguese bandore or from an early anglicisation of Spanish bandurria.[10] However, contrary evidence definitively supports that the terms bandore and bandurria were terms used when Europeans encountered the banjo or its kin varieties in use by people of African descent, who used different terms for the instrument like banza.[8]

Various instruments in Africa, chief among them the kora, feature a skin head and gourd (or similar shell) body.[11] Those African instruments differ from early African American banjos in that the necks do not possess a Western-style fingerboard and tuning pegs; instead they have stick necks, with strings attached to the neck with loops for tuning.[11]

Another likely relative of the banjo is the akonting, a spike folk lute played by the Jola tribe of Senegambia, and the ubaw-akwala of the Igbo.[12] Similar instruments include the xalam of Senegal[13] and the ngoni of the Wassoulou region including parts of Mali, Guinea, and Ivory Coast, as well as a larger variation of the ngoni known as the gimbri developed in Morocco by Black Sub-Saharan Africans (Gnawa or Haratin).

Banjo-like instruments seem to have been independently invented in several different places, since instruments similar to the banjo are known from a diverse array of distant countries. For example, the Chinese sanxian, the Japanese shamisen, Persian tar, and the Moroccan sintir, in addition to the many African instruments mentioned above.[12]

Early, African-influenced banjos were built around a gourd body and a wooden stick neck. These instruments had varying numbers of strings, though often including some form of drone. The earliest known picture, c. 1785–1795, of an enslaved person playing a banjo-like instrument (The Old Plantation) shows a four-string instrument with its fourth (thumb) string shorter than the others.

Banjos with fingerboards and tuning pegs are known from the Caribbean as early as the 17th century.[11] Some 18th- and early 19th-century writers transcribed the name of these instruments variously as bangie, banza, bonjaw,[14] banjer[15] and banjar.

The instrument became increasingly available commercially from around the second quarter of the 19th century due to minstrel performances.[2]

Minstrel era, 1830s–1870s

In the antebellum South, many enslaved Africans played the banjo, spreading it to the rest of the population.[8] In his memoir With Sabre and Scalpel: The Autobiography of a Soldier and Surgeon, the Confederate veteran and surgeon John Allan Wyeth recalls learning to play the banjo as a child from an enslaved person on his family plantation.[8] Another man who learned to play from African-Americans, probably in the 1820s, was Joel Walker Sweeney, a minstrel performer from Appomattox Court House, Virginia.[16][17] Sweeney has been credited with adding a string to the four-string African-American banjo, and popularizing the five-string banjo.[16][17] Although Robert McAlpin Williamson is the first documented white banjoist,[18] in the 1830s Sweeney became the first white performer to play the banjo on stage.[16] Sweeney's musical performances occurred at the beginning of the minstrel era, as banjos shifted away from being exclusively homemade folk instruments to instruments of a more modern style.[19] Sweeney participated in this transition by encouraging drum maker William Boucher of Baltimore to make banjos commercially for him to sell.[17] name="Tosches1996" />

 
Sheet music cover for "Dandy Jim from Caroline", featuring Dan Emmett (center) and the other Virginia Minstrels, c. 1844

According to Arthur Woodward in 1949, Sweeney replaced the gourd with a sound box made of wood and covered with skin, and added a short fifth string about 1831.[20] However, modern scholar Gene Bluestein pointed out in 1964 that Sweeney may not have originated either the 5th string or sound box.[20] This new banjo was at first tuned d'Gdf♯a, though by the 1890s, this had been transposed up to g'cgbd'. Banjos were introduced in Britain by Sweeney's group, the American Virginia Minstrels, in the 1840s, and became very popular in music halls.[21]

The instrument grew in popularity during the 1840s after Sweeney began his traveling minstrel show.[22] By the end of the 1840s the instrument had expanded from Caribbean possession to take root in places across America and across the Atlantic in England.[23][24] It was estimated in 1866 that there were probably 10,000 banjos in New York City, up from only a handful in 1844. People were exposed to banjos not only at minstrel shows, but also medicine shows, Wild-West shows, variety shows, and traveling vaudeville shows.[25] The banjo's popularity also was given a boost by the Civil War, as servicemen on both sides in the Army or Navy were exposed to the banjo played in minstrel shows and by other servicemen.[26] A popular movement of aspiring banjoists began as early as 1861.[27] The enthusiasm for the instrument was labeled a "banjo craze" or "banjo mania."[27]

 
The Briggs' Banjo Instructor was the first method for the banjo. It taught the stroke style and had notated music. Publication date - 1855

By the 1850s, aspiring banjo players had options to help them learn their instrument.[28] There were more teachers teaching banjo basics in the 1850s than there had been in the 1840s.[28] There were also instruction manuals and, for those who could read it, printed music in the manuals.[29] The first book of notated music was The Complete Preceptor by Elias Howe, published under the pseudonym Gumbo Chaff, consisting mainly of Christy's Minstrels tunes.[29] The first banjo method was the Briggs' Banjo instructor (1855) by Tom Briggs.[29] Other methods included Howe's New American Banjo School (1857), and Phil Rice's Method for the Banjo, With or Without a Master (1858).[29] These books taught the "stroke style" or "banjo style", similar to modern "frailing" or "clawhammer" styles.[29]

By 1868, music for the banjo was available printed in a magazine, when J. K. Buckley wrote and arranged popular music for Buckley's Monthly Banjoist.[30] Frank B. Converse also published his entire collection of compositions in The Complete Banjoist in 1868, which included "polkas, waltzes, marches, and clog hornpipes."[31]

Opportunities to work included the minstrel companies and circuses present in the 1840s, but also floating theaters and variety theaters, forerunners of the variety show and vaudeville.[28]

Classic era, 1880s-1910s

The term classic banjo is used today to talk about a bare-finger "guitar style" that was widely in use among banjo players of the late 19th to early 20th century.[32] It is still used by banjoists today. The term also differentiates that style of playing from the fingerpicking bluegrass banjo styles, such as the Scruggs style and Keith style.[32]

The Briggs Banjo Method, considered to be the first banjo method and which taught the stroke style of playing, also mentioned the existence of another way of playing, the guitar style.[33][34] Alternatively known as "finger style", the new way of playing the banjo displaced the stroke method, until by 1870 it was the dominant style.[35] Although mentioned by Briggs, it wasn't taught. The first banjo method to teach the technique was Frank B. Converse's New and Complete Method for the Banjo with or without a Master, published in 1865.[36][37]

To play in guitar style, players use the thumb and two or three fingers on their right hand to pick the notes. Samuel Swaim Stewart summarized the style in 1888, saying,

In the guitar style of Banjo-playing...the little finger of the right hand is rested upon the head near the bridge...[and] serves as a rest to the hand and a resistance to the movement of picking the strings...In the beginning it is best to acquire a knowledge of picking the strings with the use of the first and second fingers and thumb only, allowing the third finger to remain idle until the other fingers have become thoroughly accustomed to their work...the three fingers are almost invariably used in playing chords and accompaniments to songs."[33]

 
Banjo, from the Musical Instruments series (N82) for Duke brand cigarettes, 1888

The banjo, although popular, carried low-class associations from its role in blackface minstrel shows, medicine shows, tent shows, and variety shows or vaudeville.[38] There was a push in the 19th century banjo to bring the instrument into "respectability."[38] Musicians such as William A. Huntley made an effort to "elevate" the instrument or make it more "artistic," by "bringing it to a more sophisticated level of technique and repertoire based on European standards."[39] Huntley may have been the first white performer to successfully make the transition from performing in blackface to being himself on stage, noted by the Boston Herald in November 1884.[39] He was supported by another former blackface performer, Samuel Swaim Stewart, in his corporate magazine that popularized highly talented professionals.[40]

As the "raucous" imitations of plantation life decreased in minstrelsy, the banjo became more acceptable as an instrument of fashionable society, even to be accepted into women's parlors.[22][41] Part of that change was a switch from the stroke style to the guitar playing style.[22][41][36] An 1888 newspaper said, "All the maidens and a good many of the women also strum the instrument, banjo classes abound on every side and banjo recitals are among the newest diversions of fashion...Youths and elderly men too have caught the fever...the star strummers among men are in demand at the smartest parties and have the choosing of the society of the most charming girls."[42]

Some of those entertainers, such as Alfred A. Farland, specialized in classical music. However, musicians who wanted to entertain their audiences, and make a living, mixed it in with the popular music that audiences wanted.[43] Farland's pupil Frederick J. Bacon was one of these. A former medicine show entertainer, Bacon performed classical music along with popular songs such as Massa's in de cold, cold ground, a Medley of Scotch Airs, a Medley of Southern Airs, and Thomas Glynn’s West Lawn Polka.

Banjo innovation which began in the minstrel age continued, with increased use of metal parts, exotic wood, raised metal frets and a tone-ring that improved the sound.[44] Instruments were designed in a variety of sizes and pitch ranges, to play different parts in banjo orchestras.[44] Examples on display in the museum include banjorines and piccolo banjos.

New styles of playing, a new look, instruments in a variety of pitch ranges to take the place of different sections in an orchestra – all helped to separate the instrument from the rough minstrel image of the previous 50–60 years.[44] The instrument was modern now, a bright new thing, with polished metal sides.[44]

Ragtime era (1895–1919) and Jazz Age era (1910s–1930s)

In the early 1900s, new banjos began to spread, four-string models, played with a plectrum rather than with the minstrel-banjo clawhammer stroke or the classic-banjo fingerpicking style. The new banjos were a result of changing musical tastes. New music spurred the creation of "evolutionary variations" of the banjo, from the five-string model current since the 1830s to newer four-string plectrum and tenor banjos.[45]

The instruments became ornately decorated in the 1920s to be visually dynamic to a theater audience.[45] The instruments were increasingly modified or made in a new style – necks that were shortened to handle the four steel (not fiber as before) strings, strings that were sounded with a pick instead of fingers, four strings instead of five and tuned differently.[45] The changes reflected the nature of post-World War 1 music.[45] The country was turning away from European classics, preferring the "upbeat and carefree feel" of jazz, and American soldiers returning from the war helped to drive this change.[45]

The change in tastes toward dance music and the need for louder instruments began a few years before the war, however, with ragtime.[45] That music encouraged musicians to alter their 5-string banjos to four, add the louder steel strings and use a pick or plectrum, all in an effort to be heard over the brass and reed instruments that were current in dance-halls.[45] The four string plectrum and tenor banjos did not eliminate the five-string variety. They were products of their times and musical purposes—ragtime and jazz dance music and theater music.

