Favoriting Sounds Under 64 Not Allowed with Jan Turkenburg: Playlist from July 10, 2021 Favoriting

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Going back to the pre-multitrack era at 4680 rounds per hour.

Thursday 10am - Noon (EDT) | On WFMU's Sheena's Jungle Room
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Favoriting July 10, 2021: 112 The Banjo Archives 01

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Emile Grimshaw (all left) and banjo orchestra
Emile Grimshaw (all left) and banjo orchestra
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Emile Grimshaw (all left) and banjo orchestra

Artist Track Year Comments Images
Fred van Eps  L' Enfante   Favoriting 1902   
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Smith and Allgood  American And Spanish Fandango (S.J. Allgood)   Favoriting 1923   
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Vess Ossman  Pretzel Pete   Favoriting 1907   
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Jan Garber  Steppin' Around   Favoriting 1926  (Harry Reser - banjo solo) 
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Marion Underwood  Coal Creek March   Favoriting 1927   
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George Formby  I Promised To Be Home By Nine O' Clock   Favoriting 1935   
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The Coon Creek Girls  Banjo Picking Girl   Favoriting 1938   
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Dixieland Jug Blowers  Banjoreno   Favoriting 1926   
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Harry Reser  Kitten On The Keys   Favoriting 1922   
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Eddie Peabody  La Paloma   Favoriting 1931  banjo mandoline solo 
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Samantha Bumgarner  The worried Blues   Favoriting 1924   
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Frank Jenkins  Baptist Shout   Favoriting 1920s   
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Gus Cannon  My money never runs out   Favoriting 1920s   
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Papa Charlie Jackson  Skoodle Um Skoo   Favoriting 1928   
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Fred van Eps  Sunflower Dance   Favoriting 1906   
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The Coon Creek Girls  How many biscuits can you eat   Favoriting 1939   
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Mike Danzi  Banjoreno   Favoriting 1929   
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Vess Ossman  Whoa Bill   Favoriting 1904   
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Arthur Collins  Ghost Of The Banjo Coon   Favoriting 1910   
Arthur Collins
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Arthur Collins
Fred van Eps  Keep Off The Grass   Favoriting 1903   
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Gus Cannon  Can you blame the colored man   Favoriting 1920s   
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Papa Charlie Jackson  Gotta Shake that thing   Favoriting 1925   
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Samantha Bumgarner  Georgia Blues   Favoriting 1924   
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Lots and lots of other audio antiquities on WFMU:

Centennial Songs - The Antique Phonograph Music Program contextually presented by Michael Cumella

The Ragged Phonograph Program with Mike Haar Original ragtime, jazz, and pop music from the first quarter of the 20th century, with historical background on vaudeville-era artists

Thomas Edison's Attic The audio curator at Edison National Historic Site rummages through the archives of the legendary Edison Laboratory of West Orange, New Jersey

The Old Codger: playing 78 RPM records like they're going out of style!

Rare Oldies Radio hosted by Kitschy Mama, featuring lost songs from the 50s & 60s: Retro Obscuro with Kitschy Mama

Music from the 1920s in the January 7, 2020 episode of Continental Subway with David Dichelle

Music and other recordings of Lynda Barry in the june 7, 2020 episode of Canibal Stew with DJ ARB

and you might want to check out the Surface Noise archives with DJ Joe McGasko from 2008 and 2009


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Listener comments!

Avatar Swag For Life Member 7:16am
Jan Turkenburg:

Hi everyone, it's non-stop again today. I'll be around to check the comments every now and then.
Avatar 🎸 Swag For Life Member 8:01am
WR:

banjorific greetings to all.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:02am
MHLee:

Woke up for this
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:03am
MHLee:

I see the great Gus Canon here
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:04am
Jan Turkenburg:

Goodmorning WR!
Goodmorning MHLee!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:05am
Jan Turkenburg:

@MHLee, yes, Gus wasn't in my archives, but I'm getting in the habit of looking a little further now.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:08am
MHLee:

Gus Canon and Canon's Jug Stompers were one the really big names in jugband music. The rival band was the Memphis Jugband.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:09am
MHLee:

I'm pretty handy with blues, hillbilly, bluegrass, and folk.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:12am
yerfriendpaul:

Hi Jan, MHLee and WR! Happy to be hearin’ some pickin’!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:13am
Jan Turkenburg:

Goodmorning, yerfriendpaul!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:14am
MHLee:

I've got the complete recordings of Charlie Poole who to me is one of the most important early banjoneers. Loudin Wainright III did a great cover album of his songs a few years back.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:15am
Jan Turkenburg:

