Oh. Thanks. 
I knew he used to play banjo in his SNL days, but I didn’t know about the happy death song joke.
Oh. Thanks. 
I knew he used to play banjo in his SNL days, but I didn’t know about the happy death song joke.
Mr Scarlett responds:
Well. I had thought he would be more of his acerbic self. He also found a great Steve Martin banjo story.
Back to the OP, how goes the banjo hunt, Euty?
Not well, so far. I suppose I should explain the reason for my current banjo lust. I love bluegrass music and have always wnated to join in rather than just listening. Everyone plays guitar and fiddling seemed too difficult at this time. Besies, one of the great regrets of my life is that I never learned to play a musical instrument when I was younger. A banjo just seemed to fit the bill.
Bluegrass is cool. Very cool. But one question–if you do get a banjo, are you going to get a red-striped shirt, garters, and a straw hat to complete the ensemble? It’s the law, you know. 
Oh, and if you’d like, I can score you some CD’s from one of the all time finest dixieland/bluegrass bands ever, Michigan’s Own New Reformation Dixieland Band. They are un-freaking-believable. My grandfather turned me on to them just a couple of years ago. Just let me know. 
The banjo might just be the most difficult of the instruments in the bluegrass pantheon (okay, maybe the fiddle’s worse). Have you considered an upright bass? Much easier to learn, and you’ll be able to play almost any-damn-kind of music on it from jazz to folk to rockabilly, and you’ll be in hot and heavy demand. Not enough bassists around. On the downside, it’s gonna be a lot more expensive than a banjo.
…then there’s the mandolin. It’s much QUIETER than the banjo, so when you join in with some skilled bluegrass pickers it won’t be quite as obvious that you don’t know what you’re doing. {insert smiley here.}
For the tyros, that would be
mandolin
fiddle
guitar
banjo
bass
and sometimes dobro.
Where does the mandocello fall into that pantheon? I bought one from Kathleen Keane of Gaelic Storm thinking I would learn to play only to discover I am terribly inept at stringed instruments.
I would gladly trade it for a decent quality Irish Flute (keyed or even a simple system if it is nice)
It plays nice accordiong to the musicians who have tried it but my friend Aidan says it would be perfect for a bass player who wants to play the mandolin/bouzouki type of instrument as the feel is similar.
It is made by Bardsong but I can’t get their site to load. It has a black body and a pretty cool laminated neck with Otoh tuners.
Am I the only one wondering what the heck a dixieland/bluegrass band is? Isn’t that a banjo-style oxymoron?
I was wondering the same thing, spoke-…Aside from the inclusion of a banjo in both ensembles (four-string in Dixieland, five-string in bluegrass), I don’t see a connection.
“That was ‘Muskrat Ramble,’ folks, and now, we’ll be featuring Mandolin Slim on our next number, ‘Uncle Pen!’”
“Dixieland” is generally considered to be a 1940s bastardization of the old New Orleans polyphonic jazz style, also known as “white guys in straw hats and striped vests playing ‘Fidgety Feet,’” featuring
cornet (or trumpet)
clarinet
trombone
piano
banjo (or guitar)
tuba (or string bass)
drums
…whereas bluegrass is a souped-up version of old-time mountain music, featuring that High Lonesome Sound and musicians on the aforementioned string instruments picking away at lightning speed.
:::Persephone slowly works head out of butt:::
That’s what I get for posting before I’ve taking my morning meds.
New Reformation is indeed a dixieland band. With brass & everything. They’re one of those funny performance bands, you know? Doing goofy things to crack the audience up, whilst making some incredible music. A joy to watch, a joy to hear.
Thanks for not making fun of me. I do appreciate it. 
Do NOT touch a five-string! Play grand Irish tunes on a four string, honey.
This from a girl (and I kid you not) who sleeps with a banjo player and plays the harp (with strings on, NOT easy)
What is the difference beteen a skunk walking down the road, and a Banjo Player walking down the road?
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The skunk might be on his way to a gig.
Message ends.