Banjo: Dominica musical instrument
The banjo is a four, five or six stringed musical instrument that has a thin membrane stretched over a frame as the resonator if the music...
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The banjo is a four, five or six
stringed musical instrument that has a thin membrane stretched over a frame as
the resonator if the musical instrument.
source: get-tuned.com
The membrane of the musical instrument
is typically a piece of animal skin or a plastic and the frame of the
instrument is circular. Simpler versions of the musical instrument were
fashioned by Africans in the colonial America, adapted from many African
musical instruments of analogous design.
The banjo instrument is frequently
linked with the country music, the folk music, Irish traditional and bluegrass
music. Historically, the musical instrument occupied a central place in the
African American traditional music, before becoming well-known in the minstrel
shows of the 19th century.
There are many theories concerning
the origin of the musical instrument. It may be derived from the Kinbundu term
‘mbanza’. Some etymologists believe that it comes from the dialectal
pronunciation of the Portuguese ‘bandore’ or from the early Anglicization of
the Spanish word ‘bandurria’, but other researchers proposes that it may come
from a West African term for a bamboo stick that is formerly used for the neck
of the musical instrument.
Various musical instruments in
Africa, chief among them the kora, displays a skin head and a gourd body. The
African musical instruments varies from the African American banjos in that the
neck of the instrument do not have a western-style fingerboard and tuning pegs,
rather having stick necks, with strings fixed to the neck of the instrument
with loops for tuning it. The versions of this musical instrument that has
fingerboards and tuning pegs are known from the Caribbean as early as the 17th
century. Late 18th century and the early part of the 19th
century writers transcribed the name of these musical instruments differently
as bangie, banza, banjar and banjer. Analogous musical instruments to the banjo
have been performed in many countries of the world. Another musical instrument
that is said to be the ancestor of the banjo is the ‘akonting’, which is a
spike folk lute instrument performed by the Jola tribe of the Senegambia and
the ubaw-akwala of the Igbo people of Nigeria. Analogous musical instrument
include the xalam of Senegal and the ngoni of the Wassoulou region including
parts of Guinea, Cote d’Ivoire and Mali and a larger version of the ngoni
developed in Morocco by sub-Saharan Africans that is known as the Gimbri.
Early, African-influenced versions of
the musical instruments were built around a gourd body and a wooden stick neck.
These musical instruments had differing numbers of strings, but often including
some form of drone. The five stringed version of the musical instrument was
made popular by Joel Walker Sweeney, an American minstrel player from
Appomattox Court House, Virginia. Sweeney became the first white man to perform
the musical instrument on a stage. His version of the musical instrument
replaced the gourd with sound box like drum and included four full-length
strings together with a short fifth-string. This new version of the musical
instrument was at first tuned d’Gdf#a, but by the 1980s, this had been reserved
up to g’cgbd’. The banjos were brought into Britain by Sweeney’s group of
musicians; the American Virginia minstrels became very popular in the music
halls in the 1840s.
The styles that are closely linked
with the banjo are the rolls and the drones. The rolls are right hand
accompanimental fingering style that is made up of eight notes, which subdivide
each measure. The drones are quick little notes that are always performed on
the fifth string to fill in around the melody notes. These styles are both
idiomatic to banjo in all technique and their sound is typical of bluegrass.
The modern version of the banjo comes
in many forms, including four-string version and five-string version of the
musical instrument. A six-string version of the banjo that is tuned and
performed analogously to a guitar, has gained popularity. In almost all of its
forms, the playing of the musical instrument is characterized by a fast arpeggiated
plucking, but there are many various playing patterns.
The body of the modern version of the
banjo is typically made up of a circular rim and a tension head, analogous to
the head of a drum. Traditionally, the head o0f the banjo was produced from the
skin of an animal, but in the modern day, the musical instrument is made of
different synthetic materials. Most modern version of the musical instrument
also have a metal tone ring assembly, which helps further make clear and
project the sound.
Modern versions of the banjo are
typically strung with the metal strings. Often, the fourth string of the
musical instrument is wound with steel or bronze-phosphor alloy. Some players
of the musical instrument may string their instruments with gut or nylon
strings to achieve a mellower, old-time tone.
