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Banjo's Greatest Hits

Once Famous 18 Jul 04 - 06:28 PM
Mark Clark 18 Jul 04 - 07:05 PM
McGrath of Harlow 18 Jul 04 - 07:29 PM
Once Famous 18 Jul 04 - 08:38 PM
Big Al Whittle 19 Jul 04 - 04:20 AM
Big Al Whittle 19 Jul 04 - 04:21 AM
GUEST,SHANNON LEDFORD 19 Jul 04 - 04:26 AM
ThreeSheds 19 Jul 04 - 06:31 AM
John MacKenzie 19 Jul 04 - 08:03 AM
GUEST,Jon 19 Jul 04 - 08:27 AM
GUEST,Frank 19 Jul 04 - 10:09 AM
Jeremiah McCaw 19 Jul 04 - 10:22 AM
Dave Hanson 19 Jul 04 - 10:29 AM
Once Famous 19 Jul 04 - 11:03 AM
Steve-o 19 Jul 04 - 01:52 PM
Uncle_DaveO 19 Jul 04 - 02:14 PM
fat B****rd 19 Jul 04 - 02:23 PM
Big Al Whittle 19 Jul 04 - 07:03 PM
GUEST,banjoman 20 Jul 04 - 06:35 AM
Once Famous 20 Jul 04 - 10:17 AM
Leadfingers 20 Jul 04 - 11:52 AM
ex-pat 20 Jul 04 - 04:23 PM
Roger the Skiffler 21 Jul 04 - 04:09 AM
BanjoRay 21 Jul 04 - 06:42 AM
Splott Man 21 Jul 04 - 07:51 AM
Big Al Whittle 21 Jul 04 - 12:31 PM
Steve Latimer 22 Jul 04 - 07:26 AM
GUEST,amadorvet 27 Jul 04 - 11:10 AM
GUEST,Mappa mundi 28 Jul 04 - 03:01 AM
fat B****rd 28 Jul 04 - 03:30 AM
GUEST,Cattail (sans cookie) 28 Jul 04 - 06:56 PM
BanjoRay 28 Jul 04 - 07:57 PM
Bee-dubya-ell 28 Jul 04 - 11:07 PM
GUEST,Cattail (no cookie) 29 Jul 04 - 03:05 PM
GUEST,Jaze 29 Jul 04 - 08:45 PM
fat B****rd 30 Jul 04 - 03:21 AM
GUEST,Cattail 30 Jul 04 - 03:23 PM
Jeff Green 30 Jul 04 - 08:48 PM
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Subject: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Once Famous
Date: 18 Jul 04 - 06:28 PM

I actually hope that this does not get relegated to the BS section and I don't know if this has been done before. Somewhat further to the defense of the banjo, I would like to start a list of what the most well known recorded songs featuring a banjo (any type) are.

Now, my ground rules, when I say "well-known" in the most general sense. It was a hit or had somewhat decent popular air play. So please, no songs from self-produced CDs or by someone who is only known in small circles.

I also believe, that with very few exceptions, none have been recorded by British artists. One that has banjo on it that does come to mind, is "Squeezebox" by The Who.

This list I am sure is not endless, so please limit your songs to three and give someone else a chance or two before you add more. With the aforementioned Who song, I will add:

Foggy Mountain Breakdown
The MTA


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Mark Clark
Date: 18 Jul 04 - 07:05 PM

In my experience there are only two banjo numbers any general audience knows well enough to request by name. One is Dueling Banjos and the other one isn't. Actually, the other one, already listed by Martin is usually requested as “that Bonnie and Clyde tune” or some variation of that.

      - Mark


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 18 Jul 04 - 07:29 PM

Banjo's greatest hiy? Undoubtedly Waltzing Matilda.


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Once Famous
Date: 18 Jul 04 - 08:38 PM

Not necessarily songs people would request that a banjo is famous for, but songs that are/were well knowned where a banjo was used.

One more:

Washington Square

Bsp. Bsp. Waltzing Matilda is disqualified.


