User Contributed Dictionary
see Banjos
Alternative spellings
Noun
banjos- Plural of banjo
Extensive Definition
- For other uses, see Banjo (disambiguation)
The banjo is a stringed
instrument developed by
enslaved Africans in the
United
States, adapted from several African instruments. The name
banjo commonly is thought to be derived from the Kimbundu term
mbanza. Some etymologists derive it from a dialectal pronunciation
of "bandore",
though recent research suggests that it may come from a Senegambian
term for the bamboo stick
used for the instrument's neck. Another possibility is derivation
from the word Banjar, a stringed
folk instrument, used in the music of Antigua and Barbuda.
History
African Slaves in the American South and Appalachia fashioned the earliest banjos after instruments they had been familiar with in Africa, with some of the earliest instruments sometimes referred to now as "gourd banjos". One example would be an akonting. It is a spike folk lute played by the Jola tribe of Senegambia. Another similar instrument is the xalam of Senegal which dates back to ancient Egypt. The modern banjo was popularized by the American minstrel performer Joel Sweeney in the 1830s. Banjos were introduced in Britain in the 1840s by Sweeney's group, the American Virginia Minstrels, and became very popular in music halls.Modern forms
The modern banjo comes in a variety of forms, including four-(plectrum and tenor banjos) and five-string versions. A six-string version, tuned and played similar to a guitar, is gaining popularity. In almost all of its forms the banjo's playing is characterised by a fast strumming or arpeggiated right hand, although there are many different playing styles.Usage
Today, the banjo commonly is associated with country and bluegrass music. Historically, however, the banjo occupied a central place in African American traditional music, as well as in the minstrel shows of the 19th century. In fact, African Americans exerted a strong, early influence on the development of both country and bluegrass through the introduction of banjo, and as well through the innovation of musical techniques in the playing of both the banjo and fiddle. Recently, the banjo has enjoyed inclusion in a wide variety of musical genres, including pop crossover music and Celtic punk.Five-string banjo
The instrument is available in many forms. The five-string banjo is credited to Joel Walker Sweeney, an American minstrel performer from Appomattox Court House, Virginia. Sweeney wanted an instrument similar to the banjar played by African Americans in the American South, but at the same time, he wanted to implement some new ideas. He worked with a New York drum maker to replace the banjar's skin-covered gourd with the modern open-backed drum-like pot, and added another string to give the instrument more range or a drone. This new banjo came to be tuned gCGBD; somewhat higher than the eAEG#B tuning of the banjar, and Sweeney was playing it by the 1830s.The banjo can be played in several styles and is
used in various forms of music. American old-time
music typically uses the five-string open back
banjo. It is played in a number of different styles, the most
common of which are called clawhammer (or "claw-hammer")
and frailing, characterised by the use of a downward rather than
upward motion when striking the strings with the fingers. Banjo
picks are inserted onto the fingers for a smoother playing.
Frailing techniques use the thumb to catch the fifth string for a
drone after
each strum or twice in each action ("double thumbing"), or to pick
out additional melody notes in what is known as "drop-thumb."
Pete
Seeger popularised a folk style by
combining clawhammer with "up picking", usually without the use of
fingerpicks.
Bluegrass
music, which uses the five-string resonator banjo exclusively,
is played in several common styles. These include Scruggs
style, named after Earl
Scruggs, melodic or Keith style,
and three-finger style with single string work, also called Reno
style after Don Reno,
legendary father of Don Wayne
Reno. In these styles the emphasis is on arpeggiated figures
played in a continuous eighth-note rhythm. All of these styles are
typically played with fingerpicks.
Many tunings are used for the five-string banjo.
Probably the most common, particularly in bluegrass, is the open G
tuning (gDGBd). In earlier times, the tuning gCGBd was commonly
used instead. Other tunings common in old-time music include double
C (gCGCd), sawmill or mountain minor (gDGCd) also called Modal or
Mountain Modal, old-time A (aDADE) a step up from double C, often
played with a violin accompaniment, and open D (f#DF#Ad). These
tunings are often taken up a tone, either by tuning up or using a
capo.
The fifth (drone) string is the same gauge as the
first, but it is generally five frets shorter, three quarters the
length of the rest (one notable exception is the long necked
Pete
Seeger model, where the fifth string is eight frets shorter).
This presents special problems for using a capo to change the pitch of
the instrument. For small changes (going up or down one or two
semitones, for example) it is possible simply to retune the fifth
string. Otherwise various devices, known as fifth string capos, are
available effectively to shorten the string. Many banjo players
favour the use of model railroad spikes or titanium spikes (usually
installed at the seventh fret and sometimes at others), under which
the string can be hooked to keep it pressed down on the fret.
While the five-string banjo has been used in
classical music since the turn of the century,
contemporary and modern works have been written for the
instrument by Béla
Fleck, Tim Lake, George
Crumb, Jo Kondo,
Paul
Elwood, Hans
Werner Henze (notably in his Sixth
Symphony), Beck, J.P.
Pickens, Peggy Honeywell and Sufjan
Stevens.
