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No. 189 October 2004 The Banjoists' Broadsheet THE BANJOISTS’ BROADSHEET NO. 189 FOR OCTOBER 2004 PAGE 1 It’s ON THE WEB!! Fiddling around recently, trying to find out whether there was anything worth watching on ITN, I came across the film archive. This led me on to the Pathe News archive which has lots of down-loadable ‘shorts’ (with very low resolution – but you can get better versions at a price!). I thought it worth listing them. The information is slightly edited. From the ITN archive 2002 Switzerland: award-winning banjo player Allison Brown appears at the Vermier festival. Kurt Masur, James Levine, Evgeny Kissin, Vadim Repin, Joshua Bell... all flocked to the Swiss hills for the magical music-making that is the Verbier Festival. This year the line-up offered an alternative to classical with Grammy-award winning banjo player Allison Brown. For American banjo player Allison Brown, Vermier is a little different to her normal platform. The former investment banker with a BA from Harvard who went on to ditch taxes and bond issues for a Grammy award has never been played at a classical music festival before, but was delighted to bring her banjo to the Swiss mountains. “It’s interesting because most of the time you don’t see a banjo in a jazz context but that’s what our quartet is. It’s basically piano, bass and drums, so it looks like a jazz trio with banjo up front. And it’s music that I’ve written, so it’s a little bit different repertoire for the banjo but it’s a real mix of bluegrass and jazz and Celtic music and some other things.” 20/4/1960 South Africa: Johannesburg: celebrations at union festival for coloured people Thousands of coloured people filled the stadium at Newlands, Johannesburg, April 18, for the official opening of their Union Festival. They roared their appreciation as girl drum-majorettes marched rhythmically along in procession to the music of a banjo band, followed by a smart parade of boys in kilts. In a speech to the crowds, South African Deputy Interior Minister, Mr. P. Botha talked of new bonds of friendship between coloured people and the Government. 04/07/1932 Smart set’s regatta Leander Boat Club beat Thames in the Grand Challenge Cup. Society crowds see a great race, the climax of the finest river festival at Henley, England: Semi view of man in punt playing Banjo. Semi view of people in punts having lunch. 01/05/2002 France: Film director Shane Meadows speaks about his latest film “Once upon a time in the Midlands” Ricky Tomlinson describing his character saying: I play a sort of a country and western singer who goes round the clubs earning a few quid, but I know I know a million of them guys, there’s a million of those guys in Liverpool right at this moment and 20 years ago I used to play not the guitar, I used to play the banjo and go round the clubs and the pubs and do a bit of a stand up, a bit of a Billy Connolly stuff like that so I know exactly where that guy’s coming from and I know exactly where he’s going - he’s going nowhere but some of those guys are lovely and they wear the stetson and the long hair and the cowboy coats and the boots with the spurs and they live the part.’ 20/11/1992 Benny Hill: Props auction: Stills Hill playing banjo and standing by Abbey Road street sign. British Pathe (downloadable shorts) 7/03/1949 Music Festival on Strings Westminster Central Hall, London. SV Banjo player sorting out instrument cases: LV Banjo player arriving: VS of more banjo players arriving: LV banjo player arrives on bicycle: SV woman instrumentalist gets out of taxi: VS more musicians arrive: CU Poster ‘Music Festival’: LS Elevated audience: Various CUs of people playing in a massed banjo and mandolin band: SV Judges: LV Band. (playing “Man the Guns”): LV Audience applauding: LV Band standing and acknowledging applause. No titles. Banjo Player - could be Ernest Jones or Alvin Keech. A heavy plush curtain is pulled back to reveal a man sitting on a set decorated with potted palms and playing the banjo. The man has a thin moustache and wears white tie and tails (evening dress). He sings a pleasant little song - Dreaming of the Day, about how wonderful life will be when “you’ll be mine”. (The next item listed is by the same person!) THE BANJOISTS’ BROADSHEET NO. 189 FOR OCTOBER 2004 PAGE 2 Banjo player Lou Abelardo sings the plaintive song S’posing in the studio. On a set dressed with the usual potted palms, we see Lou Abelardo, a slim man with a moustache wearing white tie and tails, playing the banjo. The song is a plaintive little tune, called S’posing. It’s about “S’posing I should fall in love with you, do you think that you could love me too? S’posing I would hold you and caress you, would it impress you, or distress you?” (note – he’s obviously using guitar/ukulele tuning) Felix the Cat - Uncle Tom’s Crabbin Animation. One in the series of “Adventures of Felix the Cat” cartoons by Pat Sullivan. A Yeti in the snow. Felix with knapsack journeying through the snow. He arrives amongst sunny fields of sunflowers. Uncle Tom is playing the banjo and his child is dancing. Felix joins in. The music wakes an angry man (dressed like a ring master). He uses his whip to break the banjo and threaten uncle Tom. Mammy is cooking pancakes. Felix turns her frying pan into a banjo using his whiskers as strings. The family dance again. The angry man chases them and Felix turns the banjo into a unicycle to escape. The man throws stones, but Felix turns the banjo into a tennis racket and hits them back. A little girl gives Felix her hair bow which turns into a propeller to lift him into the sky. The man turns his whip into a stair case and then into a dog to try and catch him. They chase and fight, but the dog turns back into the whip. It begins to snow. 09/09/1937 Raymonde and his banjo band play a medley of marches on their twangy instruments. Music is: Stars & Stripes, Washington Post, Colonel Bogey. 