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 19 Jul 04 - 04:20 AM

Misty by Ray Stevens


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 19 Jul 04 - 04:21 AM

7 drunken nights the Dubliners


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: GUEST,SHANNON LEDFORD
Date: 19 Jul 04 - 04:26 AM

SWANEE RIVER, DUELING BANJO'S, Keep On The Sunny Side,
I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow,
In The Highways (I'll Be Somewhere Working For My Lord),
I Am Weary (Let Me Rest),
The Big Rock Candy Mountain,
Didn't Leave Nobody But The Baby,
Down To The River To Pray,
I'll Fly Away,In The Jailhouse Now,
You Are My Sunshine,Angel Band,When You Come Back Down
Out Of The Woods
Ode To A Butterfly
The Lighthouse's Tale
In The House Of Tom Bombadil
Reasons Why
Sweet Afton
The Hand Song
Robin And Marian
The Fox
Pastures New
Cuckoo's Nest
(ALSO THE DIXIE CHICKS SONGS USUALLY ARE WITH BANJO)
Spit On A Stranger
Speak
Young
Hanging By A Thread
I Should've Known Better
Smoothie Song
This Side
Green And Gray
Seven Wonders
House Carpenter
Beauty And The Mess
Brand New Sidewalk
Sabra Girl
Ballad Of Jed Clampett
Before I Met You
Columbus Stockade Blues
Hey, Good Lookin'
I Saw The Light
I'll Fly Away
I've Just Seen A Face
Milwaukee, Here I Come
Mountain Dew
Oh, Lonesome Me
Rocky Top
Tennessee
This Land Is Your Land
Tom Dooley
Wabash Cannonball
Will The Circle Be UnbrokenOn The Banks Of The Wabash, Far Away
You're A Star
Alouette
Amazing Grace
America, The Beautiful
Angels We Have Heard On High
Arkansas Traveler
(Go Tell Aunt Rhody) The Ole Grey Goose Is Dead
Away In A Manger
Banks Of The Ohio
Barbara Allen
Battle Hymn Of The Republic
Beautiful Brown Eyes
A Bicycle Built For Two (Daisy Bell)
Bill Grogan's Goat
Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair (Niles)
Blood On The Saddle
Blow The Man Down
The Blue Tail Fly (Jimmy Crack Corn)
Boil Them Cabbage Down
Bringing In The Sheaves
Buffalo Gals (Won't You Come Out Tonight?)
Careless Love
Cielito Lindo (My Pretty Darling)
Cindy
(Oh, My Darling) Clementine
Columbus Stockade Blues
Comin' Through The Rye
Corrina
Cotton Eyed Joe
The Crawdad Song
Cripple Creek
Deck The Hall
(I Wish I Was In) Dixie
Down In The Valley
Drill Ye Tarriers, Drill
The Drunken Sailor
Du, Du Liegst Mir Im Herzen (You, You Weigh On My Heart)
The First Noel
The Foggy, Foggy Dew
For He's A Jolly Good Fellow
Frere Jacques (Are You Sleeping?)
Frog Went A-Courtin'
Give Me That Old Time Religion
Go, Tell It On The Mountain
God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen
Goodbye, Old Paint
Good King Wenceslas
Good Night Ladies
Grandfather's Clock
Great Speckled Bird
The Grey Goose
Greensleeves
Hallelujah, I'm A Bum
Hand Me Down My Walking Cane
Hard, Ain't It Hard
Hark! The Herald Angels Sing
Hava Nagilah
He's Got The Whole World In His Hands
Here We Come A-Wassailing
House Of The Rising Sun