The Great Depression is a visible line to mark the end of the Jazz Age.[45] The economic downturn cut into the sales of both four- and five-stringed banjos, and by World War 2, banjos were in sharp decline, the market for them dead.[46]

Modern era

 
Hubby Jenkins performing on solo banjo at the IBMA Bluegrass Live! festival in Raleigh, North Carolina on October 2, 2021

In the years after World War II, the banjo experienced a resurgence, played by music stars such as Earl Scruggs (bluegrass), Bela Fleck (jazz, rock, world music), Gerry O'Connor (Celtic and Irish music), Perry Bechtel (jazz, big band), Pete Seeger (folk), and Otis Taylor (African-American roots, blues, jazz).[47]

Pete Seeger "was a major force behind a new national interest in folk music."[17] Learning to play a fingerstyle in the Appalachians from musicians who never stopped playing the banjo, he wrote the book, How To Play The Five-String Banjo, which was the only banjo method on the market for years.[17] He was followed by a movement of folk musicians, such as Dave Guard of the Kingston Trio and Erik Darling of the Weavers and Tarriers.[17]

Earl Scruggs was seen both as a legend and a "contemporary musical innovator" who gave his name to his style of playing, the Scruggs Style.[48] Scruggs played the banjo "with heretofore unheard of speed and dexterity," using a picking technique for the 5-string banjo that he perfected from 2-finger and 3-finger picking techniques in rural North Carolina.[48] His playing reached Americans through the Grand Ole Opry and into the living rooms of Americans who didn't listen to country or bluegrass music, through the theme music of The Beverly Hillbillies.[48]

For the last one hundred years, the tenor banjo has become an intrinsic part of the world of Irish traditional music.[49] It is a relative newcomer to the genre.

The banjo has also been used more recently in the hardcore punk scene, most notably by Show Me the Body on their debut album, Body War.

Technique

 
Forward roll[50]  Play .
 
Melody to Yankee Doodle, on the banjo, without and with drone notes[51]  Play without  and  with drone .

Two techniques closely associated with the five-string banjo are rolls and drones. Rolls are right hand accompanimental fingering patterns that consist of eight (eighth) notes that subdivide each measure.[50] Drone notes are quick little notes [typically eighth notes], usually played on the 5th (short) string to fill in around the melody notes [typically eighth notes].[51] These techniques are both idiomatic to the banjo in all styles, and their sound is characteristic of bluegrass.

Historically, the banjo was played in the claw-hammer style by the Africans who brought their version of the banjo with them.[52] Several other styles of play were developed from this. Clawhammer consists of downward striking of one or more of the four main strings with the index, middle or both fingers while the drone or fifth string is played with a 'lifting' (as opposed to downward pluck) motion of the thumb. The notes typically sounded by the thumb in this fashion are, usually, on the off beat. Melodies can be quite intricate adding techniques such as double thumbing and drop thumb. In old time Appalachian Mountain music, a style called two-finger up-pick is also used, and a three-finger version that Earl Scruggs developed into the "Scruggs" style picking was nationally aired in 1945 on the Grand Ole Opry.[53] In this style the instrument is played by plucking individual notes. Modern fingerstyle is usually played using fingerpicks, though early players and some modern players play either with nails or with a technique known as on the flesh. In this style the strings are played directly with the fingers, rather than any pick or intermediary.[54]

While five-string banjos are traditionally played with either fingerpicks or the fingers themselves, tenor banjos and plectrum banjos are played with a pick, either to strum full chords, or most commonly in Irish traditional music, play single-note melodies.

Modern forms

The modern banjo comes in a variety of forms, including four- and five-string versions. A six-string version, tuned and played similarly to a guitar, has gained popularity. In almost all of its forms, banjo playing is characterized by a fast arpeggiated plucking, though many different playing styles exist.

The body, or "pot", of a modern banjo typically consists of a circular rim (generally made of wood, though metal was also common on older banjos) and a tensioned head, similar to a drum head. Traditionally, the head was made from animal skin, but today is often made of various synthetic materials. Most modern banjos also have a metal "tone ring" assembly that helps further clarify and project the sound, but many older banjos do not include a tone ring.

The banjo is usually tuned with friction tuning pegs or planetary gear tuners, rather than the worm gear machine head used on guitars. Frets have become standard since the late 19th century, though fretless banjos are still manufactured and played by those wishing to execute glissando, play quarter tones, or otherwise achieve the sound and feeling of early playing styles.

Modern banjos are typically strung with metal strings. Usually, the fourth string is wound with either steel or bronze-phosphor alloy. Some players may string their banjos with nylon or gut strings to achieve a more mellow, old-time tone.

Some banjos have a separate resonator plate on the back of the pot to project the sound forward and give the instrument more volume. This type of banjo is usually used in bluegrass music, though resonator banjos are played by players of all styles, and are also used in old-time, sometimes as a substitute for electric amplification when playing in large venues.

Open-back banjos generally have a mellower tone and weigh less than resonator banjos. They usually have a different setup than a resonator banjo, often with a higher string action.[55]

Five-string banjo

The modern five-string banjo is a variation on Sweeney's original design. The fifth string is usually the same gauge as the first, but starts from the fifth fret, three-quarters the length of the other strings. This lets the string be tuned to a higher open pitch than possible for the full-length strings. Because of the short fifth string, the five-string banjo uses a reentrant tuning – the string pitches do not proceed lowest to highest across the fingerboard. Instead, the fourth string is lowest, then third, second, first, and the fifth string is highest.

The short fifth string presents special problems for a capo. For small changes (going up or down one or two semitones, for example), retuning the fifth string simply is possible. Otherwise, various devices called "fifth-string capos" effectively shorten the vibrating part of the string. Many banjo players use model-railroad spikes or titanium spikes (usually installed at the seventh fret and sometimes at others), under which they hook the string to press it down on the fret.

Five-string banjo players use many tunings. (Tunings are given in left-to-right order, as viewed from the front of the instrument with the neck pointing up.) Probably the most common, particularly in bluegrass, is the Open-G tuning G4 D3 G3 B3 D4. In earlier times, the tuning G4 C3 G3 B3 D4 was commonly used instead, and this is still the preferred tuning for some types of folk music and for classic banjo. Other tunings found in old-time music include double C (G4 C3 G3 C4 D4), "sawmill" (G4 D3 G3 C4 D4) also called "mountain modal" and open D (F#4 D3 F#3 A3 D4). These tunings are often taken up a tone, either by tuning up or using a capo. For example, "double-D" tuning (A4 D3 A3 D4 E4) – commonly reached by tuning up from double C – is often played to accompany fiddle tunes in the key of D, and Open-A (A4 E3 A3 C#4 E4) is usually used for playing tunes in the key of A. Dozens of other banjo tunings are used, mostly in old-time music. These tunings are used to make playing specific tunes easier, usually fiddle tunes or groups of fiddle tunes.

The size of the five-string banjo is largely standardized, but smaller and larger sizes exist, including the long-neck or "Seeger neck" variation designed by Pete Seeger. Petite variations on the five-string banjo have been available since the 1890s. S.S. Stewart introduced the banjeaurine, tuned one fourth above a standard five-string. Piccolo banjos are smaller, and tuned one octave above a standard banjo. Between these sizes and standard lies the A-scale banjo, which is two frets shorter and usually tuned one full step above standard tunings. Many makers have produced banjos of other scale lengths, and with various innovations.

 
A five-string banjo

American old-time music typically uses the five-string, open-back banjo. It is played in a number of different styles, the most common being clawhammer or frailing, characterized by the use of a downward rather than upward stroke when striking the strings with a fingernail. Frailing techniques use the thumb to catch the fifth string for a drone after most strums or after each stroke ("double thumbing"), or to pick out additional melody notes in what is known as drop-thumb. Pete Seeger popularized a folk style by combining clawhammer with up picking, usually without the use of fingerpicks. Another common style of old-time banjo playing is fingerpicking banjo or classic banjo. This style is based upon parlor-style guitar.[56]

Bluegrass music, which uses the five-string resonator banjo almost exclusively, is played in several common styles. These include Scruggs style, named after Earl Scruggs; melodic, or Keith style, named for Bill Keith; and three-finger style with single-string work, also called Reno style after Don Reno. In these styles, the emphasis is on arpeggiated figures played in a continuous eighth-note rhythm, known as rolls. All of these styles are typically played with fingerpicks.

The first five-string, electric, solid-body banjo was developed by Charles Wilburn (Buck) Trent, Harold "Shot" Jackson, and David Jackson in 1960.

The five-string banjo has been used in classical music since before the turn of the 20th century. Contemporary and modern works have been written or arranged for the instrument by Jerry Garcia, Buck Trent, Béla Fleck, Tony Trischka, Ralph Stanley, Steve Martin, George Crumb, Modest Mouse, Jo Kondo, Paul Elwood, Hans Werner Henze (notably in his Sixth Symphony), Daniel Mason of Hank Williams III's Damn Band, Beck, the Water Tower Bucket Boys, Todd Taylor, J.P. Pickens, Peggy Honeywell, Norfolk & Western, Putnam Smith, Iron & Wine, The Avett Brothers, The Well Pennies, Punch Brothers, Julian Koster, Sufjan Stevens, Sarah Jarosz and sisters Leah Song and Chloe Smith from Rising Appalachia

Frederick Delius wrote for a banjo in his opera Koanga.

Ernst Krenek includes two banjos in his Kleine Symphonie (Little Symphony).

Kurt Weill has a banjo in his opera The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny.

Viktor Ullmann included a tenor banjo part in his Piano Concerto (op. 25).

Four-string banjos

 
Plectrum banjo from Gold Tone

The four-string plectrum banjo is a standard banjo without the short drone string. It usually has 22 frets on the neck and a scale length of 26 to 28 inches, and was originally tuned C3 G3 B3 D4. It can also be tuned like the top four strings of a guitar, which is known as "Chicago tuning".[57] As the name suggests, it is usually played with a guitar-style pick (that is, a single one held between thumb and forefinger), unlike the five-string banjo, which is either played with a thumbpick and two fingerpicks, or with bare fingers. The plectrum banjo evolved out of the five-string banjo, to cater to styles of music involving strummed chords. The plectrum is also featured in many early jazz recordings and arrangements.

Four-string banjos can be used for chordal accompaniment (as in early jazz), for single-string melody playing (as in Irish traditional music), in "chord melody" style (a succession of chords in which the highest notes carry the melody), in tremolo style (both on chords and single strings), and a mixed technique called duo style that combines single-string tremolo and rhythm chords.[58]

Four-string banjos are used from time to time in musical theater. Examples include: Hello, Dolly!, Mame, Chicago, Cabaret, Oklahoma!, Half a Sixpence, Annie, Barnum, The Threepenny Opera, Monty Python's Spamalot, and countless others. Joe Raposo had used it variably in the imaginative seven-piece orchestration for the long-running TV show Sesame Street, and has sometimes had it overdubbed with itself or an electric guitar. The banjo is still (albeit rarely) in use in the show's arrangement currently.

Tenor banjo

Tenor banjos
 
Man playing a four-string banjo.
 
Two Gibson tenor banjos from the early 20th century at the American Banjo Museum. (Right) A 15 fret tenor banjo. (Left) A 19 fret tenor banjo.

