Culture A Quest to Return the Banjo to Its African Roots - The Black Banjo Reclamation Project aims to put banjos into the hands of everyday people.

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A Quest to Return the Banjo to Its African Roots​

The Black Banjo Reclamation Project aims to put banjos into the hands of everyday people.

Smithsonian Magazine - Paul Ruta


Of all the melodic musical instruments in the world, perhaps none is more connected to the land it comes from than the banjo.

The “land” here refers to two things. It’s the indelible link to the continent of Africa, the geographic and cultural origin of that range of instruments which have evolved into the modern banjo. That fact of provenance alone puts any conversation about the history of the banjo inside the larger conversation about American history, and slavery in particular.

Being connected to the land also has a more immediate meaning, referring to the arable earth beneath our feet. Quite literally, every main component of a gourd banjo—one that’s built in the manner of its African precursors—arises from the land.

The Black Banjo Reclamation Project, based in the San Francisco Bay Area, aims to put banjos into the hands of everyday people. It does this in two connected ways: by producing most of the components and by teaching banjo-building skills in community workshops.

Then the BBRP addresses the bigger objective to retake possession of the narrative and tell the story of the banjo from the Black perspective. In this way, it can reconnect the African diaspora to their ancestral land and to their cultural legacy.

Hannah Mayree is the founder of the Black Banjo Reclamation Project and an Oakland, California-based singer-songwriter and banjo player. In an interview via Zoom she said, “We want to inspire everyone to reach back to who their ancestors were, and who we are now, and how we can honor that and bring integrity back into what we’re doing with music. The inspiration [for the BBRP] is the earth, really, because that’s where the instruments are coming from.”

A vision of banjos coming from the earth may take a number of twenty-first-century people by surprise.

The average American, if asked to conjure an image of a banjo, would likely picture the modern version of the instrument. It would be a factory-made object with a round wooden or metal body, with a synthetic, drum-like membrane stretched taut across the body, and four or five metal strings spanning a fretted neck.

In other words, people would tend to picture the good old bluegrass banjo, or the kind of instrument made popular by Pete Seeger and other singers and folklorists of the sixties. Either way, the context is almost always White, because for hundreds of years the story of the banjo has been told from an exclusively White point of view.

The familiar bluegrass-style banjo is indeed a twentieth-century American creation, a defining characteristic of the bluegrass and country music which evolved along with it. But the modern banjo, according to Mayree, is a demonstration of how far it has become separated from its roots. In fact, she calls it “part of the colonization of the instrument.”

Veteran banjo builder Pete Ross agrees. In his Baltimore workshop, Ross creates historical recreations of gourd banjos as well as wood-rimmed minstrel-era instruments. In an email conversation, he said, “What the BBRP is doing is actively reclaiming this co-opted, appropriated object and trying to re-root an extinguished tradition in the African American community.”

The story of the banjo goes back centuries, to West Africa, where folk lute instruments like the Senegambian akonting have long been in use. In recent decades, scholars and master musicians such as Daniel Laemouahuma Jatta have kept alive the traditions of these instruments, which ethnomusicologists worldwide are finally recognizing as living ancestors of the banjo.

Those African instruments never made the journey on slave ships bound for the Americas, but the technology for building them was carried in the heads of the passengers along with their memories of the music.

Enslaved Africans then fashioned variations on those instruments in the fields of the Mississippi Delta and elsewhere. Thus began the banjo’s trail of evolution in America.

In the mid-1800s, minstrel shows were a popular form of entertainment, where White performers in blackface played banjos and sang and danced in a caricature of Black music and culture.

Owning a banjo (or an equally popular fiddle) soon became all the rage in households across the country. To meet demand, production became mechanized, and the banjo quickly lost all connection to the earth. Along the way, its connection to Black heritage was effectively erased.


By the early twentieth century, the mass-produced banjo had become a symbol of White supremacist culture—so much so that in later decades people sometimes had difficulty accepting the fact of its African origins.

“Correcting the history of the banjo and making it clear that this instrument, so central to American cultural history that so many White people have their personal identities wrapped up in, is in fact African American, forces a shift in understanding the country’s history as well as personal cultural identifications,” Ross claimed.