I Gave My Love A Cherry (The Riddle Song)
I Ride An Old Paint
I Saw Three Ships
I Was Born About 10,000 Years
I'll Take You Home Again, Kathleen
I'm A Pilgrim
I've Been Working On The Railroad
In The Evening By The Moonlight
In The Good Old Summertime
Jacob's Ladder
Jeanie With The Light Brown Hair
Jingle Bells
John Henry
Joy To The World
Just A Closer Walk With Thee
Kum Ba Yah
Li'l Liza Jane (Go Li'l Liza)
Listen To The Mocking Bird
Little Brown Jug
Little Maggie
Loch Lomond (Deis)
Lonesome Valley
Mama Don't Low
Michael Row The Boat Ashore
The Midnight Special
Molly Malone (Cockles & Mussels)
My Old Kentucky Home
My Wild Irish Rose
Nelly Bly
Nine Pound Hammer
The Ninety And Nine
Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen
O Come, All Ye Faithful (Adeste Fideles)
O Little Town Of Bethlehem
Oh! Susanna
Old Dog Tray
Old Folks At Home (Swanee River)
The Old Gray Mare
Old Joe Clark
Old MacDonald
Old Ship Of Zion
On Top Of Old Smoky
Onward, Christian Soldiers
Pick A Bale O' Cotton (Ledbetter)
Polly Wolly Doodle
The Red River Valley
Revive Us Again
Rock-A-My Soul
Rock Island Line
Rollin' In My Sweet Baby's Arms
Sally In Our Alley
Salty Dog Blues
Santa Lucia
Scarborough Fair
The Seven Blessings Of Mary
Shalom Chaveyrim (Shalom Friends)
She'll Be Comin' 'Round The Mountain
Shenandoah (Dougherty)
Silent Night
Sinner Man
Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child
Saint James Infirmary
Steal Away
Stewball
Strawberry Roan
Streets Of Laredo
Sweet Betsy From Pike
Sweet Beulah Land
Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
Take This Hammer
Things About Comin My Way
This Old Man
This Train
Three Blind Mice
Tom Dooley
The Twelve Days Of Christmas
Wabash Cannonball
Wayfaring Stranger
We Wish You A Merry Christmas
Were You There?
What A Friend We Have In Jesus
What Child Is This?
When The Saints Go Marching In
Who's Gonna Shoe Your Feet
Worried Man Blues
Yankee Doodle
Git Along, Little Dogies
Zum Gali Gali
Old Blue
Railroad Bill
Wanderin'
The Colorado Trail
Down In The Willow Garden
Sally Goodin
Candy Man Blues
Get On Board, Little Children
Can The Circle Be Unbroken
Don't Let Your Deal Go Down
Devilish Mary
The Foggy Dew
Mi Y'malel
Suliram (Go To Sleep)
Ah! Si Mon Moine Voulait Danser! (Come And Dance With Me)
Horse Named Bill, A
Bowling Green
Brigham Young
Chewing Gum
Cumberland Gap
Darlin' Corey
Gee, But I Want To Go Home
Ground Hog
He Was A Friend Of Mine(Dylan B)
Ida Red
In The Pines
I'm Going Down Road Feeling Bad
Kentucky Bootlegger
My Home Across Smokey Mtns.
Muskrat
Oh, Babe, It Ain't No Lie
Old Rattler
Shalom Aleychem
Sweet Evelina
Take A Whiff On Me
Devil And The Farmer's Wife
Dreary Black Hills
The Eyes Of Texas
Titanic
Times Are Getting Hard
Ragupati Ragava Rajah Ram
South Australia
Sowing On The Mountain
Streets Of Glory
Walk In Jerusalem, Just Like John
Chanuke, O Chanuke
Camptown Races
Londonderry Air
Home On The Range