The shorter-necked, tenor banjo, with 17 ("short scale") or 19 frets, is also typically played with a plectrum. It became a popular instrument after about 1910. Early models used for melodic picking typically had 17 frets on the neck and a scale length of 1912 to 2112 inches. By the mid-1920s, when the instrument was used primarily for strummed chordal accompaniment, 19-fret necks with a scale length of 2134 to 23 inches became standard. The usual tuning is the all-fifths tuning C3 G3 D4 A4, in which exactly seven semitones (a perfect fifth) occur between the open notes of consecutive strings; this is identical to the tuning of a viola. Other players (particularly in Irish traditional music) tune the banjo G2 D3 A3 E4 like an octave mandolin, which lets the banjoist duplicate fiddle and mandolin fingering.[59] The popularization of this tuning is usually attributed to the late Barney McKenna, banjoist with The Dubliners.[60]

The tenor banjo was a common rhythm instrument in early 20th-century dance bands. Its volume and timbre suited early jazz (and jazz-influenced popular music styles) and could both compete with other instruments (such as brass instruments and saxophones) and be heard clearly on acoustic recordings. George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue, in Ferde Grofe's original jazz-orchestra arrangement, includes tenor banjo, with widely spaced chords not easily playable on plectrum banjo in its conventional tunings. With development of the archtop and electric guitar, the tenor banjo largely disappeared from jazz and popular music, though keeping its place in traditional "Dixieland" jazz.

Some 1920s Irish banjo players picked out the melodies of jigs, reels, and hornpipes on tenor banjos, decorating the tunes with snappy triplet ornaments. The most important Irish banjo player of this era was Mike Flanagan of the New York-based Flanagan Brothers, one of the most popular Irish-American groups of the day. Other pre-WWII Irish banjo players included Neil Nolan, who recorded with Dan Sullivan's Shamrock Band in Boston, and Jimmy McDade, who recorded with the Four Provinces Orchestra in Philadelphia. Meanwhile, in Ireland, the rise of ceili bands provided a new market for a loud instrument like the tenor banjo. Use of the tenor banjo in Irish music has increased greatly since the folk revival of the 1960s.[60]

Six-string banjos

 
Old six-string zither banjo

The six-string banjo began as a British innovation by William Temlett, one of England's earliest banjo makers. He opened a shop in London in 1846, and sold seven-string banjos which he marketed as "zither" banjos from his 1869 patent.[61] A zither banjo usually has a closed back and sides with the drum body and skin tensioning system suspended inside the wooden rim, the neck and string tailpiece mounted on the outside of the rim, and the drone string led through a tube in the neck so that the tuning peg can be mounted on the head. They were often made by builders who used guitar tuners that came in banks of three, so five-stringed instruments had a redundant tuner; these banjos could be somewhat easily converted over to a six-string banjo.

American Alfred Davis Cammeyer (1862–1949), a young violinist turned concert banjo player, devised the six-string zither banjo around 1880. British opera diva Adelina Patti advised Cammeyer that the zither banjo might be popular with English audiences as it had been invented there, and Cammeyer went to London in 1888. With his virtuoso playing, he helped show that banjos could make more sophisticated music than normally played by blackface minstrels. He was soon performing for London society, where he met Sir Arthur Sullivan, who recommended that Cammeyer progress from arranging the music of others for banjo to composing his own music.

Modern six-string bluegrass banjos have been made. These add a bass string between the lowest string and the drone string on a five-string banjo, and are usually tuned G4 G2 D3 G3 B3 D4. Sonny Osborne played one of these instruments for several years. It was modified by luthier Rual Yarbrough from a Vega five-string model. A picture of Sonny with this banjo appears in Pete Wernick's Bluegrass Banjo method book.[62]

Six-string banjos known as banjo guitars basically consist of a six-string guitar neck attached to a bluegrass or plectrum banjo body, which allows players who have learned the guitar to play a banjo sound without having to relearn fingerings. This was the instrument of the early jazz great Johnny St. Cyr, jazzmen Django Reinhardt, Danny Barker, Papa Charlie Jackson and Clancy Hayes, as well as the blues and gospel singer Reverend Gary Davis. Today, musicians as diverse as Keith Urban, Rod Stewart, Taj Mahal, Joe Satriani, David Hidalgo, Larry Lalonde and Doc Watson play the six-string guitar banjo. They have become increasingly popular since the mid-1990s.

Other banjos

Low banjos

 
Cello banjo from Gold Tone

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, in vogue in plucked-string instrument ensembles – guitar orchestras, mandolin orchestras, banjo orchestras – was when the instrumentation was made to parallel that of the string section in symphony orchestras. Thus, "violin, viola, 'cello, bass" became "mandolin, mandola, mandocello, mandobass", or in the case of banjos, "banjolin, banjola, banjo cello, bass banjo". Because the range of pluck-stringed instrument generally is not as great as that of comparably sized bowed-string instruments, other instruments were often added to these plucked orchestras to extend the range of the ensemble upwards and downwards.[63][64]

The banjo cello was normally tuned C2-G2-D3-A3, one octave below the tenor banjo like the cello and mandocello. A five-string cello banjo, set up like a bluegrass banjo (with the short fifth string), but tuned one octave lower, has been produced by the Goldtone company.[65]

 
Bass banjo

Bass banjos have been produced in both upright bass formats and with standard, horizontally carried banjo bodies. Contrabass banjos with either three or four strings have also been made; some of these had headstocks similar to those of bass violins. Tuning varies on these large instruments, with four-string models sometimes being tuned in 4ths like a bass violin (E1-A1-D2-G2) and sometimes in 5ths, like a four-string cello banjo, one octave lower (C1-G1-D2-A2).[66]

Banjo hybrids and variants

A number of hybrid instruments exist, crossing the banjo with other stringed instruments. Most of these use the body of a banjo, often with a resonator, and the neck of the other instrument. Examples include the banjo mandolin (first patented in 1882)[67] and the banjo ukulele, most famously played by the English comedian George Formby.[68] These were especially popular in the early decades of the 20th century, and were probably a result of a desire either to allow players of other instruments to jump on the banjo bandwagon at the height of its popularity, or to get the natural amplification benefits of the banjo resonator in an age before electric amplification.

Conversely, the tenor and plectrum guitars use the respective banjo necks on guitar bodies. They arose in the early 20th century as a way for banjo players to double on guitar without having to relearn the instrument entirely.[69]

Instruments that have a five-string banjo neck on a wooden body (for example, a guitar, bouzouki, or dobro body) have also been made, such as the banjola. A 20th-century Turkish instrument similar to the banjo is called the cümbüş, which combines a banjo-like resonator with a neck derived from an oud. At the end of the 20th century, a development of the five-string banjo was the BanSitar.[70] This features a bone bridge, giving the instrument a sitar-like resonance.

The Brazilian Samba Banjo is basically a cavaquinho neck on a banjo body, thereby producing a louder sound than the cavaquinho. It is tuned the same as the top 4 strings of a 5-string banjo up an octave (or any cavaquinho tuning).

Notable banjoists

  • Vess Ossman (1868–1923) was a leading five-string banjoist whose career spanned the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Vess started playing banjo at the age of 12. He was a popular recording artist, and in fact, one of the first recording artists ever, when audio recording first became commercially available. He formed various recording groups, his most popular being the Ossman-Dudley trio.[71][72]
  • Joel Sweeney (1810–1860) also known as Joe Sweeney, was a musician and early blackface minstrel performer. He is known for popularizing the playing of the banjo and has often been credited with advancing the physical development of the modern five-string banjo.
  • Fred Van Eps (1878–1960) was a noted five-string player and banjo maker who learned to play from listening to cylinder recordings of Vess Ossman. He recorded for Edison's company, producing some of the earliest disk recordings, and also the earliest ragtime recordings in any medium other than player piano.[73]
  • Uncle Dave Macon (1870–1952) was a banjo player and comedian from Tennessee known for his "plug hat, gold teeth, chin whiskers, gates ajar collar and that million dollar Tennessee smile".
  • Eddie Peabody (1902–1970) was a great proponent of the plectrum banjo who performed for nearly five decades (1920–1968) and left a considerable legacy of recordings.[74] An early reviewer dubbed him "King of the Banjo", and his was a household name for decades. He went on to develop new instruments, produce records, and appear in movies.
  • Frank Lawes (1894–1970), of the United Kingdom, developed a unique fingerstyle technique on the four-string plectrum instrument, and was a prolific composer of four-string banjo music, much of which is still performed and recorded today.
  • Harry Reser (1896–1965), plectrum and tenor banjo, was regarded by some as the best tenor banjoist of the 1920s. He wrote a large number of works for tenor banjo, as well as instructional material, authoring numerous banjo method books,[75] over a dozen other instrumental method books (for guitar; ukulele; mandolin; etc.), and was well known in the banjo community. Reser's accomplished single string and "chord melody" technique set a "high mark" that many subsequent tenor players endeavored – and still endeavor – to attain.
  • Ola Belle Reed (1916–2002) was an American folk singer, songwriter and banjo player.
  • Pete Seeger (1919–2014), a singer-songwriter who performed solo as well as with folk group The Weavers, included five-string banjo among his instruments. His 1948 method book How to Play the Five-String Banjo has been credited by thousands of banjoists, including prominent professionals, with sparking their interest in the instrument. He is also credited with inventing the long-neck banjo (also known as the "Seeger Banjo"), which adds three lower frets to the five-string banjo's neck, and tunes the four main strings down by a minor third, to facilitate playing in singing keys more comfortable for some folk guitarists.
  • Earl Scruggs (1924–2012), whose career ranged from the end of World War II into the 21st century, is widely regarded as the father of the bluegrass style of banjo playing.[76] The three-finger style of playing he developed while playing with Bill Monroe's band is known by his name: Scruggs Style.[77]
  • Ralph Stanley (1927–2016) had a long career, both with his brother as "The Stanley Brothers" and with his band "The Clinch Mountain Boys. He was awarded an honorary doctorate of music by Lincoln Memorial University, is a member of the Bluegrass Hall of Fame and the Grand Ole Opry. He won a Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance in the movie O Brother, Where Art Thou?.
  • Rual Yarbrough (1930–2010)
  • Roy Clark (1933–2018)
  • John Hartford (1937–2001)
  • Ben Eldridge (b. 1938)
  • Barney McKenna (1939–2012) was an Irish musician and a founding member of The Dubliners. He played the tenor banjo, violin, mandolin, and melodeon. He was most renowned as a banjo player. Barney used GDAE tuning on a 19-fret tenor banjo, an octave below fiddle/mandolin and, according to musician Mick Moloney, was single-handedly responsible for making the GDAE-tuned tenor banjo the standard banjo in Irish music. Due to his skill level on the banjo fans, all around the world and other members of The Dubliners nicknamed him "Banjo Barney".
  • Bill Keith (1939–2015)
  • Sonny Osborne (b. 1937)
  • Pete Wernick (b. 1946)
  • Tony Trischka (b. 1949)
  • Béla Fleck (b. 1958) is widely acknowledged as one of the world's most innovative and technically proficient banjo players.[78] His work spans many styles and genres, including jazz, bluegrass, classical, R&B, avant garde, and "world music", and he has produced a substantial discography and videography. He works extensively in both acoustic and electric media. Fleck has been nominated for Grammy Awards in more categories than any other artist, and has received 13 as of 2015.[79]
  • Noam Pikelny (b. 1981) is an American banjoist who plays eclectic styles including traditional bluegrass, classical, rock, and jazz music. He has won the Steve Martin Prize for Excellence in Banjo and Bluegrass in 2010.[80] He has been nominated for eight Grammy Nominations and has been awarded one with his band, The Punch Brothers, in 2018.[81]
  • Clifford Essex, (b. 1869 – c.1946) a British banjoist, who was also a musical instrument manufacturer
  • Other important four-string performers were Mike Pingitore, who played tenor for the Paul Whiteman Orchestra through 1948, and Roy Smeck, early radio and recording pioneer, author of many instructional books, and whose influential performances on many fretted instruments earned him the nickname "Wizard of the Strings", during his active years (1922–1950). Prominent tenor players of more recent vintage include Narvin Kimball (d. 2006) (left-handed banjoist of Preservation Hall Jazz Band fame).
  • Notable four-string players currently active include ragtime and dixieland stylists Charlie Tagawa (b. 1935) and Bill Lowrey (b. 1963). Jazz guitarist Howard Alden (b. 1958) began his career on tenor banjo and still plays it at traditional jazz events. Cynthia Sayer (b. 1962) is regarded as one of the top jazz plectrum banjoists. Rock and country performer Winston Marshall (b. 1988) plays banjo (among other instruments) for the British folk rock group Mumford and Sons, a band that won the 2013 Grammy Award for "Best Album of the Year".