Four-string banjo
The plectrum banjo has four strings, lacking the shorter fifth drone string, and around 22 frets; it is usually tuned CGBD. 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. Eddie Peabody was possibly the greatest exponent of the plectrum banjo style in the early to mid twentieth century.A further development is the tenor banjo, which
also has four strings and is also typically played with a plectrum.
It has a shorter neck with around 19 frets and a scale length of 21
3/4" - 23" on shorter models, and 25 1/2" to 26 3/4" on longer
ones. It is usually tuned CGDA, like a mandola, but has also been tuned
GDAE like an octave
mandolin which produces a more mellow tone. Tenor Banjos also
come in short scale with 17 frets and are used by players who use
fiddle fingering, in the GDAE tuning. These tunings became popular
around the turn of the century due to the growing popularity of the
mandolin. Another alternative, called "Chicago" tuning is DGBE
(like the first four strings of a guitar) which is now regaining
popularity due to the number of guitarists who double on banjo. The
tenor banjo has become a standard instrument for Irish
traditional music.
The tenor banjo was also a common rhythm
instrument in early jazz and dance bands throughout the 1920s and
1930s. 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. However, as the guitar gained in
popularity in the 1930s, the tenor banjo moved out of mainstream
jazz and popular music finding a place in traditional jazz and
Dixieland jazz.
Harry Reser
was arguably the best tenor banjoist of the early twentieth century
and wrote a large number of works for tenor banjo as well as
instructional material.
The tenor banjo is regaining popularity as
Dixieland jazz finds its way back into experimental improvisational
music. Its rise to popularity is being supported by the recent
manufacturing of tenors at a working musicians price.
Four-string banjo playing (in addition to rhythm
playing) can include single string playing, chord melody (in which
a succession of chords are played where the highest note forms a
melody), a tremolo style (both of chords and single strings) and a
complicated technique called duo style which combines single string
tremolo and rhythm chords.
Roy Smeck was
an influential performer on many fretted instruments including
banjo. He also wrote a number of solos and instructional books.
Johnny
Biar and Buddy
Wachter are prominent four-string banjoists currently working
professionally.
Banjo variants
A British innovation was the 6-string banjo,
developed by William Temlett, one of England's earliest banjo
makers, who opened his shop in London in 1846. American Alfred
Davis Cammeyer (1862-1949), a young violinist-turned banjo concert
player, devised the 5-string zither-banjo around 1880, which had a
wood resonator and metal "wire" strings (the 1st and 2nd melody
strings and 5th "thumb" string; the 3rd melody string was gut and
the 4th was silk covered) as well as frets and guitar-style tuning
machines. British opera
diva Adelina
Patti advised Cammeyer that the zither-banjo might be popular
with English audiences, and Cammeyer went to London in 1888. After
convincing the British that banjos could be used for more
sophisticated music than was normally played by blackface
minstrels, he was soon performing for London society, where he met
Sir Arthur
Sullivan, who recommended that Cammeyer progress from writing
banjo arrangements of music to composing his own music.
(Interesting to note that, supposedly unbeknownst
to Cammeyer, William Temlett had patented a 7-string closed back
banjo in 1869, and was already marketing it as a
"zither-banjo.")
The first 5-string electric solid-body banjo was
developed by Charles (Buck) Wilburn Trent, Harold "Shot" Jackson,
and David Jackson in 1960.
The six-string or guitar-banjo was the instrument
of the early jazz great Johnny St.
Cyr, as well as of jazzmen Django
Reinhardt, Danny
Barker, Papa
Charlie Jackson and Clancy
Hayes, as well as the blues and gospel singer The Reverend
Gary Davis. Nowadays, it sometimes appears under such names as
guitanjo, guitjo, ganjo,
or banjitar.
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; the Banjolin; Banjoline and the
banjo ukulele or
banjolele. These were
especially popular in the early decades of the twentieth 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.
Instruments using the five-string banjo neck on a
wooden body (for example, that of a bouzouki or resonator guitar) have also been
made, such as the banjola. A 20th-Century Turkish
instrument very similar to the banjo is called Cümbüs.
A different variation is the bassjo used most notably by
Les
Claypool on the song "Iowan Gal." It
is, in essence, a banjo with a bass guitar
neck and bass strings.
Rhythm guitarist Dave Day of
1960's proto-punks The Monks
replaced his guitar with a six-string, gut-strung banjo upon which
he played guitar chords. This instrument sounds much more metallic,
scratchy and wiry than a standard electric guitar, due to its
amplification via a small microphone stuck inside the banjo's
body.
Banjo makers
- Aria
- Bacon & Day
- Bart Reiter
- Deering Banjo Company
- Framus
- Gibson Guitar Corporation
- Huber
- Iida
- Oldfield
- Ome
- Stelling
- Vega
- Wildwood Banjos
References
See also
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.
- 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.
Instructional (5-String Banjo)
- Bailey, Jay. "Historical Origin and Stylistic Development of the Five-String Banjo." The Journal of American Folklore 85.335 (1972): 58-65.
