Giant (and old!) Tambourine - Minstrel Banjo2024-03-29T09:34:28Zhttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/forum/topics/giant-and-old-tambourine?commentId=2477478%3AComment%3A120263&feed=yes&xn_auth=noHey, this is cool. Glad you…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2018-11-07:2477478:Comment:1763112018-11-07T01:07:40.693ZStrumeliahttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/Strumelia
<p>Hey, this is cool. Glad you commented on this Richard- and it's good to have a knowledgeable percussion person around here.</p>
<p> I also got a kick out of reading the blast-from-the-past posts from a few years ago. =8-o ...lolol</p>
<p>Hey, this is cool. Glad you commented on this Richard- and it's good to have a knowledgeable percussion person around here.</p>
<p> I also got a kick out of reading the blast-from-the-past posts from a few years ago. =8-o ...lolol</p> Hey yeah you may be right abo…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2014-11-09:2477478:Comment:1205512014-11-09T17:47:23.212ZStrumeliahttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/Strumelia
<p>Hey yeah you may be right about that John.</p>
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<p>Yes that style is older, but is most definitely used (and truly needed once you get above 16" diamter) even today in tambourine/frame drum playing all over the world, not only in europe. Never went extinct. Many frame drums (tambourines without the jingles) are held and played vertically in the lap out of necessity once they pass a certain size. Unless the style includes twirlng, tossing/weighting up and down to sound the jingles…</p>
<p>Hey yeah you may be right about that John.</p>
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<p>Yes that style is older, but is most definitely used (and truly needed once you get above 16" diamter) even today in tambourine/frame drum playing all over the world, not only in europe. Never went extinct. Many frame drums (tambourines without the jingles) are held and played vertically in the lap out of necessity once they pass a certain size. Unless the style includes twirlng, tossing/weighting up and down to sound the jingles like with the Daf.</p> I think he means the Italian/…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2014-11-09:2477478:Comment:1202892014-11-09T17:12:52.594ZJohn Cohenhttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/JohnCohen
<p>I think he means the Italian/English Salon music era, not the style. The style never died out and is still common in a number of European music traditions. </p>
<p>I think he means the Italian/English Salon music era, not the style. The style never died out and is still common in a number of European music traditions. </p> He obviously knows his stuff!…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2014-11-09:2477478:Comment:1204742014-11-09T17:00:00.884ZStrumeliahttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/Strumelia
<p>He obviously knows his stuff! Great info!</p>
<p>When he says "It predates the minstrel music and would link up nicely historically speaking if that indeed were the case." I <span style="text-decoration: underline;">think</span> by "it" he means the "the style of tambourine playing" he is taking about right before that in the previous sentence. That's a bit confusing- but i don't think he means that your tambourine<em> </em>predates minstrel music. I think he means the older upright…</p>
<p>He obviously knows his stuff! Great info!</p>
<p>When he says "It predates the minstrel music and would link up nicely historically speaking if that indeed were the case." I <span style="text-decoration: underline;">think</span> by "it" he means the "the style of tambourine playing" he is taking about right before that in the previous sentence. That's a bit confusing- but i don't think he means that your tambourine<em> </em>predates minstrel music. I think he means the older upright position playing style commonly seen with larger tambourines predates minstrel... and also used with larger hand held frame drums.</p>
<p>Great that you contacted him! :)</p> I got in touch with Dr. Robin…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2014-11-09:2477478:Comment:1203902014-11-09T15:54:15.035ZJohn Cohenhttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/JohnCohen
<p>I got in touch with Dr. Robinson and here is what he had to say:</p>
<p>"</p>
<div>The jingles are small and on the one’s I have seen they were much larger but that isn’t necessarily a rule. The tacking on of the head is a Chinese technology. It appears to be old but the arrangement of the jingles in three areas with a single long slot for each area is strange. It seems too uniform to have been done by hand. I have a modern made Italian tamburello with jingles in clumped areas likes that…</div>
<p>I got in touch with Dr. Robinson and here is what he had to say:</p>
<p>"</p>
<div>The jingles are small and on the one’s I have seen they were much larger but that isn’t necessarily a rule. The tacking on of the head is a Chinese technology. It appears to be old but the arrangement of the jingles in three areas with a single long slot for each area is strange. It seems too uniform to have been done by hand. I have a modern made Italian tamburello with jingles in clumped areas likes that (on mine 4 areas).</div>
