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Letter: Letters : Fingering Scruggs

Published 6 December 1997

From Daniel Bennett, University of Aberdeen

Your article suggests that banjo players can sound like Earl Scruggs by using
a new bronze alloy tone ring
(This Week, 8 November, p 28).

Alas, if only it were true. Scruggs’s unique sound wasn’t due to the pre-war
tone ring in his banjo (which many other 1920s and 1930s banjo players were also
using) it was because he developed and perfected a three-finger picking
technique that many banjo players try to emulate but few even come close to.

The sound Scruggs got out of a banjo was due to an extraordinary talent that
defies scientific description. To attribute it to a “special alloy” is ridiculous.

Issue no. 2111 published 6 December 1997

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