02/07/1936 Close up shots of Raymonde and some other players playing Blaze Away. (note – this is the sort of thing which killed the banjo as a musical instrument!) 12/07/1951 Various shots as musicians of Britain’s Banjo, Mandolin and Guitar Clubs arrive in Red Lion Square with their instruments. Various shots as they enter Conway Hall. Interior shots of crowds applauding. L/S band playing Mind the Guns (sic) conducted by Phil Barker. Various shots as they play. People applaud at the end. 07/06/1943 Various shots of banjo players Tarrant Bailey Junior and Renaldo playing Streamline, an original piece for the banjo. Cataloguer’s note: both men play with fixed grins on their face making it (unintentionally) funny to watch. (both play plectrum banjos) 06/04/1939 M/S of Tarrant Bailey playing the banjo and smiling. Various shots of him playing lively tunes, some shots are superimposed over others. (playing finger-style) 22/10/1936 M/S of broadcaster Tarrant Bailey Junior playing his banjo in the studio. M/S of him with Geoff Sisley on the guitar, they play a lively composition of their own. Various C/U’s of him and shots of them together. They look very happy and finish with a flourish. 13/09/1934 Titles read: “Now Pathe Pictorial has pleasure in presenting - Britain’s Greatest Banjoist - Tarrant Bailey Jr. of Broadcasting and Record fame in a novelty Banjo Solo - The Donkey Laugh. Various shots of Tarrant Bailey, in white tie and tails, playing the jaunty novelty tune The Donkey Laugh on his banjo. Shots of a donkey are intercut. 01/07/1937 Various shots of Gene Essen, banjo player and his band of banjos of various sizes playing Turkey in the Straw and Old Joe. (this is truly appalling! – Get me out of here – I’m a musician) 08/09/1930 Full titles read: “Mario de Pietro - the famous instrumental virtuoso. At the piano Jean Melville.” Various shots of the famous musician Mario De Pietro sitting down. He plays a song called Rosmarin on his Mandolin, and is accompanied by Jean Melville who sits in the background on (sic!) the piano. When the piece is finished. Pietro turns to Melville and asks - “Well Jean, what a shall we play next ?” She replies, “Well, I think Lollipops would be rather nice.” Pietro picks up a Banjo and starts to play the lively tune. THE BANJOISTS’ BROADSHEET NO. 189 FOR OCTOBER 2004 PAGE 3 3/12/1934 Titles read: ‘NOW PATHE PICTORIAL has pleasure in presenting - “The Wizard of the Strings” - MARIO DE PIETRO - well-known to countless Radio listeners’. Mario de Pietro, the Wizard of the Strings, plays the banjo. He is accompanied by a woman at a grand piano. Both wear evening dress. No details on what the tune is - paperwork lists it simply as ‘His own music’. It’s an upbeat, jaunty number! - SL. 09/11/1939 Mario de Pietro is introduced to the camera by the guitar player in the band. Both have posh English accents - they don’t sound at all Spanish! As well as the guitar, the other instruments in the band are the banjo (played by Mario), the double bass, the accordion and the violin. All the musicians wear satin shirts and floppy hats - they are supposed to be gypsies. They play upbeat gypsy style music. 09/08/1934 Titles read: ‘NOW Pathe Pictorial has pleasure in presenting - Gene Essen and his Chicago Vellum Boys in a Plantation Medley’.Various shots of Gene Essen and his orchestra of banjos of all shapes and sizes, plus pianist, playing The Old Folks At Home (a.k.a. Swanee River) in a slow and soulful way. Two musicians play larger banjos with bows, like cellos. They are all wearing white suits with black lapels, black ties and a black stripe down their trousers. Gene’s suit is all white. Shots are intercut showing swamp land (?), a river with willow trees, an African-American woman fishing in a lake and an African-American man leaning against a tree and walking about. It sounds like the tune changes halfway through, but I don’t recognise this one. (Note: Gene and his boys are all white.) 04/08/1938 M/S of lady playing piano, Eddie Peabody comes on and says a few words before playing Listen to the Mocking Bird on the violin. C/U as he simulates bird sounds by grabbing the strings and moving the bow quickly. M/S as he sits down with the banjo. M/S as he gives a lesson on how to use the instrument before playing When I Grow Too Old to Dream. Various shots as he plays slowly then livens it up towards the end. 30/11/1933 Titles read: “Now Pathe Pictorial presents – Troise and his Mandoliers (of Variety and BBC Fame,) in Old-time Favourites. Various shots of Troise and his Banjoliers playing a medley of ‘old-time favourites’. Most of the men play banjos of varying sizes (including a double-bass banjo) and there is also a pianist, drummer and accordionist. All the musicians are dressed in flouncy shirts. A man conducts - presumably this is Troise. The only tunes recognised by this cataloguer are Oh, Susanna! and Jingle Bells. 