New Rickard banjo

New Rickard banjo

Bill Rickard and I have been friends for some years. We share a love of banjos, most banjo music, and motorcycles. For those who don’t know, Bill makes some of the most amazing banjos around these days. But not only that, he has become a major supplier of banjo parts to the industry. Find him at Rickard Banjos.

He has a shop in Aurora, Ontario, about 40 minutes from my basement. He is an accomplished machinist, and is reproducing many vintage style parts from the first Golden Age of the 5-string banjo (~1880 to ~1910). And not just reproducing them, but making them from better materials, and using modern machining methods to make them even stronger.

If you’ve seen me play, I likely had my go-to banjo, the Ghastlytone, Bill made all the metal parts and collaborated with Hugh Hunter at Midnight Special on some of the woodworking.

Rickard peghead

Rickard peghead

And now, at long last, Ghastly has a companion and a true peer. In mid-October Bill delivered the beast you see above. And because I’m a banjo nerd, I have to describe it. I’ll start at the top…

Bill’s new tuners at 1 and 3, and Bill Keith‘s at 2 and 4 so I can get from doubleD tuning to A or A-sawmill in a hurry.

The peghead inlay is my concept, and Bill’s magic construction. How it ended up is a black pearl cloud with a white pearl edge (how Bill cut this I have no idea!), with a german-silver thunderbolt through it on an ebony back over  the cocobolo neck. It throws off dark rainbows in the light.

Rickard neck (top)

Rickard neck (top)

The neck adjustment access is uncovered, and painted black so it blends in.

The inlays on the neck are raindrops, seemingly randomly scattered down the neck. The actual placement is my design, and Bill and I had many discussions (arguments? angst?) about what materials would be best until we decided on german-silver for the big drops at the standard position markers (1,3,5,7,10,12, 17 and 19) and bluish abalone for the rest.

The pictures don’t do it justice.

Rickard neck (middle)

Rickard neck (middle)

The neck itself is made of cocobolo, one piece cut in half and joined on the middle with a maple/ebony/maple strip.

The fingerboard is ebony, unbound, with 21 stainless steel frets. Scale length is 26-1/2 inches, one of the old Vega standards. It is only 21 frets so I could get the bridge closer to the edge of the pot than Bill normally puts them. There is no frailing scoop.

There are railroad spike capos in the neck at 6, 7, and 8, so I can mess about with key changes and modal tunings with less fuss on stage.

Rickard neck (bottom)

Rickard neck (bottom)

I am a fingerstyle player who plays to the end of the neck, so I need low action (1/8th at 15). The action also needs  to be low so the strings are close enough to the humbucker pickup, supplied by John Kavanaugh, to get decent amplification.

I tried to get the height the same as the Ghastlytone, so I would have less fussing about when dealing with DI boxes and PA systems at gigs. The closer they are to each other – the better.

Rickard pot

Rickard pot

The pot is also beautifully figured cocobolo, with antiqued brass metal to hold the head down.

It’s a 12″ pot, of course, so I can get some decent low-end. Bill was insistent on a 1/2″ pot, while I was worried that anything less than 5/8 or even 3/4 wasn’t going to have enough punch. Bill was right, and I was not.

Rickard pot

inside Rickard pot

It is a LOUD banjo. The Dobson tone ring really rings in this configuration. It is so loud that the rich overtones collide with each other when I’m playing jazzier chords at speed. So I had to put some wool between the tailpiece and the head to kill the noise from the strings past the bridge, and a piece of cork on the perch pole just barely touching the head near the pickup.

Now it’s perfect. And very similar to the Ghastlytone. Now I can’t tell which is better, as they’re both better than anything else modern I’ve heard for the way I play. So – 1/2″ cocobolo rim with a Dobson ring sounds reasonably close to a 3/4″ hard maple rim with a tubaphone. Weird, but I couldn’t be happier. I now have two go-to axes.

One is tuned in D and one in C anyway, so I don’t have to retune on stage between tunes. They will both be going with me to every gig.

Rickard's Oettinger

Rickard’s take on the Oettinger style tailpiece

And the tailpiece. Sometimes I wonder if Bill is a mad genius, sometimes I’m certain.

This massive piece of high tolerance engineering is a true wonder. Bill has taken the Oettinger idea from the Jazz Age and brought it to the space age. Steel allen screws into the brass ensure precise calibration of every arm, so string tension can be balanced for even tone and volume across all the strings. And the overall height is just as easily adjusted as the piece clamps to the rim hooks. For a hot rodder like me – this is a joy. Hours of fiddling to get it the way I want, then I can change my mind and do it all over.

So – Bill – this is an amazing instrument. Well worth all of the time and effort it we’ve put into it over however many months (years?) it has taken.

I’ll post a sound clip as soon as I can get one …

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Forget Hallowe’en. Toronto’s mayoral election is far scarier. Oct 27th is the big day. So scary that we’re making sure to be in a place where we can drown our sorrows at the bar and soothe our souls with some great music as the results roll in.

That place is the Old Nick, where we’re honoured to have been invited back by Elana Harte for another M Factor Mondays. We’ve got another kick-ass set of tunes, but quite different than the last one we played there.

We’ll be joined again by the inimitable Lost in Sparse – Marthalee Aykroyd on percussion and Neil Kitagawa on sax and bass.

Please come out – we want to be among friends when the news comes out, and you do too … group hugs may help

7:30 PM (we’ll be on about 8:30 or so)

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My favourite Nuit Blanche Toronto installation of 2014 was Portal Potties, in Old Fort York.

While appearing to be a simple row of facilities for humans to rid themselves of material for which (most of them) have no further use, the façade is an illusion. It is an interactive metaphor disguising the many fundamental conflicts between the private and public faces Torontonians must wear, and demands each participant choose how they will compromise themselves to conform to the community.

