Culture The Black origins of the banjo in country music

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The Black origins of the banjo in country music​

Beyoncé's surprise new country album has kicked open the saloon doors to a new audience.

While this may not be Beyoncé's first rodeo when it comes to country music, people are now exploring the genre through her two new songs "16 Carriages" and "Texas Hold 'Em." The latter is a banjo-heavy ode to the singer's home state of Texas, and seems to be already causing controversy due to an Oklahoma country music station refusing a request to play the songbecause Beyoncé is not traditionally seen as a country artist. The station reneged eventually caved after receiving backlash from Beyoncé's unrelenting fans, but the incident has shed light on the larger misunderstanding of country music's origins.

In the song "Texas Hold 'Em," Beyoncé features live banjo and viola playing by Black country musician Rhiannon Giddens, who has been credited for highlighting that Black people created and played the banjo before it was popularized and appropriated by white country artists. So, there's no way to confuse Beyoncé's new era as anything but country especially if songs like "Texas Hold 'Em" heavily feature a historically Black southern instrument like the banjo.

However, the banjo's history within roots music is as loaded and complex as the U.S.' relationship with race because they are both inextricably intertwined. Long before the banjo was considered a staple instrument in mainstream country music, it went through several iterations, but it always had been deeply connected to the Black experience.

African lutes, the banjo's predecessor, were documented to be used in early 16th century West Africa in countries such Gambia, Senegal and Guinea-Bissau. Still used today by West Africans, the instrument's main parts are a gourd, and a stick attachment and a bridge for its three to four strings, paralleling a modern banjo. It is also tuned just like a banjo and similarly played by hand, The Black Music Project reported.

At the height of the transatlantic slave trade, abducted Africans were brought to the Caribbean islands first before they were forcibly taken to the American South. It's in these two regions where enslaved people created iterations of instruments that mimicked the ones in their native land to keep the tradition alive during the brutality and subjugation of slavery, The Smithsonian said. Early versions of the banjo were reportedly used in Jamaica in 1687.

Despite the horrific and complex system of slave labor camps, plantations and rural and urban settings — enslaved Africans musical traditions and instruments were upheld and passed down by generations. However, the banjo's creation eventually became a blending between West African and European traditions mostly due to minstrel shows in the 1800s. The instrument was first reported in the U.S. in 1736 and eventually by the 1800s it had its way to New England.

The banjo became the backbone of American roots music and culture through minstrelsy — white America's most popular form of entertainment in the early 1800s – in which white performers blackened their faces and performed as exaggerated versions of enslaved Africans on plantations, cementing a grotesque caricature of Black people in white American society. In these images, these caricatures were seen playing banjos.

White minstrel performers like Joel Walker Sweeney were credited with popularizing the instrument that inspired a vital part of popular music in the country seen as "hillbilly" music. But this couldn't have be done without the help of formative Black banjoists like Scott Joplin, Horace Weston, the Bohee Brothers, Hosea Eason and James Bland. In the 20th century, white artists like Earl Scruggs, who popularized the bluegrass genre were largely seen as banjo virtuosos for their unique playing style. Currently, the four-five string banjo is the product of the influence of many different groups of people and regions just like how American roots music has inspiration from Scots-Irish and Appalachia roots too alongside its Black influences.

Sadly, despite the banjo's origins, Black artists have slowly lost their ties to the instrument. But in the 21st century, Black folk-blues banjoists like Amythyst Kiah, Taj Mahal, Allison Russell, Otis Taylor and Giddens are reviving banjo playing in popular music, The African American Registry said.

In an interview with Variety last year, Giddens said that learning the banjo's Black roots was even a surprise to her. "That shifts your whole view of what we’ve been told about American music. If the very foundation of what we’ve been told is as wrong as it is, what does that mean for everything that’s built on top of it?"

She continued, "History isn’t simple — especially American history, which is super complicated because of the way that America came to be and the amounts of different cultures that mixed and mingled, and the economic juggernaut that was slavery.

"The banjo is existing in this world. And I guess what I want people to understand is that you can’t talk about the banjo without talking about slavery," she said. "You have to talk about slavery, you have to talk about minstrelsy, you have to talk about the segregation of American music."

Check out Giddens' banjo playing on "Texas Hold 'Em":
 
"The banjo is existing in this world. And I guess what I want people to understand is that you can’t talk about the banjo without talking about slavery," she said. "You have to talk about slavery, you have to talk about minstrelsy, you have to talk about the segregation of American music."
That's quite a leap.
Many different cultures around the world had stringed instruments of some form, not just west africa. Japan, India, and not to mention EUROPE are ones I can think of right now. It's not a black invention any more than a white invention. This article is peak black fragility. If you want to talk about modern music, then you have more of a claim that it is a product White Europeans.
 
That's quite a leap.
Many different cultures around the world had stringed instruments of some form, not just west africa. Japan, India, and not to mention EUROPE are ones I can think of right now. It's not a black invention any more than a white invention. This article is peak black fragility. If you want to talk about modern music, then you have more of a claim that it is a product White Europeans.
That's just more proof that they were either taught by ancient magical niggers who went to space in the pyramids or that the "real" ones were niggers and the modern, "fake" peoples stole dey culcha and killed them all
 
Many different cultures around the world had stringed instruments of some form, not just west africa. Japan, India, and not to mention EUROPE are ones I can think of right now. It's not a black invention any more than a white invention.
The various types of lutes were likely descended from the Middle East, which spread east to India, China and Japan; west to Europe; and south-west to Africa.
 
Since Beyoncé announced she's doing a country album, there's going to be a full court press to try to say black people invented country music and if yonce doesn't win all the CMA awards then they're racist.
Just like clockwork. Originally the media ignored country music unless it involved Taylor Swift. Now they'll complain how racists country music is because they won't accept Beyonce. Personally I wouldn't give her the time of day. However, radio will be forced to play here rather than be accused of racism.
 
True but also common knowledge at this point?

What I wonder is why they stopped using it. I consider blues to be the Black equivalent of country music, in terms of where it comes from geographically, socially, historically, the sort of music that it is. But at some point they seemed to just shitcan that particular instrument.
 
It is really tiresome how everything is invented by black people these days. Including a musical instrument that uses a resonator case with strings that you pluck with your fingers.
lute_thumb.jpg

Yes, Black people in America used similar instruments. Just like everyone else in western civilization.

The only major source I can see for this idea that the Banjo SPECIFICALLY is from Africa is Wikipedia, and both their cited sources go to dead links. How convenient.

The Wikipedia article cites this as the "oldest banjo"
Surinamese_Creole,_c_1770-1777.png

Which basically just looks like someone took a violin and a drum and forced them into unholy union. The wiki article also contradicts itself by saying the Banjo instrument (which they also are unable to source the name too) was brought to America by the FRENCH. And that Enslaved Africans used stringed resonator instruments that they fashioned themselves, and were referred to by the French as Banju, which was sort of a catchall term for home made guitars.

While the Banjo definitely has some roots in Plantation Slave culture, its a gross over simplification to say it was "invented" by slaves. And its certainly a massive oversimplification to say "Black people invented country music". Because lord knows all those Black People in West Virginia and Eastern Kentucky had alot to do with the Appalachian folk and Bluegrass (Not).

Music, and Musical instruments, are in fact a pure form of humanities common heritage. They all borrow from and derive from each other and historical past iterations. Anyone who tries to put a racialized spin to music and say "this is OURS" is at best being disingenuous and at worst is lying.
 
This isn't country in any way. Also her voice is shit as always. In every song I've heard of hers she sounds utterly generic. She is like the Air Jordan of black musicians: she's adored for her brand, for her status, without the quality of her output ever being taken into consideration.

Blacks are as ever extremely allegiant to brands. They're probably the only reason that Cadillac and Lincoln continue to exist.
 
A lot of early country singers weren't taken seriously for years because everyone wrote the genere off as "ignorant hillbilly music."
Intresting how they didn't mention that part.
They also left out how the Irish adapted the guitars they encountered in North America and brought them back to Ireland. The Irish Banjo is now almost indispensable for Irish Folk Music.

This is another one of those things where its 10 degrees to Kevin Bacon. Just because someone in the degrees is black does not mean it was "invented" BY blacks. No music or musical instrument has been uniquely invented by anyone, unless we can find the absolute genius known a Gruk the Destroyer of Females, who discovered he could make cool noise sounds by banging a rock into a hollow log he found while hunting mammoth.
 
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