See also

References

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  5. ^ Winship, David."The Black American Music Tradition in Country Music February 4, 2007, at the Wayback Machine." BCMA, Birthplace of Country Music Alliance. Retrieved 2 August 2007.
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Further reading

Banjo history

  • Conway, Cecelia (1995). African Banjo Echoes in Appalachia: A Study of Folk Traditions, University of Tennessee Press. Paper: ISBN 0-87049-893-2; cloth: ISBN 0-87049-892-4. A study of the influence of African Americans on banjo playing throughout U.S. history.
  • De Smaele G. (1983). "Banjo a cinq cordes". Brussels: Musée Instrumental (MIM), Brussels. D 1983-2170-1
  • De Smaele G. (2015). "Banjo Attitudes." Paris: L'Harmattan, 2015.
  • De Smaele G. (2019). "A Five-String Banjo Sourcebook." Paris: L'Harmattan, 2019.
  • Dubois, Laurent (2016). The Banjo: America's African Instrument. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2016.
  • Epstein, Dena (1977). Sinful Tunes and Spirituals: Black Folk Music to the Civil War. University of Illinois Press, 2003. Winner of the Simkins Prize of the Southern Historical Association, 1979. Winner of the Chicago Folklore Prize. The anniversary edition of a classic study of black slave music in America.
  • Gaddy, Kristina (2022). Well of Souls: Uncovering the Banjo's Hidden History. W. W. Norton & Company, 2022. ISBN 978-0393866803. The author uncovers the banjo's key role in Black spirituality, ritual, and rebellion.
  • Gibson, George R. (2018). "Black Banjo, Fiddle and Dance in Kentucky and the Amalgamation of African American and Anglo-American Folk Music." Banjo Roots and Branches(Winans, 2018). University of Illinois Press, 2018. Gibson's historiographic chapter uncovers much new information about black banjo and fiddle players, and dance, in Kentucky, and their influence on white musicians, from the 1780s.
  • Gura, Philip F. and James F. Bollman (1999). America's Instrument: The Banjo in the Nineteenth Century. The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-2484-4. The definitive history of the banjo, focusing on the instrument's development in the 1800s.
  • Katonah Museum of Art (2003). The Birth of the Banjo. Katonah Museum of Art, Katonah, New York. ISBN 0-915171-64-3.
  • Linn, Karen (1994). That Half-Barbaric Twang: The Banjo in American Popular Culture. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-06433-X. Scholarly cultural history of the banjo, focusing on how its image has evolved over the years.
  • Tsumura, Akira (1984). Banjos: The Tsumura Collection. Kodansha International Ltd. ISBN 0-87011-605-3. An illustrated history of the banjo featuring the world's premier collection.
  • Webb, Robert Lloyd (1996). Ring the Banjar!. 2nd edition. Centerstream Publishing. ISBN 1-57424-016-1. A short history of the banjo, with pictures from an exhibition at the MIT Museum.
  • Winans, Robert (2018). Banjo Roots and Branches. University of Illinois Press, 2018. The story of the banjo's journey from Africa to the western hemisphere blends music, history, and a union of cultures. In Banjo Roots and Branches, Robert B. Winans presents cutting-edge scholarship that covers the instrument's West African origins and its adaptations and circulation in the Caribbean and United States.

External links

  • "Banjo" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). 1911.
  • The Banjo in Irish Traditional Music
  • 200 banjo makers pre 2nd WW
  • BANJO ATTITUDES - Le banjo à cinq cordes : son histoire générale, sa documentation, Gérard De Smaele - livre, ebook, epub
  • 19th Century Banjo Instruction Manuals
  • To Hear Your Banjo Play, 1947 Alan Lomax film (16 minutes)
  • Banjo Newsletter
  • Banjo Hangout
  • Online, Open-Source Banjo Chord Generator
  • Dr Joan Dickerson, Sparky Rucker, and George Gibson with host Michael Johnathon explore the African-American History of the Banjo through conversation and music on show 350 of the WoodSongs Old-Time Radio Hour. .
  • "The Physics of Banjos – A Conversation with David Politzer", Ideas Roadshow, 2016