No one is suggesting that the banjo and its means of manufacture, along with the music played on it, ought to be immune to evolution and adaptation. All musical instruments are subject to change: today’s Fender Stratocaster, for example, bears little resemblance, visually or sonically, to a C.F. Martin parlor guitar of even a century ago.

The difference is one of cultural ownership and general acknowledgement, of giving credit where it’s due—especially when credit is long overdue to a historically oppressed people.

One way to give the story of the banjo a fresh start is to tell it to kids. Rachel Baiman weaves that kind of lesson into her children’s music camp in Chicago. A Nashville-based singer, songwriter, and banjoist, she also teaches about the origins of musical instruments and music.

“Music, like food and language, is a fluid culture, and folk music picks up all kinds of influences as it moves through time and different communities,” she said via email. “But White people do have a bad habit in this country of taking something from another culture, whitewashing it, and profiting off of it to the exclusion of that cultural community. It’s been a persistent trend throughout the popular music industry for decades.”

Along with their efforts to help African Americans reclaim the right to the narrative, the Black Banjo Reclamation Project also gives people the opportunity to return to the music itself, to explore their own spirituality and artistic voices, and to learn how to play through online lessons. That kind of music is best played on a gourd banjo—if you can find one.

Gourd banjos are not often heard in American music today, if only because they’re relatively hard to come by. Few banjo makers produce them on a commercial scale. As a result, regardless of the style, most banjo music today is played on factory-made fretted instruments—or, for the lucky few, on banjos crafted by high-end luthiers commanding thousands of dollars.

But even a basic, serviceable banjo costs several hundred dollars, a significant expense for many working musicians, putting the more expensive professional-grade instruments well beyond reach.

One solution for lowering the price of entry is to make a banjo of your own. Bay Area musician and BBRP co-founder Seemore Love did exactly that. He claims the banjo he built for himself at a BBRP workshop is the nicest one he’s ever owned. It’s a beautiful-looking instrument and is robust enough to compose, record, and gig with.

Love said his self-made instrument allowed him to tune into his ancestors. “I’m an African in America. I don’t play from a colonized approach. Playing a fretless gourd banjo has given me a deeper sense of connection to the instrument. The vibrations are warmer, it’s a little more rooted, and it sounds a lot earthier.”


The mellow, earthy tones should come as no surprise. Like most gourd banjos, Love’s has a wooden neck, wooden bridge, and wooden friction-style tuning pegs. The strings are nylon—the modern version of traditional “catgut” strings made from sheep or goat intestines. It’s topped off with goat skin stretched across the opening in the hollow gourd body.

In addition to offering opportunities for practicing musicians to create their own tools of the trade, the BBRP provides space for families or anyone in the local community to learn useful land-based skills. Gardening, tanning, and woodworking with hand and power tools are all skills applied in building a banjo.

“Everyone that’s part of this project is offering something that is furthering our healing as a community,” Mayree said. “And we definitely focus on the community that we serve in terms of Black folks.”

The folks in question aren’t just in the Bay Area anymore. The Black Banjo Reclamation Project is in the process of expanding their reach by working with partners in the Caribbean as well as Black farmers in Virginia and Alabama. One day, Mayree hopes to complete the loop and connect with Daniel Jatta and other major figures in West African music and ethnomusicology.

“This organization at its core is a land-based project,” she added. “All of us are farmers, and all of us are herbalists, and we work with plants and food sovereignty, increasing our ability to have self-determination through plants and through the earth and through natural things. So I think that’s a big part of the inspiration, as well as our ancestors, knowing that this has been happening for so many generations through from the Continent to Turtle Island to everywhere that we are.”

This journey of musical and cultural rediscovery begins by simply planting a seed in the ground. With proper care, that seed will grow into a gourd, which may be harvested in 180 days. After the gourd has been left for about a year to harden and cure, the banjo-building process can begin.

And if the day ever comes when you’ve grown tired of your gourd banjo, no problem: it’s almost entirely biodegradable.

You can hardly get more connected to the land than that.

Paul Ruta is a writer, stringed instrument junkie, and curator of @guitarsofcanada on Instagram. A recent pre-COVID pilgrimage to the Mississippi Delta inspired this story. He lives in Hong Kong.