19/10/1933 Various shots of Troise and his Banjoliers, all clad in light flouncy shirts and dark trousers, playing the jaunty tune At Sundown. Almost all the musicians are playing banjos of varying sizes, including a double bass banjo! There is also a pianist, accordionist and xylophone player. Central Hall, Westminster, London. Various shots of a large orchestra on stage during the Westminster Music festival, London. Several shots of musician H. J. Brisby, the oldest competitor, playing solo on banjo with orchestra in background. Several shots of conductor and members of the orchestra. People arriving at Central Hall, Westminster and entering the building. Several shots of the audience and judges listening the concert. Two men, possibly Ronga brothers, finishing playing and leaving the stage. MS. Mr Brisby finishing & acknowledging applause. More shots of the orchestra and the judges listening. Various close up shots of the audience listening and applauding. MS. Mr Brisby playing Freckles - natural sound. SCU. Mr Brisby playing Freckles. MS. Brisby taking ovation. Various shots of the orchestra playing - natural sound. Various shots of the people arriving to Central Hall with their instruments. Several shots of the youngest competitor, Anita Bloom and another young girl arriving. 27/01/1938 Various shots of river boat sailing across Sydney Harbour. The boat is very old and used to be used as a ferry before the building of the bridge. On board the boat is an enormous banjo and ukulele band. Good views of the city and Sydney Harbour Bridge. THE BANJOISTS’ BROADSHEET NO. 189 FOR OCTOBER 2004 PAGE 4 28/12/1936 Carson Robison Wild West Cowboy quartet consisting of female vocalist, two banjo players and a guitarist. Various C/Us of the group as they perform ballad, Sleepy Rio Grande. Performers all wear traditional cowboy clothing, set looks vaguely like they are sitting around a camp fire. Song is in close harmonies, with a warbly whistling interlude by one of the men. 09/10/1933 Titles read: “Now to meet again Carson Robison and his Pioneers. Real cowboy Troubadours of the Prairie - in an old time Hill-Billy [sic]”. Various shots of three men and one woman singing Hot Time in New Orleans Tonight. The men play banjos and guitars; one plays a mouth organ / harmonica. They are all in cowboy / cowgirl clothes. Brief shot in the middle of the song of a crowded showboat on a river. Dear Julian . . . Sorry to hear about your computer (wayward? Unreliable? Unfaithful? Dodgy? Defective immune system – prone to virus attacks and sudden states of collapse? – aren’t they all!). Even more sorry to hear that subscribers’ manuscripts had been forwarded to help meet Government recycling targets! I have to confess that my own prolonged Senior Moments make me aware of also having recycled my rough copy of the article and, even worse, I had seemed to have forgotten most of the substance of the article. BUT, this Senior Wrinkly’s cranial computer did eventually remember the subject matter: viz. The Floating Resonator! D id anyone else read the short article about Buddy Wachter’s experiment of loosening the resonator fixings and using a foam washer to allow the resonator to ‘float’ with a view to improving the instrument’s tone? Who else other than this Senior Wrinkly [and jules – ed] decided to give it a go? (or was it – “Who else was taken in?”). Who else is playing quite happily with a floating resonator secured by a central bolt with a foam washer made from some jewelry box lining? No, it doesn’t rattle; no, it doesn’t slip from side to side against the flange sections; no, it isn’t uncomfortable against the legs and body. Who else tried this experiment and is brave enough (or stupid enough) to admit it in print, and with what results? Having been complimented a number of times on the sound quality of Colin Chapman’s tenor, I can’t say that there’s been a marked improvement in tone. On the other hand, it definitely hasn’t got any worse as a result of the experiment. Recent remarks from our normally quiet (in both manner and playing) drummer about the Chaplin tenor being a loud instrument seems to suggest that there has been a gain in volume. Perhaps a little scientific detail, if available, might throw some light on the background to this unusual, to say the least, experiment on tonal improvement. So until such time as I hear that I might be damaging my health and sanity or that, like passive smoking, I am the source of similar life-threatening problems for the listening public, this Senior Wrinkly will carry on floating. Best wishes Griff Thomas Bath Banjo Festival I think we’ve sorted out the date for next year’s bash – it will be June 24-26. The venue will be the University, again, and we have some plans to make it more friendly (tea and biscuits on tap, more space for playing, etc) and have it in a bigger hall. We’ll have the Friday and Saturday evening sessions as before, in the Senior Common Room bar. It was unfortunate this year that the students decided, at the last moment, to have their Annual Ball on the same evening, but it wasn’t such an imposition. It was also a shame that I had to leave on the Sunday for a project meeting in Bonn. So who do we have on the Concert list? Bill Keith said that