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By Robbie Whelan
When you hear the banjo, you probably picture one of two things—Kermit the Frog strumming away or the inbred boy from Deliverance. How can one instrument conjure up images both so sweet and so repugnant? The answer lies in the history of the banjo, which stretches from Africa to Hollywood, with an extended pit stop in Appalachia.

Centuries ago, somewhere in West Africa, the banjo was born on the knees of griots—storytellers who improvised their lyrics as they performed. Almost like forerunners to today’s hip-hop artists, griots interacted with their audiences using call-and-response patterns to liven up the crowd. Their instruments—strings and animal skins tacked across hollowed-out gourds—are considered the first banjos.
The earliest versions were easy to make and easily portable, so when Africans were forced aboard slave ships, they brought their banjos with them. Once in America, slaves had no trouble recreating the instruments wherever they went. The banjo spread across Appalachia, but it was quickly pigeonholed as a black instrument.
Big changes were in store for the banjo, though. In the mid-19th century, the newest and most popular form of entertainment was the minstrel show. White men and women toured the nation dressed in blackface while singing and dancing in a manner that mocked black people. And because they were lampooning all aspects of African-American culture—particularly African dance and music—the banjo was at center stage.
Minstrel shows also meant change for the instrument itself. The early “minstrel banjo” was a fretless, four-string instrument with strings crafted from animal intestines. But metal strings soon replaced those, and then a minstrel named Joel Walker Sweeney (aka The Banjo King) popularized the fifth string, which became the defining characteristic of the modern instrument.
During the next 50 years or so, a strange thing happened to the banjo. Although minstrel shows poked fun at black people, they made the banjo immensely popular among white people in the process. In turn, African Americans increasingly wanted to distance themselves from an instrument that had come to represent oppression and bigotry. In the early 1900s, the banjo only played a small part in new forms of African-American music, such as blues, gospel, and jazz. Meanwhile, it was becoming all the rage in white communities, especially in Appalachia.
The 1930s saw the rise of the banjo in Appalachian country music, thanks to the Grand Ole Opry. A Saturday-night variety show performed in Nashville and broadcast live on the radio, the Opry spread “hillbilly” culture over the airwaves. The banjo played a central role in this, accompanying the antics of comedians such as David “Stringbean” Akeman and Louis Marshall “Grandpa” Jones, both of whom became even more famous later on the TV hit Hee-Haw.
The banjo might have remained an instrument of redneck comedy forever if it hadn’t been for one man—Earl Scruggs. Born in 1924 in rural North Carolina, Scruggs grew up listening to the Opry and became convinced that the instrument could do more than accompany stage acts. By inventing the jangly, three-finger technique of banjo-picking—the trademark of today’s bluegrass music—Scruggs used his fast-paced, twangy style to prove beyond a doubt that banjo players could be virtuoso musicians. Of course, the trend has lived on. Modern-day banjo masters like Bela Fleck, Tony Trischka, and Bill Keith all play with as much technical precision as concert violinists.
Ironically, Scruggs also recorded the soundtracks for Bonnie and Clyde (ever wonder why high-speed getaway music is always played on a banjo?) and TV’s The Beverly Hillbillies. Both projects probably maligned the banjo’s image as much as Scruggs’s earlier work had innovated it, though not everyone in the music industry agrees. In fact, Juilliard-trained banjo legend Eric Weissberg thinks the soundtracks brought bluegrass into the lives of many people who would have otherwise never heard it.
Until the 1960s, bluegrass wasn’t really played outside of Appalachia. And because it was considered regional music, record companies didn’t distribute it nationally. But in 1963, Weissberg recorded an album with his friend Marshall Brickman called New Dimensions in Banjo & Bluegrass. The record didn’t generate much attention at first, but five years later, the hills came alive with the sound of banjos when film director John Borman wanted the song “Dueling Banjos” for his new movie, Deliverance. Weissburg happily recorded a new version with musician Steve Mandell, and it turns out, the song shouldn’t have been called “Dueling Banjos” at all. It’s actually a duet between a banjo and a guitar, but listeners didn’t seem to care. The new cut was played as the background music in the movie’s radio ad, and all of the sudden, all over the country, disc jockeys were answering phone calls from people who wanted to know where they could get their hands on the song. In lieu of a soundtrack album, Warner Brothers added two Deliverance songs to the material from New Dimensions and released it in 1973 as Dueling Banjos. Weissberg, Brickman, and Mandell became rich overnight, and Deliverance’s depiction of rural Appalachian life—with that foreboding, nine-note banjo melody—was burned forever into the American psyche.
We’ll end with a clip of Kermit performing “The Rainbow Connection”:
Shhh…super secret special for blog readers.
Like the old addage, “Banjo music is good for the soul.”
I’m a city girl, but I love the banjo.
Great article!
posted by nicole on 9-14-2008 at 1:52 pm
If you want to check out some amazing modern banjo, listen to Bela Fleck with Chick Corea (jazz fusion keyboardist) on their CD “The Enchantment”.
Of course anything from Bela is always good.
posted by Nick on 9-14-2008 at 3:41 pm
Q.What’s the difference between a banjo and an onion?
A.Nobody cries when you chop up a banjo.
posted by deb on 9-14-2008 at 8:43 pm
My uncle plays the banjo, and his wife makes him take it outside. Outside, you can hear it miles away.
I’m glad I don’t live that close to him.
posted by Miss Cellania on 9-15-2008 at 12:41 am
The banjo has made a comeback in scene music as well. Bands like the Can Kickers, Roof Rabbit, and the Pine Hill HAints take the bluegrass sound and put a punk twist on it. Makes for a very good change in the punk sound.
posted by Marcus on 9-15-2008 at 11:06 am
Justification for the existence of the banjo:
The last scene of Harold and Maude.
posted by EMStoveken on 9-15-2008 at 12:14 pm
@deb:
Q: What do you call 1,000 banjos at the bottom of the ocean?
A: A good start.
I actually do like the banjo, and one of my current favorite CDs is Bela Fleck & Friends’ Perpetual Motion. Classical music lovers will be amazed at how good Bach, Scarlatti, Chopin, Beethoven, and more sound when played on banjo!
posted by Rachel on 9-15-2008 at 1:16 pm
I had heard from several folk musicologists that Earl Scruggs had picked up the three-finger style from an earlier hillbilly picker named Snuffy Jenkins, but that turns out not to be the case. Both Earl and Snuffy acknowledge that he worked it out all on his own. I myself learned the two-finger “clawhammer” style, and when I attempted the three-finger Scruggs style, it was like a whole different universe. It really makes you appreciate what a genius he is. Two-finger “old-timey” style is fun and folksy, but three-finger bluegrass is an art form.
posted by Scott on 9-15-2008 at 2:48 pm
Sufjan Stevens plays the banjo beautifully. It all depends on how it’s played.
posted by Jenny on 9-15-2008 at 10:37 pm
Hey Rachel, good one. I actually love the banjo too. For me it never got any better than hearing Earl Scruggs, Doc Watson or the late, great Tommy Makem put a banjo through its paces!
posted by deb on 9-16-2008 at 1:51 am
I 100% agree with Rachel…
Can’t talk about the banjo without discussing Bela Fleck… he’s completely revolutionized the instrument. It isn’t just a bluegrass instrument… it’s a jazz fusion instrument that’s taken to its limits. If you haven’t heard Bela Fleck and the Flecktones, check them out. Archive.org has a bunch of free concerts that have been shared for starters!
posted by PointSpecial on 9-19-2008 at 1:20 am