Results 1 to 19 of 19

Thread: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

  1. #1
    Certified! Bernie Daniel's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
    Posts
    8,347
    Blog Entries
    4

    Default Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    Just a quick comment and an set of following questions.

    I have recently acquired both a tenor guitar and tenor bajno -- they are both vintage ear Gibsons and, I would suggest, more or less of compable quality i.e., a 1936 TG-00 versus a 1929 TB-3. I have both tuned CGDA.

    However, I have found that while I am making pretty good progress in translating my mandolin family techniques to the guitar -- the banjo is a different story. It seems to be to be a much harder and more demanding instrument (for me) to play.

    I find myself making clams -- not because I hit the wrong note but rather because I miss or overpick, or just "tangle up" in string on the banjo.

    Both have a 23 inch scale (584 mm) scale but the there seems to be considerably less tension on the banjo strings (0.009; 0.012; 0.022; 0.028) then the guitar (0.010; 0.014; 0.022; 0.032) so the banjo strings feel "floppier".

    Therefore, they give way to the pick more easily and as a result I seem to hangup or get caught on them breaking my pattern or the less tension leads to my touching other strings producing unwanted sounds.

    On the advice of folks like Jill McAuley, Barbara Schlutz and Mike Keyes I have switched to a much thinner pick (circa 0.5 to 0.63 mm) for the banjo (vesus 1.5 mm for the guitar) but I still not there on the TB!

    Others find this to be the case?
    Last edited by Bernie Daniel; Sep-08-2009 at 8:58am.
    Bernie
    ____
    Due to current budgetary restrictions the light at the end of the tunnel has been turned off -- sorry about the inconvenience.

  2. #2
    Registered User Jill McAuley's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Co. Mayo, Ireland
    Posts
    3,569

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    My example is coming from the reverse perspective of yours, but one thing I noticed when I made the tenor banjo to mandolin crossover was that I found the mandolin more challenging - the reasons I identified were these:

    -I was trying to just transfer tenor banjo techniques directly to the mandolin, when I would've been better served approaching it as what it is - an instrument in it's own right. Lots of techniques I use in my tenor playing just don't translate to the mandolin as well. I try to be aware of that in my playing but it's something I'm still working on. Interestingly, when I got the chance to play a tenor guitar back in the spring (a beautiful Fletcher Tenortone) I at first had some difficulty until I realized the mistake I was making - I was just playing it like it was a tenor banjo, again falling into the trap of not approaching it in it's own right. I then started thinking about the tenor guitar playing of John Carty, and inspired by that I started playing the Tenortone in a manner that took advantage of it's guitar qualities and it was not only easier to play, it also sounded a million times better in my hands than previously!

    --Another trap I fell into at first was assuming that my level of proficiency on the mandolin was automatically going to be relatively on a par with my tenor banjo playing. So if I could play a reel at speed on my banjo I would attempt the same degree of speed on the mandolin from the get-go. I could kind of get away with it, but there were mistakes (mostly from my right hand/picking) peppered throughout it. When I realized that I wasn't getting thru any of the tunes I knew cleanly then I copped on and slowed things way, way down and stopped assuming that everything from my skill set was instantly transferable.

    Cheers,
    Jill
    2018 Girouard Concert oval A
    2015 JP "Whitechapel" tenor banjo
    2018 Frank Tate tenor guitar
    1969 Martin 00-18




    my Youtube channel

  3. #3
    Certified! Bernie Daniel's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
    Posts
    8,347
    Blog Entries
    4

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    Thanks Jill, very analytical suggestions and intuitively they seem on target and worth heeding.

    Thinking about your comments more -- I started out on the frets playing 6-string guitar (probably 3 or 4 years before touching a mandolin) and in fact the as I think about it the strings of tenor guitar do respond very much like my J-50 6-string. So I am probably getting carry over benefits from that insturment even though I don't play it much anymore.

    My only banjo experience was three finger picking on a 5-string --so that does not related in any meaningful way to the piking a tenor banjo I guess.

