DVD-quality lessons (including tabs/sheet music) available for immediate viewing on any device.
Take your playing to the next level with the help of a local or online banjo teacher.
Weekly newsletter includes free lessons, favorite member content, banjo news and more.
Not that it keeps me awake at 3am, but western hats were for sun-drenched western North American places , so why do southeastern country and bluegrass musicians/bands don the big hats? Just guessing but it must’ve had something to do with those Western swing bands in the 1939’s and ‘40’s being so popular….. but still..
my bowing to the tradition....
Edited by - chuckv97 on 07/05/2026 22:03:30
I don’t know but in the days when we would get a ‘front of house mix’ in the PA foldback at our gigs back around 1980, I would always wear an Aussie made acubra hat so I could hear myself better. It provided the right amount of sound reflection into my ears. Maybe the same could be said for those days, mandolins and guitars can be hard to hear up on stage and in those times there probably wasn’t any foldback. Plus there was a lot of harmony singing going on. Horn players in jazz bands wouldn’t have had that problem.
Edited by - martyjoe on 07/05/2026 22:54:16
Cowboy movies were very popular in the period when country music was emerging--the 1920s, '30s, and '40s. The image of the heroic cowboy was imbued with all sorts of positive implications. The image of the mountaineer/hillbilly, much less so.
I've read a bunch of discussions of this phenomenon. A good one can be found in this book: press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/b...5068.html .
The music genre used to be called Hillbilly music. At the time, that was not considered to be a pejorative description. Sometime in Fourties or Fifties the genre became Country and Western music, and a lot of the performers adopted western-style apparel.
I suspect that the name change was the work of some marketing folks associated with the music recording and publishing business. It would appear to be an early example of political correctness.
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Privacy Consent (EU/GDPR Only)
Copyright 2026 Banjo Hangout. All Rights Reserved.