Hello from Germany
Posted: Mon Feb 16, 2015 6:45 am
Greetings from an Irish folkie domiciled in Germany!
My real name is actually John E. Dallas - like the well-known London banjo-maker of the early 20th century. There's no family connection, and I'm not a luthier by trade, but I do play the banjo.
My first banjo was a derelict, no-name open-backed 5-string that was given to my father back in the 1950s, when I was about 10 years old. It had no strings, bridge or tailpiece, and there was a peg missing. Dad bought strings and a bridge and improvised a replacement peg and tailpiece, and also bought me a tutor. From then on, playing and renovation went hand in hand.
In the 1960s, I fitted a new set of friction pegs and a proper tailpiece, and in the 1970s I fitted a new vellum head after the old one split. I also improved the set-up (the dowel-stick wasn't quite straight), and then I dealt with the "untuneability" of the instrument by inserting a zero fret. Finally, I converted it to nylon strings, fitting a No-Knot tailpiece, and now it's a lovely-sounding, clean-fretting classic banjo!
Over the years, I've upgraded two old Oscar Schmidt autoharps from 12 or 15 chords, respectively, to 21-chord 'harps, and built a Norwegian langeleik from scratch.
I'm now retired, and in the initial stages of scratch-building a 6-string Germanic lyre, based on the available drawings of the 6th-century lyre found at Trossingen (which is not far from where I live). Another project that I have in mind is to do a proof-of-concept prototype of a strange-looking stringed instrument that the Pre-Raphaelite painter Bourne-Jones used as a prop in several paintings.
So I hope to be able to tap into a lot of expertise on woodworking, glueing and finishing on this forum!
Cheers,
John
My real name is actually John E. Dallas - like the well-known London banjo-maker of the early 20th century. There's no family connection, and I'm not a luthier by trade, but I do play the banjo.
My first banjo was a derelict, no-name open-backed 5-string that was given to my father back in the 1950s, when I was about 10 years old. It had no strings, bridge or tailpiece, and there was a peg missing. Dad bought strings and a bridge and improvised a replacement peg and tailpiece, and also bought me a tutor. From then on, playing and renovation went hand in hand.
In the 1960s, I fitted a new set of friction pegs and a proper tailpiece, and in the 1970s I fitted a new vellum head after the old one split. I also improved the set-up (the dowel-stick wasn't quite straight), and then I dealt with the "untuneability" of the instrument by inserting a zero fret. Finally, I converted it to nylon strings, fitting a No-Knot tailpiece, and now it's a lovely-sounding, clean-fretting classic banjo!
Over the years, I've upgraded two old Oscar Schmidt autoharps from 12 or 15 chords, respectively, to 21-chord 'harps, and built a Norwegian langeleik from scratch.
I'm now retired, and in the initial stages of scratch-building a 6-string Germanic lyre, based on the available drawings of the 6th-century lyre found at Trossingen (which is not far from where I live). Another project that I have in mind is to do a proof-of-concept prototype of a strange-looking stringed instrument that the Pre-Raphaelite painter Bourne-Jones used as a prop in several paintings.
So I hope to be able to tap into a lot of expertise on woodworking, glueing and finishing on this forum!
Cheers,
John