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This may rock the boat, but I feel the only difference between stroke and clawhammer is the musical situation. Otherwise, both styles strike the strings the same way and incorporate drop thumb. To me, stroke style simply implies more use of glides, using the 5th string on the downbeat, other rhythmic oddities not found in old time tunes... would those who have already responded, and those who will respond in the future, like to add how and why they got started playing these minstrel tunes?
I was a die-hard Scruggs picker with no interest in frailing until I heard Joe Ayers play Keemo Kimo, and from that moment on all I wanted to play was documentated nineteenth-century style banjo.
Lucas Bowman said:This may rock the boat, but I feel the only difference between stroke and clawhammer is the musical situation. Otherwise, both styles strike the strings the same way and incorporate drop thumb. To me, stroke style simply implies more use of glides, using the 5th string on the downbeat, other rhythmic oddities not found in old time tunes... would those who have already responded, and those who will respond in the future, like to add how and why they got started playing these minstrel tunes?
Good points, Lucas; I would like to opine that the rhymthic and fingering oddities that you describe form the foundation of the early stroke-style, and therefore make it a distinct and separate genre from the style that evolved from it, i.e. "clawhammer" or "frailing." True, both use the same right-hand motion, but the tune repertiore and the "licks" that come up over and over and quite different.
I wish more clawhammer players would branch out into the minstrel style, ala Bob Flesher and Bob Carlin. I don't know how hard the "retooling" is from clawhammer to minstrel, since I've never played modern clawhammer, but if one is interested in banjo history it's the way to go.
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