Shedding light on the beginnings of fingerstyle banjo and other topics - Minstrel Banjo2024-03-29T02:12:46Zhttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/forum/topics/shedding-light-on-the-beginnings-of-fingerstyle-banjo-and-other?commentId=2477478%3AComment%3A126277&feed=yes&xn_auth=noYou don't need to be that goo…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2015-06-15:2477478:Comment:1282132015-06-15T03:54:50.132ZTim Twisshttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/TimTwiss
<p>You don't need to be that good to play this music. You only need some soul.</p>
<p>You don't need to be that good to play this music. You only need some soul.</p> That is over my head, CW.
Mor…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2015-06-13:2477478:Comment:1283742015-06-13T04:39:38.792ZOK-4http://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/OK4
<p>That is over my head, CW.</p>
<p>More on playing styles: I mentioned Pete Seeger saying that most folks musicians that he encountered only knew maybe three songs using simple accompaniment. But he also stressed that many of these same people played with great artistry.</p>
<p>Artistry is not the same as technical brilliance or complexity.</p>
<p>Did full-time professional musicians like Converse, Weston, Ossman, Van Eps, Bacon, etc take the banjo to higher technical levels of playing than…</p>
<p>That is over my head, CW.</p>
<p>More on playing styles: I mentioned Pete Seeger saying that most folks musicians that he encountered only knew maybe three songs using simple accompaniment. But he also stressed that many of these same people played with great artistry.</p>
<p>Artistry is not the same as technical brilliance or complexity.</p>
<p>Did full-time professional musicians like Converse, Weston, Ossman, Van Eps, Bacon, etc take the banjo to higher technical levels of playing than ante bellum folk players? Did they have banjos that were better made and more durable?</p>
<p>Seems pretty likely.</p>
<p></p> Only within the walls of the…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2015-06-12:2477478:Comment:1281952015-06-12T21:51:41.628ZCW Bayerhttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/CWBayer
Only within the walls of the empire is the tree of knowledge forbidden.
Only within the walls of the empire is the tree of knowledge forbidden. I'm gonna duck out of this an…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2015-06-12:2477478:Comment:1283052015-06-12T21:13:23.791ZStrumeliahttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/Strumelia
<p>I'm gonna duck out of this and go play my banjer now. <em>How about you guys putting up a video or two of actual music playing once in a while, for a change?</em> Dan'l? Young John? You've both been active members a long time but never seem to contribute except to debate and 'correct' others. Do you also <em>play</em> the banjo? Maybe time to <em>put up</em> some tunes and <em>inspire</em> somebody here in a positive way.<strong> </strong> What a concept! :)</p>
<p></p>
<p>I'm gonna duck out of this and go play my banjer now. <em>How about you guys putting up a video or two of actual music playing once in a while, for a change?</em> Dan'l? Young John? You've both been active members a long time but never seem to contribute except to debate and 'correct' others. Do you also <em>play</em> the banjo? Maybe time to <em>put up</em> some tunes and <em>inspire</em> somebody here in a positive way.<strong> </strong> What a concept! :)</p>
<p></p> I use the term "celtic harp"…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2015-06-12:2477478:Comment:1283712015-06-12T20:40:46.084ZCW Bayerhttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/CWBayer
I use the term "celtic harp" because it is the term everyone is familiar with. About 1100 the instrument was considered natural or native to the British Isles as a whole--so one can argue with that name. And going back further, it was probably imported to the British Isles from the mainland a thousand years earlier--at least. It used a musical system that preceded the systemization of music both in Persia and Europe around 1000AD. So, in fact, it was not "Celtic" inherently. After 1200 or so,…
I use the term "celtic harp" because it is the term everyone is familiar with. About 1100 the instrument was considered natural or native to the British Isles as a whole--so one can argue with that name. And going back further, it was probably imported to the British Isles from the mainland a thousand years earlier--at least. It used a musical system that preceded the systemization of music both in Persia and Europe around 1000AD. So, in fact, it was not "Celtic" inherently. After 1200 or so, it survived in "celtic" areas of the British Isles. Hence the reason for using that word. The basic scale was F G a bflat c d eflat f with the tonality set as twin finals--F combined with Bflat or G combined with Bflat. Bflat was tuned slightly sharp. It was probably the most complete of all the various drone based instruments used across the ancient and then medieval world. And as such it was seen as the core of a musical system that preceded and for a time competed with the Persian and European systems that commenced about 1000AD. Ultimately, it went away much as did the early banjo---because a drone based music is more ecstatic than intellectual. Where is there a reference to…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2015-06-12:2477478:Comment:1283042015-06-12T20:33:38.849ZJohn Cohenhttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/JohnCohen
Where is there a reference to celtic harps going that far back? The histories of that instrument I've read trace it back to the Middle Ages.
