Got A Ukulele Reviews - Deering Goodtime Banjo Ukulele

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  • Опубликовано: 21 янв 2016
  • Support Got A Ukulele! www.patreon.com/user?u=671103
    Got A Ukulele Reviews and Buyers Guides looks at the USA made Goodtime banjo uke from Deering - read the full written review here www.gotaukulele.com/2016/01/de... #gotaukulele #ukulele #review
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Комментарии • 79

  • @bayoucity1
    @bayoucity1 8 лет назад +1

    Thanks for all of your reviews and tips!

  • @davestambaugh7282
    @davestambaugh7282 6 лет назад +2

    I have yet to calculate the bridge down pressure on this one however at twenty one degrees breakover I can see why it has a big foot on the bridge. The bridge would be sinking deeply into the top at the big down pressure but that is where the power comes from.

  • @poisonjoe1812
    @poisonjoe1812 8 лет назад

    I got to play one of these, I saw a busker with one and asked and I was thoroughly impressed by it, plenty loud enough for any use I can think of.

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  8 лет назад +1

      Yeah - would make a GREAT busking instrument I think

  • @BlessYourHeart254
    @BlessYourHeart254 8 месяцев назад

    This is sweet, and I have a Deering Goodtime banjo, which is wonderful, but I also love Gold Tone banjoleles, especially the baritone one.

  • @twkarches
    @twkarches 3 года назад +2

    I love mine. As do many of the people that hear it. It is a very loud instrument. Good for playing with traditional instruments and not getting blown out. As you say, build quality is superb.

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  3 года назад +1

      Yep - Deering really are masters when it comes to banjo

  • @clawhammer704
    @clawhammer704 6 лет назад +1

    This is a great instrument and very well made. I have one that I use in a old time band. I put a sponge under the head to mute the over tones. It will hang in there with the other instruments in the band.

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  5 лет назад +3

      Indeed - don't think i've ever played a banjo (uke or otherwise) where I haven't put a sock or a cloth under the head to calm it down.

  • @marieandersson6655
    @marieandersson6655 Год назад +1

    I guess a standard gigbag for mandolin should fit to this banjolele. Thanks for a nice review ❤️

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  Год назад

      I seem to recall that Deering make one that fits themselves

  • @EdwinMcCravy1
    @EdwinMcCravy1 5 лет назад +1

    I love mine. I took the strings off and replaced them with the B, G, D, and A (top to bottom) classical guitar strings. But I tune it E, B, G, D, just like the top four strings of a guitar. It's fun. I play chord melodies, and sound like a dixieland tenor banjo.

  • @donovanskillman2557
    @donovanskillman2557 11 месяцев назад +1

    I played one at a music store and it was great

  • @sonnyceeplaylist6337
    @sonnyceeplaylist6337 6 лет назад +2

    Excellent thank you bro👏

  • @Margareth20648
    @Margareth20648 6 лет назад +1

    Just bought a banjolele, very exciting. i don't know how to play my ukulele straight yet, and I am adventure to a banjolele. I love the sound, I just need to know basic care for my banjolele. Thanks

  • @EdwinMcCravy1
    @EdwinMcCravy1 4 года назад

    I love mine but I had one complaint about it. The tailpiece was a little too long to allow me to move the bridge away from the neck as much as it needs to be able to play in tune down on the neck. So I ordered Deering's other banjo tailpiece, which is made for claw hammer tone. It's like $35. It's made for 5 metal strings with 5 hooks, but it fits the Goodtime banjo ukulele perfectly. I tie my C and E strings on the 2nd and 5th hooks respectively, then tie the outer strings, G and A, on the 1st and 5th hooks with the strings going around the outsides of the tailpiece. That spaces the 4 strings just right and I can now move my bridge where I want it.

  • @amibethappreciationsociety9998
    @amibethappreciationsociety9998 7 лет назад +1

    Excellent review, I'm buying one soon.I wonder how it would sound in d-tuning....with a calf skin vellum?do you think it would sound good?

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  7 лет назад

      Honestly have absolutely no idea - would take D tuning, but have never re skinned a banjolele - sorry

  • @suziofftheplanet977
    @suziofftheplanet977 5 лет назад +1

    thankyou for this review. i actually went and bought one after watching. can it be tuned to plectrum tuning like a4 string banjo?
    or could i tune this like the last 4 strings of a 5 string banjo?
    would i use banjo strings for that? please

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  5 лет назад +2

      You'd certainly need different strings as the gauges of these will make that tuning difficult on tension grounds. I assume you mean DGBD tuning? I think to get that you would need ukulele baritone strings as they are normally tuned DGBE - so close enough. I would urge caution with banjo strings and certainly avoid steel strings - it's not built for that.

