CD songs, Jamming

A Salamander & A Handful Banjo

September 26, 2020

If you’re looking for a thrill/ It’s at the Salamander Grill

Where you can get your fill of/Bluegrass pickin` and chicken

Down Home Country Fried!

When the Hitchin` Post saloon was sold, the Sunday afternoon Bluegrass jam session took up residence at a newly opened and freshly renovated venue only a few doors down the street. The owners graciously welcomed the pickers and the patrons that followed our music there, and cigarette smoke was not an indoor environmental issue in the spacious family style eatery. It became a popular Sunday luncheon locale for many neighboring families. Although handy on the banjo, the BRC founder would sometimes play mandolin when a song called for it.

The local press took an interest in the revitalized music scene in the village of Hartsburg, and the Grill owners asked the BRC founder to record his original tune “The Salamander Grill” for a radio advertisement. With his son on rhythm guitar, the banjo builder recorded a stanza of the song with the above refrain as the catch-phrase. In the below sound file of this up tempo theme song, all the instruments and vocals were multi-tracked by the author on his initial CD to benefit the Childrens Hospital. Enjoy.


From the “Hartsburg Anthology- songs mostly about Missouri” copyright 2004.

A Handful Banjo

For the autumn 2020 juried exhibit, the community art league tasked its members with the following directive: The tradition of the human figure in art continues to inspire and challenge artists today. Whether abstracted or realistic, we experience the figure in art both visually and physically. We want to see your contemporary take on interpreting the ancient practice of recreating the figure.

In response to this assignment, the BRC founder built the “Play Your Hand” banjo which was accepted and exhibited in The Figure art show among 56 other entries of photographs, sculptures, watercolor and oil paintings, mixed media abstraction, wood, metal, and fiber works- each reflecting the human form.

The human hand is a marvel of communication second only to the face in its ability to convey emotion. We give and take with the hand. We wave a greeting and bid farewell with it. A handshake confirms connection, and fingertip kisses are blown to departing loved ones. Holding up two fingers in a V is a sign of peace, and a tightly clasped fist held overhead is a symbol of protest. We pointedly accuse with the hand, and both are held overhead to indicate surrender. A salute offers recognition of office, and a circle made with the thumb and index finger is the universal emoji for OK. Fingers are crossed for good luck, and flattened palms are pressed together in prayer. We wring our hands when worried and flap them in frustration. The extended index finger in front of pursed lips is a non verbal request for quietude. Historically, thumbs-up is a positive indicator of affirmation, and thumbs-down is negative. Holding up the palm vertically is a signal to stop, and a firmly clenching hand is a barometer of anger.  We affectionately caress loved ones with the hand, and in some traditional cultures, kissing the hand is a gesture of deferential respect. Sculptors and painters fashion their works by hand while silently crafting their artistic vision. The hearing impaired communicate with a vocabulary of sign language. A choir conductor gestures wordlessly to guide a chorale, and an orchestra makes music with its fingertips following the direction of the maestro`s hand-held baton. 

 

Bluegrass musicians spend endless hours honing their craft, and many banjo players wear fingerpicks to amplify their tonal palette (enter “picks” in the homepage search engine). According to 5-stringer lore, Earl Scruggs estimated that 10,000 hours of practice were required to master a musical instrument.

 

At a festive outdoor gig for the Children’s Hospital, the BRC founder poses with his fiddler who lost a finger in a severe power saw injury some years ago. After staged and complex surgeries, the fiddler devotedly rehabilitated his hand and retrained it to full musicianship.

 

 

 

From the BRC: Be well, practice hand hygiene, and keep on picking.

 

 

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1 Comment

  • Reply Mid-Mo Banjar November 30, 2020 at 8:04 am

    Anonymous says:
    November 26, 2020 at 9:28 am
    Dear BRC: Received the handy banjo. Wonderful instrument. Bid on your banjos before but never won. Can’t believe i was able to get this one. Had to do some set up work but nothing too complicated. Not only is it beautiful to look at, it tunes wonderfully and has a tone like none of my other banjos. I am so proud of this hand made, work of art. Great job Berry! Old fashioned sound from a hand crafted banjo. Priceless to me. Thanks so much. If I ever get a chance on another one I will jump on it. God bless.

    Reply
    BRC says:
    November 26, 2020 at 3:08 pm
    J.W.- Thank you for your kind words about the BRC banjo. Be safe, be well. With appreciation, Barry

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