252 Banjo Tabs In 5 books

book key Title Source
1 A Hangmans Reel Albert Hash
1 A Old Mother Flanagan Dwight Diller
1 A Sandy Boys Edden Hammons
1 A Cookhouse Joe Estill Bingham
1 A Little Billy Wilson festival mashup
1 A Long Steel Rail Fred Cockerham
1 A Hog Eyed Man Hiram Stamper
1 A Road to Malvern Jim Childress
1 A Red Steer John Dykes
1 A Mike in the Wilderness John Salyer
1 A Cripple Creek Kyle Creed
1 A Jim Shank Sam Dyer
1 A Blackest Crow Tommy Jarrell
1 A June Apple Tommy Jarrell
1 Am John Riley the Shepherd Art Stamper
1 Am Abe’s Retreat Burl Hammons
1 Am Highlander’s Farewell Emmett Lundy
1 Am Shady Grove Gaither Carlton
1 Am Ducks on the Pond Henry Reed
1 Am Kitchen Girl Henry Reed
1 Am New Orleans Melvin Wine
1 C Billy in the Low Ground Burnett & Rutherford
1 C Say Darling Say Sweet Brothers
1 D Valley Forge Absie Morrison
1 D Arkansas Traveler Doc Roberts
1 D Ducks on the Millpond Emmett Lundy
1 D Julie Ann Johnson Emmett Lundy
1 D Old Molly Hare Ernest Claunch
1 D Folding Down the Sheets Henry Reed
1 D Fisher’s Hornpipe Hill Billies
1 D Liberty Jimmy Wheeler
1 D Cowboy’s Dream John Hutchinson
1 D Ways of the World  Luther Strong
1 D Possum’s Tail Is Bare Melvin Wine
1 D Whiskey Before Breakfast Melvin Wine
1 D Spotted Pony Paul David Smith
1 D Doctor Doctor Phillips
1 D Sally in the Garden Steve Mote
1 D Soldier’s Joy Steve Mote
1 G Polly’s Mountain Kettle Byard Ray
1 G Sail Away Ladies Dave Macon
1 G Garfield’s Blackberry Blossom Ed Haley
1 G Magpie Harlan Coble
1 G Shoes and Stockings Henry Reed
1 G Lost Girl John Salyer
1 G Roscoe Kyle Creed
1 G Mother Flanagan Lee Triplett
1 G Devil Ate the Groundhog Paul David Smith
1 G Old Yeller Dog Came Trottin’ public domain song
1 G Turkey in the Straw Ward Jarvis
2 A Shades of Death Creek Chirps Smith
2 A Big Hoedown Edden Hammons
2 A Old Bunch of Keys Fred Cockerham
2 A Sugar in the Gourd John Ashby
2 A Buffalo Gals John Hatcher
2 A Tippin’ Back the Corn Jordon Wankoff
2 A Little Liza Jane JP Fraley
2 A Hog Went Through the Fence Yoke and All Luther Strong
2 A Up Jumped Joe in the Middle of It Mark Tamsula
2 A Richmond Roscoe Parrish
2 A Christmas Time in the Morning Stephen Tucker
2 A Icy Mountain Ward Jarvis
2 Am Brushy Forks of John’s Creek Art Stamper
2 Am Davy Come Back and Act Like You Oughta Delbert Hughes
2 Am Shakin’ Down the Acorns Edden Hammons
2 Am Frosty Morn Henry Reed
2 Am Jeff Sturgeon John Salyer
2 Am Haning’s Farewell JS Price
2 Am Ways of the World William Stepp
2 C Cranberry Rock Burl Hammons
2 C Hell Up Coal Holler Henry Reed
2 C Farewell Trion James Bryan
2 C Cumberland Blues John Hannah
2 C Katy Did Lowe Stokes
2 C Colored Aristocracy Taj Mahal
2 D Lost Hornpipe Charlie Kinney
2 D Martha Campbell Doc Roberts
2 D Jimmy Sutton Fred Cockerham
2 D Rocky Mountain Goat Henry Reed
2 D Durang’s Hornpipe Jake Phelps
2 D Johnny Don’t Get Drunk John Ashby
2 D Sharp’s Tune John Sharp
