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Jameson Guitars 6 STRING BANJO 6 String Banjo Guitar with Closed Back Resonator and 24 Brackets, Brown

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$34.91

$ 16 .55 $16.55

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About this item

  • Tunes and plays like a guitar, sounds like a banjo
  • Tunes and plays like a guitar, sounds like a banjo
  • New 6 string banjo by Jameson guitar company
  • Maple neck and mahogany resonator
  • 24 bracket and Diecast enclosed tuners


The banjo is known for its iconic, classically Americana sound, producing rich melodies and songs that instantly transport the listener to fields of Kentucky bluegrass. The 6-string banjo is tuned similarly to that of a standard guitar, making this banjo perfect for guitar players looking to take up the banjo without having to learn a new instrument. For a student, beginning musician, an intermediate banjo player, or even an advanced musician, this is an excellent banjo to strum on. This beautiful, well-crafted 6-string banjo from Jameson Guitars is a must-have for anyone interested in playing folk, country, clawhammer, bluegrass, and similar eclectic types of rock music. It is a stunning, banjo with 24 chrome-plated brackets. It features a closed solid back mahogany resonator and is crafted with a 5-ply maple and mahogany shell and mahogany neck. Additionally, it has a 5/8-inch maple ebony bridge and a purpleheart fretboard, which add to its pleasant acoustic sound and tone. It has a top-quality Remo head, an adjustable truss rod, a chrome armrest, and a hinged tailpiece. Included with the banjo is a deluxe 15mm gig bag to keep your instrument safe when carrying or in transport. It is designed with a carry handle, backpack shoulder straps, and a storage pocket for added convenience.