Where is there a reference to celtic harps going that far back? The histories of that instrument I've read trace it back to the Middle Ages. Ok. I read it. Lots of intere…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2015-06-12:2477478:Comment:1283032015-06-12T20:27:03.520ZCW Bayerhttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/CWBayer
Ok. I read it. Lots of interesting stuff. And some confusion about whether a drone is high, low, or either one. Along those lines, I'd argue that a drone based music is in balance when it has both a high and low drone. So, on the historical Celtic harp--probably the source of all organized instrumental music in the Middle East and Europe, going back to 2000 or 3000 BC--there were two low notes--what I and others have called an alternating drone accompaniment--and a single high drone. Where is…
Ok. I read it. Lots of interesting stuff. And some confusion about whether a drone is high, low, or either one. Along those lines, I'd argue that a drone based music is in balance when it has both a high and low drone. So, on the historical Celtic harp--probably the source of all organized instrumental music in the Middle East and Europe, going back to 2000 or 3000 BC--there were two low notes--what I and others have called an alternating drone accompaniment--and a single high drone. Where is the low drone in minstrel banjo? I'd say, often at the tip of the cane that the group gently tapped on the downbeat. The stages were often inclined toward the audience and they resonated. The bones played a complex fill rhythm. The tambourine helped create sustain--much as bottle caps do on the gourd into which mbira players fit their instrument. The banjo's high drone ideally created sparkle and was not simply a melody note. It could be sporadic because the cane tap was constant. And the thimble struck a clear percussive melody. Voila. The whole range. The question remains, to what extent do the tutors reflect the actual use of the banjo's drone string, at least prior to 1870 when American music began a serious shift to a more arranged and chordal aesthetic? I'd argue that this remains a central concern here and one that not will be resolved though it will remain important to discuss. Um, before we start dragging…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2015-06-12:2477478:Comment:1283022015-06-12T18:53:45.101ZStrumeliahttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/Strumelia
<p>Um, before we start dragging up this whole discussion of drones and drone strings and 'pedal points' yet again...<strong>can everyone please first read (or re-read) this discussion where we <em>beat it all to death</em> not that long ago?</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/forum/topics/small-point-on-terminology" target="_blank">http://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/forum/topics/small-point-on-terminology</a></p>
<p>Um, before we start dragging up this whole discussion of drones and drone strings and 'pedal points' yet again...<strong>can everyone please first read (or re-read) this discussion where we <em>beat it all to death</em> not that long ago?</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/forum/topics/small-point-on-terminology" target="_blank">http://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/forum/topics/small-point-on-terminology</a></p> It's my opinion that the fift…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2015-06-12:2477478:Comment:1281882015-06-12T18:48:21.017ZJohn Cohenhttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/JohnCohen
It's my opinion that the fifth string is used more as a pedal tone than a drone in early banjo music.
It's my opinion that the fifth string is used more as a pedal tone than a drone in early banjo music. I might add that I find it cu…tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2015-06-12:2477478:Comment:1281872015-06-12T18:41:30.465ZCW Bayerhttp://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/CWBayer
I might add that I find it curious that we have no western/European terminology for the use of drones. We think of music as chord based. And, I think with German influence, American popular melody becomes much more chord based after 1870. Still, a lot of ancient and non-western European music is drone based.
I might add that I find it curious that we have no western/European terminology for the use of drones. We think of music as chord based. And, I think with German influence, American popular melody becomes much more chord based after 1870. Still, a lot of ancient and non-western European music is drone based.