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Music
Blog Entry 5 of 7
Fresh Air and a little vinegar
It's pretentious, I think, to write my own blog intro, but Here We Go! If you want to read an ongoing blog soundly based in the living, breathing, world, and not on the stifling and bizarre theories of liberal academia, this is your blog. If you love to gain meaningful and inspiring knowledge, then you've come to the right place. If you like the outdoors and can't stand staying inside any longer than you have to, this is your blog! If you want to hear a teen's perspective on things, and wonder just how much 'our generation' can achieve, you might want to read this blog too.
Blog Url:
http://denver.yourhub.com/~LuxVerumque
Entries:
4/11/2008 'A misplaced(?) brief genera...'
4/25/2008 'The Colorado Open'
5/5/2008 'Thoughts on moving dirt'
5/22/2008 'Cub Scout shootout'
5/30/2008 'My Musical paramour: The Banjo'
6/26/2008 'The divine right of judges?'
8/26/2008 'A culture of death? 1941-2008'
My Musical paramour: The Banjo
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Contributed by:
Johnathan Osborn
on 5/30/2008
"The banjo is everything that's good wrapped up in a neat package"---
Chris Athey
Most kids play the piano. Some kids play the guitar in all of its versions (electric, acoustic, and air.) Others play violins and flutes and take expensive lessons from expert tutors. Many kids I know don't play anything, period, but are so well versed on all the different bands in all the different genres that they should count as musicians.
My parents wanted me to take the piano. So I took piano lessons for two years. I did the Musician's Guild (a competition of sorts where the player memorizes songs and scales) I attended recitals, I studied theory, and I learned nothing. This wasn't really my teacher's fault, however, nothing could convince me that playing piece after piece
ad nauseam
was teaching me anything. Piano, as an instrument and mindset, lacked ( and still lacks, for me) any personality or power.
So I looked up different instruments. I tried the guitar for a while, strumming on an old Hondo that my mom had owned since college. I even paid for a few lessons. Then I took a couple of classes at a co-op ( a home school 'school' of sorts) and
everybody
over the age of 12 could play the guitar. The catch was that they only knew how to play chords, no melody, just strummin' and croonin'. After a little longer I concluded that most of guitar was like this, and began to investigate other instruments. I even considered the ukelele for a while after watching a particularly entertaining performance of 'Ukelele Lady.'
I asked my dad, "What instrument do you remember that was really fun to play or listen to?" He thought about it for a moment, then answered, "It would have to be the banjo. No one can frown at a party if someone's playing a banjo in the room."
I thought that sounded neat, so I asked my parents for an inexpensive banjo for my birthday. They got me an honest-to-God $300 instrument. I was stunned when I opened the packaging, and I still haven't gotten over it's simple beauty more than a year later. The slender neck, the gleaming resonator, the dark and smooth wood! what a pleasure to own, much less play! I confidently asserted that I'd be playing it like a pro in six months. Then I started to teach myself.
Let's just say that I still don't play like a pro, but i've never had more fun playing any other instrument before. I can make my banjo sound like a harp, like the theme from
Star Trek the movie,
a
C
itibank commercial, and many things in between, in addition to good 'ole pickin' and grinnin'.
Much to the trepidation of my sister, who is a classical music aficionado, I normally practice a half hour a day and end the session with a hearty
yeehaw!
(They need to put something about that in those 'You might be a redneck if-" books)
Although the banjo may seem simple, the mechanics of playing it are complicated. The right hand (unless the player is a lefty) has picks on the thumb, index, and middle fingers. The left hand, in addition to holding the neck of the banjo, adds in effects, (like the 'slide' which required sounding three or more notes simultaneously) that give the music that bluegrass/country/weird feel.
So, in conclusion, I'd have to say that banjo is fun and worthwhile, and if you ever meet a banjo player, ask him about it. You may just find yourself pickin' and grinnin' too.
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Showing 1 of 1 comments
Submitted By: Michael Rule
posted on 5/31/2008 @ 7:20:55 AM
Rated Blog Entry
Right on, Jonathon! I, too, was a piano kid. I, too, remember little of it (other than a few chords of Scott Joplin Ragtime).
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CONTRIBUTOR INFORMATION
Johnathan Osborn
Larkspur
, CO
Johnathan Osborn has posted
7
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6
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