    Something else I just realized -- in the past the times when I have picked around on a tenor banjo to plink around on they have always been 17-fret insturments whereas the Gibson I have now is the longer scale 19-fret. I wonder the extra frets changes the playing character of the insturment?
    Last edited by Bernie Daniel; Sep-08-2009 at 3:32pm.
    Bernie
    ____
    Due to current budgetary restrictions the light at the end of the tunnel has been turned off -- sorry about the inconvenience.

  4. #4
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Berkeley, CA
    Posts
    1,629

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    Bernie -- the "extra frets" have two different effects. First, the scale length on a 19-fret banjo is generally longer than that on a 17-fret banjo, making LH stretches a bit more difficult. Second, the shorter scale length on the 17-fret means that, holding string gauges and tuning the same, the string tension on the 17-fret will be lower (looser, floppier) than on a 19-fret. Some folks use (slightly) heavier-gauge strings on shorter-scale instruments to compensate.
    EdSherry

  5. #5
    Cafe Linux Mommy danb's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 1996
    Location
    Norfolk, England
    Posts
    5,813

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    I've goofed around on all 3- mandolin, tenor guitar, tenor banjo. The main difference is in the right hand I feel, getting used to the different string tensions takes a lot of work.

    I string my 19-fret TB 11p/18w/30w/42w or therabouts. The TG gets heavier gauges, and I tune all 3 of them to GDAE. I use a .54 pick on the TB, a .72 on the TG, and these days a .95-1mm on the mandolin. It varies considerably with each instrument what will sound right.

    The trick to your TB might be trying lighter picks (or try GDAE tuning which has a little more tension to it). It's certainly a different picking technique too- a thinner pick hitting the strings at more of an angle is most common, though I still am mostly perpendicular and playing more mandolin-like.
    The Mandolin Archive
    my CDs
    "The wheel is turning, but the hamster is dead"

  6. #6

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    Aside from scale-length differences, and adjusting string tension with varying string gauges, what I would say here is that the banjo is just that way: it's a loud instrument accentuating percussive elements; thus, it is an instrument requiring great precision and is less forgiving than mandos and guitars. It amplifies your sound, so it will amplify your mistakes: the same fluffed notes that don't play havoc on the mando and guitar sound noticeably more incorrect on the stark palette of the banjo. But being inherently loud, it does not require a heavy attack and therefore will permit use of a thin plectrum--no need to use a heavy pick with TB/PB. In this regard, the banjo requires a very precise approach and, having adjusted to it, will make you a better player on the other instruments. Maintain a supple wrist, practice legato..

  7. #7
    Registered User Charles E.'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Saint Augustine Beach FL
    Posts
    6,633

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    Bernie, I will second catmandu2. I play mandolin, tenor guitar and tenor banjo and I have to approach each one differently. Because the banjo responce is so quick and amplified I think of it like an electric guitar. I use the same pick as I do for the other instruments ( heavy jazz ) but use a much lighter touch on the string. I play mostly old time on the banjo so I incorporate slurs, slides and brush strokes to simulate clawhammer playing, something I cant do on the other two instruments. It is also great for playing Wacka-Wacka rhythm in a stringband setting.
    Charley

    A bunch of stuff with four strings

  8. #8
    Certified! Bernie Daniel's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
    Posts
    8,347
    Blog Entries
    4

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    I appreciate all the comments. At least it confirms my intial impressions that that two instruments are indeed different picking experiences.

    The idea of the thinner pick and more delicate touch seem to be the dominant take home. Indeed I tried the TB-3 for an hour again last night and I can already tell that keeping these ideas in mind are going to help.

    Here are some picks I have been trying. The Clayton 0.63 mm was Jill's idea. Drilling the holes to improve the grip -- a la Wegen -- was mine. The jury is still out on that idea -- it does confer more stability for grip but makes the pick more "flimsy" also.

    I'm still working on the ideal pick for me.

    Thanks again
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Click image for larger version. 

Name:	tenorbanjo picks.jpg 
Views:	266 
Size:	120.8 KB 
ID:	45679  
    Last edited by Bernie Daniel; Sep-09-2009 at 6:52am.
    Bernie
    ____
    Due to current budgetary restrictions the light at the end of the tunnel has been turned off -- sorry about the inconvenience.