he’d be willing to return (he gave one of the best performances I’ve ever seen. But we’ll have some PA this time so’s you can hear him in the back row of the auditorium!). Doug Back, a finger-style player from the USA whose CDs have been reviewed in the BB, also wants to come but only if enough finger-style players want to have lessons (the tuition fees at the BBF are about half what you’d normally pay – and your tutors are necessarily some of the best in the world. So you can’t say they are expensive!!). We have yet to fill plectrum slots, and perhaps could have another 5-string player and need an Irish exponent. Suggestions gratefully received. THE BANJOISTS’ BROADSHEET NO. 189 FOR OCTOBER 2004 PAGE 5 --==Bits and Bobs==-Cleaning Windows The Guardian On-Line August 26th Blog Watch, by Bobbie Johnson eorge Formby has a lot to answer for. Behind that cheeky exterior, Lancashire’s favourite four-string strummer has helped spark a whole world of uke on the web. First stop for anyone doing a tour of duty should be Ukulelia – the self-proclaimed “world’s greatest ukulele weblog”. Who are we to argue? Then there’s the highly regarded Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain, whose website doesn’t seem to offer audio clips but at least quotes daytime TV great Richard Madeley: “They are HOT!” http://ukulelia.com www.ukuleleorchestra.com G J ulian Pilling sent an excerpt from The Book of Royal Trivia (Brown & Cunliffe 1982). Under the heading of modern songs associated with Royalty, we find that the Duke of Windsor sang The Red Flag at Oxford to his own banjo accompaniment, and Mr Gladstone, the Prime Minister, sang The Camptown Races, accompanying himself on the banjo, at the insistence of King Edward VII and his guests at Sandringham. The act received several encores. This BB’s cover riff Thomas visited Jersey in August and saw these two sculptures of musicians on St Helier, both by Carole Vincent (no relation). They are near the eastern end of Queen Street, where six roads and streets meet. Les Jongleurs (The Jugglers, 1996) is sculpted in a creamy grey rock (granite) and depicts a trio made up of banjo, fiddle and accordion. Working in Concert (1999) is outside La Motte Chambers, sculpted from greenflecked granite (?) and has banjo, fiddle, concertina, bodran and singer. Griff’s drawings are based on photos he took. G J This BB’s music ohn Kennaugh was given this piece when he visited a repairman, Frank Lucchesi, in Holyoake, Mass. Along with the music came the tale that the Bacon Banjo Band provided the first live music to be transmitted to the UK. Anyone comment? Banjo Science Roger Siminoff has been on the banjo scene for a good while now, having written and published on all technical aspects of the banjo, making, repairing, set-up and playing. He’s doing some occasional articles in Banjo Newsletter (q.v.) on finding the right tailpiece. Very informative and interesting. To find out more, either subscribe to Banjo Newsletter, or go to Siminoff’s web site – www.siminoff.com Banjo books ohn Winch of Hastings writes to introduce himself and announce that he’s writing a book about banjos. Have a look at him, and hear some of his music, on http://www.johnwinch.com J --==Letters==-Dear Mr Vincent, Through the good offices of one of your subscribers, Peter Durham, I have copies of articles about my grandfather, Walter Langley, which appeared in BB186 and BB187. The contribution from Richard Ineson, which appeared in BB187, was particularly interesting. When, some 60 years ago, my grandmother, Langley’s widow, died a banjo was one of the many items discovered in her home in Penzance – nothing had ever been thrown away – and this I well remember as one of the more unusual arrivals at our home in Cheltenham, courtesy of the GWR. Neither I nor my brother had the slightest musical talent and my father sold the banjo, in Cheltenham! If Eliza Creegan’s statement that she had my grandfather’s banjo was correct (and I have no reason to suppose it was not) it suggests to me that it is likely he passed on an older instrument to her when replacing it with a more modern one. The name ‘Eliza Creegan’ is not familiar to me, but then it would have been under her maiden name that my grandfather would have known her, possibly as a model for one or more of his paintings. From the article it appears Eliza was born in 1897 and, as she said that my grandfather taught her to play the banjo when she was a young girl, I would suppose that she THE BANJOISTS’ BROADSHEET NO. 189 FOR OCTOBER 2004 PAGE 6 either featured in one or more of his paintings, from (say) 1905 on, or was a friend of the family. There are several painting candidates but, regrettably, Eliza cannot have been the young girl to the left of the paintings featured in your Broadsheets, which date from 1898. If Mrs Creegan’s daughter is still alive perhaps she might recall more of the circumstances under which Walter Langley came to teach her mother the banjo? Roger Langley Dear Festival Director, I am extremely grateful to yourself and Mr. Perlman for providing me with the opportunity to meet, and receive tuition from, the great Bill Keith. It turned out to be a very enlightening and awe inspiring experience. Thanks also to Dorothy and Colin Cosh who allowed me to visit their home in Shepperton, where Bill was ‘in digs’ both before and after the festival, for