Ain't Gonna Work Tomorrow
All The Good Times Are Past And Gone
Amazing Grace
Angel Band
Ballad Of Jed Clampett
Banks Of The Ohio
(A) Beautiful Life
Before I Met You
Big Ball In Boston
Blue Ridge Mountain Blues
(The) Bluebirds Are Singing For Me
Bluegrass Express
Bound To Ride
Brand New Shoes
Bringing Mary Home
Bury Me Beneath The Willow
(The Children Are Crying And) Calling Your Name
Close By
Columbus Stockade Blues
Daddy Sang Bass
Dark Hollow
Darling Corey
Detroit City
Don't Let Your Deal Go Down
Don't Put Her Down, You Helped Put Her There
Don't This Road Look Rough And Rocky
Down In the Willow Garden
Down The Road
Eating Out Of Your Hand
Face Lost In The Crowd
Fair And Tender Ladies
Foggy Mountain Top
Footprints In The Snow
Fox On The Run
Free Born Man
Freight Train
Give Me Your Hand
Handsome Molly
He Will Set Your Fields On Fire
Heaven
Hello City Limits
Highway Of Regret
Hot Corn, Cold Corn
How Mountain Girls Can Love
I'm A Pilgrim
I Know You're Married But I Love You Still
I'm Using My Bible For A Roadmap
If I Lose
In The Pines
(It's A Long Way) To The Top Of The World
It's In My Mind To Ramble
Jesse James
John Hardy
John Henry
Katy Daley
Knoxville Girl
(The) Last Song
Late Last Night (Way Downtown)
(The) Legend Of The Rebel Soldier
Life Is Like A Mountain Railroad
Listening To The Rain
Little Bessie
Little Birdie
(The) Little Girl And The Dreadful Snake
Little Glass Of Wine
Little Joe
Little Maggie
Little White Church
(The) Lonesome River
Lonesome Road Blues
Long Black Veil
Long Journey Home (Two Dollar Bill)
Lord, I'm Coming Home
Love, Please Come Home
Making Plans
Man Of Constant Sorrow
Maple On The Hill
Matterhorn
Memories Of Mother And Dad
(The) Memory Of Your Smile
Midnight On The Stormy Deep
Milwaukee Here I Come
Mr. Engineer
Mountain Dew
My Better Years
My Dying Bed
New Freedom Bell
New River Train
Nine Pound Hammer
(The) Old Old House
Ole Slew Foot
On The Jericho Road
Out On The Ocean
Pallet On Your Floor
Paradise
Poor Ellen Smith
Precious Memories
Pretty Polly
Rabbit In The Log (Feast Here Tonight)
Rank Stranger
Roll In My Sweet Baby's Arms
Roll Muddy River
Roll On Buddy
Roving Gambler
Satisfied Mind
Short Life Of Trouble
Singing All Day And Dinner On The Ground
Sitting On Top Of The World
(She Left Me) Standing On The Mountain
Steppin' Stones
Stone Walls And Steel Bars
Sweet Little Miss Blue Eyes
Sweet Sunny South
Swing Low Sweet Chariot
Teardrops In My Eyes
Tennessee
Tennessee Stud
That's How I Can Count On You
Things In Life
Think Of What You've Done
This Is The Girl I Love
Tragic Romance
Two Little Boys
Victim To The Tomb
Wabash Cannonball
We Need A Whole Lot More Of Jesus
Wear A Red Rose
What Would You Give In Exchange For Your Soul
When The Golden Leaves Begin To Fall
Where The Soul Never Dies
White House Blues
Widow Maker
Wildwood Flower
Will The Circle Be Unbroken
With Care From Someone
Working On A Building
Worried Man Blues
Wreck Of The Old Ninety-Seven
Y'All Come
You Go To Your Church (And I'll Go To Mine)
Abilene
Foggy Mountain Breakdown
Blue Moon Of Kentucky
Dooley
Doug's Tune
Down Yonder
Freight Train
I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry
Jambalaya (On The Bayou)
Katy Daly
Old Home Place
Red Wing
Roving Gambler
Salty Dog Blues
Take This Hammer
Temperence Reel
AND THE FOLLOWING ARE ALSO KNOWN ON BANJO BUT NOT AS KNOWN....
I Can Let Go Now composed by Michael McDonald
Deeper Than Crying composed by Mark Simos
Find My Way Back To My Heart composed by Mark Simos
Looking In The Eyes Of Love composed by Kostas, Tricia Walker
So Long, So Wrong composed by Patrick Brayer, Walden Dahl
Pain Of A Troubled Life composed by Ron Block
There Is A Reason composed by Ron Block
It Doesn't Matter composed by Harley Allen
Happiness composed by Viktor Krauss, Michael McDonald
I'll Remember You, Love, In My Prayers composed by Traditional
Little Liza Jane composed by Traditional
Blue Trail Of Sorrow composed by Jeff White
No Place To Hide composed by Bob Lucas
The Road Is A Lover composed by Bob Lucas
HOPE THIS HELPS!!!!