<div>It is far too large to hold flat like modern tambourines. This must have been held in the upright position just like see in the old flyers and how tambourine is played in many parts of Europe in folk music (Italy, Spain).</div>
<div>I can tell you that this is nothing like the tambourines made in Italy and England during the salon music period from 1799-1840 by people like Joseph Dale, Sr. and Tebaldo Monzani. Based on that I would concur that this was American made. Some of that salon music was published in Boston but I have never found evidence that the style of tambourine playing came with it. It predates the minstrel music and would link up nicely historically speaking if that indeed were the case. Many of the performers in England were of various African American descent. The jingles on the one you have are very different from those UK/Italian made ones from that period. I haven’t seen German silver jingles from that period. The ones available now are always hammered. The hole that the jingle pin goes through seems overly large but on cheaper jingles this can occur due to wear."</div> Yes I thought of him too, Wes…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2014-11-08:2477478:Comment:1203852014-11-08T16:28:57.727ZStrumeliahttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/Strumelia
<p>Yes I thought of him too, Wes. He has a great extensive site and vast drum-specific knowledge.</p>
<p>Yes I thought of him too, Wes. He has a great extensive site and vast drum-specific knowledge.</p> http://www.nscottrobinson.com…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2014-11-08:2477478:Comment:1202842014-11-08T14:11:07.019ZWes Merchanthttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/WesMerchant
<p><a href="http://www.nscottrobinson.com/gallery.php" target="_blank">http://www.nscottrobinson.com/gallery.php</a></p>
<p>You might try getting in touch with this fellow.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.nscottrobinson.com/gallery.php" target="_blank">http://www.nscottrobinson.com/gallery.php</a></p>
<p>You might try getting in touch with this fellow.</p> I did a pretty extensive sear…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2014-11-08:2477478:Comment:1202832014-11-08T02:05:56.704ZJohn Cohenhttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/JohnCohen
<p>I did a pretty extensive search online for them. They must be pretty reclusive. Maybe that's why there are so few surviving tambourines we know of... there are a few collectors out there living in their parent's basement hoarding all of them. ;)</p>
<p>I did a pretty extensive search online for them. They must be pretty reclusive. Maybe that's why there are so few surviving tambourines we know of... there are a few collectors out there living in their parent's basement hoarding all of them. ;)</p> Yeah i was just pulling your…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2014-11-08:2477478:Comment:1202822014-11-08T02:01:08.109ZStrumeliahttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/Strumelia
<p>Yeah i was just pulling your leg about the tambourine expert. ;) But there must be a few out there, somewhere!</p>
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<p>Yeah i was just pulling your leg about the tambourine expert. ;) But there must be a few out there, somewhere!</p>
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<p></p> The guy I brought it to (not…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2014-11-08:2477478:Comment:1203842014-11-08T01:12:32.287ZJohn Cohenhttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/JohnCohen
<p>The guy I brought it to (not sure if he wants me to post his name or not) took one look at it, the construction, and the wood and just knew right away. He's seen a lot of 19th century tambourines, American and European, and was able to immediately rule out European origin, and given the location it was found and its age, that narrowed it down nicely. By the way, he is primarily a 19th century banjo and guitar expert, and I'm not sure he'd consider himself to be a tambourine expert. The…</p>
<p>The guy I brought it to (not sure if he wants me to post his name or not) took one look at it, the construction, and the wood and just knew right away. He's seen a lot of 19th century tambourines, American and European, and was able to immediately rule out European origin, and given the location it was found and its age, that narrowed it down nicely. By the way, he is primarily a 19th century banjo and guitar expert, and I'm not sure he'd consider himself to be a tambourine expert. The jury is still out on whether those actually exist ;)</p>
<p>I don't think there are previous tack holes although it is a bit hard to tell. The skin that's on there is practically petrified. It feels like really thin cardboard and I'm worried if I fool with it to peak under the edge it will shatter into a bunch of pieces. Besides the duck tape, staples, and different tack sizes, there is also some copper wire tied to the rim and holding it together in a place where it split in two. Somebody was really determined to keep this thing in one piece!</p>