more banjo and music wisdom. Great stuff. Thanks a million. Yours Sincerely Norman Jones Dear Julian I am beginning to think that banjo playing is a disease from which one does not recover. I am deeply, madly, into Ragtime at the moment, playing and reading about it. My recent favourite is Peaceful Henry by EH Kelly (1901) arranged for 5string banjo by David Miles. Many thanks for the work that you put into organising the Bath Banjo Festival. I had not planned to go to any workshops this year, but after spending some time with Bill Keith I attended his workshop. I was most impressed with the music theory that he covered. At last I feel that I understand the circle of 5ths and how to use it to work out any chord, especially the augmented and diminished ones, in any key. My thanks to Bill for a most unusual and interesting approach to the banjo. Yours sincerely Dorothy Cosh Hello Banjomaniacs, Just wanted to let you know that the Zing! Went the Strings of My Heart Customize-Your-Own FourString Banjo Emailable Postcard is finally finished! You can check it out here: http://www.stringsofmyheart.com. When you get to the website, just click on the little star at the upper right hand corner (it says “banjo postcard” on it). You’ll definitely want to have your sound turned on! Also, you’ll need to have the flash player installed, but if you do not have it the site will let you know. I hope you’re all well! Enjoy the banjo fun! Amy Finkel Hi everybody, Sue Sangiacomo has been making changes to our website in order to accommodate the works of other banjo instructors. We are pleased to announce the Harry Reser Home Lesson Study Course is now available through www.UltimateBanjo.com thanks to the efforts of Jürgen Kulus. We have the book in stock and ready for immediate shipment. To find the Reser book in our website, click on “Books” then click on “Other Books” - then click on “Tenor” and scroll to the title. Four-String Banjo Hall of Fame recipient Tim Allan now has nine instruction books and CDs available through www.UltimateBanjo.com! Tim is one of the most respected and well-known tenor banjoists in the world. His instruction books are well thought out and very informative. Many of the books are tune related. Your favorite might be there. Now you can learn it from one of the world’s best! To check out Tim’s instruction books, go to www.UltimateBanjo.com - in the top banner, click on “Other Books” - then scroll down to Tim’s books or go to the “Tenor Banjo” section of the website. While in the website, be sure to what else has been going on. We are continuing to streamline the website for ease of accessibility as more instructors and authors come on board. Also check out some of the other categories in the site such as “Fakebooks and Others.” You’ll find David Littlefield’s extensive library in there. Our continued goal is to make four-string banjo instruction accessible and easy to find. I’m very pleased with the progress being made in the website. As awareness of the site grows, more and more banjo students and players are checking it out, purchasing materials and asking questions. This can only be beneficial to the four-string banjo and its presence in the music world. Please write to me with any suggestions and / or recommendations you may have concerning www.UltimateBanjo.com. Thanks. Dave Frey THE BANJOISTS’ BROADSHEET NO. 189 FOR OCTOBER 2004 PAGE 7 Hello Julian, I was given your e-mail address by Juergen Kulus. He told me that you might know about Bill Trigg’s Vol. 2 Book (Harry F. Reser). I was good friends with Bill and was shocked when I heard that he had passed away. I called Mrs. Triggs in February 2004 and she told me that vol. 2 was going to the printer in the States and she would let me know when it was done, but I never heard from her. I been trying to call her but I think her phone number is changed. Would you know anything on Vol. 2 book or would you have her phone number? I am a tenor banjo player and a lover of the music of the 1920’s. I also collect Harry Reser 78’s and anything of Harry Reser. I really enjoy reading the Reser book that Bill worked on, it has lots of information, so I hope there is another book coming out with more information. I hope you can help me on this. Thank you, Gus C. Zimmerman Dear Gus Thanks for your note regarding Bill and his Reser projects. Bill’s wife died earlier this year, and anyway according to Bill’s daughter nobody in the family really knew what Bill was doing. They had no idea about the value of his various instruments, for instance, and nearly sold them cheaply as ‘house clearance’. However, all Bill’s records, collections, etc were boxed up by his step-daughter and are safe. Bill’s family contacted me shortly after his death as someone who had known him for many years and lived conveniently close. I have negotiated with the University of Exeter (which has an extensive collection of American music) that they’ll set up a “Triggs Collection” and will lodge nearly everything there. The 78s will then all gradually be put onto CDs, and all the sheet music, MSs, letters, etc catalogued and made available. After about a year’s searching and negotiation we are just about ready to move the stuff to the University. Until then it’s all in boxes, and nobody really understands the significance of what’s there. When the boxes are unpacked in Exeter, I’ll be there to see what there is and help with initial sorting. I don’t know what will happen after that. It will depend on funding and who might be interested. Certainly the collection will be more readily available than in Bill’s spare bedroom, and it will be possible for people like yourself to gain access and do your own studies. We have yet to sort out problems like copyright (which I don’t think Bill worried about!). Best wishes Julian BANJOLLITY John Whitlock’s BANJORAMA will be playing at the Bradford on Avon Jazz Club on Friday 8th October. 