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: ThreeSheds
Date: 19 Jul 04 - 06:31 AM

I see you include Greensleeves in your selection wasn't this supposed to be written by HenryVIII now he isnt famous for his banjo is he?


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 19 Jul 04 - 08:03 AM

What part of 'keep it to two' didn't you understand?

Giok


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: GUEST,Jon
Date: 19 Jul 04 - 08:27 AM

My experience is differnt to Mark Clark's. In my experience, few know the name Duelin Banjos. I've said this before - it starts off "Do you know that film"... At least that's how it has worked for me. It's certainly popular and often requested though. I don't think Foggy Mountain Breakdown is too well known over here (UK) outside of folk circles. Ballad of Jed Clampet is the other I've been asked for quite a few times ("That Beverly Hillbillies tune").

I'm not really clear what Martin Gibson means by a banjo hit. There is quite probably things from both the Dubliners, e.g. 7 drunken nights and maybe something from the Pogues for example that made the UK charts but to me, the banjo would have been an accompanying device rather than a main feature of the song.


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: GUEST,Frank
Date: 19 Jul 04 - 10:09 AM

I like all kinds of banjo music. I like tenor banjo and plectrum style as well as five sting all styles.

Art Mooney would qualify as well as Harry Reser. They all had hits.
Tom Dooley by the KT would have to qualify as well as Weavers Top of Old Smokey and Erik Darling with the Tarriers doing the Banana Boat Song in which Erik does a banjo solo that got lots of air play.

There was a group or was it a tune called Washington Square which featured a banjo solo.

Eddie Peabody was popular at one time. He was a showman banjo player with lots of tricks. His disciple Perry Bechtel was a better player, though but less known although he was responsible for the extended frets on the Martin Guitars.

Django Reinhardt started out on the 6th string banjo but didn't popularize it the way he did the guitar. I'm not sure there are any Django recordings with him playing 6-string banjo.

Frank


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Jeremiah McCaw
Date: 19 Jul 04 - 10:22 AM

"or was it a tune called Washington Square which featured a banjo solo"

"Washington Square" by the Village Stompers. 1963. Great song as I recall (& I think it was 5-string claw-hammer style banjo).

Also "Sweet City Woman", 1971, by the Stampeders. Won a Juno (Canadian eqivalent of the Grammy) for best single of the year. In my 'memory-replay' I'm hearing a tenor banjo.

Off on a slight tangent, a friend of mine, Alfie Smith performs "Minnie the Moocher" with a 5-string - and makes it work!


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Dave Hanson
Date: 19 Jul 04 - 10:29 AM

No one likes a smartarse Shannon Ledford.
Black Velvet Band and The Irish Rover by the Dublinners.
eric


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Once Famous
Date: 19 Jul 04 - 11:03 AM

Guest, Shannon Ledford, why didn't you include Beethoven's 5th Symphony or Carmen by Bizet. what a totally stupid ass post yours was. But you obviously missed. It's not what songs can have a banjo, because quite frankly, any one can. It's what songs, well knowned, perhaps as a hit, or with popular radio ari play had a banjo featured. Your list, if wasn't copied and pasted, or evenif it was, was a total waste of time.

Now, back to the real deal:

The Battle of New Orleans by Johnny Horton


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Steve-o
Date: 19 Jul 04 - 01:52 PM

Excellent reminder!- "Washington Square" by the Village Stompers. 1963. Definitely not, however, 5-string played clawhammer....it was classic 4-string jazz banjo played plectrum-style. My addition to MG's list is "Love is a Rose" sung by Linda Ronstadt (banjo played by Herb Pederson).


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Uncle_DaveO
Date: 19 Jul 04 - 02:14 PM

Any number of songs by sung and played on banjo by Pete Seeger, either alone or with the Almanac Singers, the Weavers, and others. Far too many to list.

Dave Oesterreich


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: fat B****rd
Date: 19 Jul 04 - 02:23 PM

I have a strange fondness for "Happy Days Are Here Again" by The Big Ben Banjo Band.


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 19 Jul 04 - 07:03 PM

I suppose all the trad hits of the 1960's had banjo

Im shy Mary Ellen - Bob Wallis and the Storyville Jazz men
Midnight in Moscow, Peter and the wolf - Kenny Ball

I was taking it as hits in living memory

Lonnie Donnegan played one on have a drink on me, maybe some others


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: GUEST,banjoman
Date: 20 Jul 04 - 06:35 AM

May have already been mentioned somewhere but how about"Roseville Fair"
"off to Alabama with a banjo on my knee" may be excluded as I think the origibal song said "Washboard on my knee"
Good thread to set the grey cells working a bit


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Once Famous
Date: 20 Jul 04 - 10:17 AM

Rocky Top by the Osborne Bros.


