Online Encyclopedia

BANJO

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 319 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

BANJO  , a musical

instrument with strings plucked by fingers or plectrum, popular among the
See also:
American negroes and introduced by them into
See also:
Europe . The word is either a corruption of "bandore" or "
See also:
pandura" (q.v.), an instrument of the guitar type, or is derived from "bania," the name of a similar
See also:
primitive Senegambian instrument . The banjo consists of a
See also:
body composed of a single piece of vellum stretched like a drum-head over a wooden or metal hoop to ensure the requisite degree of resonance; the
See also:
parchment may be tightened or slackened by means of a series of screws disposed round the circumference of the hoop . Attached to the body, which has no back, is a long neck, terminating in a flat head acting as a peg-box and bent back slightly at an obtuse angle from the neck . There are five, six or nine strings to the banjo; they are fastened to a tail-piece 'as in the
See also:
violin, pass over a low
See also:
bridge, on the body, and are strained over the nut or ridge at the end of the neck, where they are threaded through holes and wound round the tuning-pegs fixed in the back of the head in
See also:
Oriental fashion, as in the lute (q.v.) . The strings are stopped by the pressure of the fingers against the
See also:
finger-board which lies over the front of the neck; the correct positions for the formation of the intervals of the scale are indicated in some banjos by frets consisting of metal or wooden bands inlaid in the finger-board . The vibrating length of the strings from bridge to nut is 24 in. for all except the highest in pitch, known as the " chanterelle," " melody " or " thumb
See also:
string," which is only 16 in. long; its tuning peg is inserted
See also:
half-way up the neck . The chanterelle is not, as in other stringed
See also:
instruments, in its position as the highest in pitch, but is placed next the lowest string for convenience in playing it with the thumb . In the tables of accordance here given, the chanterelle is indicated by a X . The five-stringed banjo is tuned either 5 4 3 2 = 3 2 : The six-stringed is tuned X 6 Sr 4 3 2 The nine-stringed banjo has three thumb strings thus X X X gene -we g 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 The G clef is used in notation, but the notes sound an octave
See also:
lower than they are written . The banjo is usually a transposing instrument in the sense that, when playing with other instruments, the A corresponds to the C of the piano or violin; the key of A major is therefore the first to be mastered . The chanterelle does not lie over the finger-board and is always played open by the thumb .

The banjo is held so that the neck is even with the

See also:
left shoulder and the body rests on the right thigh; the front of the instrument is held inclined at an angle, allowing the performer to see all the strings . When played as a solo instrument, a plectrum may be used with good effect to produce rapid scale and arpeggio passages, or to produce the tremolo or sustained notes as on the mandoline (q.v.) . The best results are obtained by means of a
See also:
tortoise-shell plectrum about the
See also:
size of a
See also:
shilling,' having the contact-edges highly polished, bevelled and terminating in a point . The tone of the banjo is louder and harder than that of the guitar, Chords of two, three and four notes can be played on it . The banjo or bania of the
See also:
African negro having grass strings is still in use on the coast of
See also:
Guinea . The banjo was made known in England through companies of coloured minstrels from the
See also:
United States, one of which came over to
See also:
London as early as 1846 . (K .

End of Article: BANJO
[back]
BANJERMASIN (Dutch Bandjermasin)
[next]
BANK

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.