13th Annual Bluegrass Charity Concert (Charlie Gaisford Memorial Concert) Dec 4th 2004 7pm to 11pm. he concert will be held at the Riddell Hall, Deans Lane, Walton on the Hill, Surrey (Junction 8 M25, nearest station Tadworth, courtesy bus service to Sutton station), tickets £7 in advance, £8 on the door. Bar. This is a fantastic old hall in a beautiful village in Surrey with plenty of room for bands and audience. This year the concert features Bob & Sheila Everhart from Iowa, Smithsonian / Folkways Recording Artists. Other bands booked so far, Monroes Revenge, Street Legal, Betty Davila and the Acoustic Astronauts, Bluegrass Express, Freddie Smith (“Boy Wonder” of the fiddle) for more info call 07703 472824. T B Fretted Festivals ackwell came back, well as ever. Actually it was the second time I’d been there (I visited a meeting there about 25 years ago, before the present series started). Mike Redman does an excellent job organising this, in a nice airy hall with good acoustics, easily accessible with enough parking and lots of good playing. Unfortunately I wasn’t able to stay for the evening part of the event (dinner at a local pub together with a dispensation for plectrum played banjos). Fred Determann and I nearly had a fight when I played my Weaver with a plectrum in order to provide a legato countermelody to an exceedingly up-beat Teddy Bears’ Picnic, one of the Community Numbers. What jolly fun! Midlands Fretted Orchestra Meetings Thursday fortnightly, The Good Shepherd Hall, Slack Lane, Handsworth Wood, Birmingham (off College Rd behind St Andrew’s church) THE BANJOISTS’ BROADSHEET NO. 189 FOR OCTOBER 2004 PAGE 8 The Orchestra caters for all ages, all levels of ability and all fretted instruments. For more info. contact Danielle Saxon Reeves, tel 01384 89 39 87 or email [email protected] BANJO TIMES a magazine for all banjoists BANJO TIMES is issued bimonthly by David Price and Natalie. A forum for views, letters correspondence and articles on banjo music and musicians, historical notes, events, free advertisements, instructional hints. Annual subscription £10.00 UK, £12.00 EU, £13.00 USA / Australia. Wayside Publications, Wayside, Epping Green, Essex, CM16 6PU. Email: [email protected] Ragtime Century for the 5-string banjo A layflat, spirally bound, book containing 100 rags by Joplin and others arranged for 5-string banjo by David Miles and Jack Holliday. In musical notation with fingering and position markings. Arrangements follow original piano copy. £25.00 Mastering the Classical Banjo A comprehensive tutor by David Miles. Nearly 200 pages of instruction, graded exercises and music to take the beginner to the most advanced stages of playing. Also section dealing with self accompaniment for the troubadour. £25.00 Bouquet of Classics for Banjo 120 pieces from the repertoire of the lute, guitar, and other sources, arranged for 5-string banjo by David Miles. £28.00 Morley Mania 83 of Joe Morley’s banjo solos for £20. 52 second banjo parts for use with above for £13. £32 if ordered together. Both with bound backs. POP Goes the Banjo Popular songs from 1560-1960. Musical notation, fingering, position marking, plus chord symbols. Half the songs are from the 20th century. Each book contains 100 songs. Where appropriate 2 versions are shown – “straight” and “swingy”. All are written out with chord symbols, as well as fingering and position markings. Spiral-bound, lay-flat format. Vols 1 to 6, all at £25 each when ordered singly. If two are ordered, any of vols 1 to 5 will be reduced to £20 each. All prices include postage and packing; payment by cheque or postal order. Only from David Miles, 6 Millbridge Mews, St Andrew St, Hertford, SG14 1HE. Index of each volume free on request. ANDY PERKINS TRADITIONAL INSTRUMENTS Large stocks of refurbished vintage banjos. New banjos built to order in many styles. Exclusive UK Distributor of GOLD TONE high quality American banjos. Write or phone for a free catalogue. Apple Craft Centre, Selling Rd, Faversham, KENT, ME13 8XF tel 01795 590374 / 633864 SULLY’S BANJOS Original banjos of unmistakable style hand-made in England. Order with confidence from this internationally famous banjo shop, established in 1979 by All Ireland Banjo Champion Sully. Supplies Tutors Tunes Repairs Halshaw Music, 37 Catherine St, Macclesfield, Cheshire, SK11 6ET, UK Tel 01625 610849 Mobile: +44 (0)498 912736 Fax: +44 (0)1625 267136 [email protected] www.halshawmusic.co.uk JOHN ALVEY TURNER FRETTED INSTRUMENT SPECIALISTS 36 New Road, Ware, Herts, SG12 7BY 01920 466924, [email protected] Most banjos supplied with fitted case. We have many banjos in stock, including some interesting early ones, plus all the usual accessories, strings. ---== TEACHERS ==--Current BB subscribers who teach banjo - let me know if you wish to be included in this list. Inclusion does not imply endorsement by the BB. SJ HARROP 5-string and tenor banjo, guitar, dobro, mandolin, bass, pedal steel. 