- Costello, Patrick (2003). The How and the Tao of Old Time Banjo. Pik-Ware Publishing. ISBN 0-9744190-0-1. Instruction in frailing banjo. Available online under a Creative Commons license on several web sites including ezfolk.
- Richards, Tobe A. The Bluegrass Banjo Chord Bible: Open G Tuning 2,160 Chords. Cabot Books (2008) ISBN 978-1-906207-08-3. Comprehesive chord dictionary featuring 2,160 chords, moveable shapes, slash chords, tuning diagrams, historical factfile etc. 94 pages.
- Scruggs, Earl. "Earl Scruggs and the 5-String Banjo". Hal Leonard Corporation. ISBN 0-634-06042-2. Instruction in Scruggs or 3 finger style 5 string banjo.
- Seeger, Mike (2005). "Old-Time Banjo Styles". Homespun Tapes. . Seeger teaches several old-time picking techniques - clawhammer, two-finger, three-finger, up-picking and others.
- Seeger, Pete (1969). How to Play the 5-String Banjo. 3rd edition. Music Sales Corporation. ISBN 0-8256-0024-3. The seminal instruction book, still in print decades later. Seeger has since recorded an instruction video, available on DVD.
- Wernick, Pete (1985 DVD). Beginning Bluegrass Banjo. Full course in the basics of Scruggs style.
- Wernick, Pete & Trischka, Tony (2000). Masters of the Five-String Banjo. Acutab Publications. ISBN 0-7866-5939-4. 70 banjo pieces from Scruggs, Reno, Osborne and Crowe to Fleck, Munde, and Cloud. Technique, improvising, set-up, learning, backup, favorite banjos, practice tips, equipment.
- Winans, Robert B. "The Folk, the Stage, and the Five-String Banjo in the Nineteenth Century." The Journal of American Folklore 89. 354 (1976): 407-37. 14 Sep. 2006.
Instructional (Tenor Banjo)
- Bay, Mel (1990). Complete Tenor Banjo Method. Porcupine Press. ISBN 1-56222-018-7. An instructional guide.
- Bay, Mel (1973). Deluxe Encyclopedia of Tenor Banjo Chords. Porcupine Press. ISBN 0-87166-877-7. A comprehensive chord dictionary for CGDA or standard tuning.
- Nichols, Fox (1985). "I Do Declare That Tenors Are Cool: But They are for Chumps". Grill Books. ISBN 0-756842-445-1. A comprehensive guide for dislikement of tenors.
- O'Connor, Gerry. 50 solos for Irish tenor banjo: (featuring jigs, reels and hornpipes arranged for E, A, D, G and A, D, G, C tuning). Soodlum, Waltons Mfg. Ltd. ISBN 978-1857201482.
- Richards, Tobe A. (2006). The Tenor Banjo Chord Bible: CGDA Standard Jazz Tuning 1,728 Chords. Cabot Books. ISBN 0-9553944-4-9. A comprehensive chord dictionary in standard jazz tuning.
- Richards, Tobe A. (2006). The Irish Tenor Banjo Chord Bible: GDAE Irish Tuning 1,728 Chords. Cabot Books. ISBN 0-9553944-6-5. A comprehensive chord dictionary in Irish tuning.
- Wachter, Buddy (2005). Learning Tenor Banjo. Homespun. ISBN 1-59773-078-5. An instructional guide.
Instructional (Plectrum Banjo)
- Richards, Tobe A. (2007). The Plectrum Banjo Chord Bible: CGBD Standard Tuning 1,728 Chords. Cabot Books. ISBN 978-1-906207-07-6. A comprehensive chord dictionary in standard tuning.
External links
- Field Recorders Collective Collection of CDs of American traditional styles; Appalachian, fiddling, banjo, Cajun, Gospel from private collections now made available to the public
- The International Bluegrass Music Museum
- Banjo Music & Theory
- Old-Time Banjo Music from Rural America
- Chord finder for 4-string banjos
- Banjo-L
- The Banjo Hangout
- The Banjo Newsletter
- Cybergrass - The Internet's Bluegrass Music News Magazine.
- Chords for Banjo 5 string.
banjos in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Банджа
banjos in Bulgarian: Банджо
banjos in Czech: Bendžo
banjos in Danish: Banjo
banjos in German: Banjo
banjos in Estonian: Bandžo
banjos in Spanish: Banjo
banjos in Esperanto: Banĝo
banjos in French: Banjo
banjos in Scottish Gaelic: Bainsiò
banjos in Galician: Banjo
banjos in Italian: Banjo
banjos in Hebrew: בנג'ו
banjos in Georgian: ბანჯო
banjos in Dutch: Banjo
banjos in Japanese: バンジョー
banjos in Norwegian: Banjo
banjos in Polish: Banjo
banjos in Portuguese: Banjo
banjos in Romanian: Banjo
banjos in Russian: Банджо
banjos in Simple English: Banjo
banjos in Slovenian: Banjo
banjos in Finnish: Banjo
banjos in Swedish: Banjo
banjos in Turkish: Banjo
banjos in Ukrainian: Банджо
banjos in Chinese: 班卓琴