Part Two: Introduction to Comping on the Banjo

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  • Опубликовано: 21 авг 2024
  • New Orleans banjo master Don Vappie guides you through comping on the banjo in this two-part series! Learn more about how to take advantage of the instrument's unique sound and volume through a mixture of ringing tones, muted tones, full chords, two-note chords, and single-line runs!
    Find out more at the Jazz Academy by visiting academy.jazz.org
    Don Vappie - Banjo
    Eric Suquet - Director
    Bill Thomas - Director of Photography
    Richard Emery - Production Assistant
    Seton Hawkins - Producer
    Recorded May 22, 2013

Комментарии • 23

  • @thalesofthewell
    @thalesofthewell 8 лет назад +9

    "Sometimes space is good"
    A quote for years to come

  • @SuperTom1501
    @SuperTom1501 4 года назад +3

    Outstanding videos (part 1 and 2). Trying to recreate this type of dixie/jazz sound using Studio One and Native Instruments banjo VST. This video was extremely helpful. These great banjo players are a real treasure in my opinion. Thank you for sharing your talents and skills with these videos.

  • @Skizze37
    @Skizze37 4 года назад +1

    Excellent word of advice at the end. I could watch a whole series of this fella

  • @MrPipex75
    @MrPipex75 8 лет назад +9

    Now I need a banjo

    • @robertclark3258
      @robertclark3258 7 лет назад +2

      MrPipex75 Doesn't everyone?

    • @victorsong8416
      @victorsong8416 6 лет назад

      ...And a pick...

    • @weastblue4233
      @weastblue4233 5 лет назад

      @@victorsong8416 picks aren't really important. I find it easier without them

  • @tapefive
    @tapefive 6 лет назад +2

    great guy!

  • @keithruddell1800
    @keithruddell1800 7 лет назад +2

    man sick tone. cool cat.

  • @marabeaujazz
    @marabeaujazz 8 лет назад +2

    lindo!!!

  • @jakezonis17
    @jakezonis17 3 года назад

    Thanks

  • @felipedelatorre5504
    @felipedelatorre5504 4 года назад

    Que maravilha! Muito bom! 🙌🤠

  • @mauraventurini
    @mauraventurini 8 лет назад

    Grat video, thanks!

  • @vincenzomorandi973
    @vincenzomorandi973 8 лет назад

    Great! Thanks

  • @tannerharrodguitar
    @tannerharrodguitar 8 лет назад

    So when do you use a 4-string tenor banjo and when do you use a 4-string plectrum banjo?

    • @TonyfromBham
      @TonyfromBham 8 лет назад +4

      It's an either/or thing. Each of those two banjos fills the same musical role but in a different way from one another. If one is deciding which of the two to choose, he should know that each has certain pluses and minuses. Tenors are tuned much higher, so they really cut though horns and drums in a band. The tenor's fifth tuning is much more spread out than the plectrum tuning, so single note playing is easier on plectrum. Plus, plectrum tuning offers closer harmony and more overtones than tenor, but the tenor tuning is uniform and the plectrum tuning is not, which makes patterns easier to move around on a tenor. Both banjos are great in its own way.

    • @jasobres
      @jasobres 7 лет назад +1

      A plectrum banjo is really more for jazz banjo soloists, such as Eddie Peabody and Cynthia Sayer. Tenor banjo is more for traditional New Orleans jazz or ragtime or Dixieland.

    • @ised-5239
      @ised-5239 Год назад

      Does the tenor banjo also read alto clef as a viola?

    • @tannerharrodguitar
      @tannerharrodguitar Год назад

      @@ised-5239 no - tenor banjo reads the same as guitar: treble clef, sounding down an octave

  • @Isosceles1
    @Isosceles1 5 лет назад

    I want to play this on tenor guitar. How/where do I learn these chords and technique?

    • @ised-5239
      @ised-5239 Год назад

      Can also played on tenor guitar and mandola

  • @raedians
    @raedians 8 лет назад +1

    ned stark now playing banjo