Bill
Reviewed in the United States on February 15, 2025
I already have a custom 6 string banjo that a friend and I put together over 20 years ago and wouldn't part with for any amount of money. It has a Fender Tele neck with exceptionally low action, sounds like a million dollars and is my favorite instrument to play. That said, being high strung, I'm unable to play a solo on the high strings, so I thought I would like to get another with more conventional strings. Enter this Jameson 6-String Banjo.I read all the other reviews, a summary of which is that while it's quality construction, it needs a total professional setup. When I received it yesterday, the cardboard box was badly torn, partially crushed and I expected it to be toally destroyed. Happily, somehow it was undamaged and I took it to the luthier this morning, who confirmed both the quality and the need for a total setup.Knowing your way around stringed instruments is one thing, but being a professional with over fifty years experience is quite another. I watched him work on it for two hours and I concur with other reviewers that unless you're an experienced professional, don't try to DIY.BOTTOM LINE: Fit and finish, excellent. Components, excellent, including the tuners. Sound as received, TERRIBLE!. Installed 9-42 cryogenic electric guitar strings which, as hoped, were a huge improvement both in the sound and playability. Comes with a 5/8" bridge, which is too high My guy says it needs a 1/2" bridge and we're trying to find a compensated one.So, should you buy it? As long as you're willing to spend the time and effort to buy different strings and a bridge AND have it professionally set up, ABSOLUTELY BUY IT ! It will then compare favorably with the most expensive ones on the market and you will have saved yourself many hundreds of dollars. You're welcome.
John
Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2025
As a guitar player, I wanted to interject some different sounds into my groups performances, but didn't have the time to re-learn a completely different instrument. This allows me to play in normal guitar chord shapes but sounds like a banjo. It does sound like a banjo, but the lower notes sound too deep, so I put a capo on the 5th fret and this really sounds like a banjo. I'm no banjo expert but this seems to be a quality instrument. I'll probably change out the tuners and take it to a professional to adjust the tightness of the head, but otherwise it's a fantastic instrument for the price and I'd recommend one for anyone that wants something a little different.
Jr D.
Reviewed in Canada on March 21, 2024
All good, needed to put lighter strings on however!!
Olga Kawaza
Reviewed in Canada on March 14, 2024
Just wish it had pegs installed for a strap, otherwise a very nice instrument…
Woodchuck
Reviewed in the United States on September 9, 2023
Everything, so far I like. Plays awsome, low action. Polished frets. Gloss finish with tight binding. nice gig bag, nicely padded. beautiful to look at. Very well protected for shipping. Included tuning and truss rod tools. Absolutely Perfect and is really loud. Tight head. Quality at this price point is a blessing. Tuned up really well with enclosed machine tuners. You can't go wrong. The many dollars that I've spent with Amazon over the years has never warranted a review like this. Come to think of it; I really can't remember ever writing a review, but this (banjatauir) is something else, and deserves a good review.
Bradley
Reviewed in Canada on September 24, 2018
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Customer
Reviewed in Canada on June 9, 2018
Love it, having a lot of fun with it....Whish it could have been electric. Great banjo sound...Need instruction on how to adjust tension on resonator...Good price for quality....
Terry
Reviewed in Canada on May 22, 2018
Sounds great. Just learning to play however.
Randall
Reviewed in Canada on December 28, 2018
Quality and packaging are very good, banjo will not stay tuned may have to do a complete setup to get this to play and maintain the tuning
Em
Reviewed in the United States on November 6, 2018
PROS: Very good construction, chrome and wood all nicely finished,excellent bright (banjo) tone with adjustments (see below), intonation much better than I expected. For the very reasonable price a good deal.CONS: shipped new with only 25 of 26 ring tie-down lugs and an unusable bridge--split in two places, low E wouldn't stay in string slot. Come on, a bad bridge on a banjo?? Also quite a bit of adjustment required to get acceptable action--including (ugh) adjusting bow of neck downwards with tension rod.Best part of deal was the vendor customer service from MDWsupport.com: rapid, responsive, friendly. Answered email within the hour sent replacement parts same day tho only the bridge was the right part. Suspect I didn't describe the lug and nut clearly enough, my bad. Banjo gets 3 stars, 5 for the company. I would recommend both.
John M.
Reviewed in Canada on November 15, 2018
It came in less time expected, was packed really well. No damage whatsoever. Beautiful looking instrument. Had it set up by a professional and now it plays and sounds really well for the price. I would recommend it.
Mudwog
Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2016
Years ago a friend found an old family heirloom Banjitar that was in bad shape, and asked me to take it to a luthier for restoration. When It was done I had the opportunity to play it for a while before returning it to it's rightful owner. I enjoyed it, and thought about getting one of my own from time to time.The R.W.Jameson banjitar is the least expensive instrument of that type that I have come across. That is a little worrisome because usually you get what you pay for, but I took the chance and I'm glad I did. The Jameson Banjitar is not the most refined instrument, but it was better than I expected.When it arrived, I adjusted the bridge using the harmonics, and tuned it up with a clip on tuner. The scale length is somewhat longer than I expected, approximately 26 and 3/16". The nut is approximately 1 and 11/16" wide. The neck on mine will need a little strut rod tweak, the action is a little high, the fret ends are not smooth which I notice when moving my hand on the neck. The hardware all looks good, and the mahogany on the resonator back is impressive. It was strung with what appear to be ordinary 11 - 52 phosphor bronze acoustic guitar strings. All in all it looks better and is more playable than I expected at this price.It was louder than all get out, and blaring. The only adjustment I have made so far is a wadded up Kleenex stuffed under the stringsbetween the bridge and the tail piece. That cleaned up the sound quite a bit.I bought a banjo Strap: (Neotech 5701002 Super Banjo Strap)With the strap attached to the existing "strap hooks" on the banjo body it is very top heavy. I plan to add a "strap hook" to the heel of the neck to improve the balance.I also bought a case: (Carrion C-2901 Black Hardshell 5-string Resonator Banjo Case)The case fits, but the bottom is flat and doesn't support the resonator as well as I think it should, so I took the Styrofoam ring from the box that the banjitar came in, and put it on the bottom of the case. Maybe I'll cover that with felt some day.I was at a loss for songs to play on the banjitar at first. But after a while "Mr. Bojangles", "Thunder Road", and "Freight train" just started to sound right on the banjitar.Sooner or later I'll get around to adjusting it and getting better strings, but in the mean time it's a blast to play.