banjo, other, uses, disambiguation, banjo, stringed, instrument, with, thin, membrane, stretched, over, frame, cavity, form, resonator, membrane, typically, circular, modern, forms, usually, made, plastic, originally, animal, skin, early, forms, instrument, we. For other uses see Banjo disambiguation The banjo is a stringed instrument with a thin membrane stretched over a frame or cavity to form a resonator The membrane is typically circular in modern forms usually made of plastic originally of animal skin Early forms of the instrument were fashioned by African Americans and had African antecedents 1 2 In the 19th century interest in the instrument was spread across the United States and United Kingdom by traveling shows of the 19th century minstrel show fad followed by mass production and mail order sales including instruction method books The inexpensive or home made banjo remained part of rural folk culture but 5 string and 4 string banjos also became popular for home parlour music entertainment college music clubs and early 20th century jazz bands By the early 21st century the banjo was most frequently associated with folk bluegrass and country music but was also used in some rock pop and even hip hop music 3 Among rock bands the Eagles Led Zeppelin and the Grateful Dead have used the five string banjo in some of their songs BanjoA five string banjoString instrumentHornbostel Sachs classification321 312 resonator or 321 314 open backed Composite chordophone with a neck that passes diametrically through the resonator sounded by plectrum finger picks or the bare fingers Developed18th centurySound sampleCorncob source source Song using modern banjo picking style with fingerpicks Problems playing this file See media help The Buffalo Rag source source Tom Turpin s 1904 composition The Buffalo Rag in a 1906 performance by Vess Ossman Although this is a ragtime piece Ossman played with classic banjo style He fingerpicked gut strings using a technique similar to classical guitarists Problems playing this file See media help Historically the banjo occupied a central place in Black American traditional music and rural folk culture before entering the mainstream via the minstrel shows of the 19th century 4 5 6 7 Along with the fiddle the banjo is a mainstay of American styles of music such as bluegrass and old time music It is also very frequently used in Dixieland jazz as well as in Caribbean genres like biguine calypso and mento Contents 1 History 1 1 Early origins 1 2 Minstrel era 1830s 1870s 1 3 Classic era 1880s 1910s 1 4 Ragtime era 1895 1919 and Jazz Age era 1910s 1930s 1 5 Modern era 2 Technique 3 Modern forms 3 1 Five string banjo 3 2 Four string banjos 3 2 1 Tenor banjo 3 3 Six string banjos 4 Other banjos 4 1 Low banjos 4 2 Banjo hybrids and variants 5 Notable banjoists 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Banjo history 9 External linksHistory EditSee also American Banjo Museum Note This article uses Helmholtz pitch notation to define banjo tunings Early origins Edit The Old Plantation c 1785 1795 the earliest known American painting to picture a banjo like instrument thought to depict a plantation in Beaufort County South Carolina The oldest known banjo c 1770 1777 from the Surinamese Creole culture The modern banjo derives from instruments that have been recorded to be in use in North America and the Caribbean since the 17th century by enslaved people taken from West and Central Africa Their African style instruments were crafted from split gourds with animal skins stretched across them Strings from gut or vegetable fibers were attached to a wooden neck 8 Written references to the banjo in North America and the Caribbean appear in the 17th and 18th centuries 8 The earliest written indication of an instrument akin to the banjo is in the 17th century Richard Jobson 1621 in describing The Gambia wrote about an instrument like the banjo which he called a bandore 8 The term banjo has several etymological claims one being from the Mandinka language which gives the name of Banjul capital of The Gambia Another claim is a connection to the West African Akonting The akonting is made with a long bamboo neck called a bangoe The material for the neck called ban julo in the Mandinka language again gives Banjul In this interpretation Banjul became a sort of eponym for the Akonting as it crossed the Atlantic The instrument s name might also derive from the Kimbundu word mbanza 9 which is a loan word to the Portuguese language resulting in the term banza Its earliest recorded use was in 1678 in the Caribbean Martinique by enslaved Africans 8 The OED claims that the term banjo comes from a dialectal pronunciation of Portuguese bandore or from an early anglicisation of Spanish bandurria 10 However contrary evidence definitively supports that the terms bandore and bandurria were terms used when Europeans encountered the banjo or its kin varieties in use by people of African descent who used different terms for the instrument like banza 8 Various instruments in Africa chief among them the kora feature a skin head and gourd or similar shell body 11 Those African instruments differ from early African American banjos in that the necks do not possess a Western style fingerboard and tuning pegs instead they have stick necks with strings attached to the neck with loops for tuning 11 Another likely relative of the banjo is the akonting a spike folk lute played by the Jola tribe of Senegambia and the ubaw akwala of the Igbo 12 Similar instruments include the xalam of Senegal 13 and the ngoni of the Wassoulou region including parts of Mali Guinea and Ivory Coast as well as a larger variation of the ngoni known as the gimbri developed in Morocco by Black Sub Saharan Africans Gnawa or Haratin Banjo like instruments seem to have been independently invented in several different places since instruments similar to the banjo are known from a diverse array of distant countries For example the Chinese sanxian the Japanese shamisen Persian tar and the Moroccan sintir in addition to the many African instruments mentioned above 12 Early African influenced banjos were built around a gourd body and a wooden stick neck These instruments had varying numbers of strings though often including some form of drone The earliest known picture c 1785 1795 of an enslaved person playing a banjo like instrument The Old Plantation shows a four string instrument with its fourth thumb string shorter than the others Banjos with fingerboards and tuning pegs are known from the Caribbean as early as the 17th century 11 Some 18th and early 19th century writers transcribed the name of these instruments variously as bangie banza bonjaw 14 banjer 15 and banjar The instrument became increasingly available commercially from around the second quarter of the 19th century due to minstrel performances 2 Minstrel era 1830s 1870s Edit In the antebellum South many enslaved Africans played the banjo spreading it to the rest of the population 8 In his memoir With Sabre and Scalpel The Autobiography of a Soldier and Surgeon the Confederate veteran and surgeon John Allan Wyeth recalls learning to play the banjo as a child from an enslaved person on his family plantation 8 Another man who learned to play from African Americans probably in the 1820s was Joel Walker Sweeney a minstrel performer from Appomattox Court House Virginia 16 17 Sweeney has been credited with adding a string to the four string African American banjo and popularizing the five string banjo 16 17 Although Robert McAlpin Williamson is the first documented white banjoist 18 in the 1830s Sweeney became the first white performer to play the banjo on stage 16 Sweeney s musical performances occurred at the beginning of the minstrel era as banjos shifted away from being exclusively homemade folk instruments to instruments of a more modern style 19 Sweeney participated in this transition by encouraging drum maker William Boucher of Baltimore to make banjos commercially for him to sell 17 name Tosches1996 gt Sheet music cover for Dandy Jim from Caroline featuring Dan Emmett center and the other Virginia Minstrels c 1844 According to Arthur Woodward in 1949 Sweeney replaced the gourd with a sound box made of wood and covered with skin and added a short fifth string about 1831 20 However modern scholar Gene Bluestein pointed out in 1964 that Sweeney may not have originated either the 5th string or sound box 20 This new banjo was at first tuned d Gdf a though by the 1890s this had been transposed up to g cgbd Banjos were introduced in Britain by Sweeney s group the American Virginia Minstrels in the 1840s and became very popular in music halls 21 The instrument grew in popularity during the 1840s after Sweeney began his traveling minstrel show 22 By the end of the 1840s the instrument had expanded from Caribbean possession to take root in places across America and across the Atlantic in England 23 24 It was estimated in 1866 that there were probably 10 000 banjos in New York City up from only a handful in 1844 People were exposed to banjos not only at minstrel shows but also medicine shows Wild West shows variety shows and traveling vaudeville shows 25 The banjo s popularity also was given a boost by the Civil War as servicemen on both sides in the Army or Navy were exposed to the banjo played in minstrel shows and by other servicemen 26 A popular movement of aspiring banjoists began as early as 1861 27 The enthusiasm for the instrument was labeled a banjo craze or banjo mania 27 The Briggs Banjo Instructor was the first method for the banjo It taught the stroke style and had notated music Publication date 1855 By the 1850s aspiring banjo players had options to help them learn their instrument 28 There were more teachers teaching banjo basics in the 1850s than there had been in the 1840s 28 There were also instruction manuals and for those who could read it printed music in the manuals 29 The first book of notated music was The Complete Preceptor by Elias Howe published under the pseudonym Gumbo Chaff consisting mainly of Christy s Minstrels tunes 29 The first banjo method was the Briggs Banjo instructor 1855 by Tom Briggs 29 Other methods included Howe s New American Banjo School 1857 and Phil Rice s Method for the Banjo With or Without a Master 1858 29 These books taught the stroke style or banjo style similar to modern frailing or clawhammer styles 29 By 1868 music for the banjo was available printed in a magazine when J K Buckley wrote and arranged popular music for Buckley s Monthly Banjoist 30 Frank B Converse also published his entire collection of compositions in The Complete Banjoist in 1868 which included polkas waltzes marches and clog hornpipes 31 Opportunities to work included the minstrel companies and circuses present in the 1840s but also floating theaters and variety theaters forerunners of the variety show and vaudeville 28 Classic era 1880s 1910s Edit The term classic banjo is used today to talk about a bare finger guitar style that was widely in use among banjo players of the late 19th to early 20th century 32 It is still used by banjoists today The term also differentiates that style of playing from the fingerpicking bluegrass banjo styles such as the Scruggs style and Keith style 32 The Briggs Banjo Method considered to be the first banjo method and which taught the stroke style of playing also mentioned the existence of another way of playing the guitar style 33 34 Alternatively known as finger style the new way of playing the banjo displaced the stroke method until by 1870 it was the dominant style 35 Although mentioned by Briggs it wasn t taught The first banjo method to teach the technique was Frank B Converse s New and Complete Method for the Banjo with or without a Master published in 1865 36 37 To play in guitar style players use the thumb and two or three fingers on their right hand to pick the notes Samuel Swaim Stewart summarized the style in 1888 saying In the guitar style of Banjo playing the little finger of the right hand is rested upon the head near the bridge and serves as a rest to the hand and a resistance to the movement of picking the strings In the beginning it is best to acquire a knowledge of picking the strings with the use of the first and second fingers and thumb only allowing the third finger to remain idle until the other fingers have become thoroughly accustomed to their work the three fingers are almost invariably used in playing chords and accompaniments to songs 33 Banjo from the Musical Instruments series N82 for Duke brand cigarettes 1888 The banjo although popular carried low class associations from its role in blackface minstrel shows medicine shows tent shows and variety shows or vaudeville 38 There was a push in the 19th century banjo to bring the instrument into respectability 38 Musicians such as William A Huntley made an effort to elevate the instrument or make it more artistic by bringing it to a more sophisticated level of technique and repertoire based on European standards 39 Huntley may have been the first white performer to successfully make the transition from performing in blackface to being himself on stage noted by the Boston Herald in November 1884 39 He was supported by another former blackface performer Samuel Swaim Stewart in his corporate magazine that popularized highly talented professionals 40 As the raucous imitations of plantation life decreased in minstrelsy the banjo became more acceptable as an instrument of fashionable society even to be accepted into women s parlors 22 41 Part of that change was a switch from the stroke style to the guitar playing style 22 41 36 An 1888 newspaper said All the maidens and a good many of the women also strum the instrument banjo classes abound on every side and banjo recitals are among the newest diversions of fashion Youths and elderly men too have caught the fever the star strummers among men are in demand at the smartest parties and have the choosing of the society of the most charming girls 42 Some of those entertainers such as Alfred A Farland specialized in classical music However musicians who wanted to entertain their audiences and make a living mixed it in with the popular music that audiences wanted 43 Farland s pupil Frederick J Bacon was