2 D Black Eyed Susie Luther Strong
2 D Gilsaw Pete McMahon
2 D Pete’s High D Tune Pete Vigour
2 D Snake River Reel Peter Lippincott
2 D Needlecase Sam McGee
2 D Half Irish Snake Chapman
2 D Spring In the Valley Tom McCreesh
2 D Polly Put the Kettle On Tommy Jarrell
2 D Sugar Hill Tommy Jarrell
2 D Fair Morning Hornpipe Wilson Douglas
2 G Jimmy in the Swamp Bob Walters
2 G Snakewinder Buddy Thomas
2 G Mississippi Palisades Chirps Smith
2 G Ebenezer Henry Reed
2 G Cauliflower Jimmy Wheeler
2 G Stumptailed Dolly John Salyer
2 G Old Time Billy in the Lowground Kelly Gilbert
2 G Roaring River Monte Sano Crowder
3 A Breaking Up Christmas Benton Flippen
3 A Salt River Clark Kessinger
3 A Grub Springs Ernest Claunch
3 A Dinah Henry Reed
3 A Hell and Scissors JW Day
3 A Hog Went Through the Fence Luther Strong
3 A Last of Callahan Luther Strong
3 A Red Haired Boy mash-up
3 A Railroad Runs Through Georgia Max Collins
3 A Ida Red Tommy Jarrell
3 A Icy Mountain Ward Jarvis
3 Am Squirrel Hunters Bayard
3 Am Grub Springs (2) Grub Springs (2)
3 Am Cousin Sally Brown Marcus Martin
3 Am Pretty Polly Steve Mote
3 C L & N Rag Alex Hood
3 C Big Rock Candy Mountain Harry McClintock
3 C Birdie Henry Reed
3 C Texas Gals Hill Billies
3 C Oh! Susannah Stephen Foster
3 C O Come,  All Ye Faithful Traditional
3 C Silent Night Traditional
3 D Shades Of Death Creek Chirps Smith
3 D Farewell Princeton Clyde Davenport
3 D Mississippi Sawyers Edden Hammons
3 D Belle Of Lexington Emmett Lundy
3 D Julianne Johnson Emmett Lundy
3 D Arkansas Hoosier George Mert Reeves
3 D Rally ‘Round The Flag GF Root
3 D Over The Waterfall Henry Reed
3 D Quince Dillion’s High D Tune Henry Reed
3 D Forked Deer John Salyer
3 D Storming Banks Of The Black River Lee Stoneking
3 D Cumberland Gap mash-up
3 D Angeline The Baker Steve Mote
3 F Wildwood Flower Carter Family
3 F Wiley Laws Tune Manco Sneed
3 F Wild Horse Posey Rorer
3 F Frankie Baker Tommy Jarrell
3 G Josie-O Art Stamper
3 G Sandy River Belle Blue Ridge Highballers
3 G Big Scioty Burl Hammons
3 G Marching Jaybird Dave Macon
3 G Wild Goose Chase Dave Reiner
3 G Ida Red Ed Haley
3 G Poor Little Mary Sitting In A Corner Enos Canoy
3 G Dandy Lusk fernando Lusk
3 G The Girl I Left Behind Me Irish Folk Song
3 G Miller’s Reel JP Fraley
3 G Old Joe Clark Kentucky Folk Song
3 G Shove The Pigs Foot Marcus Martin
3 G Buffalo Girls Paisley Hagood
3 G Gum Tree Canoe SS Steele
3 G Bell’s March Tom Sauber
4 A Old Dangerfield Bill Monroe
4 A Cuckoo’s Nest Ed Haley
4 A Devlish Mary Fate Morrison
4 A Devil In The Haystack Harvey Taylor
4 A Chicken In The Snowbank James Bryan
4 A Little Birdie John Hammond
4 A Far In The Mountain Red Headed Fiddlers
4 A John Henry Steve Mote
4 Am Rocky Road To Dublin Allen Sisson
4 Am Jeff Davis Bert Layne
4 Am Biddy Edden Hammons
4 Am Boatin’ Up Sandy George Hawkins
4 Am Santa Anna’s Retreat Henry Reed
4 Am Adeline Luther Strong
