The Banjo: The Twang of Rebellion: A Story of Strings, Spirits, and Survival
Banned, Borrowed, and Stolen: The American Music Series
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Gesprochen von:
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James Coman
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Von:
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Kevin L. Whitworth
Über diesen Titel
The Banjo: The Twang of RebellionA Story of Strings, Spirits, and SurvivalThe banjo is one of the most misunderstood instruments in American history. Before it became a bluegrass trademark or a rural stereotype, it was an African invention — a spiritual tool, a storytelling instrument, and a survival technology carried through the trauma of slavery. This narrative history traces the true origin and evolution of the banjo from West African griots to modern American roots music.
This audiobook is perfect for listeners who enjoy:
- Music history (bluegrass, folk, country, jazz, blues, string band traditions)
- African American history & cultural reclamation
- Appalachian studies and the history of the American South
- Instrument history and ethnomusicology
- Narrative nonfiction with a documentary feel
Inside you’ll discover how the banjo:
- Emerged from African gourd instruments like the akonting and ngoni
- Survived the plantation era as a form of coded resistance and cultural memory
- Was stolen and commercialized through minstrel shows and blackface
- Re-evolved in Appalachia and helped birth bluegrass and American folk music
- Became a symbol of protest and political expression during the folk revivals now being reclaimed by Black musicians in a global cultural renaissance
Told in vivid narrative form — part history, part cultural detective work — The Banjo: The Twang of Rebellion reveals how one instrument became a mirror of America itself: ingenious, conflicted, stolen, reinvented, and impossible to silence.
If you love audiobooks like How the Word Is Passed, Hillbilly Elegy, Stamped from the Beginning, Cod, The Devil's Horn, or any deep-dive music history that reads like a story, this audiobook belongs on your shelf.
A sound may change — but a truth that vibrates this loudly never dies.
©2025 Kevin L. Whitworth (P)2026 Kevin L. Whitworth