one of these A former medicine show entertainer Bacon performed classical music along with popular songs such as Massa s in de cold cold ground a Medley of Scotch Airs a Medley of Southern Airs and Thomas Glynn s West Lawn Polka Banjo innovation which began in the minstrel age continued with increased use of metal parts exotic wood raised metal frets and a tone ring that improved the sound 44 Instruments were designed in a variety of sizes and pitch ranges to play different parts in banjo orchestras 44 Examples on display in the museum include banjorines and piccolo banjos New styles of playing a new look instruments in a variety of pitch ranges to take the place of different sections in an orchestra all helped to separate the instrument from the rough minstrel image of the previous 50 60 years 44 The instrument was modern now a bright new thing with polished metal sides 44 Ragtime era 1895 1919 and Jazz Age era 1910s 1930s Edit In the early 1900s new banjos began to spread four string models played with a plectrum rather than with the minstrel banjo clawhammer stroke or the classic banjo fingerpicking style The new banjos were a result of changing musical tastes New music spurred the creation of evolutionary variations of the banjo from the five string model current since the 1830s to newer four string plectrum and tenor banjos 45 The instruments became ornately decorated in the 1920s to be visually dynamic to a theater audience 45 The instruments were increasingly modified or made in a new style necks that were shortened to handle the four steel not fiber as before strings strings that were sounded with a pick instead of fingers four strings instead of five and tuned differently 45 The changes reflected the nature of post World War 1 music 45 The country was turning away from European classics preferring the upbeat and carefree feel of jazz and American soldiers returning from the war helped to drive this change 45 The change in tastes toward dance music and the need for louder instruments began a few years before the war however with ragtime 45 That music encouraged musicians to alter their 5 string banjos to four add the louder steel strings and use a pick or plectrum all in an effort to be heard over the brass and reed instruments that were current in dance halls 45 The four string plectrum and tenor banjos did not eliminate the five string variety They were products of their times and musical purposes ragtime and jazz dance music and theater music The Great Depression is a visible line to mark the end of the Jazz Age 45 The economic downturn cut into the sales of both four and five stringed banjos and by World War 2 banjos were in sharp decline the market for them dead 46 Modern era Edit Hubby Jenkins performing on solo banjo at the IBMA Bluegrass Live festival in Raleigh North Carolina on October 2 2021 In the years after World War II the banjo experienced a resurgence played by music stars such as Earl Scruggs bluegrass Bela Fleck jazz rock world music Gerry O Connor Celtic and Irish music Perry Bechtel jazz big band Pete Seeger folk and Otis Taylor African American roots blues jazz 47 Pete Seeger was a major force behind a new national interest in folk music 17 Learning to play a fingerstyle in the Appalachians from musicians who never stopped playing the banjo he wrote the book How To Play The Five String Banjo which was the only banjo method on the market for years 17 He was followed by a movement of folk musicians such as Dave Guard of the Kingston Trio and Erik Darling of the Weavers and Tarriers 17 Earl Scruggs was seen both as a legend and a contemporary musical innovator who gave his name to his style of playing the Scruggs Style 48 Scruggs played the banjo with heretofore unheard of speed and dexterity using a picking technique for the 5 string banjo that he perfected from 2 finger and 3 finger picking techniques in rural North Carolina 48 His playing reached Americans through the Grand Ole Opry and into the living rooms of Americans who didn t listen to country or bluegrass music through the theme music of The Beverly Hillbillies 48 For the last one hundred years the tenor banjo has become an intrinsic part of the world of Irish traditional music 49 It is a relative newcomer to the genre The banjo has also been used more recently in the hardcore punk scene most notably by Show Me the Body on their debut album Body War Technique Edit Forward roll 50 Play help info Melody to Yankee Doodle on the banjo without and with drone notes 51 Play without help info and with drone help info Two techniques closely associated with the five string banjo are rolls and drones Rolls are right hand accompanimental fingering patterns that consist of eight eighth notes that subdivide each measure 50 Drone notes are quick little notes typically eighth notes usually played on the 5th short string to fill in around the melody notes typically eighth notes 51 These techniques are both idiomatic to the banjo in all styles and their sound is characteristic of bluegrass Historically the banjo was played in the claw hammer style by the Africans who brought their version of the banjo with them 52 Several other styles of play were developed from this Clawhammer consists of downward striking of one or more of the four main strings with the index middle or both fingers while the drone or fifth string is played with a lifting as opposed to downward pluck motion of the thumb The notes typically sounded by the thumb in this fashion are usually on the off beat Melodies can be quite intricate adding techniques such as double thumbing and drop thumb In old time Appalachian Mountain music a style called two finger up pick is also used and a three finger version that Earl Scruggs developed into the Scruggs style picking was nationally aired in 1945 on the Grand Ole Opry 53 In this style the instrument is played by plucking individual notes Modern fingerstyle is usually played using fingerpicks though early players and some modern players play either with nails or with a technique known as on the flesh In this style the strings are played directly with the fingers rather than any pick or intermediary 54 While five string banjos are traditionally played with either fingerpicks or the fingers themselves tenor banjos and plectrum banjos are played with a pick either to strum full chords or most commonly in Irish traditional music play single note melodies Modern forms EditThe modern banjo comes in a variety of forms including four and five string versions A six string version tuned and played similarly to a guitar has gained popularity In almost all of its forms banjo playing is characterized by a fast arpeggiated plucking though many different playing styles exist The body or pot of a modern banjo typically consists of a circular rim generally made of wood though metal was also common on older banjos and a tensioned head similar to a drum head Traditionally the head was made from animal skin but today is often made of various synthetic materials Most modern banjos also have a metal tone ring assembly that helps further clarify and project the sound but many older banjos do not include a tone ring The banjo is usually tuned with friction tuning pegs or planetary gear tuners rather than the worm gear machine head used on guitars Frets have become standard since the late 19th century though fretless banjos are still manufactured and played by those wishing to execute glissando play quarter tones or otherwise achieve the sound and feeling of early playing styles Modern banjos are typically strung with metal strings Usually the fourth string is wound with either steel or bronze phosphor alloy Some players may string their banjos with nylon or gut strings to achieve a more mellow old time tone Some banjos have a separate resonator plate on the back of the pot to project the sound forward and give the instrument more volume This type of banjo is usually used in bluegrass music though resonator banjos are played by players of all styles and are also used in old time sometimes as a substitute for electric amplification when playing in large venues Open back banjos generally have a mellower tone and weigh less than resonator banjos They usually have a different setup than a resonator banjo often with a higher string action 55 Five string banjo Edit The modern five string banjo is a variation on Sweeney s original design The fifth string is usually the same gauge as the first but starts from the fifth fret three quarters the length of the other strings This lets the string be tuned to a higher open pitch than possible for the full length strings Because of the short fifth string the five string banjo uses a reentrant tuning the string pitches do not proceed lowest to highest across the fingerboard Instead the fourth string is lowest then third second first and the fifth string is highest The short fifth string presents special problems for a capo For small changes going up or down one or two semitones for example retuning the fifth string simply is possible Otherwise various devices called fifth string capos effectively shorten the vibrating part of the string Many banjo players use model railroad spikes or titanium spikes usually installed at the seventh fret and sometimes at others under which they hook the string to press it down on the fret Five string banjo players use many tunings Tunings are given in left to right order as viewed from the front of the instrument with the neck pointing up Probably the most common particularly in bluegrass is the Open G tuning G4 D3 G3 B3 D4 In earlier times the tuning G4 C3 G3 B3 D4 was commonly used instead and this is still the preferred tuning for some types of folk music and for classic banjo Other tunings found in old time music include double C G4 C3 G3 C4 D4 sawmill G4 D3 G3 C4 D4 also called mountain modal and open D F 4 D3 F 3 A3 D4 These tunings are often taken up a tone either by tuning up or using a capo For example double D tuning A4 D3 A3 D4 E4 commonly reached by tuning up from double C is often played to accompany fiddle tunes in the key of D and Open A A4 E3 A3 C 4 E4 is usually used for playing tunes in the key of A Dozens of other banjo tunings are used mostly in old time music These tunings are used to make playing specific tunes easier usually fiddle tunes or groups of fiddle tunes The size of the five string banjo is largely standardized but smaller and larger sizes exist including the long neck or Seeger neck variation designed by Pete Seeger Petite variations on the five string banjo have been available since the 1890s S S Stewart introduced the banjeaurine tuned one fourth above a standard five string Piccolo banjos are smaller and tuned one octave above a standard banjo Between these sizes and standard lies the A scale banjo which is two frets shorter and usually tuned one full step above standard tunings Many makers have produced banjos of other scale lengths and with various innovations A five string banjo American old time music typically uses the five string open back banjo It is played in a number of different styles the most common being clawhammer or frailing characterized by the use of a downward rather than upward stroke when striking the strings with a fingernail Frailing techniques use the thumb to catch the fifth string for a drone after most strums or after each stroke double thumbing or to pick out additional melody notes in what is known as drop thumb Pete Seeger popularized a folk style by combining clawhammer with up picking usually without the use of fingerpicks Another common style of old time banjo playing is fingerpicking banjo or classic banjo This style is based upon parlor style guitar 56 Bluegrass music which uses the five string resonator banjo almost exclusively is played in several common styles These include Scruggs style named after Earl Scruggs melodic or Keith style named for Bill Keith and three finger style with single string work also called Reno style after Don Reno In these styles the emphasis is on arpeggiated figures played in a continuous eighth note rhythm known as rolls All of these styles are typically played with fingerpicks The first five string electric solid body banjo was developed by Charles Wilburn Buck Trent Harold Shot Jackson and David Jackson in 1960 The five string banjo has been used in classical music since before the turn of the 20th century Contemporary and modern works have been written or arranged for the instrument by Jerry Garcia Buck Trent Bela Fleck Tony Trischka Ralph Stanley Steve Martin George Crumb Modest Mouse Jo Kondo Paul Elwood Hans Werner Henze notably in his Sixth Symphony Daniel Mason of Hank Williams III s Damn Band Beck the Water Tower Bucket Boys Todd Taylor J P Pickens Peggy Honeywell Norfolk amp Western Putnam Smith Iron amp Wine The Avett Brothers The Well Pennies Punch Brothers Julian Koster Sufjan Stevens Sarah Jarosz and sisters Leah Song and Chloe Smith from Rising AppalachiaFrederick Delius wrote for a banjo in his opera Koanga Ernst Krenek includes two banjos in his Kleine Symphonie Little Symphony Kurt Weill has a banjo in his opera The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny Viktor Ullmann included a tenor banjo part in his Piano Concerto op 25 Four string banjos Edit See also American Banjo Museum Ragtime era 1895 1919 and Jazz Age era 1910s 1930s This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Plectrum banjo from Gold Tone The four string plectrum banjo is a standard banjo without the short drone string It usually has 22 frets on the neck and a scale length of 26 to 28 inches and was originally tuned C3 G3 B3 D4 It can also be tuned like the top four strings of a guitar which is known as Chicago tuning 57 As the name suggests it is usually played with a guitar style pick that is a single one held between thumb and forefinger unlike the five string banjo which is either played with a thumbpick and two fingerpicks or with bare fingers The plectrum banjo evolved out of the five string banjo to cater to styles of music involving strummed chords The plectrum is also featured in many early jazz recordings and arrangements Four string banjos can be used for chordal accompaniment as in early jazz for single string melody playing as