4 Am All Young Melvin Wine
4 Am Karabouchka traditional
4 Bb Polly Put The Kettle On Marcus Martin
4 C Rocky Mountain Goat.tef Dwight Diller
4 C Spider Bit The Baby Kenny Baker
4 C Hogskin Paul Goodman
4 C Rocky Pallet The Skillet Lickers
4 D Morpeth Rant Allan Block
4 D Snouts and Ears of America Bayard #58
4 D St. Anne’s Reel Buddy Thomas
4 D Chicken Reel Ed Haley
4 D Indian Ate The Woodchuck Ed Haley
4 D Bonaparte Crossing the Rhine.tef festival maship
4 D Mole in the Ground.tef Green Baley
4 D Willott’s Hornpipe Lee Stoneking
4 D Chinese Breakdown Lyman Enloe
4 D Dry And Dusty Morrison Twin Bros.
4 D Swannanoa Waltz Rayna Gellert
4 D Goin’ Uptown Sam Dyer
4 D Old Time Sally Ann Tommy Jarrell
4 D Mulqueen’s Reel traditional
4 D Buck Mountain Uncle Nip Chisolm
4 Em Glory In The Meeting House Luther Strong
4 G Flowers Of Edinburgh Art Galbraith
4 G Home Town Band Bayard #391A
4 G McMichen’s Reel Clayton McMichen
4 G Big Scioti festival maship
4 G Waldorf Reel Gus Meade
4 G Ora Lee James Bryan
4 G Oyster River Hornpipe James Bryan
4 G Moon Behind The Hill Melvin Wine
4 G Undone In Sorrow Ola Bella Reed
4 G Miss McLeod’s Reel The Skillet Lickers
4 G Leather Britches Wilson Douglas
5 A Salty River Reel Cyril Stinnett
5 A Half Past Four Ed Haley
5 A Fine Times At Our House Edden Hammons
5 A Camp Chase French Carpenter
5 A Ol’ Bob Garry Harrison
5 A Red Prairie Dawn Garry Harrison
5 A Jenny Get Around John Morgan Salyer
5 A Lacy Brown John Morgan Salyer
5 A Speed Of The Plow John Morgan Salyer
5 A Grey Haired Dancing Girl Jumahl
5 A Chinquapin Hunting Norman Edmonds
5 Am Cattle In The Cane Bill Northcutt
5 Am Jenny On The Railroad Carter Bros. & Son
5 Am Pride of America David R. Hamblon
5 Am No Corn On Tygart Ed Haley
5 Am Falls Of Richmond Edden Hammons
5 Am Jake’s Got The Bellyache Edden Hammons
5 Am Twenty-Eighth Of January Franklin George
5 Am Rock Andy Snake Chapman
5 C Old Melinda Bob Walters
5 C Catlettsburg Ed Haley
5 C Dunbar Ed Haley
5 C Old Mose Howard Sims
5 C Altamont John Lusk
5 C Monkey In The Dogcart Leake County Revelers
5 C Wes Muir’s Tune Nile Wilson
5 C Pike’s Peak Ted sharp
5 D Chinquapin Hunting Art Stamper
5 D Coleman’s March Bruce Greene
5 D Big Powwow Claude Parker
5 D Washington’s March Edden Hammons
5 D Bonaparte’s Retreat Festival Mashup
5 D Rush And The Pepper Jesse James Abbott
5 D Grand Picnic Joe Politte
5 D Indians Over The Hill John Hannah
5 D Jaybird John Summers
5 D Rosetree Reed Martin
5 D Green Willis Taylor Kimball
5 D Texas Quickstep 2 The Red Headed Fiddlers
5 G North Carolina Breakdown Arthur Smith
5 G Old Gray Cat Bayard
5 G High Up On Tug Edden Hammons
5 G Waynesboro Edden Hammons
5 G Sunny Home In Dixie Frank Jenkins
5 G Sail Away Ladies JP JP Fraley
5 G High Dad In The Morning Kenny Baker
5 G Girl I Left Behind Me Rayna Gellert
5 G Seneca Square Dance Sam Long
5 G Hooker’s Hornpipe Tylor McBaine
5 G Rebel’s Raid William Stepp

