|
|
 |
 |
 
The
banjo is, according to the Oxford dictionary of musical instruments:
"A plucked lute with a long guitar-like neck and a circular
soundtable of tauntly stretched parchment or skin (now usually plastic),
against which the bridge is pressed by the strings. The banjo and
its variants have had long and widespread popularity as folk, parlour
and professional entertainers instruments. The name of the instrument
probably derives from the Portuguese or Spanish bandore".
In order to examine the origins of the Irish tenor banjo we must first
consider the development of the banjo and its other variants. The
development of the modern banjo began in the second quarter of the
19th century as a largely commercial adaption of an instrument used
by West African slaves in the new world as early as the 17th century.
The earliest known illustration of the instrument is in Sir Hans Sloane's
A Voyage to the Islands of Maderia, Barbados, Nieves, S.Christopher
and Jamaica (London, 1707), written in 1688, which depicts two Jamaican
negro 'strum-strums' with long flat necks and skin covered gourd bodies.
In the French colonies, where the instrument was usually known as
the banza, it was often associated with the calinda, a dance unsuccessfully
suppressed by acts of the Martinique government as early as 1654 and
as late as 1772.
In the British colonies the instrument was usually known as banjer
or banjar, pronunciations still commonly used in the southern USA.
The Rev. Jonathan Boucher, describing life in Maryland and Virginia
before he returned to England in 1775, wrote in Boucher's Glossary
of Archaic and Provincial Words (London 1832):
"The favorite and almost only instrument in use among the
slaves there was a bandore; or, as they pronounced the word, banjer.
Its body was a large hollow gourd, with a long handle attached to
it, strung with catgut, and played with the fingers".
The invention of the short string banjo is often erroneously attributed
to Joel Walker Sweeney (c1810-60); nevertheless, as the first well-known
and widely travelled white banjoist, Sweeney played a role in bringing
the banjo to the attention of urban audiences in the USA and England
and presumably in popularizing the type of banjo that he played. Through
theinfluence of Sweeney, Daniel Emmet and many other popular minstrel-show
banjoists the banjo was rapidly introduced to white urban culture
and by the 1840s and 1850s was being commercially produced by such
early makers as William Boucher of Baltimore.
After about 1870 the banjo was increasingly used in the USA as a genteel
parlour instrument for the performance of popular music, and a separate
style of 'classical' banjo playing developed. From about 1890 to 1930
there was a craze for banjo, mandolin and guitar clubs and orchestras.
During the 1920s and 1930s the five string banjo was largly displaced
among urban players by the four stringed tenor, but it regained its
former popularity after World War II, largely because of the influence
of the American banjoists Pete Seeger , who popularized traditional
rural Southern styles, and Earl Scruggs, who became famous as the
developer of the 'bluegrass' style of playing.
The Irish Tenor
During the 19th and early 20th centuries, a number of hybrid and specialized
banjos were developed, including bass and picolo banjos (tuned an
octave below and above the standard banjo); guitar, mandiloin and
ukulele banjos (strung and tuned like their parent instruments); and
plectrum banjos. The tenor banjo is identical with the standard banjo
but has a shorter neck and no fith string. Like the plectrum banjo
it was developed for use in jazz and dance orchestras and is played
with a plectrum. The standard tenor banjo is tuned to c-g-d-a. In
recent years a whole family of stringed instruments have been utilized
in Irish traditional music: these include the mandoline, the mandocello,
the bouziki, the cittern, the banjo-mandolin (a banjo with four double
strings or a mandolin with a banjo-type head) and the tenor banjo.
These are tuned like a fiddle, g-d-a-e, and played with a plectrum.
They may be used for accompaniment or for melody. While somewhat inflexible
in tone, they can generate and exciting rhythmical impact. Having
said that, there is some suspicion in some quarters that handlers
of these instruments are really failed fiddlers.
It was during the Virgina Minstrels tour of England, Ireland and France
(1843-1845) that the banjo was ,more than likely, first introduced
to Ireland. The leader of the virginia Minstrels was Joel Walker Sweeney
who was born in Buckingham County, Virginia, in 1810 and who has,
wrongly or rightly, been accredited with introducing the fith string
to the banjo. It was the fith string variety of the minstrals that
was initially introduced to Ireland and a late 19th century sketch
in Captain Francis O'Neill's 'Irish Minstrels and Musicians' of piper
Dick Stephanson and banjoist John Dunne, clearly depicts a fifth string
present on Dunne's banjo. The minstrel banjo lacked frets and as a
result, playing above the fifth string peg posed a lot of severe problems.
It wasn't until 1878 that Henry Dobson of New York, began commercially
producing fretted banjos, so it appears that the original Irish banjos
were definitely fretless. Up to the turn of the 19th century, banjos
were plucked and strummed by the fingers. So the evidence would indicate
that originally the banjo was used in Ireland for rudimentary accompaniment
of songs and tunes, with perhaps the some of the simpler melodies
being plucked out by the fingers.
This all changed dramatically at the turn of the century when steel
strings were invented. Influenced by the use of the plectrum in mandolin
playing, banjo players started to experiment with different plectral
playing styles. The idea of tuning the banjo in fiths, just like the
mandolin, caught on around this time as well. Many players started
to remove the short drone fith string from the banjo and before long
manufacturers started making 4 string banjos, originally called plectrum
banjos which were full sized,4 stringed, 22 fret banjos.
Around 1915, the tenor banjo was invented, coinciding in America with
the popularity of the tango dance form imported from Latin AMerica.
The tenor had 17 or 19 frets, a shorter kneck tuned in fifths and was
played with a plectrum. The plectrum and tenor banjos became the preferred
instrument in Vaudeville, Music Hall, in Dixieland Jazz, Ragtime and
Swing.
The first Irish banjo player to record commercially was Mike Flanagan,
born in county Waterford in 1898, who emigrated to the US at the age
of 10. Like many of the Irish banjo players in this century, he started
on the mandolin and taught himself to play the banjo. Other banjo
players to record in the 1920s were Michael Gaffney from New York
and Neil Nolan from Maine, who played in Dan Sullivan's Shamrock band
in Boston. The banjo at this time was traditionally tuned higher than
nowadays, still in fiths, but with the top string pitched at B or
sometimes C. There are a few players in America who still favor this
old tuning, most notably Jimmy Kelly in Boston. Most younger players,
however, favor the GDAE tuning, which is now the standard for Irish
music on the tenor banjo.
Before 1960, a number of styles and instruments co-existed in the
modest fraternity of banjo players in Ireland. Some players favored
the 5 string banjo, some the banjo mandolin, while others favored
the varieties of the four string instrument. Some players used a pick,
while others used a thimble.
In the Early 1960s the rise of the Dubliners in the Irish and English
folk revival had a profound effect on the fortunes of the banjo in
Irish music. Barney McKenna, tenor banjoist in the group, became a
household name among traditional music fans. Barney's skill and visibility
helped bring scores of new devotees to the instrument, almost all
tuning their banjos as Barney did; GDAE, an octave below the fiddle.
|
|