Rob MacKillop calls it Historically Informed Performance, or HIP. Since no one alive ever heard the original banjo style, the old stroke style, we can't claim to know exactly what it sounded like, although personally I believe that standard musical notation tells us a hell of a lot of what it sounded like. However, it has been pointed out that so much time has passed since then, and musical styles have evolved in so many ways, that we can't truly recapture the original sound.
BIG DIFFERENCE IN CLASSIC BANJO...thanks to the Wizard of Menlo Park, we can actually hear what the Classic banjo sounded like.
So what do we think of the recorded stylings of Ossman, Van Epps, et al.? Do people try and incorporate the masters' sound and style into their own playing?
I must confess I don't think I sound much like the original recordings. Just getting the notes right and memorizing takes up most of my time, and I don't spend much time refining my "phrasing."
The Vess Ossman recordings I just uploaded here seem to me, for lack of a better word, seem to have a sort of "choppy" sound to them. Do we think this is because of the primitive recording and reproduction devices?
And I know many people play and enjoy this style without trying to imitate or reproduce an historical artifact. I just thought it might be food for discussion...