Kamis, 14 November 2013

What do you look for when buying a banjo?

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Rory P


I'd like to start playing banjo, but I have no idea what makes a good banjo. I'd like it to be inexpensive, but to have good overall value. What should I look for when buying a banjo, and what should I expect to pay for a basic one?


Answer
Guitarpicker's answer is pretty good, except that nowadays, a "standard" banjo, for bluegrass, old-time, or folk music, is a 5-string. 4-string tenor or plectrum banjos aren't used as much, except for Irish traditional music (tenor banjo tuned an octave below the fiddle G D A E, and played with a flatpick to pick out melodies), or Dixieland jazz (chords strummed with a pick and used as a rhythm instrument). Unless you know you want to play Irish fiddle tunes or Dixieland, chances are you want a 5-string.

5-string banjos come in 2 basic styles -- openback and resonator. Most folk and old-time clawhammer or frailing-style players tend to prefer openback banjos, while most bluegrass pickers want a banjo with a resonator. You can play either style on either type of banjo -- but most old-time players prefer the mellower, plunky sound of an openback banjo for clawhammer/frailing-style fiddle and song accompaniment, while OTOH, the quintessential sound of bluegrass music is that of the bright, crisp, LOUD sound of a resonator-back banjo played with metal finger- and thumbpicks.

Figure on spending $300 - $500 for a good beginner level banjo. I personally really like the Deering Goodtime banjos -- Deering is a well-respected brand name, their professional quality instruments are excellent, and their Goodtime line of beginner banjos are very good value for the money. I've played them and found them to be solidly constructed of quality materials, with a good sound. They come in openback and resonator-back models -- Elderly Instruments has the openback for $379, and the resonator model for about $529. Rover also makes a couple of inexpensive beginner instruments -- their openback model goes for about $200 and their resonator-back model for about $350, but I've never played them so I can't say anything about them. I also note that in the Elderly Instruments catalog, they offer a banjo package featuring a Gold Tone openback banjo, gigbag, strap, and instructional DVD for $340. Gold Tones are decent banjos, too.

http://elderly.com/departments/banjo

Ideally, what I would look for would be a wooden rim (the round body part of the banjo), as opposed to a cast aluminum rim; a brass hoop tone ring is nice to have, too, and so is a geared 5th string tuning peg. The banjo -- whether openback or resonator -- should feel solid and well constructed, not flimsy, and most importantly, you should like what it sounds like. If you don't like the way it sounds, you're not going to want to play it. Take a banjo-playing friend with you when you go to the music store to look at banjos, and have him/her play each one so you can listen to it.

What are the effects of the internet on the quantity and quality of real-life interpersonal relationships?




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Please answer first in terms of your own life, then give your impression of the overall social trends.

Quantity: Do you think you meet more people (in person) because of the internet, or do you think you would meet more people if you just avoided the internet? You might want to consider the balance between opposing effects. On one hand, the time you spend on-line might reduce the time you spend in real-life social settings, but on the other hand, the internet might prompt you to get out and meet people that you might otherwise have never met (cuz they seem so cool in cyberspace).

Quality: Does the internet increase your chances of meeting those really special people who can became your best friends, lovers, soulmatesâ¦? Or do you think that, overall, the internet sends you on more wild-goose chases â making you think that maybe you would be socially better off to just forget about meeting people from on-line communities?



Answer
In terms of my own life: I only meet 'real' people, not 'virtual' ones. If I were not having transportation problems--caring for an elderly gent following heart surgery...I would not be on line often at all.

Overall: People are not getting enough exercise, social interaction, etc.--because they work all day, and then spend the remainder of their time on line.

The internet would NEVER prompt me to chance meeting a person from cyberspace in the 'real world'

The internet can be fun, but I cannot comprehend becoming involved with someone met on the net. No lovers, no soulmates, no best friends--they need to come from the 'real' world.

My computer is like my TV, stereo, DVD player, etc.--just a form of entertainment.




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