Just getting started on some banjo history. Can you recommend something that would talk about the actual early tunes played by folks in different communities. I think the tune I learned from you; "Hook and Line" is a very early banjo or fiddle tune. I would like to know more about these early banjo tunes and their origin.
@CliftonHicksbanjo3 жыл бұрын
George Gibson's old banjo history articles (there are several) from the late '90s offer some of the best details for pre-WW2 banjo titles, tunings, and techniques: banjohistory.com/article
@ChandlerRuss5 жыл бұрын
I would recommend "That Half Barbaric Twang - The Banjo in American Popular Culture" by Karen Linn. A little dated now, but very good on the development of the classic style and the interplay between black vernacular and white bourgeois culture during the nineteenth century.
@clockguy25 жыл бұрын
I have a copy of "America's Instrument" and it's a very good book. Another book is "Foxfire 3" edited by Eliot Wiggington. It has a chapter on banjos and stories about mountain banjo players and how to make banjos. I made a cake box banjo once from an example in the book.
@itsobvious58355 жыл бұрын
Thank you for that Clifton. I'm going to have to get some of tbese and educate myself.
@itsobvious58355 жыл бұрын
Just with the content you have out here on you tube you could write a book....
@toadeepants5 жыл бұрын
Ethnomusicology, that sounds fascinating for sure! Thanks for the recommendations, I always love your deep history tidbits, Clifton.
@bearshield71382 жыл бұрын
Fantastic Banjo roots and branches Americas iInstrument African echoes in Appalachia Sinful tunes and spirituals Black folk music till the civil war Folk songs of the Southern United States Got it Thank you, this sounds like a good place to start. Can you tell me anything about the hajuj instrument?
@deltabilly15 жыл бұрын
Thanks, Clifton! I have the American Instrument book but I’m looking forward to reading the others. The banjo imho is the key to understanding the history of multiculturalism in the US!
@deltabilly15 жыл бұрын
Or at least A key
@christineweatherford58525 жыл бұрын
What is that song you are playing in the beginning? Love the 2/finger style!
@CliftonHicksbanjo5 жыл бұрын
That's my arrangement of a song called "Old Shoe Boots and Leggings" I learned from a recording of Aunt Molly Jackson. When I do it I sing "brogan boots and leggings" so type that in to see my version on yTube. It's an old song, they sing it in Ireland and Britain often as "Old Man From Over the Sea" or "Old Man From Lee."
@12stringDH3 жыл бұрын
Late coming to this ( as usual ) sorry for that, but have you come across " Ring the Banjar! " -The Banjo in America from Folklore to Factory. Robert Lloyd Webb is the author, published by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. It accompanied an exhibition they put on in 1984 . A couple of essays of the history and musical styles of the early days, and another on the banjo makers of Boston by James F Bollman, with photos of the instruments in the exhibition. Not a very big book but interesting and nicely produced.
@porkyfedwell5 жыл бұрын
The BBC "Arena" documentary on Woody Guthrie mentions using hatpins as fiddlesticks. As if playing fiddle wasn't hard enough, you then get some fool pounding on the strings with sharp objects? :)
@porkyfedwell5 жыл бұрын
Clifton, what's the name of the introductory song you're playing? Very nice.
@CliftonHicksbanjo5 жыл бұрын
"Brogan Boots and Leggings" also know as "Old Shoe Boots and Leggings," "Old Man From Over the Sea," "Old Man From Lee..."
@porkyfedwell5 жыл бұрын
@@CliftonHicksbanjo thank you sir
@kylepowers16285 жыл бұрын
i would to talk to you can i hire you to make a banjo? i can pay/work
@paulrogers28155 жыл бұрын
I've heard some people say it came from Africa and some say Ireland
@CliftonHicksbanjo5 жыл бұрын
Paul, it's now generally agreed that the instrument emerged during the 17th-century, either in the Caribbean or back in West Africa. The most thorough research I've seen on its early origin is Adams & Pestcoe's article in Banjo Roots And Branches. They argue that the flat fingerboard, nut and tuning pegs are European elements adopted by Afro-Caribbean gourd lute makers to create the "banjo."
@ProfesserLuigi5 жыл бұрын
@@CliftonHicksbanjo I figure looking at most other african folk instruments, it's obvious the flat fingerboard is a european element.
@paulrogers28155 жыл бұрын
@Thomas D I hear you bubby
@porkyfedwell5 жыл бұрын
@@CliftonHicksbanjo I recall reading (in 1975) that the middle eastern rebec may also be related to the banjo. I think I read it in Earl Scruggs book, but hey, it's been 44 years so don't hold me to that.
@CliftonHicksbanjo5 жыл бұрын
@Thomas D It's complex but, basically, the Irish tenor descended from the American five-string banjo which, in turn, descended from gourd lutes played in West Africa and the Caribbean. Nobody knows for certain whether the original "banjo" first emerged in Africa, the Caribbean or both simultaneously.