in Irish traditional music in chord melody style a succession of chords in which the highest notes carry the melody in tremolo style both on chords and single strings and a mixed technique called duo style that combines single string tremolo and rhythm chords 58 Four string banjos are used from time to time in musical theater Examples include Hello Dolly Mame Chicago Cabaret Oklahoma Half a Sixpence Annie Barnum The Threepenny Opera Monty Python s Spamalot and countless others Joe Raposo had used it variably in the imaginative seven piece orchestration for the long running TV show Sesame Street and has sometimes had it overdubbed with itself or an electric guitar The banjo is still albeit rarely in use in the show s arrangement currently Tenor banjo Edit Tenor banjos Man playing a four string banjo Two Gibson tenor banjos from the early 20th century at the American Banjo Museum Right A 15 fret tenor banjo Left A 19 fret tenor banjo The shorter necked tenor banjo with 17 short scale or 19 frets is also typically played with a plectrum It became a popular instrument after about 1910 Early models used for melodic picking typically had 17 frets on the neck and a scale length of 191 2 to 211 2 inches By the mid 1920s when the instrument was used primarily for strummed chordal accompaniment 19 fret necks with a scale length of 213 4 to 23 inches became standard The usual tuning is the all fifths tuning C3 G3 D4 A4 in which exactly seven semitones a perfect fifth occur between the open notes of consecutive strings this is identical to the tuning of a viola Other players particularly in Irish traditional music tune the banjo G2 D3 A3 E4 like an octave mandolin which lets the banjoist duplicate fiddle and mandolin fingering 59 The popularization of this tuning is usually attributed to the late Barney McKenna banjoist with The Dubliners 60 The tenor banjo was a common rhythm instrument in early 20th century dance bands Its volume and timbre suited early jazz and jazz influenced popular music styles and could both compete with other instruments such as brass instruments and saxophones and be heard clearly on acoustic recordings George Gershwin s Rhapsody in Blue in Ferde Grofe s original jazz orchestra arrangement includes tenor banjo with widely spaced chords not easily playable on plectrum banjo in its conventional tunings With development of the archtop and electric guitar the tenor banjo largely disappeared from jazz and popular music though keeping its place in traditional Dixieland jazz Some 1920s Irish banjo players picked out the melodies of jigs reels and hornpipes on tenor banjos decorating the tunes with snappy triplet ornaments The most important Irish banjo player of this era was Mike Flanagan of the New York based Flanagan Brothers one of the most popular Irish American groups of the day Other pre WWII Irish banjo players included Neil Nolan who recorded with Dan Sullivan s Shamrock Band in Boston and Jimmy McDade who recorded with the Four Provinces Orchestra in Philadelphia Meanwhile in Ireland the rise of ceili bands provided a new market for a loud instrument like the tenor banjo Use of the tenor banjo in Irish music has increased greatly since the folk revival of the 1960s 60 Six string banjos Edit Old six string zither banjo The six string banjo began as a British innovation by William Temlett one of England s earliest banjo makers He opened a shop in London in 1846 and sold seven string banjos which he marketed as zither banjos from his 1869 patent 61 A zither banjo usually has a closed back and sides with the drum body and skin tensioning system suspended inside the wooden rim the neck and string tailpiece mounted on the outside of the rim and the drone string led through a tube in the neck so that the tuning peg can be mounted on the head They were often made by builders who used guitar tuners that came in banks of three so five stringed instruments had a redundant tuner these banjos could be somewhat easily converted over to a six string banjo American Alfred Davis Cammeyer 1862 1949 a young violinist turned concert banjo player devised the six string zither banjo around 1880 British opera diva Adelina Patti advised Cammeyer that the zither banjo might be popular with English audiences as it had been invented there and Cammeyer went to London in 1888 With his virtuoso playing he helped show that banjos could make more sophisticated music than normally played by blackface minstrels He was soon performing for London society where he met Sir Arthur Sullivan who recommended that Cammeyer progress from arranging the music of others for banjo to composing his own music Modern six string bluegrass banjos have been made These add a bass string between the lowest string and the drone string on a five string banjo and are usually tuned G4 G2 D3 G3 B3 D4 Sonny Osborne played one of these instruments for several years It was modified by luthier Rual Yarbrough from a Vega five string model A picture of Sonny with this banjo appears in Pete Wernick s Bluegrass Banjo method book 62 Six string banjos known as banjo guitars basically consist of a six string guitar neck attached to a bluegrass or plectrum banjo body which allows players who have learned the guitar to play a banjo sound without having to relearn fingerings This was the instrument of the early jazz great Johnny St Cyr jazzmen Django Reinhardt Danny Barker Papa Charlie Jackson and Clancy Hayes as well as the blues and gospel singer Reverend Gary Davis Today musicians as diverse as Keith Urban Rod Stewart Taj Mahal Joe Satriani David Hidalgo Larry Lalonde and Doc Watson play the six string guitar banjo They have become increasingly popular since the mid 1990s Other banjos EditLow banjos Edit Cello banjo from Gold Tone In the late 19th and early 20th centuries in vogue in plucked string instrument ensembles guitar orchestras mandolin orchestras banjo orchestras was when the instrumentation was made to parallel that of the string section in symphony orchestras Thus violin viola cello bass became mandolin mandola mandocello mandobass or in the case of banjos banjolin banjola banjo cello bass banjo Because the range of pluck stringed instrument generally is not as great as that of comparably sized bowed string instruments other instruments were often added to these plucked orchestras to extend the range of the ensemble upwards and downwards 63 64 The banjo cello was normally tuned C2 G2 D3 A3 one octave below the tenor banjo like the cello and mandocello A five string cello banjo set up like a bluegrass banjo with the short fifth string but tuned one octave lower has been produced by the Goldtone company 65 Bass banjo Bass banjos have been produced in both upright bass formats and with standard horizontally carried banjo bodies Contrabass banjos with either three or four strings have also been made some of these had headstocks similar to those of bass violins Tuning varies on these large instruments with four string models sometimes being tuned in 4ths like a bass violin E1 A1 D2 G2 and sometimes in 5ths like a four string cello banjo one octave lower C1 G1 D2 A2 66 Banjo hybrids and variants Edit A number of hybrid instruments exist crossing the banjo with other stringed instruments Most of these use the body of a banjo often with a resonator and the neck of the other instrument Examples include the banjo mandolin first patented in 1882 67 and the banjo ukulele most famously played by the English comedian George Formby 68 These were especially popular in the early decades of the 20th century and were probably a result of a desire either to allow players of other instruments to jump on the banjo bandwagon at the height of its popularity or to get the natural amplification benefits of the banjo resonator in an age before electric amplification Conversely the tenor and plectrum guitars use the respective banjo necks on guitar bodies They arose in the early 20th century as a way for banjo players to double on guitar without having to relearn the instrument entirely 69 Instruments that have a five string banjo neck on a wooden body for example a guitar bouzouki or dobro body have also been made such as the banjola A 20th century Turkish instrument similar to the banjo is called the cumbus which combines a banjo like resonator with a neck derived from an oud At the end of the 20th century a development of the five string banjo was the BanSitar 70 This features a bone bridge giving the instrument a sitar like resonance The Brazilian Samba Banjo is basically a cavaquinho neck on a banjo body thereby producing a louder sound than the cavaquinho It is tuned the same as the top 4 strings of a 5 string banjo up an octave or any cavaquinho tuning Notable banjoists EditMain article List of banjo players See also American Banjo Museum Hall of Fame members Vess Ossman 1868 1923 was a leading five string banjoist whose career spanned the late 19th and early 20th centuries Vess started playing banjo at the age of 12 He was a popular recording artist and in fact one of the first recording artists ever when audio recording first became commercially available He formed various recording groups his most popular being the Ossman Dudley trio 71 72 Joel Sweeney 1810 1860 also known as Joe Sweeney was a musician and early blackface minstrel performer He is known for popularizing the playing of the banjo and has often been credited with advancing the physical development of the modern five string banjo Fred Van Eps 1878 1960 was a noted five string player and banjo maker who learned to play from listening to cylinder recordings of Vess Ossman He recorded for Edison s company producing some of the earliest disk recordings and also the earliest ragtime recordings in any medium other than player piano 73 Uncle Dave Macon 1870 1952 was a banjo player and comedian from Tennessee known for his plug hat gold teeth chin whiskers gates ajar collar and that million dollar Tennessee smile Eddie Peabody 1902 1970 was a great proponent of the plectrum banjo who performed for nearly five decades 1920 1968 and left a considerable legacy of recordings 74 An early reviewer dubbed him King of the Banjo and his was a household name for decades He went on to develop new instruments produce records and appear in movies Frank Lawes 1894 1970 of the United Kingdom developed a unique fingerstyle technique on the four string plectrum instrument and was a prolific composer of four string banjo music much of which is still performed and recorded today Harry Reser 1896 1965 plectrum and tenor banjo was regarded by some as the best tenor banjoist of the 1920s He wrote a large number of works for tenor banjo as well as instructional material authoring numerous banjo method books 75 over a dozen other instrumental method books for guitar ukulele mandolin etc and was well known in the banjo community Reser s accomplished single string and chord melody technique set a high mark that many subsequent tenor players endeavored and still endeavor to attain Ola Belle Reed 1916 2002 was an American folk singer songwriter and banjo player Pete Seeger 1919 2014 a singer songwriter who performed solo as well as with folk group The Weavers included five string banjo among his instruments His 1948 method book How to Play the Five String Banjo has been credited by thousands of banjoists including prominent professionals with sparking their interest in the instrument He is also credited with inventing the long neck banjo also known as the Seeger Banjo which adds three lower frets to the five string banjo s neck and tunes the four main strings down by a minor third to facilitate playing in singing keys more comfortable for some folk guitarists Earl Scruggs 1924 2012 whose career ranged from the end of World War II into the 21st century is widely regarded as the father of the bluegrass style of banjo playing 76 The three finger style of playing he developed while playing with Bill Monroe s band is known by his name Scruggs Style 77 Ralph Stanley 1927 2016 had a long career both with his brother as The Stanley Brothers and with his band The Clinch Mountain Boys He was awarded an honorary doctorate of music by Lincoln Memorial University is a member of the Bluegrass Hall of Fame and the Grand Ole Opry He won a Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance in the movie O Brother Where Art Thou Rual Yarbrough 1930 2010 Roy Clark 1933 2018 John Hartford 1937 2001 Ben Eldridge b 1938 Barney McKenna 1939 2012 was an Irish musician and a founding member of The Dubliners He played the tenor banjo violin mandolin and melodeon He was most renowned as a banjo player Barney used GDAE tuning on a 19 fret tenor banjo an octave below fiddle mandolin and according to musician Mick Moloney was single handedly responsible for making the GDAE tuned tenor banjo the standard banjo in Irish music Due to his skill level on the banjo fans all around the world and other members of The Dubliners nicknamed him Banjo Barney Bill Keith 1939 2015 Sonny Osborne b 1937 Pete Wernick b 1946 Tony Trischka b 1949 Bela Fleck b 1958 is widely acknowledged as one of the world s most innovative and technically proficient banjo players 78 His work spans many styles and genres including jazz bluegrass classical R amp B avant garde and world music and he has produced a substantial discography and videography He works extensively in both acoustic and electric media Fleck has been nominated for Grammy Awards in more categories than any other artist and has received 13 as of 2015 update 79 Noam Pikelny b 1981 is an American banjoist who plays eclectic styles including traditional bluegrass classical rock and jazz music He has won the Steve Martin Prize for Excellence in Banjo and Bluegrass in 2010 80 He has been nominated for eight Grammy Nominations and has been awarded one with his band The Punch Brothers in 2018 81 Clifford Essex b 1869 c 1946 a British banjoist who was also a musical instrument manufacturer Other important four string performers were Mike Pingitore who played tenor for the Paul Whiteman Orchestra through 1948 and Roy Smeck early radio and recording pioneer author of many instructional books and whose influential performances on many fretted instruments earned him the nickname Wizard of the Strings during