What are these seeming booths about? The participant will assume each is a dark, close, malodourous space; a parallel social universe where each is utterly alone with the consequences of their own consumption – that very conspicuous consumption which is so valued in the context of Western capitalism. No matter how many times before they have performed this ritual, this time is different, as the piece does not allow the automatic repression of dissonance, but forces awareness by the nature of the choice.

It is an art installation – what is beyond the doors cannot be known in advance. Perhaps the doors do not lead to the expected – the installation name gives a hint. Perhaps they are portals to a separate universe in each: one with flowers, one a desert landscape, one a swirling kaleidoscope of bright light. Perhaps there are just two kinds – one acceptable, one not. There are grey portals, and blue portals – perhaps the grey and blue are but a trick, unrelated to the interior.

But each door has a little red or green indicator, showing whether or not another participant has chosen that door, and is experiencing what is behind.

Here the beauty and complexity of the piece is revealed. Each participant must choose to use, or not to use, the reactions of those exiting the portals before them. Would you choose a booth where someone exits smiling? Are they smiling because the universe inside was a good one, because they are just relieved the ordeal is over, or are they just putting on a brave face? If they appear haunted, is it because that portal’s universe was frightening, their ritual was just personally difficult, or they want to project a suffering face, either because they always do, or because they want to protect the secret of a wonderful place they might return unmolested? Do participants want to assist the greater good by sharing the truth of themselves, or maintain their own illusions at the expense of the next one in? How can their community spirit be gauged?

The participant cannot ignore their own prejudices and anxieties in trying to ascertain what is really going on from other members of the community. They must assess their own trust levels, and what behavioural clues they use to judge the actions of others. Or become so frustrated with recursive self-analysis they choose a door with a green dot, and hurl themselves into the unknown. But then – grey or blue? There is no choice with no choice.

And it is no less profound for the passive voyeur, who, standing watching the choices made by the braver participants, is faced with their own reticent nature, and what this public failure will mean to their place in the community. No one approaches this installation without being consumed by its Gestalt.

The setting in Fort York also speaks volumes. This is a place where Ojibway, American and British fighters lost their lives in 1813 in an engagement that was by any measure futile. Whatever different choices these young men made, all ultimately led to the waste of their own lives. To evoke this historical echo in the piece is nothing less than brilliant.

Which would you choose?

Well done!

What a great host!

Hosting the open mic at MacKenzies in The Annex


is hosting the open mike October 4th at MacKenzies on Bloor in the Annex. If you play, you get a $5 coupon for whatever you want from the bar or kitchen. Last week there were some very talented people playing some excellent music of all sorts. Should be this week as well – will be for sure if you come … bring yourself and your instrument(s) on down ….

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TWN says Saturday should be sunny and warm. I hope so, because I’m going to be standing in whatever weather happens from 12-2 at the corner of Quebec and Dundas for the Junction Music Festival. Standing and playing banjo and singing, of course.

If you’re in town and want to catch a few minutes, please come on by and say hi. With over 60 other performances happening in venues all over the Junction, including a number of well known and up-and-coming indie artists – there will be some great listening whatever your tastes in music, .

There are also over 20 local eateries putting on special menus and street food. The Junction has become a real foodie strip in recent years – if you haven’t sampled it yet, you’ll be in for a big treat.

Click HERE to see the festival writeup.

And, yes, I’ll have some CD’s for sale if you need one …

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Never surrender. The schools may be full, the roads may be full, the leaves may look a bit less green than last week. But we shall prevail – summer is not yet done. Help us make it linger by joining us for some musical spell casting next Thursday at Graffiti’s. The more people, the more likely summer will last at least another few weeks; these spells require participation.

For this fine evening, we will be joined by Lost in Sparse, namely Neil Kitagawa on saxophone and bass, and Martha Aykroyd on percussive things and background vocals. As usual, we have a unique 3-set grouping of tunes, 36 to be exact, that we have never played in this way before, nor will again. Some new very cool tunes, too.

First set starts at 7:30, we’re probably done by 10:30 or so. So come on down – it’s Thursday night and you’ll be fine on Friday, even better because you will know deep inside you have helped extend summer.

September 11th, 2014
7:30PM until 11 or so
Graffiti’s Bar & Grill
130 Baldwin Street (Corner of Kensington, in The Market)

here’s a living room take on a favourite tune from my late friend Wayne. Even the dog liked it – she watched, and then just curled up to listen to us. This is my old friend and mfab Tom Gilmore on harmonica – it’s hard to hear him so we will definitely have to make another recording – he was in fine form. Given how hungover we were, that’s saying something.

Nephew Bill got it on his iPhone, hence the low-res style. But the sound’s pretty good … thanks Bill

A nice writeup

Posted: June 30, 2014 in music
Tags: , , , ,

kates streaming

Click HERE – a nice writeup of me from Kayt Lucas of the Kayt Lucas Band

I have been fortunate enough to get to know Kayt, and she has asked me to back her up on some of her songs. On her recent live streaming contest, I helped her open her show for the first two tunes. She’s also working on doing some of my tunes with me – we’ll see how that turns out – stay tuned.

In the meantime, she is doing some research for a songwriting project, interviewed me, and wrote the following article.

Thanks Kayt!

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Once again we have been honoured to join Elana Harte on her M-Factor Mondays shows at The Old Nick. We’ll be playing one kick-ass set somewhere about 8:30 or so.

123 Danforth,
south side, just east of Broadview

Another video experimentation with a track off Unassumed Sideroads. This is called Lizard Crossing, because I like lizards, I like seeing them run, and I love the high deserts where you get to see them fairly often. I also shared my home with Al for well over a decade. I rescued Al from unhappy circumstances, and he loved banjo music. Anyway – here it be