Posts Tagged ‘Tuning’

Yes, that is how you get to Carnegie Hall.  Practice (or “time on board” to the fretted instrument player–the fingerboard) is necessary if you’re to reach any of your goals as a musician, whether you’ve taken up banjo, guitar or any instrument.  The discipline of practice when playing an instrument should be fun rather than a chore; approaching it with at least a general plan will make your practice time both more enjoyable and more productive.

Start each practice session by getting in tune with a good electronic tuner.  Other tools you should have at the ready include a metronome and some kind of recording device.  The metronome is particularly important for guarding against bad timing; that can easily crop up when playing alone.  Listening to a playback of your practice will make areas of needed improvement only too apparent.

Remember to repeat material you’ve already learned, but keep in mind that one of the most important principles is to “practice what you can’t play.”  It’s easy to fall into the trap of simply playing what you’ve already mastered, since it’s naturally more enjoyable.  But put in time practicing the tunes and licks you’re having trouble with, at whatever tempo is slow enough for you to play cleanly and in time (again, the metronome is essential here).  Proficiency is more important than speed.  Worry about speed last, only bumping up the metronome a few beats per minute once you feel confident at a given tempo.  If you can play as well at the new tempo as you did at the old, great; if not, dial it back and practice again at the slower speed.

Practice, and learning how to practice, is a lifelong challenge!  More later. .

Bill Keith D-Tuner setEarl Scruggs learned to play the 5-string banjo on an instrument that belonged to his older brother Junie.  The banjo did not always stay in tune well, and the young virtuoso found himself having to retune mid-song.  Scruggs’s musical inventiveness took it from there, and he soon adapted that mid-song tuning sound into his developing style.  After recording his first tuner instrumental Earl’s Breakdown in 1951, Scruggs decided a little mechanical help would make playing a lot easier.  He installed a pair of cams onto his banjo peghead that raised and lowered the second and third strings to preset pitches.  The most common settings are for the second string to lower from B to A and the third string to lower from G to F#, moving the banjo from G tuning to D tuning and giving the devices the common name “D-tuners”. 

Scruggs’s new innovation was soon featured in such instrumentals as Flint Hill Special, Foggy Mountain Chimes, and Randy Lynn Rag.  D-tuners soon became required equipment for any aspiring bluegrass banjoist.  Melodic banjo pioneer Bill Keith took things the next step with a design that incorporated conventional second- and third-string tuners and the stop-setting mechanism in one unit, making it no longer necessary to drill extra holes in the peghead.  Keith tuners became the standard in the banjo world with over 30,000 sold to date and are still manufactured by Bill Keith in Woodstock, New York.  Players seeking the unique feel and sound of traditional cam-type tuners now have another option available in a new product called Cheat-A-Keys, which use the cam mechanism but are easily interchangeable between banjos and don’t require alteration of the peghead.

 

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