  9. #9
    Registered User Jill McAuley's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Co. Mayo, Ireland
    Posts
    3,569

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    You might try one of the light grey Jim Dunlop .60mm nylon picks - grip wise they're good because the shoulder end is textured. They have less pick noise than the Claytons, but aren't quite as snappy sounding to my ears. When I was starting out they were the only pick I could use as the flex in them felt just right. Once I'd been playing for a few months I moved onto the Claytons - I think because my technique was better at that stage that I was able to get the benefits from them. I had initially tried a Clayton when I first got my banjo and had grip issues, but those cleared up with improved technique later on down the line.

    Cheers,
    Jill
    2018 Girouard Concert oval A
    2015 JP "Whitechapel" tenor banjo
    2018 Frank Tate tenor guitar
    1969 Martin 00-18




    my Youtube channel

  10. #10
    Certified! Bernie Daniel's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
    Posts
    8,347
    Blog Entries
    4

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    Jill: You might try one of the light grey Jim Dunlop .60mm nylon picks - grip wise they're good because the shoulder end is textured.
    Thanks I think I've seen those recently -- they might be very much like that black on in the photo I took?
    Bernie
    ____
    Due to current budgetary restrictions the light at the end of the tunnel has been turned off -- sorry about the inconvenience.

  11. #11
    Oscar Stern s11141827's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2019
    Location
    2486 Govoners Drive South
    Posts
    433

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    Quote Originally Posted by Bernie Daniel View Post
    Just a quick comment and an set of following questions.

    I have recently acquired both a tenor guitar and tenor bajno -- they are both vintage ear Gibsons and, I would suggest, more or less of compable quality i.e., a 1936 TG-00 versus a 1929 TB-3. I have both tuned CGDA.

    However, I have found that while I am making pretty good progress in translating my mandolin family techniques to the guitar -- the banjo is a different story. It seems to be to be a much harder and more demanding instrument (for me) to play.

    I find myself making clams -- not because I hit the wrong note but rather because I miss or overpick, or just "tangle up" in string on the banjo.

    Both have a 23 inch scale (584 mm) scale but the there seems to be considerably less tension on the banjo strings (0.009; 0.012; 0.022; 0.028) then the guitar (0.010; 0.014; 0.022; 0.032) so the banjo strings feel "floppier".

    Therefore, they give way to the pick more easily and as a result I seem to hangup or get caught on them breaking my pattern or the less tension leads to my touching other strings producing unwanted sounds.

    On the advice of folks like Jill McAuley, Barbara Schlutz and Mike Keyes I have switched to a much thinner pick (circa 0.5 to 0.63 mm) for the banjo (vesus 1.5 mm for the guitar) but I still not there on the TB!

    Others find this to be the case?
    The Tenor Guitar & Tenor Banjo have the same Tuning but they sound different. Of course the Tenor Guitar is a hybrid instrument consisting of a Tenor Banjo neck slapped on a Guitar body. These were made (they still make them today) during the Transition Period from Banjo to Guitar when Banjoists had to switch over to Guitar.

  12. The following members say thank you to s11141827 for this post:


  13. #12
    Oscar Stern s11141827's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2019
    Location
    2486 Govoners Drive South
    Posts
    433

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    You can actually hear the difference between a Tenor Guitar & Tenor Banjo (Tuned the same way for example John Pearse 450 Strings on both instruments cause most Banjos today have a Terminator Tailpiece that allows you to use Ball End strings for fast easy restringing, & those Tailpieces are inexpensive) by playing the same music on each. There's a reason why Both instruments sound great when played together.