    • @suziofftheplanet977
      @suziofftheplanet977 5 лет назад

      @@GotAUkulele thank you. I'll try the baritone strings. I read somewhere that Glen Deering used mandolin strings and tuned it like a mandolin. Might be interesting to try that too😊

  • @peterforrest3424
    @peterforrest3424 6 лет назад +1

    Its very nice and its given me an idea because i have an old banjo nothing special but about 100 years old no a great sound i think due to the neck its kind of a wavy sound but i might bang a Uke neck on it and see how it goes.I am into Dotora an India folk instrument very much like a banjo and a lot of people in India now use Ukes instead and tune it EBEA so i think if i try my idea i might get the nice plonking sound dotoras have, anyway check them out.

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  6 лет назад

      I will do Petey. Sounds interesting

  • @ISawUAtTheSTore
    @ISawUAtTheSTore 8 лет назад

    I love these videos and Ive always wondered if there is a name for the tunes you play while demoing the ukes, id love to learn them!

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  8 лет назад

      +ISawUAtTheSTore There is - some people get sniffy because don't play anything complicated- but there is a reason - I once ran a poll about the music and MOST people liked it was always the same tunes as it allows them to compare.
      Anyway - on to the question - the strummed song is called 'Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate' - you will get the chords easily if you Google.
      The picked song is Creep by Radiohead, but played in the key of C. So C, C7, F, Fm , repeated..

    • @ISawUAtTheSTore
      @ISawUAtTheSTore 8 лет назад +1

      +GotAUkulele thanks so much, and yes it makes sense that playing the same songs really gives you something to compare them too

    • @RRaquello
      @RRaquello 3 года назад

      @@GotAUkulele
      Hah! It's funny, I thought the tune you were finger picking was "Where the blue of the night meets the gold of the day, someone waits for me", the old Bing Crosby theme song. Sounds a lot like it, though not exactly. Does Radiohead listen to Bing Crosby?

  • @shellydianenovascotia3914
    @shellydianenovascotia3914 6 лет назад

    Do you know anything about an Alabama Banjo Uke or Denver Duke Banjo Uke?

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  6 лет назад

      Not heard of either I’m afraid. It’s fair to say banjo uke varieties are not really my expertise

  • @BG-ig6fd
    @BG-ig6fd Год назад

    I’m hesitating between the Deering and the Firefly. I like the sound of the Deering, but love the light weight of the Firefly. Which would you say plays more in tune? Thanks for these reviews!

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  Год назад +1

      Playing in tune isn’t a feature of any particular instrument- it’s just a feature of the instrument being setup accurately by the player. Both will play in tune if they are setup properly

  • @max_petroleum
    @max_petroleum 6 лет назад +1

    Are you gonna review the tenor scale any time soon?

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  6 лет назад

      Gus Sanders possibly but booked up on reviews until november

  • @hugsandhomies
    @hugsandhomies 7 лет назад +1

    Thanks for your helpful reviews. I've been playing guitar and a little ukulele in bars a bit lately and I would like to step up my game with a banjo uke. The Duke is pretty tempting, especially since it can go electric, but I really like the volume on this Deering banjo uke. Any thoughts on that trade off? Also, are there any other good electric banjo ukes you would recommend for a similar price?
    I'm currently playing a Kala KA-C concert uke. It's been great to learn on, but I really regret not getting something electronics.

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  7 лет назад +1

      The Deering is a touch louder than the Duke 8, but check out the new Duke 10 - not much in it on volume to be honest. I prefer the new Duke 10 myself - much lighter.

  • @because88
    @because88 6 лет назад

    it's very sweet sounding. Kind of Mandolin like, but with that ukey plonk. Is there an equivalent more readily available to the UK?

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  6 лет назад

      because88 I thought these were readily available in the UK?

    • @because88
      @because88 6 лет назад

      Right you are! I default to ebay, but I do see retail examples. Cheers for putting up with me.

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  6 лет назад

      Eagle Music stock them I think and I am sure Southern Ukulele Store did too - two of the top ukulele specialists in the UK. I'd seriously avoid ebay for ukes !

    • @because88
      @because88 6 лет назад

      Oh, nice. ty for the tip. I usually keep an eye on gumtree, but there's seldom much about. Only a tenor banjo, which is tempting. Not sure how wrong you can go with those. - www.gumtree.com/p/banjos/4-string-tenor-banjo/1308110321

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  6 лет назад

      Sadly they can be EXTREMELY mixed - i'm really not an expert in buying vintage banjos I'm afraid

  • @Sertao2013
    @Sertao2013 7 лет назад +1

    Just to let you know even when you didn't turn the volume down it sounded fine not to loud on this end at all .

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  7 лет назад

      Yeah - seems you can't please everyone all the time!

    • @juliuschas
      @juliuschas 7 лет назад

      The loudness is valuable for ensemble playing, with no amp needed!

  • @coolowlman
    @coolowlman 8 лет назад

    I know this question doesn't involve the video but what is a great ukulele that is around 50 US dollars?

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  8 лет назад

      +coolowlman I personally don't think there are any truly 'great' ukuleles for 50 dollars - have a look at my reviews in price category order to take a look at the rest of my instrument opinions
      www.gotaukulele.com/p/ukulele-reviews.html

    • @zacharytarnow7290
      @zacharytarnow7290 6 лет назад +1

      Kalas got a great uke for $60

  • @AlexGreenwoodUkulele
    @AlexGreenwoodUkulele 7 лет назад

    Certainly not for Formby-Style playing!
    But, in it's element, it'd probably be a superb instrument!

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  7 лет назад +1

      No - agreed - not for that style. But I know Phil Doleman in the UK uses one in his set for bluegrass and old time jazz stuff and it sounds wonderful!

  • @rebeccawilson4013
    @rebeccawilson4013 3 года назад +1

    Does this instrument use ukelele chords?

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  3 года назад +1

      Plays like a regular ukulele - tuned the same

  • @edwinparsons2619
    @edwinparsons2619 6 лет назад

    ? 4 u is it tuned like a soprano is.

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  6 лет назад +1

      ?4u?? You can tune it how you like, but yes, standard tuning for this is like a soprano

    • @edwinparsons2619
      @edwinparsons2619 6 лет назад +1

      Thank u im a very beginner and do play the soprano ukulele c am g f but i dont know anyother chords and the price of this is up here in. Florida at 467.00 usa dollars but i love the review u did and going to get one from zsounds small payments.thank you

  • @chipbipple2593
    @chipbipple2593 7 лет назад

    not sure I'd call it a banjo if it's only got four strings... my granddad had a banjo uke back in the fifties when he was in the army. It had the traditional four strings with nobs at the stock and the fifth stopping halfway up the neck. Very impressive instrument this, all the same, whatever it is.

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  7 лет назад +1

      Irish banjos only have 4?

    • @honeychurchgipsy6
      @honeychurchgipsy6 5 лет назад

      Chip Bipple - I believe that the 5 string Banjo is the interloper - didn't Pete Seeger pioneer it?

  • @edwardc7462
    @edwardc7462 7 лет назад +4

    Nice instrument but hard to say who would by this A beginner won't want to spend this much on the other hand a professional will want a ukulele with a resonater and calf skin velom

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  7 лет назад +3

      I know several professionals on the global music circuit who bought these and use them in their set!

    • @edwardc7462
      @edwardc7462 7 лет назад

      ***** a well times have changed perhaps this kind of instrument is know considered to be a more professional type

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  7 лет назад +8

      No, I don't think it's that. I just think this is a very different market to the traditional banjo ukulele of old. At the end of the day, Deering are one of the most respected banjo makers on the planet - think they are already professional standard instruments - just for a different style of play though

    • @edwardc7462
      @edwardc7462 7 лет назад

      ***** yeah you could be right

    • @suziofftheplanet977
      @suziofftheplanet977 5 лет назад

      GotAUkulele your so very right.i have one of the these in my collection and love it. it's a different sound and very quirky!
      intonation is spot on!

  • @samtalbot-cross2621
    @samtalbot-cross2621 8 лет назад

    That would probably fit a mandolin case

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  8 лет назад

      +Samuel Talbot-Cross Possibly - but I need to take care with what I advise - just one mandolin case buyer when it didn't fit would lead to complaints!!

    • @samtalbot-cross2621
      @samtalbot-cross2621 8 лет назад

      Ok I have a kinsman mandolin case and that would probably be a great fit

  • @buddha4tw
    @buddha4tw 8 лет назад

    Phil Doleman also gives a great review on this Uke, ruclips.net/video/cj2bClMbx38/видео.html

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  8 лет назад +1

      He does. He's now using one live at his shows and it features on his new EP

  • @jyrkiylarakkola7826
    @jyrkiylarakkola7826 7 лет назад +1

    Nice instrument, but You should tune it first.

    • @GotAUkulele
      @GotAUkulele  7 лет назад +1

      Was a fairly rushed review - but as you will be aware - being a banjo ukulele - it's adjustable at the saddle. The slightest nudge of the saddle throws out the intonation. Was in tune at the nut - but I must have nudged saddle in getting the review filmed. Can assure you - being a Deering - when the saddle is in the right place - the intonation is brilliant.