5 Years of Banjo Tablature

I’ve recently realized that I’ve just completed five consecutive years of writing at least one banjo tab per week. I’ve published 200 of them in four books and am about to put out Book #5. It prompted me to wonder just why I was doing it and am seemingly unable to stop. There are just so many great tunes… At first they were tunes I knew from having learned them at festivals, jams, camps and so on. For a while i was really listening to recordings of banjo players -both commercial recordings and my own hand-held collections. Somewhere along the line I started only listening to fiddlers. I realized that was because it seemed to be the purest form of the melody. Mostly I’ve been listening to source recordings because for this giant repertoire of tunes the older recordings somehow revealed the real idiosyncrasies of what makes each tune or rendition unique. For a brief period I was writing tabs that had almost every note that the fiddle was playing. Big mistake- fun but big mistake. One long time student threatened to quit because the tabs were too difficult to play and even if you learned them they just had no groove. I’ve since shifted my approach to that of trying to imagine what I would play if I could climb into Mr. Peabody’s Time Machine and sit down with Ed Haley, John Salyer, Emmett Lundy, Luther Strong, Edden Hammons and on and on. So I’m now trying still to understand these tunes better (a process which I’m sure is unending). I’ve found a relational database that I can put on my phone that can aggregate some of the info that swirls around the creation and promulgation of these wonderful melodies. I’ve found that so many tunes are icebergs of information- just the tip peeks out of the water with the name of the tune. Below the waterline lurks a mountain of information consisting of facts, rumors, tall tales, historical references, alternate titles, family history, urban legends, travelogues and the like. The next thing I’m looking at is how the mountain geography and the direction of the rivers help determine how a tune (or parts of a tune) travels.

How I Learn a New Tune


Melody is king.  If there’s a tune I want to learn on the banjo, I start by listening to multiple recordings of fiddlers.  I find at least ten recordings and listen to a couple of minutes worth of each- almost like scanning an article.  This takes about half an hour.  At the end of this time I hope to have a good idea of the shape of the tune, the key and the chord structure. I then take out my banjo and try to play along with my favorite recordings.  After woodshedding for a while, I then try to write tablature of the tune.

Finding Recordings

There are tons of great online resources.  I usually start with Larry Warren’s excellent site Slippery Hill. Within that site I start with  the equally awesome collection assembled by Walt Koken and Claire Milliner. Use the Find feature of your browser and search a word in the title of the tune.  Another great source is the Digital Library of Appalachia. Here’s an exhaustive page of links from David Lynch’s site Old-Time Music.

Shape of the Tune

I then load the tune into Capo, a program that slows the tune down without changing the pitch and let’s you set multiple loop points for listening to specific phrases. Other good programs are The Amazing Slow Downer and Song Surgeon.  Choose a phrase.  I think phrases seem to predominantly fall into four beat segments.  Four quarter-note taps of your foot will generally give you a good starting point.  Try to sing this phrase to yourself and notice the starting note and the ending note.  Once you’ve sung the starting note, what happens at the next pitch? Does it rise in pitch? Does it fall? Does it stay the same? Is it a hill that climbs upward?  What does it turn to head back downhill?  This process  takes repetition and lots of practice.  Like anything, the more you do it the easier it gets.

What Key Is It?

Old-time music recordings are often in one of four keys.  A major, G major, D major and C major.  There’s also a fairly common modal key that sounds like A major but is somehow darker.  Try to find and sing the note at the beginning or at the end of a tune.  Once you’ve sung this note, does the music feel “at rest”?  Do you feel that it could be the final note and that your ear is satisfied?  Musical phrases are often defined by tension and resolution.  The note that feels the most resolved is generally the same as the name of the key.  Once identified and I can sing this note, I then try to find it on my banjo.  Another good way is to sing into your chromatic tuner if it has a built in microphone and see the name of the note you’re singing.

