Yew: taxus baccata
By nguiver, Nov 19 2020 05:32PM
Origin of the long neck banjo
Having just had a banjo made out of English yew by artisan maker Dave Stacey, this Williamson of Lincoln turns up with a yew neck along with the Grimshaw banjo (London), a Kumalae soprano Uke (Hawaii) and an 1885 Bay State Guitar (USA)... all at an auction in North Yorkshire.
We shouldn’t underestimate how the exponential growth in the production of musical instruments in both Europe and the USA quickly fulfilled the interest in “home grown music” that spread throughout the world in the years following the American Civil War.
Initially it was the banjo, but mass immigration into the US created demand for a wider range of instruments as well as providing the links and avenues for imports from, and exports to countries around the globe: the proverbial melting pot.
The Yew was revered in medieval times for its strength and power when used in the English Longbow. Examples with 170lb “pull” were recovered from ships sunk in the Tudor period. Dave Stacey commented that having squared up the yew neck blank, it then went out of true when cut to profile.
There are a lot of natural stresses in timber and do these stresses contribute to the tone, and hence did mass produced banjos utilise stable timbers for the benefit of manufacturing process and were these necessarily the best tone woods?
Neck clamps
How about this one on the Williamson featured. Clearly the banjo attracted skilled metal workers as well as carpenters... Send us your pictures of unusual neck clamps.


For tailpieces: Michael Holmes article on Mugwumps
Antique/Vintage Banjos at auction Collectors Weekly
Banjoleles on David Sims Ukulele Corner
Hank Schwartz site on the history of Fairbanks
Links

