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Posted: 22 Sep 2006 2:48 pm
by David Nugent
Was a Bluegrass banjo picker for years, toured with one group quite regularly. Still pick banjo on a few tunes in the group I am working with currently. (Several well known steel players started as banjo pickers, Bill Keith and Jack Hicks come immediately to mind.)

Posted: 22 Sep 2006 3:17 pm
by Ken Williams
I played 5 string several years before I started playing steel. I took the thing out of the case a couple of weeks ago. That was the first time I had played it in over 15 years. I used to think I did alright but looking back I guess I wasn't that good. I feel that playing the banjo made it much easier to make early progress on steel, as I was already used to the picks and the idea of using my fingers to pick the strings.

Ken

Posted: 22 Sep 2006 7:16 pm
by Frank Estes
Epiphone MB-250 Do not spend enough time at it. I can fake a few instrumentals. Steel and lead guitar take priority.

Posted: 23 Sep 2006 6:38 am
by Bo Borland
I don't think anyone should make fun of banjos....but Mike Perlowin doing "I
Feel Pretty" , now that is funny!

Posted: 23 Sep 2006 7:05 am
by Charlie McDonald
I had no idea I was listening to banjo on 'West Side Story.'
I demand my money back!

Posted: 23 Sep 2006 7:32 am
by Mike Shefrin
Allan, I played the banjo when I was a kid.
I make fun of it in my cartoons here on the forum in my Steel Guitar Forum Funnies but
the honest truth is I have nothing against
banjos or banjo players, and I even enjoy
it. Bella Fleck sure does some interesting stuff with it.

Posted: 23 Sep 2006 8:18 am
by Mike Ester
Guilty as charged. 1978 Gibson RB250. Bought it brand new in Denver, while going to Air Force tech school. Started out playing bluegrass music, but when I moved back to New Braunfels, I had to change to steel, just to play.

By the by, have you noticed that b0b is frightenly quiet about this thread? I admire his magnanimous display of self-control. Image

Posted: 23 Sep 2006 12:06 pm
by Jim Cohen
He's plotting his next move...

Posted: 23 Sep 2006 12:29 pm
by Charles Davidson
Bob HAS to be out of town.

Posted: 23 Sep 2006 1:45 pm
by Pete Young
Maybe B0B is practicing banjo just to show you guys that he can play it too

Posted: 23 Sep 2006 3:10 pm
by Gary Lee Gimble
Well, since this thread is still alive and b0b may need some inspiration to woodshed some more as Pete has suggested, here ya go...
<embed src="http://lads.myspace.com/videos/vplayer.swf" flashvars="m=661082688&type=video&cp=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="430" height="346"></embed>
Get this video and more at MySpace.com

Posted: 23 Sep 2006 3:20 pm
by Dennis Coelho
Been playing and teaching banjo for more than thirty years: Gibsons, 60's Fenders, Ome, now on my second Stelling. Sold my railing/clawhammer banjos to buy steels.

Also play an Ome "Irish" tenor: same scale as regular tenor (21 1/2 inch) but with heavier strings and tuned a whole octave lower (GDAE) than mandolin or fiddle but with the same fingering.

25 years with the same comedy/music group. I've heard every banjo joke there is, even all those transplanted from drummer jokes. Really feel sorry for those guys. Dennis

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Posted: 23 Sep 2006 3:35 pm
by J. R. McClung
Okay. Since I let the cat out of the bag today at the club meeting, here goes:

I own and play a 1980 Gibson RB-250. I play Christian, cajun, country, celtic, and bluegrass, and often use it to accompany my wife who is a harpist.

I will even play the banjo, steel, and fiddle tomorrow at a Gospel music show down in Chichasha, Oklahoma.

Yep. Like Mike P. says....got one and aint afraid to use it!


Posted: 23 Sep 2006 5:17 pm
by Alan Brookes
There you go, now. That wasn't too difficult, was it ? Truth is I bet most steel guitarists have played banjo at some time in their lives. I've never met anyone who only played steel. It's usually an instrument you take up after already having played other instruments.

Posted: 23 Sep 2006 5:58 pm
by Don Barnhardt
Didja hear about the guy at the banjo convention who was so out of tune that the other banjo players even noticed?

Posted: 23 Sep 2006 7:39 pm
by Jennings Ward
NEED A BOLEMIC AID?
CALL A BANJER PLAYER.......
JW......
P.S. BAMA CHARLIE HAD TO DRAG ME INTO THIS MESS........
TRADED A BANJER FOR SOME CARPENTIER WORK,, THE GUY TOOK OFF, HAD A HEART ATTACK, GOT FIRED FROM HIS JOB, HIS WIFE RAN OFF WITH HIS BEST FRIEND...NOW HE IS IN JAIL.....

NO THANKS ,, NO DAM BANJER FOR ME......
THE REASION I HAD THE BANJER IN THE FIRST PLACE,, IT CAME WITH A GUITAR FIDDLE DEAL I GOT INVOLVED IN......HAD A HARD TIME GETTING RID OF IT, THE BANJER, I MEAN.......
JW

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EMMONS D10 10-10 profex 2 deltafex ne1000 pv1000, pv 31 bd eq, + D'ANGELICO
N. 400


Posted: 23 Sep 2006 8:32 pm
by Steve Robinson
Guilty as charged. Pushing 35 years of banjo-playing!

Posted: 23 Sep 2006 10:09 pm
by Clyde Mattocks
A Gibson RB-75 and an RB-250. When you play for spite, a banjo is the ultimate weapon.
It isn't meant to be enjoyed, it's meant to
be endured !

Posted: 24 Sep 2006 5:49 am
by richard burton
I can only lay claim to being a banjo owner Image

<object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/WpS4fcEcMCc"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/WpS4fcEcMCc" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="600" height="350"></embed></object><font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by richard burton on 24 September 2006 at 06:52 AM.]</p></FONT>

Posted: 24 Sep 2006 6:29 am
by John Cisco
Me too Image I bought a cheap Fender last year just to learn to play.

Posted: 24 Sep 2006 1:29 pm
by Klaus Caprani
I'm probably more of a banjo owner than a banjo player. My repertoire on the instrument is quite limited, but I find quite some fun in doing things like "Tiny Broken Heart" in tempo 180 Image

BTW it's a 5 string G-open.<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Klaus Caprani on 24 September 2006 at 02:33 PM.]</p></FONT>

Posted: 24 Sep 2006 1:49 pm
by Pete Young
And still no word from B0B

Posted: 24 Sep 2006 8:05 pm
by Andy Jones
I have a 1928 Gibson TB-1 with a Randy Wood RB-12 conversion neck.Been playing for 35 years.I've been letting her rest since I got my '74 MSA D-10 Classic 13 months ago.
Andy

Posted: 24 Sep 2006 9:30 pm
by Kelly Hydorn
Well, I have to add my two-bits worth. E. Blackburn, thank you for allowing me to see the plink, plink, plink of this so-called instrument. Back then it was known as mountain music and then it's changed to Bluegrass music and it's still the same. You can put all the lipstick on it you want but a pig is still a pig. Thank You. Yep you heard it here.

Posted: 24 Sep 2006 9:32 pm
by Kelly Hydorn
oops.<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Kelly Hydorn on 26 September 2006 at 08:02 PM.]</p></FONT>