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Explore

  • Banjos
  • Instruments
  • Banjo Art
  • Playing the Banjo

Banjos

Smithsonian Music

Few musical instruments are more deeply connected to the American experience than the banjo. The banjo was created by enslaved Africans and their descendants in the Caribbean and colonial North America. Here, they maintained and perpetuated the tradition within a complex system of slave-labor camps, plantations, and in a variety of rural and urban settings. From the earliest references in the 17th century, and through the 1830s, the banjo was exclusively known as an African-American tradition with a West African heritage. What further distinguishes the banjo is that it did not come from Africa “as-is” as an unaltered tradition. Rather, the banjo’s creation was the result of a blending between West African and European forms. Sharing some similarities with the guitar, the best-documented form of the early banjo includes a drum-like body made out of a gourd (or sometimes a calabash) and a neck that could accommodate 4 strings—three long strings that run the full length of the instrument and one short thumb string that stops about halfway up the side of the neck. The drum-like gourd body and strings of different lengths are uniquely African, while the flat fingerboard and tuning pegs are more commonly associated with European traditions.


Boucher Five-String Fretless Banjo

Creed Five-String Fretless Banjo, used by Fred Cockerham

Banjo, Lindbergh, King Collection

Ashborn Five-String Fretless Banjo

Boucher Five-String Fretless Banjo

A Symphony, Nineteenth Century

Boucher Five-String Fretless Banjo

Mather Five-String Fretless Banjo

Gillette Brothers, Banjo and Bones

The Banjo Lesson

Banjo Great Tony Trischka Discusses the Instrument [Behind The Scenes Documentary]

Blind Musicians

Indiana, from the United States Series

A Conversation with Doug Unger - North American Banjo Builders, Volume 1 [Preview Video]

O Suzanna Don't You Cry for Me

Ballad Singer

Mack Vincent's Banjo Songster

Five-String Fretless Banjo

Ralph Stanley and the Clinch Mountain Boys perform "Little Birdie"

Bacon Tenor Banjo

Pete Seeger and Alan Lomax

Banjo created for Charles P. Stinson

Lilly Brothers

Luce Local: Luce Unplugged with Luray

Tenor Banjo


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