All Videos Tagged Ashborn (Minstrel Banjo) - Minstrel Banjo 2024-05-08T05:01:26Z https://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/video/video/listTagged?tag=Ashborn&rss=yes&xn_auth=no The White Joke tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2013-02-11:2477478:Video:81804 2013-02-11T15:16:58.319Z Mark Weems https://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/MarkKellyWeems <a href="https://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/video/the-white-joke"><br /> <img src="https://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/3135342981?profile=original&amp;width=240&amp;height=180" width="240" height="180" alt="Thumbnail" /><br /> </a><br />An 18th Century jig once popular in Colonial Virginia. We are interrupted by two clocks (the second is a Birge Mallory from 1836). The Banjo is a reproduction of a raised fret James Ashborn from the 1850's built by J.M. Wesley of Roxboro, N.C. <a href="https://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/video/the-white-joke"><br /> <img src="https://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/3135342981?profile=original&amp;width=240&amp;height=180" width="240" height="180" alt="Thumbnail" /><br /> </a><br />An 18th Century jig once popular in Colonial Virginia. We are interrupted by two clocks (the second is a Birge Mallory from 1836). The Banjo is a reproduction of a raised fret James Ashborn from the 1850's built by J.M. Wesley of Roxboro, N.C. O! Boys, Carry Me 'Long. tag:minstrelbanjo.ning.com,2011-05-08:2477478:Video:34938 2011-05-08T20:35:47.432Z Carl Anderton https://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/profile/CarlAnderton <a href="https://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/video/o-boys-carry-me-long"><br /> <img src="https://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/3135338119?profile=original&amp;width=240&amp;height=180" width="240" height="180" alt="Thumbnail" /><br /> </a><br />Stephen Foster's hit from 1851. <a href="https://minstrelbanjo.ning.com/video/o-boys-carry-me-long"><br /> <img src="https://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/3135338119?profile=original&amp;width=240&amp;height=180" width="240" height="180" alt="Thumbnail" /><br /> </a><br />Stephen Foster's hit from 1851.