Ed. Note - Screenshot from the linked article
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It’s very odd all this is t it? I knit, and the specific style and motifs of the knitting are specific to the area. There’s a shared tradition of knitting in a similar way across Northern Europe and the baltics but each region has its own unique flavour.
Now I’m told that unless the small companies that produce local wool amd patterns use black models they’re racist and I’m told knitting is racist, despite the fact that it’s no use whatsoever in hot climates.
And then I’m also told that any usage whatsoever of anyone else’s non white culture is colonisation. As I see local girls forbidden from modelling the styles their ancestors created and used and which have great cultural import.
We used to, back in the day (and still do, quietly) see our shared knitting heritage as something that brought people of different cultures together over a shared passion. Little old ladies from Japan flock to shetland each year to pick up the fair isle stuff they’re obsessed with and we all smile and nod and have tea and leave with a sense that although we barely understood each other there was goodwill and a shared experience.
None of that seems to happen with this. It’s purely divisive.
It only seems to go one way and I’m quite sick of it.
 
Love how this just admits that the modern banjo is its own thing, generations removed from the people who "took" it or used it to mock black people.

I hate the ownership of music discourse especially when it comes to Southern music, which was so powerful that it tended to desegregate whole communities. The OG bluegrass players were the white Carter Family and the black musician Lesley Riddle, who traveled together and learned playing styles from one another and found new songs from every holler. It's a beautiful story that happened over and over again across the birth of multiple music genres. We shouldn't downplay any of their contributions because they were all crucial. Chalking it all up to "colonization" is lame af. It's a beautiful instrument with lots of varied styles and it's great whenever someone learns it to keep it alive. Don't make it weird.
Thanks for turning me on to Lesley Riddle. He's awesome!
 
We wuz honkeys an shit.
Yall didnt invent sittin on a porch in a chair spittin chaw into a cup!!!!
 
Weird how there's no mention of minstrel shows in the article. I can absolutely see black people being understandably embarrassed with the association to banjos through them.
Wasn't ther an article a short while ago about the Black origin of Jazz. Then I looked it up and Jazz turned out to be a multicultural effort?
IIRC as Dixieland became Jazz there was a deliberate shift from banjos to pianos, possibly over minstrel show associations.
 
Weird how there's no mention of minstrel shows in the article. I can absolutely see black people being understandably embarrassed with the association to banjos through them.

I'm still wondering what was denigrating about Minstrel Shows.
 
Aside from the feverish we wuz-ing in the article i cant find anything to be upset over. Ok they want to make shitty fucking wood and gourd banjos cheap and accessible. Go for it. The guy claiming his handmade trash stick with friction tuning pegs is the best instrument he has ever played comes off as megacope, but who gives a fuck.

The banjo is and will remain the chosen weapon of white ass crackers from Alabama to accompany guitar, mandolin and upright bass and cryin about the ol rugged cross.
 
Is the implication here that Europeans did not have stringed instruments prior to interactions with Africans because...they did.
 
We wuz Banjos.

It's all part of their long game. Next will be "We wuz Kazoos", finally ending with "We wuz Banjo Kazooie".

Watch out, Rare. They're coming for you.
 
From the Black Banjo Reclamation Project website:
The Black Banjo Reclamation Project is a vehicle to return instruments of African origin to the descendants of their original makers. Our theory of change is tied directly to re-appropriating our own culture by receiving banjos in the form of reparations and over time, gaining skills that will advance individuals and communities for generations to come. This includes ancestral survival and land based skills including fostering the trade of instrument building and repair. We are pursuing ancestral healing and envision a world where the act of remembering gives us the power to shape our world.

Hannah Mayree is a creative facilitator and musician who’s work and art lends itself as a tool for redesigning and reconnecting to our roots as humans on this planet. A banjoist, multi-instrumentalist and vocalist, Hannah founded the Black Banjo Reclamation Project and is currently existing in Oakland and throughout the west coast corridor.

Hannah was born and raised in Sacramento CA, where the waters flow from Mount Shasta to the Oak Savanna foothills lining the valley, to the delta and the bay.

