Tags:
Clyde,
I have been playing for about 6 months and I purchased my banjo from Jay Moschella. I am very happy with it. Check out his website for more information. http://www.jaymoschella.com/
Good luck....playing minstrel banjo is very fun...but it takes a lot of practice and patience.
Daniel
Clyde,
I have been playing for about 6 months and I purchased my banjo from Jay Moschella. I am very happy with it. Check out his website for more information. http://www.jaymoschella.com/
Good luck....playing minstrel banjo is very fun...but it takes a lot of practice and patience.
Daniel
Clyde--
Don is a dulcimer maker with a good reutation. I have a pre-Civil War banjo that he made a "coffin case" for. I've been very happy with it. I didn't know he made banjos. You may be able to ask him if you could "test drive" one.--Rob Morrison
Clyde--
Don is a dulcimer maker with a good reutation. I have a pre-Civil War banjo that he made a "coffin case" for. I've been very happy with it. I didn't know he made banjos. You may be able to ask him if you could "test drive" one.--Rob Morrison
My first banjo was a Gardner. I would not have purchased one otherwise. I was at a huge muster in Jackson Mich, and I stopped by his booth. It was kind of crude, but certainly good enough to experiment with and see if I liked it or not. I would never have laid out the money for an expensive quality banjo at first..nor should anyone be expected to. The one I had was actually a hand drum with a neck stuck on it. It got me started, and then I got a better one. Don has "upped his game" and has several instruments with hardware, still reasonably priced. I don't know why he does not put them up on his site.
Now another question guys, where do I go from here?
The Flesher Book is really good.
There is a lot of material in The Banjo Clubhouse.
http://www.milfordmusic.com/Banjo%20Audio.htm
And of course, open question to all the great folks right here.
Clyde--
I second Tim's recommendation for Bob Flesher's "Minstrel Banjo Stroke Style" book, which, I believe comes with a CD. Joseph Weidlich also has three easily accessible books called "Minstrel Banjo," "More Minstrel Banjo," and "The Early Minstrel Banjo." The latter features both tab and standard musical notation. Then there are the Joe Ayers reproductions of the tutors of Briggs, Buckley, Converse, and Rice. These are, of course in musical notation. They're sometimes hard to get, but occasionally one or more are available on Amazon.com or ebay. If you like Stephen Foster songs there is a book called "With a Banjo on my Knee," by Daniel Partner and Edwin Sims. It comes with a CD. There are many other sources available, of course, but please don't forget to also learn to play by ear. This is undoubtedly the way the first generation of players learned to play and is every bit as much a vital part of the tradition as any other. Many of the tunes in the aforementioned texts are variations of the same or similar tunes in other texts. With few exceptions, at least for the earlier stroke-style tunes, there are no definitive versions.--Rob Morrison
Clyde--
I second Tim's recommendation for Bob Flesher's "Minstrel Banjo Stroke Style" book, which, I believe comes with a CD. Joseph Weidlich also has three easily accessible books called "Minstrel Banjo," "More Minstrel Banjo," and "The Early Minstrel Banjo." The latter features both tab and standard musical notation. Then there are the Joe Ayers reproductions of the tutors of Briggs, Buckley, Converse, and Rice. These are, of course in musical notation. They're sometimes hard to get, but occasionally one or more are available on Amazon.com or ebay. If you like Stephen Foster songs there is a book called "With a Banjo on my Knee," by Daniel Partner and Edwin Sims. It comes with a CD. There are many other sources available, of course, but please don't forget to also learn to play by ear. This is undoubtedly the way the first generation of players learned to play and is every bit as much a vital part of the tradition as any other. Many of the tunes in the aforementioned texts are variations of the same or similar tunes in other texts. With few exceptions, at least for the earlier stroke-style tunes, there are no definitive versions.--Rob Morrison
Dan'l--
You are correct that many banjos with union shields and eagles were manufactured during Reconstruction. However, the J. H. Buckbee Company made very simple inexpensive banjos with eagle brackets all through the Civil War up to almost the turn of the century. I don't know whether a Confederate soldier would have much access to them, as they were made in New York, but it is at least conceivable and not necessarily anachronistic. J. H. Buckbee also made drums for the Union troops, decorated with eagles. --Rob Morrison
Rob and Dan'l:
Thanks for the background information on J. H. Buckbee banjos. I happened to have ordered the Gardner banjo with the eagle shoes and I am a Union soldier in the 20th Maine Co. F so I guess I could get away it all. So far there are only two other people in our entire organization that are interested in minstrel banjo way out here in Washington State, so right now no one is being too pickey. ...Clyde...
Rob Morrison said:
Dan'l--
You are correct that many banjos with union shields and eagles were manufactured during Reconstruction. However, the J. H. Buckbee Company made very simple inexpensive banjos with eagle brackets all through the Civil War up to almost the turn of the century. I don't know whether a Confederate soldier would have much access to them, as they were made in New York, but it is at least conceivable and not necessarily anachronistic. J. H. Buckbee also made drums for the Union troops, decorated with eagles. --Rob Morrison
Clyde,
I'm going to tell everyone I encounter at Port Gamble what a farb you are. A Gardner with eagle shoes might be okay for someone in any other company of the 20th Maine, but Co. F? You gotta be kidding me. I haven't seen anything about anyone in Co. F carrying a Gardner with eagle shoes. Chamberlain himself hangs his head in shame and shakes it subtly in disbelief.
© 2024 Created by John Masciale. Powered by