Chords, Chords, Chords

In general when two notes happen in succession it is considered melody.  When two notes happen at the same time it is considered harmony.  When three notes happen at the same time it is often called a chord or a triad.  Each key has a handful of chords associated with it and these three-note chords are assembled from notes from the seven-note scale of the key.  In the key of G major I look for the chords G, C and D.  In the key of A major common chords are A, D and E.  In the key of D major the chords are D, G and A.  In C major the chords are C, F and G.  Other chords occasionally make appearances but the above chord sets are a good starting place when trying to understand how a tune works.  When listening to a repeating loop of a section of the tune I try chords from the key until they sound right.

Sing the Phrases

In many fiddle tunes the melodic ideas are organized into four-beat phrases that I like to think of as questions and answers.  These ideas or phrases show up multiple times in the tune.  I start by trying to sing one phrase.  Once I can sing it then I try to find those same notes on the banjo.  I look for two groups of eight or so notes that make up a single phrase.  At this point I also start to write tablature of the tune.  This helps me to understand the tune.  Phrase by phrase I follow this process and then play the notes on the banjo while listening to the looped phrase from the fiddle recording.  When finished I play the tune against several different recordings and make adjustments as needed.

Make the Tune Your Own

At the end of this several hour-long (sometimes days-long) process I hope to have a personalized, customized arrangement somehow rooted in the performance of several fiddlers that have come from earlier times.  A friend of mine the excellent fiddler Andy Reiner wisely said something to the effect that a piece of sheet music (or single arrangement) is not something to be held frozen in time as if behind a piece of glass in a museum.  Tunes are living entities that grow and change with time.

The process of listening to a series of source-recordings and then developing an understanding of the melody that you can then share with others I think is a time-honored and important process.  I think of it as a small adventure.  Enjoy the trip!

Tim Rowell           BostonBanjoTeacher.com

 

Silver Belle

contributed by Amy Colburn

Silver Bell, also called Silver Belle, was composed in 1910 by Percy Wenrich, and was published with words by Edward Madden. Wenrich was from Joplin, Missouri but went to music school in Chicago and then on to New York. His biggest hit was probably “Put on Your Old Grey Bonnet” in 1909, though he composed many tunes and scored stage productions as well. You can read more about Percy and see the cover of the sheet music for this tune, featuring a beautiful Native American maiden and her suitor, in the article found here:
Here is the chorus:
“Your voice is ringing,
My Silver Bell.
Under its spell,
I’ve come to tell
You of the love I am bringing,
O’er hill and dell.
Happy we’ll dwell,
My Silver Bell.”
I first became acquainted with this tune by hearing Chip Arnold play the Will Keys two- finger index-lead version of the tune in double D tuning. I learned the three finger version in this video from Pete Peterson of the Orpheus Supertones. I like both versions very much. Bluegrass people also play this tune, and change keys somewhere along the line. I’m playing this one in the key of D with the banjo tuned in Drop D (aDAC#E).
Many thanks to Tim Rowell for his supportive guitar playing!

Snakewinder

I first played this tune with Canadian fiddler Glenn Patterson.  It was two in the morning and we were at Black Creek Fiddlers Reunion in Altamont New York.  I think I’d been playing for a dozen hours in the key of G.  I think the tune source was Kentucky fiddler Buddy Thomas.  Glenn said he learned it from a recording by Roger Cooper.

Every once in a while in the whirlwind of late night festival jams, a particular jam stands out.  For me this one was really memorable and still remains a favorite.  Glenn played a bunch of tunes that I didn’t really know but somehow they all seemed to work for me.  Over the next two hours we played about twenty-five tunes- I recorded most of them on my phone.  Some fiddlers present melodies in a way that just make sense to me.  I’ve been working on this one for a while and have quite a ways to go before I can play it smoothly.