Some versions of the banjo possess a
separate resonator plate on the back of the pot, fashioned to project the sound
forward and give the musical instrument more volume. This version of the
musical instrument is often used in bluegrass music, but resonator versions of
the banjo are performed by players of all techniques and are also used in the
ancient time as a substitute for electric amplification when performing in
large venues.
The modern five-string version of the
banjo is a variation on Sweeney’s original fashion. The fifth string on the
musical instrument is usually the same gauge as the first, but starts from the
fifth fret, three quarters the length of the other strings on the musical
instrument. This allows the strings of the musical instrument to be tuned to a
higher open pitch than possible for the full length strings of the instrument.
The short fifth string on the banjo means that, unlike many other string
musical instrument, strings pitches on a five string version of the banjo do
not go in order from the lowest to the highest across the fingerboard of the
musical instrument. Rather from the low to the high, they go fourth, third,
second, first and fifth. This is a kind of reentrant tuning on the musical instrument.
Many tunings are used on the
five-string version of the musical instrument. Probably the most common tuning
especially in the bluegrass is the open-G tuning which is g’dgbd’. In the early
times, this tuning, g’cgbd’ was generally used rather. The double C is another
tuning that was found in the old-time music; g’cgc’d.
The size of the five stringed version
of the musical instrument is standardized laregely, while the smaller and the
larger sizes of the musical instrument are available in cluding the
long-neckled version of the instrument built by Pete Seeger. Petite versions of
the five-stringed banjo have been in use since the 1880s.
The plectrum banjo is a standard
version of the musical instrument without short drone string. It often has 22
frets on the neck and a scale of 26 inches to 28 inches as the length, and was
traditionally tuned cgbd’. It can also be tuned like the top four strings of a
guitar instrument that is known as the ‘Chicago tuning’. As the name implies,
it is often performed with a guitar-style pick, unlike the five-string version
of the banjo that is performed with the use if a thumb pick and two fingerpicks
or with the use of bare fingers by the player. The plectrum banjo came out of
the five-stringed version of the musical instrument, to cater to style of music
involving strummed chords. The musical instrument is also used in many early
jazz recordings and arrangements.
The tenor banjo, which is also the
shorter-necked version of the instrument, is also typically performed with the
use of a plectrum. The musical instrument became very popular at around the
year 1910. The early model of the musical instrument used for meldic picking
had 17 frets typically on the neck and a scale length of 19 to 21 inches. By
the mid-1920s, the musical instrument was used mainly for strummed chordal
accompaniment, 19 frets necks with a scale length of about 21 inches to 23
inches became the standard instrument. The often tuning is the all-fifth tuning
cgd’a’, in which there are exactly seven semitones between the open notes of
successive strings; all fifths tuning is accepted for a mandola or a viola.
This version of the musical instrument was a common rhythm-musical instrument
in the early part of the 20th century dance-bands. The volume of the
tenor banjo and the tone quality suited the early jazz and could both battle
with other musical instruments and be heard clearly on any acoustic
recordings.
Scarcer than either the tenor banjo
or the plectrum banjo is the cello banjo. The musical instrument is normally
tuned CGda, one octave below the tenor banjo such as the cello and the
mandocello. The musical instrument played an important role in the banjo
orchestras in the later part of the 19th century and the early part
of the 20th century. Bass banjos have been produced in both upright
bass arrangements and also with standard and horizontally-carried banjo bodies.
The six-stringed version of the
musical instrument started as a british innovation by William Temlet, one of
the England’s earliest makers of the musical instrument.
A good number of hybrid musical
instruments exist, crossing the banjo with other stringed musical instrument.
Most of these instrument use the body of a banjo, usually with a resonator and
the neck of the other musical instrument. Examples are the banjo mandolin and
the banjo ukulele that was most popularly performed by the English comedian
that is known as George Formby. Musical instruments that are using the
five-string banjo neck on a wooden body have also been produced, like the
banjola; a 20th century Turkish musical instrument that is very
analogous to the banjo is called cumbus that has been manufactured into eight
different hybrid musical instrument, including the guitar, ukulele, mandolin
and the oud. At the end of the 20th century, a development of the
5-stringed version of the banjo was the BanSitar. This features a bridge that
is made of bone, giving the musical instrument a resonator that is like the
sitar.