18 Haveroid Way, Crigglestone, Wakefield, WF4 3PG Mike JONES tenor & plectrum banjo, plectrum guitar, jass, blues, harmony, improvisation, how to play tunes, etc. 27 Normandy Way, West Acres, Fordingbridge, Hants, tel 01425 655163 THE BANJOISTS’ BROADSHEET NO. 189 FOR OCTOBER 2004 PAGE 9 Nicholas KIRK plectrum banjo 36 Kilpin Hill, Staincliffe, W. Yorks tel 0192 440 2931 David MILES fingerstyle banjo, classical guitar, chord & harmony for vocal accompaniment 6 Millbridge Mews, St Andrew St, Hertford, SG14 1HE tel 01992 501722 Vic PARTRIDGE ALCM tenor banjo and guitar, classical and plectrum. Tel 01633 223333 David PRICE mainly plectrum banjo; occasionally finger style and tenor; most techniques, especially chord-melody & all areas of jazz. Tel 01992 577081 Danielle Saxon REEVES BMus (Hons) offers tuition on banjo and guitar. All ages and level of experience. [email protected] tel 01384 893987 or 07947 168192 Chris SANDS fingerstyle banjo, saxophone “Beeboles” Far Sawrey, Ambleside, Cumbria. Tel 015394 46742 or 33291 Pete STANLEY Blackface to bluegrass - all 5string banjo styles Kentish Town, London. Tel 0207 916 4178 Julian VINCENT tenor banjo, arranging & music theory. Laburnum Cottage, 48 Frome Road, BATH, BA2 2QB, tel 01225 835076 [email protected]. Bill WAISTELL finger style banjo in the Geordie manner. 22 Ellesmere, Bourn Moor, Houghton-leSpring, Tyne & Wear, DH4 6EA. email [email protected] ---== MAKERS/REPAIRERS ==--Phil DAVIDSON builds banjos, mandolins and guitars to your specification. Top class workmanship, superb tone. Visit the website to see some of my instruments in full splendour: www.davidsoninstruments.com, tel 0117 937 4920 DAVE STACEY is building and repairing banjos full-time and is actively seeking commissions. He can make original instruments, copies or modify original instruments (e.g. add a repro 5-string neck to an original hoop). Write for leaflet and quotation for your job. Dave Stacey, 19 Field Lane, Letchworth, Herts, SG6 3LF, tel 01462 683074 BANJOS REPAIRED, RESTORED, TRADED Barrie Lockwood, 40 Westbury Road, Penge, London, SE20 7QH, tel 0181 778 5681 BANJO REPAIRS (carried out by master luthier Clive Denman in consultation with Chris and you). Chris Sands, Bee Boles, Far Sawrey, Ambleside, Cumbria. tel 0153 94 46742, fax 0153 94 44532 REPAIRS, RESTORATIONS of all kinds. Andy Perkins, Apple Craft Centre, Selling Rd, Faversham, KENT, ME13 8XF tel 01795 590374 / 633864 REPAIRS Halshaw Music, 37 Catherine St, Macclesfield, Cheshire, SK11 6ET, UK ---===FOR SALE===--Clifford Essex Concert Grand Plectrum banjo pot, with arm made by Colin Chapman (who used to play and make banjos in Kent) - £950 Jedson Paramount copy Plectrum Banjo (gold plated, rosewood) - £950 Eric Robinson Custom Plectrum Banjo - £950 All three banjos are good playable instruments with good tone and volume. There is a hard case with the first two. They would suit jazzers or soloists! Tel 01924-402931 – Nicholas Kirk Paramount Style B tenor refurbished throughout. Great sound, possibly original case. £1600 Gibson RB250 Mastertone 5-string in mint condition. History available. £1500. Superb Gibson case. Hand-crafted banjos – three (two 5-string and one plectrum). Great tone and volume. Custom-made tone rings to my own specifications. Very ornate. For more details of these instruments, tel 01663 743610 Email [email protected] OZARK Resonator Tri-Cone guitar – new, deluxe, gold plated with m.o.p and abalone “Tree of Life” inlay on the fingerboard. Slight damage to back, hence on £350. Buyer collects Reg Baynham hand made plectrum banjo. All maple, good loud tone, ideal band instrument. £300. Phone for details. Reg Baynham tel 01873 832007 Collection of banjos, including: Victor Gem No 1 7-string banjo by Dobson Mikado by Jos. Riley & Son, Birmingham (in original case) DeLuxe fretless by Geo. P. Matthew, Birmingham THE BANJOISTS’ BROADSHEET NO. 189 FOR OCTOBER 2004 PAGE 10 Also various original exercise books by Grimshaw, and Ellis’s tutor. Offers for the above (and more . . . .!) Norman Price, tel 01912 744660 Kevin Scott has the following tenor banjos for sale: Slingerland Troubadour, Epiphone Band-master, Paramount Style C, Gibson TB 250, Vega Whyte Laydie, John Grey Chieftain, Bacon & Day No 2 Special, Stromberg Supertone, Reg Baynham . . . and the following plectrum banjos: Paramount Leader, Paramount Style A. Contact Kevin on 01932 886538 or check the web site where you’ll find full descriptions and lots of nice digital photos. http://www.findajo.co.uk Ideal for the Jazz Banjo player, a chord book with charts for over 1,430 jazz favourites. Please send a stamped addressed envelope for the complete index, some sample pages and a copy of the review from the American magazine ‘Just Jazz Guitar’. The price is £45 plus £6 postage. Alan Noble, 52 Branksome Drive, Nab Wood, Shipley, BD18 4BE or tel. 01274 583085. Email on [email protected] William BALL’s CDs are available: Pompadour (Morley compositions) and Humoresque (various composers) at £10 each or the two for £18 including p&p. Also available A Banjo Oddity CD by The New Criterion Banjo Orchestra (reviewed in BB178) at £11 including p&p. Fred Determann, 5 Nursery Rd, Ringwood, Hants, BH24 1NF. Banjollity CD by John Whitlock’s BANJORAMA. 