Ah, thanks for another line of inquiry!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:17am
MHLee:

This one I have never heard though and I love. I know a banjo player who would get a kick out of this.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:19am
yerfriendpaul:

This sounds so good! Listen to that tuba (?)!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:20am
Jan Turkenburg:

I think that's the "jug"
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:20am
MHLee:

It might be a jug
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:20am
Jan Turkenburg:

great minds think alike ;-)
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:21am
yerfriendpaul:

The jug part is fantastic
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:21am
Jan Turkenburg:

And there might be a bariton sax playing along, but it could also be a second, bigger jug
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:21am
MHLee:

There's a great banjo documentary from PBS called give me the banjo... worth checking out
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:22am
Jan Turkenburg:

👍
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:31am
Jan Turkenburg:

Frank Jenkins was the father of banjo player Oscar Jenkins.
Avatar 🎸 Swag For Life Member 8:34am
WR:

listening while working so can't be active in the comments. Great show!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:35am
Jan Turkenburg:

thanks WR!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:37am
MHLee:

Thinking of other early banjo players. Dock Boggs was very active in the 1930s... in the late 20s there was a Dock Walsh... Stringbean was playing some stuff and in Bill Monroes bluegrass boys before Scruggs created the Scruggs style of banjo playing which revolutionized banjo
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:39am
Jan Turkenburg:

I think we found ourselves another rabbit hole!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:45am
yerfriendpaul:

My first exposure to banjo came from our next door neighbor, Mr. Moynihan. He used to greet me and my brothers with a deep, loud, “Hey gang!” every time he’d see us. One day he was sitting on his front steps playing his banjo. My Dad , (a piano player himself) brought us over to listen to him play. That was the only day we ever saw him play but I’ll never forget it. He was good. Wish he would’ve played it more. Hard to find banjo-playing-neighbors these days
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:46am
MHLee:

Indeed. Heck I can spit tons of names. There's a big difference in the style of playing and in the banjos played. Jazz prefers the plectrum which is a kind of four stringed banjo. Pre-scurggs most banjo playing is "failing" or clawhammer, there are some early 3 finger banjo players like Don Reno but 3 finger becomes predominant with Scruggs and in bluegrass music.... you see scruggs doesn't just play notes in melody he produces "banjo noise" which makes his banjo playing very loud and full
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:48am
MHLee:

per wikipedoia "Scruggs style is the most common style of playing the banjo in bluegrass music. It is a fingerpicking method, also known as three-finger style. It is named after Earl Scruggs, whose innovative approach and technical mastery of the instrument have influenced generations of bluegrass banjoists ever since he was first recorded in 1946. It contrasts with earlier styles such as minstrel, classic or parlor style (a late 19th-century finger-style played without picks), clawhammer/frailing/two-finger style (played with thumb and nail of the first or middle finger), jazz styles played with a plectrum, and more modern styles such as Keith/melodic/chromatic/arpa style, and single-string/Reno style. The influence of Scruggs is so pervasive that even bluegrass players such as Bill Keith and Don Reno, who are credited with developing these latter styles, typically work out of the Scruggs style much of the time."
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:50am
Jan Turkenburg:

Paul, it so happens that a few weeks ago I was sitting outside in my little back yard garden with a friend, hearing somebody play and I asked my friend (also music teacher) "Is that a banjo I'm hearing?"
It turned out is was. A black family with three or four young children has moved into a house in our street. Every now and than the father sits in the garden with his kids and wife and friends around him and plays the banjo for an hour or so. Sometimes the kids are playing along on glockenspiels. That really makes my music teacher's heart make a jump!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:52am
Jan Turkenburg:

And the funny thing is, he is mostly playing African (Senegalish) sounding music on a banjo, singing along sometimes.
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:53am
yerfriendpaul:

That sounds amazing, Jan! What a gift! You need to do yourself a favor and introduce yourself to them! They sound like a great family!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:54am
Jan Turkenburg:

Yeah, I'm just waiting for the right occasion :-)
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:54am
MHLee:

I was trying to remember this song's name
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:58am
yerfriendpaul:

You have the perfect opportunity/opening line - all you have to say is , “I host a radio show and just featured an entire show dedicated to banjo! Let’s be best friends”, ha ha
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:58am
Jan Turkenburg:

Thanks for listening and sharing everybody!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 8:59am
Jan Turkenburg:

:-)
Avatar Swag For Life Member 9:00am
yerfriendpaul:

Thanks Jan! Love your show. Have a great day everyone!
Avatar Swag For Life Member 9:00am
MHLee:

Well I got to talking. Used to play in a bluegrass band.
Love the show, Jan.
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