7 Favorite Banjo and Fiddle Duet Recordings

Banjo and Fiddle Duet
Tim and Mike at the Black Creek Fiddlers Reunion

Just banjo and fiddle playing together was the original rock band. From the earliest time of the banjo in America – the mid to late 1800’s, the music partner of choice was the fiddle. Here’s a list of some of my favorite duo recordings:

Banging and Sawing by Bob Carlin and Guests

Southern Summits by Alan Jabbour and Ken Perlman

Tommy & Fred  by Tommy Jarrell and Fred Cockerham

Starry Crown by Rhys Jones and Christina Wheeler

The Time’s Been Sweet by Jeanne Murphy & Scott Marckx

Phil’s Patio by Aaron Jonah Lewis and Matt Ball

The Fun of Open Discussion by Bob Carlin and John Hartford

These recordings have all affected me on different levels.  They’ve inspired me to learn the tunes.  They’ve compelled me to seek out fiddlers and sit knee to knee and communicate musically.  I’ve shared tunes with my bands and we’ve learned them and added more instruments.

When I think back on wonderful musical moments through the years, many of them have been at festivals where two of us have searched out a quiet corner to sit and play together.  Starting with a tune we both know (or not…) and first developing the common ground to kind of establish the musical outlines of the thing that we are creating together then having fun and allowing new ideas to emerge.

The albums above all do this. Most of it is banjo and fiddle but there are some really beautiful fiddle duets on Starry Crown.  In the duet form I always love when the whole is greater than the sum of it’s parts.

Essential Old Time Music Recordings

I’ve often been asked what are good recordings to listen to. One reply that I often give as an absolute “must own, listen and learn” is the first Fuzzy Mountain String Band album.

This great album was recorded in two living rooms live to a a two track tape recorder and was one of the first albums released by the Rounder label in 1972 (ROUN0010).

There are so many things that I love about this album. The spirit in which it was made, the choice of tunes, the instrumentation, the totally shoestring manner in which it was recorded, the album packaging, and on and on. If you’d like to learn more about the musicians that made this and the various bands that were spawned by what was originally a gathering of friends getting together at local homes to play and enjoy old time music then visit the site of the original Red Clay Ramblers.

There are twenty cuts largely taken from the Henry Reed repertoire. These tunes were collected by the great fiddler Alan Jabbour. These tunes show up regularly at every jam that I’ve ever attended. If anyone wants a good place to start in building their own list of tunes that they can feel comfortable playing on, there could hardly be a better place to start.

Rounder combined thirty-three cuts from their first two albums on a CD release in 1995 (ROUN11571).

Some of my favorites from this venerably vinyl disc are Old Mother Flanagan, Magpie, Protect the Innocent, Frosty Morning, West Fork Girls, Bonaparte Crossing the Rhine, Santa Anna’s Retreat, Quince Dillon’s High D Tune. If you’d like to listen to me playing some of these tunes with my friends, I’ve posted a bunch of MP3’s on my Banjo Hangout music page.

This is a video of me playing one of my favorite Henry Reed tunes that I learned from the Fuzzy Mountain String Band album.

Bell’s March

A great tune that I learned from the ‘Banjo Gathering” CD. The banjo is tuned “sawmill” or gDGCD. Tom Sauber played it on the recording and wriote in the liner notes that he learned it from “the son of a father who learned it in the Civil War.” The modal tuning and the march-like timing really gives this tune a great feel- I can imagine being battle weary and walking with a rifle in may hand when I hear this played. Here’s the tablature.

Interview by Kathy Sands-Boehmer

Quick Q and A with Tim Rowell (Jubilee Mule)
by Kathy S-B · 2 September 2009

Who would ever think that a vibrant band of old time musicians had a very real presence in the town of Marblehead, Massachusetts? Having witnessed these guys in action, I can vouch for the fact that if it were not for the ocean breeze wafting through the windows or the sound of nearby Abbot Hall’s tolling chimes, you’d think you were smack dab in the middle of Appalachia. Jubilee Mule plays regularly at the Cantab in Cambridge and has developed quite a loyal following. You can read all about Jubilee Mule and see some terrific videos at their website.

What’s your definition of “old time” music?

