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Encyclopedia > Banjoline
Banjoline by Gretsch
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Banjoline by Gretsch

Banjoline


A special type of electric guitar developed by Eddie Peabody first with Fender Musical Instruments Co. and then with Gretsch Co. Eddie Peabody Eddie Peabody Edwin Ellsworth Peabody - also known as Eddie, little Eddie, King of the Banjo, and Happiness Boy (b. ...


Tuned as a plectrum banjo (low to high: C, G, B, D) has single C and G strings, while B and D strings are double like on a 12string guitar.


A Banjoline is also a mandolin mounted with the body of a banjo. In that case, it is tuned like a mandolin (low to high) : G, D, A, E. The examples and perspective in this article do not represent a worldwide view. ... Old 6-string zither banjo 4-string banjos The banjo, derived from the banjar, is a stringed instrument of American origins, sometimes called the gourd banjo. The banjar, in turn was based on the African akonting. Some etymologists derive it from a dialectal pronunciation of bandore, though recent research suggests...


  Results from FactBites:
 
banjolin: Information From Answers.com (284 words)
A Banjolin is an instrument similar to a banjo except using the tuning and size of a mandolin or a ukelele.
It is not used often in modern times, though it was slightly popularized during the 1920s while it was used in a number of jug bands, though it was hard to find one even during this period.
Banjolins have never been used widely and they are very valuable to some musicians as well as collectors.
The mandolin-banjo and the banjolin (339 words)
Irish Banjo: The instruments: The mandolin-banjo and the banjolin
Strictly speaking the mandolin-banjo and the banjolin are two different instruments.
In reality the only difference between the two is that the mandolin-banjo has double and the banjolin has single strings (just like the difference between an ordinary acoustic and a twelvestring guitar), and the two names are in fact often used interchangeably for the same instrument today.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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