Mayree is a storyteller and creates a musical backdrop, weaving in folk music as a communication between cultures and through time. Composed while traversing Turtle Island, the American landscape, communing with people and plants, their songs incorporate African rhythms and diverse European and modern American folk traditions to express the profound mystery contained within all beings. Through tools of community gathering, social permaculture and self healing, new realities are constantly being crafted and actualized.

Information on Hannah Mayree:
Hannah Mayree is a Sacramento, CA born singer, songwriter and music educator. Composed while criss-crossing America communing with people and plants, her songs incorporate African rhythms and diverse European and American folk traditions to express the profound mystery contained within all beings.

Raised by a violist mother and journalist father in a mixed race family, her music connects urban and rural ways of life and invites the listener to reconsider the boundaries between the masculine and feminine, the world of matter and the world of spirit.

Appalachian banjo, guitar, flute, accordion, and mandolin cradle inspired vocal harmonies in her freshman release Thoughts of the Night on enigma label homhomhom.
hannah.png

Some of her music:

Earl Scruggs she is not.

 
Wasn't ther an article a short while ago about the Black origin of Jazz. Then I looked it up and Jazz turned out to be a multicultural effort?
Its effectively the One-Drop rule with this shit.

If there was even the slightest involvement by a single black (or even just non-white) guy/gal in the process then the whole thing and everything stemming from it for the next ten thousand years becomes 1000% a black innovation and will be henceforth included in every single institution produced list of niggo inventions and innovations.

Unless ofcourse its bad shit like slavery or imperialism or such in which niggos were hugely involved both in the capturing/selling of slaves and in conquering their neighbors either for their own empires or as sponsored by foreign empires, in which case they had less than nothing to do with it beyond being helpless victims or (as is the somewhat new narrative) superhuman resistance fighters who singlehandledly ended slavery by force of arms in mass slave rebellions and coerced the weak and pitiful westoids into abolishing it after the fact to save face.

Aside from the feverish we wuz-ing in the article i cant find anything to be upset over. Ok they want to make shitty fucking wood and gourd banjos cheap and accessible. Go for it. The guy claiming his handmade trash stick with friction tuning pegs is the best instrument he has ever played comes off as megacope, but who gives a fuck.

The banjo is and will remain the chosen weapon of white ass crackers from Alabama to accompany guitar, mandolin and upright bass and cryin about the ol rugged cross.
Counterpoint
 
Africans do not have the fine motor skills or attention to detail to make a proper banjo. I think it's unlikely they had even independently discovered the "string" before the north africans gave it to them.
 
One thing I'll ardently argue for is that music is music, it can should be enjoyed by everyone. That thought came to me when I learned that American Country Music has a following in Africa.
So I have to ask was it colonization to market American Country in Africa, because the white man in fact did that. Wikipedia Source
Country was introduced to Nigeria in the middle 20th century by a combination of visiting American Christian missionaries from the southern United States, by returning Nigerian expatriates, and by a Don Williams-owned radio station that operated in the nation.[3][4] By the 1960s, the genre had become "a part of everyday Nigerian life".[4][5] As of the mid 1990s, country music remained highly popular among Nigerian radio listeners.[6] By the early 2010s, interest in country music had lessened in major metropolitan areas, but continued to enjoy popularity in Middle Belt states, notably including Plateau, whose state capital Jos has been described as Nigeria's "home of country music".[3] American country singer Jim Reeves, who died in 1964, has had a special staying power as a cultural icon in Nigeria and, as of the early 2010s, his recordings continued to be popular as a form of comfort music listened to in familial settings.[4]
"HOW DARE YOU PLAY THAT RANDY TRAVIS SHIT! DON'T YOU KNOW HE WAS A HUWYTE MAN!"
 
I can agree to that. But, as a part of the deal, niggers need to get rid of all items, infrastructure and concepts created by the white man and only use things that were invented in ooga booga civilization.

Good luck~
 
"African roots" my ass...

The reality as much as blacks hate it is that they have very little "african" in their culture, and any real african can tell you that. Even white afrikaners have more african culture than the average black guy.

In fact most of current black culture is derivative or at least greatly inspired by southern culture, which is not necessarily a good thing since some argue blacks basically embraced redneck culture, and if you read Hillbilly Elegy that's not a great foundation for your community.
 
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