![]() The Morgan Monroe banjos look like traditional mandolin-banjos and have wooden resonators. Morgan Monroe has recently made three models, the MM-MB1 Mandolin Banjo the MM-MB2 Mandolin Banjo, and the Banjolin DLX (8 strings). The selection is not large and the instruments are not common in stores. GoldTone makes the MB-850+ Mandolin-Banjo, with a removable maple resonator (converting the instrument to an open-backed instrument). Today mandolins-banjos are being manufactured by Vintage, GoldTone, Rogue, Cumbus, Morgan Monroe and Musikalia - Dr. Historically, mass production of mandolin-banjos have been made by several companies, most notably Gibson, but also by Vega and the English company Windsor, all who built and sold 4 and 8 string banjos in the early 20th century. Historic Ĭompared to mandolins and banjos, manufacture of mandolin banjos has grown scarce at the beginning of the 21st century. This instrument resembles the French mandolin-banjo, having a closed-resonator back that gives it a metallic sound. ![]() Mando-cümbüş, a Turkish banjo in the style of a mandolin. The Banjolin name was applied in this way to a type of bowed fretless zither Companies Makers of zithers applied the names of known instruments to their zithers as a theme. Zithers ĭuring the Hawaiian music craze of the early 20th century, instrument makers tried to capitalize on the widespread desire to learn an instrument. He said that amateurs and professionals alike preferred the single string instrument to the double stringed version, because of the "nice clear sound," which he said resembled the violin pizzicato. The American instruments he said were open backed, "and they call Mandoline-Banjo or Bandoline what we call Banjoline." In France and England, the Banjoline was an open-backed instrument, and the mandoline-banjo was a closed back instrument (with a metallic back that made a "tinny" metallic sound. In his 1921 book Méthode for the Banjoline or Mandoline-Banjo, Salvador Leonardi said that naming conventions between the United States and France had applied similar names to different instruments. The closed back is a resonator, to project more sound outward. This is a Jazz-Age banjo, the American closed-back type that Leonardi referred to. The instrument adds the banjo's volume to the mandolin.ĭistinctions Banjolin versus banjo-mandolin īacon & Day ‘’Montana Silver Bell’’ mandolin-banjo at the American Banjo Museum. It enabled mandolinists to produce a banjo sound without having to learn that instrument's fingerings. The mandolin-banjo is one of the hybrids that resulted. In the heyday of mandolin orchestras and banjo bands (late 19th–early 20th century), all sorts of instruments were produced. The instrument was popularized prior to the 1920s, when the tenor banjo became more popular. The name banjolin was first patented by John Farris in 1885. The first patent for a mandolin-banjo was taken out in 1882 by Benjamin Bradbury of Brooklyn. ![]() Inventors were experimenting to create amplified instruments in the days before electric amplification. 2.2 French banjoline versus mandolin-banjo. ![]()
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