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Understanding banjo types and musical styles
Before shopping, you need to know which type of banjo suits your musical interests. Different banjo configurations are designed for specific styles, and choosing the right one from the start can make learning much easier.
5-String Banjo
The 5-string is the most common banjo type, featuring a distinctive short fifth string that starts at the fifth fret. This "drone string" creates the characteristic banjo sound heard in American folk traditions. The standard 5-string has 22 frets and a 26¼-inch scale length, tuned to open G (G-D-G-B-D).
Five-string banjos come in two main configurations. Open-back banjos have no back panel, creating a mellower, more intimate sound perfect for clawhammer and old-time music. They're lighter (4-5 pounds) and comfortable for long playing sessions. Resonator banjos feature a wooden back panel that reflects sound forward, producing much louder volume with brighter tone—essential for bluegrass where the banjo needs to cut through other instruments.
The playing technique you choose determines which configuration works best. Three-finger style (Scruggs style) uses metal fingerpicks and thumbpick to create rapid "rolls"—the driving, syncopated sound of bluegrass pioneered by Earl Scruggs in 1945. Those playing this style typically prefer a resonator banjo. Clawhammer (or frailing) uses a downward striking motion with your fingernail, creating a melodic, rhythmic sound. This older style dates back to African slave musicians and is typically played on open-back banjos. While the type of banjo changes the sound and feel, both styles can be played on either type of banjo.
Tenor Banjo
Tenor banjos have four strings and no fifth string. Irish tenor banjos typically have 17 frets and a 21-inch scale, using GDAE tuning (same as mandolin/fiddle, one octave lower). It's played with a flatpick, focusing on single-note melodies that parallel fiddle playing. This is the standard banjo for Irish traditional music—jigs, reels, hornpipes, and sessions.
'Standard' tenor banjos typically have 19 frets and are played in CGDA tuning. They were originally developed for Jazz, Dixieland and dance band music of the 1920s.
Plectrum Banjo
Plectrum banjos have four strings like tenors but use the same 22-fret, 26¼-inch scale as 5-strings. They're essentially 5-string banjos without the fifth string. Tuned to CGBD and played with a flatpick, plectrum banjos dominated traditional jazz, ragtime, and vaudeville from the 1910s-1930s. They fell into relative obscurity when amplified guitars became popular but remain the choice for authentic vintage jazz sounds.
6-String Banjo (Banjitar)
6 String banjos are typically tuned the same as guitars (EADGBE) and played with the same techniques. hey offer an easy entry point for guitar players who want banjo tone without learning new chord shapes or techniques. However, they lack the distinctive fifth drone string of traditional banjos, so purists consider them a hybrid instrument rather than a "real banjo."