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Leadfingers
Date: 20 Jul 04 - 11:52 AM

Funny - No-one seems to have mentioned 'When You Were Sweet Sixteen' as performed by the Furies ,with that lovely banjo break all over it >


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: ex-pat
Date: 20 Jul 04 - 04:23 PM

"Take it easy" - The Eagles
There's a song out on the radio now by Nellie Furtato that features the banjo.."Powerless."


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Roger the Skiffler
Date: 21 Jul 04 - 04:09 AM

If memory serves, Hugh Rainey was the banjo player in Bob Wallis band. Chris Barber had a great line in banjo players from Lonnie through Dickie Bishop, to Graham Sealey today.

RtS
(Born with a washboard on the knee, eh? Now that would need corrective surgery!)


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: BanjoRay
Date: 21 Jul 04 - 06:42 AM

The Streak by Ray Stevens
'Oh they call him the streak
He likes to show his physique'

Ray (not Stevens)


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Splott Man
Date: 21 Jul 04 - 07:51 AM

Stop, Stop, Stop by The Hollies had an electric banjo.
The Eagles instrumental (can't remember the name) that was used in Hitch-hikers Guide to the Galaxy - it wasn't a single hit, but the album it was on was.


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 21 Jul 04 - 12:31 PM

The thing I remember about Bob Wallis's band - they all dressed up like Brett Maverick -mind you I'm getting on - I can't remember much - I keep leaving out the send m in remeber - every time - as Derek Brimstone says ......its that Euthymol disease.


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Steve Latimer
Date: 22 Jul 04 - 07:26 AM

Led Zeppelin's cover of Gallow's Pole.


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: GUEST,amadorvet
Date: 27 Jul 04 - 11:10 AM

"Mrs. Brown, You've Got A Loverly Daughter"
"The Ballad of Jed Clampett"


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: GUEST,Mappa mundi
Date: 28 Jul 04 - 03:01 AM

Whitewater - Bela Fleck - Stonkin'


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: fat B****rd
Date: 28 Jul 04 - 03:30 AM

Better late than never. Splottman, The tune is "Journey of the Sorcerer" by Don Henley/Eagles.


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: GUEST,Cattail (sans cookie)
Date: 28 Jul 04 - 06:56 PM

Hi fat B****rd

Please!! Can you remember the album that "Journey of the Sorcerer"
comes from? And if it was by the Eagles or Don Henly.

I've loved that intro for years, still have a taped copy of
"Hitchhikers" and occasionally just play the music off it. I would
really like to get hold of the full track.

Cudgel your brains for me would you, (or alternativly have a pint or
three).

Thanks, Thanks, Thanks.

Cattail !


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: BanjoRay
Date: 28 Jul 04 - 07:57 PM

I think it's on One Of These Nights - The Eagles
If you like I can send you an mp3
Ray


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Bee-dubya-ell
Date: 28 Jul 04 - 11:07 PM

Nuts! Splott Man beat me to "Stop, Stop, Stop", but I don't think anybody's mentioned "In the Summertime" by Mungo Jerry.

By the way, Splott Man, that was the instrumental version of "Doolin Dalton" from the Eagles' "Desperado" album used on Hitchhiker's Guide.


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: GUEST,Cattail (no cookie)
Date: 29 Jul 04 - 03:05 PM

BanjoRay and Bee-dubya-ell.

Very many thanks to you both for that information, would you believe
that I bought a second - hand copy of "Desperado" about three weeks
ago but havn't played it yet.

I'm off to listen to it!

Thanks again, it's appreciated.

Cattail !


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: GUEST,Jaze
Date: 29 Jul 04 - 08:45 PM

"Daisy A Day" by Jud Strunk


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: fat B****rd
Date: 30 Jul 04 - 03:21 AM

Better late than never. Cattail, like Banjo Ray said it's on One of These Nights. fB


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: GUEST,Cattail
Date: 30 Jul 04 - 03:23 PM

Many thanks again for that fB

Cattail !


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Subject: RE: Banjo's Greatest Hits
From: Jeff Green
Date: 30 Jul 04 - 08:48 PM

OK thread drift -

I regulary listen to a Pete Seeger Live at Newport on which he mentions Frank Prophet and the plans for making a Banjo - anyone know if Frank Prophet ever released the plans - or know of any recordings by Frank Prophet still in existence?

TIA

Jeff


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Mudcat time: 19 April 5:16 PM EDT

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