Yeah. The sooner I start the sooner I will be a bona fide banjo player
If you've ever seen those bluegrass players, you're gonna be a minute before you're any good with it.
It's like they're playing neo-classical metal, except it sounds nothing like it. The fingering is really complicated - and they've got like spikes on all their fingers just to help 'em be even more metal.
It's insane finger picking. Like, I'd have to work extra hard to pull it off kinda finger picking.
On that note, I can kinda make a guitar sound a bit like a banjo. I just play up close to the bridge and I can cover (most of) Dueling Banjos with just one guitar. I can't quite cover it all. My fingers aren't that speedy and some of it would be impossible to cover on one guitar without at least two extra fingers. I can fake it well enough.
Yeah I figure it will take some practice, for sure, I should probably get a thumb pick and maybe some finertip picks for it too. Im not sure how they do it really
I've seen 'em play without them, with a combination of them, and with them on all four fingers with a sideways pick on the thumb.
So, as near as I can tell, the sky's the limit.
I kinda know how one is played. Once you get the tuning sorted, and it can vary, you need to work on your fingering. Once you're fluent in the neck, you need to learn 'rolls'. Rolls are what makes the banjo a banjo - though some folks will use it strictly as a chordal instrument. Rolls are where it's at.
Google: "Banjo Rolls"
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