20 tracks of jazz, ragtime and some original pieces by John Whitlock. £11.00 (includes p&p) from John at 8 Higher Brimley, Teignmouth, Devon, TQ14 8JS, tel 01626 774710. Banjos For Sale A Good Selection Of Quality Instruments Always Available. Kevin:-01932 886538 or 0771 3768673 Email [email protected] HARRY RESER and The Clicquot Club Eskimos available on CD or tape cassette! This is a compilation of 20 performances as broadcast in the US in 1951 and never published before. The Clicquot Ginger Ale Company had asked Harry Reser to form the “Eskimos” band again for another series of radio broadcasts. This album shows the more contemporary Harry Reser and his arrangements of that time. €15 ($15) for the CD; €12 ($12) for the audio cassette. Jürgen Kulus, CarlSchmincke-Str. 12, D-71229 Leonberg, Germany. tel/fax: +49-7152-949414 BANJO AMPLIFIERS AND JAZZ BAND PAs Our JAZZ 50 (50 watts for £199) and JAZZ 100 (100 watts for £349) are light, compact “combo” amplifiers designed specifically for banjo players and other jazz musicians. We also manufacture 100 watt and 200 watt (stereo) PA amplifiers. The JAZZ 100 PA system has four input channels, two separate loud-speakers and costs £399. The JAZZ 200 PA system has eight input channels, two separate loudspeakers and costs £499. Wadey Amplifiers Ltd. 23 Beaconfield, Beacon Park, Plymouth PL2 3LD Tel 01752 563951 JULES & KEITH play tenor banjo and piano - a CD featuring tenor banjo pieces by Reser, Mandell, Weidt and others, covering jazz, ragtime, novelty and classical music. 17 tracks all accompanied by Keith Nichols at the piano. “A very interesting CD. . . If virtuoso piano and banjo playing is your forte, then this is for your listening” (Peter Lay, Just Jazz). Cost £7.50 (includes postage) from J Vincent, Laburnum Cottage, 48 Frome Road, BATH, BA2 2QB CLASSIC NYLON BANJO STRINGS from Chris Sands. Guaranteed manufactured from the finest quality materials and to be the correct gauge. State light, medium or heavy gauge when ordering. £4.50 per set, 85p p+p. SUPERIOR LOOP-END STEEL STRINGS by Ernie Ball. Please state light or medium gauge. 5-string banjo £4.25 per set Tenor banjo £4.10 per set Add 85p for postage and packing. banjo bridges - £3.95; finest selected calf skin banjo vellums (14”) - £29.95 THE BANJOISTS’ BROADSHEET NO. 189 FOR OCTOBER 2004 PAGE 11 MEL BAY BOOK of 16 pieces with a CD which presented in fully-fingered music notation and tablature. Book + CD are £15.99. Tarrant Bailey Jnr BANJO SOLOS – his life and works, by Chris Sands. Book and CD. Music shown in fully-fingered standard notation and tablature. £19.95 Order by fax or phone with Mastercard, Visa or Access. Please include your name as it appears on the card, the number and expiry date of the card, your signature and address. Chris Sands, Bee Boles, Far Sawrey, Ambleside, Cumbria. tel 0153 94 46742, fax 0153 94 44532 A CHEAP WAY to make your day – send for a free Deering catalogue. Stunning photos of stunning instruments. And they sound as good as the adverts say they do! Catalogue reviewed in BB141, Deering GDL tenor banjo reviewed in BB146. Deering also have a cheap instrument for the beginner - the “Goodtime” which can come with a “starter kit”. Bela Fleck plays a Deering, so do lots of other top players. Deering Banjo Co., 3733 Kenora Drive, Spring Valley, CA 91977, USA (619) 464 8252. Fax 464 0833 email: [email protected] URL: www.deeringbanjos.com Say you saw their name here. PETE STANLEY with BRIAN GOLBEY Banjo tunes and songs Vol 1. A 20-track cassette for £7.00 plus 50p postage and packing. Available only from Pete Stanley, 15 Torriano Ave, London NW5 2SN. UP AND KICKING with Peter Sumner and his band Cats Whisker. Cassette of originals (reviewed in BB155). Lentney House, Longlands Drive, Heybrook Bay, Plymouth, PL9 0BL. £5 (inc. p & p) BANJOVI REVIVAL HAVE NOW CUT THEIR THIRD CD BANJOVI REVIVAL 10 YEARS ON. As in previous years every penny we make will go to charity. Anyone interested please contact Pauline Gibson, 90 Straight Bit, Flackwell Heath, High Wycombe, Bucks. HP10 9NA. All proceeds go to charity. HOWARD SHEPHERD’S LATEST available on cassette and CD (plec banjo with guitar and double bass), with Cherokee, When Day is Done, Czardas, Tiger Rag, William Tell Overture, etc. £8 (includes postage and packing). Cheques to M Dexter, 1 Meadow St, New Mills, High Peak, Derbyshire, SK22 4AY Triggs on Reser – the famous biodiscography is available cheap to clear - £10 (includes P&P). Order from Julian Vincent, Laburnum Cottage, 48 Frome Road, BATH, BA2 2QB The BANJOISTS’ BROADSHEET costs £5.00 for 8 issues (which lasts a bit more than a year) within the UK, 13 Euros for the rest of Europe and £12 or $20 in the rest of the World. Pay by any currency in cash, but please, STERLING ONLY as cheque. email delivery for half this price, or email copy in addition to your postal copy at no extra charge. The email copy is a .pdf file, so you can archive your copies without taking up space. You need Adobe Reader to view a .pdf file, but it is available free on the Internet. Editorial address is Laburnum Cottage, 48 Frome Road, BATH, BA2 2QB tel 01225 835 076 mob 07941 933 901; email [email protected] --==Wanted==-Does anyone in the Oldham area (Lancs) have any information on Leslie Orme, banjoist and saxophone player from many years ago? If so, please contact Mike on 01663 743610