  14. #13
    Registered User Jill McAuley's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Co. Mayo, Ireland
    Posts
    3,569

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    Thirteen year old thread brought back from the dead....
    2018 Girouard Concert oval A
    2015 JP "Whitechapel" tenor banjo
    2018 Frank Tate tenor guitar
    1969 Martin 00-18




    my Youtube channel

  15. #14
    Registered User fumblefour's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2016
    Location
    North West Highlands, Scotland
    Posts
    28

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    Quote Originally Posted by Jill McAuley View Post
    Thirteen year old thread brought back from the dead....
    Great truths never die...
    "To play a wrong note is insignificant; to play without passion is inexcusable". Beethoven

    Eastman MD404
    Angara e D'Isanto 1895 Bowlback
    Eastman MD505 CC
    Paul Hathway Mandocello
    Bucketful of picks...still looking for the Magic one 🦄

  16. #15
    Registered User fox's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2014
    Location
    Guernsey... small island just off the coast of France
    Posts
    1,764

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    Quote Originally Posted by fumblefour View Post
    Great truths never die...
    According to s1141827 neither do John Pearse strings!

  17. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to fox For This Useful Post:


  18. #16
    Harley Marty
    Join Date
    Mar 2016
    Location
    Mullingar Co Westmeath Ireland
    Posts
    223

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    There is going to be a tenor banjo treat on TG4 (Irish) television this Sunday at 21:30. A local Mullingar player 10 yr old Eoiffe Dunleavy will be making her television debut.

  19. The following members say thank you to Harley Marty for this post:


  20. #17
    Oscar Stern s11141827's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2019
    Location
    2486 Govoners Drive South
    Posts
    433

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    Quote Originally Posted by Bernie Daniel View Post
    Just a quick comment and an set of following questions.

    I have recently acquired both a tenor guitar and tenor bajno -- they are both vintage ear Gibsons and, I would suggest, more or less of compable quality i.e., a 1936 TG-00 versus a 1929 TB-3. I have both tuned CGDA.

    However, I have found that while I am making pretty good progress in translating my mandolin family techniques to the guitar -- the banjo is a different story. It seems to be to be a much harder and more demanding instrument (for me) to play.

    I find myself making clams -- not because I hit the wrong note but rather because I miss or overpick, or just "tangle up" in string on the banjo.

    Both have a 23 inch scale (584 mm) scale but the there seems to be considerably less tension on the banjo strings (0.009; 0.012; 0.022; 0.028) then the guitar (0.010; 0.014; 0.022; 0.032) so the banjo strings feel "floppier".

    Therefore, they give way to the pick more easily and as a result I seem to hangup or get caught on them breaking my pattern or the less tension leads to my touching other strings producing unwanted sounds.

    On the advice of folks like Jill McAuley, Barbara Schlutz and Mike Keyes I have switched to a much thinner pick (circa 0.5 to 0.63 mm) for the banjo (vesus 1.5 mm for the guitar) but I still not there on the TB!

    Others find this to be the case?
    Banjo Strings need to be looser so that the head will vibrate more freely. In GDAE Tuning w/ John Pearse #450 Strings (13, 20w, 30w, 42w) you can get a much mellower sound out of both instruments (Tenor Guitar & Tenor Banjo) which reminds me alot of an old 20s big band sound as you now have some super easy to play Jazz voicings. They make Terminator Tailpieces for Banjos that allow you to use both loop & ball end strings. The Biggest similarity between the Tenor Guitar & Tenor Banjo is that they're tuned & played the same way, the only difference lies w/ the sound.

  21. #18
    Oscar Stern s11141827's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2019
    Location
    2486 Govoners Drive South
    Posts
    433

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    The Tenor Guitar is kinda a Tenor Banjo Neck on a Guitar Body (so it's sort of a Hybrid instrument if you think about the way it's played) & these were developed around the 1920s when Banjoists had to switch to Guitar.

  22. #19

    Default Re: Tenor Guitar vs Tenor Banjo

    Well, at least the second necrobump-for-nothing was only after a five-month gap.

    Do you all think he engages with the real world in the same way? I would love to see how things go at the grocery store.... *grin*
    ----

    Playing a funky oval-hole scroll-body mandolin, several mandolins retuned to CGDA, three CGDA-tuned Flatiron mandolas, two Flatiron mandolas tuned as octave mandolins,and a six-course 25.5" scale CGDAEB-tuned Ovation Mandophone.

    Love mandola?
    Join the Mandola Social Group!

  23. The following members say thank you to Explorer for this post:


Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •