Banjo guitar


Banjo guitar or banjitar or ganjo is a six-string banjo tuned in the standard tuning of a six-string guitar from lowest to highest strings. The six-string banjo was introduced in the late 19th century. Less widespread than four- and five-string banjos, it was reintroduced in the latter part of the twentieth century with the modern guitar-like tuning.
The six-string "banjo guitar" should not be confused with the five-string Bluegrass banjo, which retains re-entrant banjo tuning with a high-pitched short drone string going halfway up the neck.
The zither banjo has six tuning keys, but also only five strings as the short fifth string goes up a hole at the 5th fret up a channel under the fingerboard, and through a hole in the headstock to a tuning roller.
A double-necked guitjo is a guitar-like, fretted, stringed, musical instrument that has two necks attached to a single body, generally with 14 strings, seven on each neck. It is strung more like a banjo rather than a traditional guitar. The two necks can be played simultaneously, producing a sound that has elements of both guitar and harp.
The double-necked guitjo was developed in the late twentieth century. Guitjos are made and repaired by luthiers.

Banjo guitar players

A number of musicians have played banjo guitars or guitjos, and one a double-necked guitjo.
Johnny St Cyr was the first well known player of six string banjo. He used it in Hot Five, Hot Seven, with Jelly Roll Morton and in his own recordings after second world war. Numerous sources can verify this. The latest probably are cover text on two JAP cd records.