his active years 1922 1950 Prominent tenor players of more recent vintage include Narvin Kimball d 2006 left handed banjoist of Preservation Hall Jazz Band fame Notable four string players currently active include ragtime and dixieland stylists Charlie Tagawa b 1935 and Bill Lowrey b 1963 Jazz guitarist Howard Alden b 1958 began his career on tenor banjo and still plays it at traditional jazz events Cynthia Sayer b 1962 is regarded as one of the top jazz plectrum banjoists Rock and country performer Winston Marshall b 1988 plays banjo among other instruments for the British folk rock group Mumford and Sons a band that won the 2013 Grammy Award for Best Album of the Year See also EditAkonting Banjo samba Banjo ukulele Benju Bulbul tarang Cuatro instrument Double neck guitjo Stringed instrument tuningsReferences Edit Bluegrass Music The Roots IBMA Archived from the original on 22 August 2006 Retrieved 25 August 2006 a b Odell Jay Scott Banjo Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online Oxford University Press Retrieved 23 February 2015 subscription required Greensboro rapper brings banjo to hip hop Adamian John Jan 23 2019 Yes Weekly Retrieved Apr 9 2023 Winans Bob Gibson George 2018 Black Banjo Fiddle and Dance in Kentucky and the Amalgamation of Black American Folk Music Banjo Roots and Branches Urbana University of Illinois pp 226 231 242 246 Winship David The Black American Music Tradition in Country Music Archived February 4 2007 at the Wayback Machine BCMA Birthplace of Country Music Alliance Retrieved 2 August 2007 Conway Cecelia 2005 African Banjo Echoes in Appalachia The University of Tennessee Press p 424 Old time oldtimey Music What is it TML A Traditional Music Library Retrieved 02 08 2007 a b c d e f g Epstein Dena J September 1975 The folk banjo A documentary history Ethnomusicology 19 3 347 371 doi 10 2307 850790 JSTOR 850790 How did banjos get their name The Banjo Guru Archived from the original on 27 December 2010 Retrieved 31 January 2016 Banjo Oxford English Dictionary Retrieved 12 October 2017 a b c Pestcoe Shlomoe Adams Greg C 2010 Banjo roots research Exploring the banjo s African American origins amp west African heritage Myspace com blog Archived from the original on 29 December 2012 Retrieved 19 April 2021 a b Chambers Douglas B 2009 Murder at Montpelier Ibo Africans in Virginia Univ Press of Mississippi p 180 ISBN 978 1 60473 246 7 Fischer David Hackett Kelly James C et al Virginia Historical Society 2000 Bound Away Virginia and the Westward Movement University of Virginia Press pp 66ff ISBN 978 0 8139 1774 0 Williams Cynric R 1827 Hamel the Obeah Man 1st ed London UK Hunt and Clarke p 17 Retrieved 7 February 2016 Entertainment at the Lyceum featuring stage character The Negro and his Banjer The Times London UK 5 October 1790 p 1 a b c Metro Voloshin The Banjo from Its Roots to the Ragtime Era An Essay and Bibliography Music Reference Services Quarterly Vol 6 3 1998 a b c d e f Banjo History banjomuseum org American Banjo Museum Archived from the original on 15 May 2009 Retrieved 10 February 2020 Taken from a May 15 2009 archived version of the American Banjo Museums website Gibson George R and Robert B Winans Black Banjo Fiddle and Dance in Kentucky and the Amalgamation of African American and Anglo American Folk Music In Banjo Roots and Branches 224 Urbana University of Illinois Press 2018 Tutwiler Edward 18 November 2016 About That Banjo Americana Rhythm Music Magazine Retrieved 9 February 2020 a b Bluestein Gene October 1964 America s Folk Instrument Notes on the Five String Banjo Western Folklore 23 4 243 244 247 doi 10 2307 1520666 JSTOR 1520666 The English Zither Banjo Archived from the original on 3 July 2008 Retrieved 24 January 2008 a b c Webb Robert Lloyd 1984 Ring the Banjar The Banjo in America from Folklore to Factory Anaheim Hills California Centerstream Publishing p 16 Carlin Bob 2007 The Birth of the Banjo Jefferson North Carolina McFarland and Company p 145 Schreyer Lowell H 2007 The Banjo Entertainers Mankato Minnesota Minnesota Heritage Publishing p 64 Schreyer Lowell H 2007 The Banjo Entertainers Mankato Minnesota Minnesota Heritage Publishing p 162 Webb Robert Lloyd 1984 Ring the Banjar The Banjo in America from Folklore to Factory Anaheim Hills California Centerstream Publishing p 12 a b Banjo craze dog and cat skins Newspapers com 19 January 1961 p 9 Retrieved 19 April 2021 a b c Schreyer Lowell H 2007 The Banjo Entertainers Mankato Minnesota Minnesota Heritage Publishing pp 83 84 a b c d e Schreyer Lowell H 2007 The Banjo Entertainers Mankato Minnesota Minnesota Heritage Publishing pp 85 86 Schreyer Lowell H 2007 The Banjo Entertainers Mankato Minnesota Minnesota Heritage Publishing p 128 Schreyer Lowell H 2007 The Banjo Entertainers Mankato Minnesota Minnesota Heritage Publishing p 127 a b Schreyer Lowell H 2007 The Banjo Entertainers Mankato Minnesota Minnesota Heritage Publishing p 232 a b Stewart Samuel Swaim 1888 The Banjo A Dissertation Philadelphia Pennsylvania S S Stewart pp 43 45 Schreyer Lowell H 2007 The Banjo Entertainers Mankato Minnesota Minnesota Heritage Publishing pp 151 170 Webb Robert Lloyd 1984 Ring the Banjar The Banjo in America from Folklore to Factory Anaheim Hills California Centerstream Publishing p 13 a b Webb Robert Lloyd 1984 Ring the Banjar The Banjo in America from Folklore to Factory Anaheim Hills California Centerstream Publishing p 15 Schreyer Lowell H 2007 The Banjo Entertainers Mankato Minnesota Minnesota Heritage Publishing p 126 a b Peters Sean An Olive Branch in Appalachia The Integration of the Banjo into 19th Century American Folk Music PDF Thesis pp 104 105 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 28 March 2020 In America it has always been seen as an instrument of the lower class a b Schreyer Lowell H 2007 The Banjo Entertainers Mankato Minnesota Minnesota Heritage Publishing pp 152 153 230 Schreyer Lowell H 2007 The Banjo Entertainers Mankato Minnesota Minnesota Heritage Publishing pp 148 149 169 a b Schreyer Lowell H 2007 The Banjo Entertainers Mankato Minnesota Minnesota Heritage Publishing pp 152 230 Schreyer Lowell H 2007 The Banjo Entertainers Mankato Minnesota Minnesota Heritage Publishing p 163 Schreyer Lowell H 2007 The Banjo Entertainers Mankato Minnesota Minnesota Heritage Publishing p 175 a b c d The Classic Era Sign inside museum Oklahoma City American Banjo Museum n d a b c d e f g h Banjo History The National Four String Banjo Hall of Fame Museum Archived from the original on 20 May 2008 Banjo History banjomuseum org American Banjo Museum Archived from the original on 15 May 2009 Retrieved 10 February 2020 The resulting catastrophic collapse of the stock market and Great Depression which followed marked the end of the jazz age the final years in which the banjo held a place of prominence in American popular music By 1940 for all practical purposes the banjo was dead Entry display at the American Banjo Museum motion picture music signs 3 dimensional displays posters voiceover Oklahoma City Oklahoma American Banjo Museum a b c Earl Scruggs Bluegrass Pioneers New Traditions Sign inside museum Oklahoma City American Banjo Museum n d This ref takes from three signs from the same area in the museum The Irish Banjo 7 February 2020 Retrieved 7 February 2020 a b Davis Janet 2002 Mel Bay s Back Up Banjo p 54 ISBN 0 7866 6525 4 Emphasis original a b Erbsen Wayne 2004 Bluegrass Banjo for the Complete Ignoramus p 13 ISBN 1 883206 44 8 History of the Banjo Bluegrassbanjo org Retrieved 2 December 2016 Banjoes Rang Out Princeton Traditional Music Festival Retrieved 2 December 2016 MacKillop Rob 22 January 2011 Early Fingerstyle Banjo Retrieved 29 October 2022 Ozark 2102G 5 String Open Back Banjo Pro Music International Promusicinternational co uk Archived from the original on 3 December 2016 Retrieved 2 December 2016 Trischka Tony 1992 Banjo Songbook p 20 ISBN 0 8256 0197 5 Witt Lawrence What is a Plectrum Banjo Deering Banjos Deering Banjos Retrieved 15 October 2020 Waldrep Barry 13 July 2015 Sweet Sounds of the Banjo The History of the Banjo Banjo com Banjo com Bandrowski David 14 November 2013 The Tenor Banjo Deering Banjo Company Retrieved 27 June 2014 a b Meade Don The Irish Tenor Banjo PDF Blarneystar com Retrieved 27 June 2014 Race Paul What is a Zither Banjo Creek Don t Rise Retrieved 27 January 2021 Wernick Pete Bluegrass Banjo Oak Publications Oakland California 1992 p 27 0 825 60148 7 Archived copy Archived from the original on 20 December 2013 Retrieved 4 October 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Photographic Image of Banjo Orchestra JPG Heftone org Retrieved 26 January 2017 Insert name 27 November 2015 CEB 5 Gold Tone Music Group Goldtone com Archived from the original on 17 April 2015 Retrieved 31 January 2016 Contra bass banjo Minstrel Banjo Minstrelbanjo ning com 21 April 2011 Retrieved 31 January 2016 Don Meade The Irish Tenor Banjo PDF Blarneystar com Retrieved 26 January 2017 George Formbys Little Strad banjolele up for sale The Times London subscription required 30 May 2008 What is a tenor guitar Retrieved 1 September 2020 Bansitar Helmutrheingans co uk Retrieved 26 January 2017 Gracyk Tom 2000 Popular American Recording Pioneers 1895 1925 Routledge Haworth Popular Culture series p 106ff ISBN 0 789012 20 0 Tichenor Trebor Jay Ossman Vess L Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online Oxford University Press Retrieved 23 February 2015 Gracyk Tim Tim Gracyk s Phonographs Singers and Old Records Fred Van Eps Banjoist Gracyk com Retrieved 26 January 2017 The Banjo Wizardry of Eddie Peabody Dot Records DLP 3023 mono date not known liner notes e g Harry Reser s Manual for Tenor Banjo Technique Robbins Music Corporation 1927 Harry Reser s Let s Play The Tenor Banjo Remick Music Crop 1959 Picture Chords for Tenor Banjo Remick Music Crop 1960 et al Willis Barry R America s Music Bluegrass A History of Bluegrass Music in the Words of Its Pioneers Pine Valley Music 1997 ISBN 0 965240 70 3 Trischka Tony Earl Scruggs Banjo Song Book Oak Publications 1977 Bela Fleck Rhapsody Retrieved 8 August 2013 Awards Grammy Awards and Nominations Mywebpages comcast net Archived from the original on 18 August 2007 Retrieved 8 August 2013 Noam Pikelny Wins the Steve Martin Prize for Excellence in Banjo and Bluegrass SteveMartin com 8 September 2010 Retrieved 30 December 2020 Artist Noam Pikelny Grammy Award Retrieved 30 December 2020 Further reading EditBanjo history Edit Conway Cecelia 1995 African Banjo Echoes in Appalachia A Study of Folk Traditions University of Tennessee Press Paper ISBN 0 87049 893 2 cloth ISBN 0 87049 892 4 A study of the influence of African Americans on banjo playing throughout U S history De Smaele G 1983 Banjo a cinq cordes Brussels Musee Instrumental MIM Brussels D 1983 2170 1 De Smaele G 2015 Banjo Attitudes Paris L Harmattan 2015 De Smaele G 2019 A Five String Banjo Sourcebook Paris L Harmattan 2019 Dubois Laurent 2016 The Banjo America s African Instrument Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 2016 Epstein Dena 1977 Sinful Tunes and Spirituals Black Folk Music to the Civil War University of Illinois Press 2003 Winner of the Simkins Prize of the Southern Historical Association 1979 Winner of the Chicago Folklore Prize The anniversary edition of a classic study of black slave music in America Gaddy Kristina 2022 Well of Souls Uncovering the Banjo s Hidden History W W Norton amp Company 2022 ISBN 978 0393866803 The author uncovers the banjo s key role in Black spirituality ritual and rebellion Gibson George R 2018 Black Banjo Fiddle and Dance in Kentucky and the Amalgamation of African American and Anglo American Folk Music Banjo Roots and Branches Winans 2018 University of Illinois Press 2018 Gibson s historiographic chapter uncovers much new information about black banjo and fiddle players and dance in Kentucky and their influence on white musicians from the 1780s Gura Philip F and James F Bollman 1999 America s Instrument The Banjo in the Nineteenth Century The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 2484 4 The definitive history of the banjo focusing on the instrument s development in the 1800s Katonah Museum of Art 2003 The Birth of the Banjo Katonah Museum of Art Katonah New York ISBN 0 915171 64 3 Linn Karen 1994 That Half Barbaric Twang The Banjo in American Popular Culture University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 06433 X Scholarly cultural history of the banjo focusing on how its image has evolved over the years Tsumura Akira 1984 Banjos The Tsumura Collection Kodansha International Ltd ISBN 0 87011 605 3 An illustrated history of the banjo featuring the world s premier collection Webb Robert Lloyd 1996 Ring the Banjar 2nd edition Centerstream Publishing ISBN 1 57424 016 1 A short history of the banjo with pictures from an exhibition at the MIT Museum Winans Robert 2018 Banjo Roots and Branches University of Illinois Press 2018 The story of the banjo s journey from Africa to the western hemisphere blends music history and a union of cultures In Banjo Roots and Branches Robert B Winans presents cutting edge scholarship that covers the instrument s West African origins and its adaptations and circulation in the Caribbean and United States External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Banjo family instruments Banjo Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed 1911 The Banjo in Irish Traditional Music 200 banjo makers pre 2nd WW BANJO ATTITUDES Le banjo a cinq cordes son histoire generale sa documentation Gerard De Smaele livre ebook epub 19th Century Banjo Instruction Manuals To Hear Your Banjo Play 1947 Alan Lomax film 16 minutes Fingerstyle Tenor Banjo Banjo Newsletter Banjo Hangout Online Open Source Banjo Chord Generator Dr Joan Dickerson Sparky Rucker and George Gibson with host Michael Johnathon explore the African American History of the Banjo through conversation and music on show 350 of the WoodSongs Old Time Radio Hour Both audio and video are provided The Physics of Banjos A Conversation with David Politzer Ideas Roadshow 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Banjo amp oldid 1152239794, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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