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John Bullard - Jesu, Joy of Manβs Desiring
Did you see our piece about classical banjoist and innovator, John Bullard? See it here, and in the meantime check out this incredible recording. Classical banjo will blow your mind... but somehow it makes sense.Β
Gibson Banjo Catalog, 1927

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The banjo isn't typically the first image that comes to mind when one considers classical music. For Virginia banjo player and teacher John Bullard, however, the banjo is just as suited to Mozart as it is to mountain music. Last Fall, Bullard released Classical Banjo: The Perfect Southern Art, his third full-length album of banjo interpretations of classical music. The album is an impressively rendered collection of 25 tracks, parts of which Bullard has worked decades to master.
"[The project] came out of me having a discussion with Jayme Stone, who was the producer and is also a banjo player and has some great albums out," Bullard says. "He asked, βWhen was the last album you did?β And it was a long time ago. He ended up being interested in being the producer, so it ended up that we did it together."
Stone -- known for, among many other things, his 2015 Lomax Project -- worked on the album with Bullard from its inception, lending a hand with recording, of course, but also with what Bullard considers to be one of the most difficult parts of his musical endeavors: exploring ways to play complex classical pieces on an instrument viewed by many to have limited capabilities. Stone and Bullard found novel approaches to counter such issues, like experimenting with various conversations of backing instruments to make certain arrangements easier to play.
classical banjo? Yep. read more here