Old Time music to me is American music from the Civil War up until the mid 1930’s. The stuff that I’ve been really interested in for about the last 35 years or so has been primarily from the southern Appalachian mountains and surrounding areas. It’s music that is strongly connected to a time when people wrote or played music as easily as often as we flip on a TV. The songs were written about whatever was happening at that moment — a crow landing on the fence at harvest time, the exploits of a traveling railroad man, the chickens in the henhouse, unrequited love and on and on.

As an award-winning banjo player, I have to ask — what is it about the banjo that rocks your world?

I’m not 100% sure. I can’t explain the hold that it has on me. I love a lot of different instruments and am always trying to learn how to play new ones — but when I sit down to play or practice I almost always pick up the banjo — much to the chagrin of my extremely patient wife. I find that the clawhammer style in particular has a groove and a drive that I really love and that lends itself to a bunch of different styles of music.

Tell us about your mentor, Steve Mote. What is it about his music that has inspired you?

Most old time musicians are closet ethnomusicologists. They love to learn about the tunes that they play and love. They try to preserve the heritage of this unique American art. Until I met Steve, my biggest influence was Pete Seeger and the way that he used music as a tool to bring people together. Pete said to me once that he was really a guitar player with a banjo in his hands and I think that his playing style totally reflects that. His banjo has a long neck with three extra frets so that it matched his vocal range and long limbs and could easily play in more keys with the same relative tuning. The style was really unique to Pete. Steve exposed me to the clawhammer playing style. He learned his tunes directly from the families of musicians in the Ozark mountains who handed the tunes and the playing style down from generation to generation. The first time I heard him play I felt like a was a witness to something primordial — like salmon swimming upstream or a river cutting its way through limestone.

How did Jubilee Mule become a playing entity?

I was driving through Marblehead during the summer with my windows down and I heard this great music coming out of this small art gallery and it was JP (John Price) playing the mandolin with someone. The groove was undeniable and I had to find out who was playing. I stopped the car in traffic and accosted him with my phone number and he called and we’ve been playing together ever since. There have been a bunch of different musicians who have joined us on various stages in the past eight or nine years, but the core of the band has remained with me and JP.

Do you continue to explore new musical frontiers with your own music and with the band?

Yes, absolutely. Right now the band is a really interesting mix of different musical points of view. JP has been playing guitar in a really interesting way that incorporates Irish sensibilities with dynamic rhythms and innovative tunings. His son, Ren, has contributing great rhythmic drive with a variety of hand percussion and occasionally bass. Tim Baldanzi is a really talented mandolin player and singer who’s playing I’ve enjoyed since first hearing him at play at the Monday night old time jam at Sandy’s Music in Cambridge. Tim and I first bonded while playing tunes in modal tuning or what we affectionately call “spooky tunes.”
Our newest member, Etienne Cremieux, has just entered Berklee and brings a whole world of hard driving and intricate bluegrass chops to the table. This musical soup has included everything from Civil War marching songs to Frank Zappa. I really look forward every time to sitting down and pulling out the instruments with these guys because I’m never really sure what’s going to happen but it has almost always been an adventure.

Tim & Don & Ed & 3 Banjos

I know, I know. One banjo is bad enough. But three???
On the second Thursday of every month there’s an old time jam at my music school, Minuteman Music Center, in Lexington. (half-hour from Boston). It’s open to anyone who wants to come and I never know who’s going to show.

This month I was overjoyed to have Ed Britt and Don Borchelt walk in. These guys have played a lot of double banjo stuff together. I think that the first time we really played together was sitting under Jon Gersh’s canopy at the Harry Smith Frolic in Greenfield this past summer.

Well, we shared an enjoyable couple hours of music with a small handful of other musicians and at about 10pm everybody packed up and trundled off to their respective homes. Well, almost everybody.
Don and Ed had some more pickin’ left in them, so we played on and I pulled out my handy Zoom H2 recorder. Here are the first couple of tunes.

Chilly Winds and Greasy Coat can both be found on my Banjo Hangout music page. If you go to the site, be sure to find both Ed and Don’s music pages- there’s a ton of artfully executed and joyful music showing clearly what can happen when two old friends carry on a musical conversation.