This is the trouble blues, that Lightnin' Hopkins is havin' at the present, which I hope it don't last all week - Lightnin' Hopkins, intro to Trouble Blues
Not exactly CB, but I thought y'all might get a kick out of this. A while back I was inspired to build this instrument. Bob Thornburg was very generous with advice and old pal Dave Godwin let me use his band saw.
The top is goatskin, glued into place, because I was not confident I could get the tension high enough just using the rawhide threads, but I did the threads anyway because I liked the look. The neck is made two pieces of book matched cherry. The nut is ebony, as are the standard violin pegs. The tail piece is leather. The designs are traditional African images I got from Bob.
The hardest part was getting the neck to match the holes in the gourd just right so the strings lie at a playable angle. I was surprised at how good it sounds.
Thanks, Uncle Bud. I couldn't tell you exactly what kind of gourd it is, but they are very common, and there is an entire subculture out there involving making stuff out of these. I got a few likely-shaped ones at a gourd festival. They are sold dried, so I just cut the top off and cleaned it out. The designs were added with one of those wood burners we used as cub scouts. I glued sandpaper to a piece of plywood so I could sand the gourd rim as level as possible. As far as plans, all had was a couple of rough sketches of a neck from Bob Thornburg, that I'd be happy to share if I can find it. My woodworking skills and tools are extremely basic. Patience is the key.
I'm not set up yet to record, but I'm working on it...
Wow. Well, there you go, Eric. Now that you're done the gourd banjo, you can move on to a 16th-century Italian Pentagonal Virginal Harpsichord.
Slack, I am seriously considering building one. Should really fix a few things in the house first though. And my woodworking experience amounts to screwing some leftover wood together to make a shelf for plants. I'm also good at splinters.
Slack, I am seriously considering building one. Should really fix a few things in the house first though. And my woodworking experience amounts to screwing some leftover wood together to make a shelf for plants. I'm also good at splinters.
There are _always_ things to fix around the house, do both. Getting a pre-made neck greatly simplifies things for a first round build.
Well, there you go, Eric. Now that you're done the gourd banjo, you can move on to a 16th-century Italian Pentagonal Virginal Harpsichord.
Hmmm... I wonder what Cow Cow Davenport would sound like on that thing...
Quote
Getting a pre-made neck greatly simplifies things for a first round build.
Slack, getting that neck would indeed make it really simple. I forgot to mention that I had to take mine to Mike Lewis so we could use his peg head reamer, which isn't a tool everyone has lying around. Mike, by the way, is a maestro of archtop luthiery.
Great looking instrument! Would mounting the head with tacks simplify things a bit? In the years I've had my tackhead, I've never had a problem with head tension that didn't correct itself. Love the designs on the gourd!
If you're careful and don't bang too hard, tacks work really well to secure the head. I really recommend Welborn Gourd Farm in California. They have excellent, think bodied canteen gourds; you have to work hard to crack them.
I have an article on gourd banjo-making coming out this spring in Make Magazine. Here is a link to Youtube with me playing one of my banjos.