This YouTube video features Clifton Hicks playing the songs "Wild Bill Jones" and "White House Blues" on a vintage 1940s Gretsch New Yorker banjo. The description promotes various platforms for the artist, including Patreon, Banjo Heritage, Bandcamp, Spotify, and iTunes, offering exclusive content, merchandise, and music streaming. It also highlights donation links via PayPal and Venmo, and a YouTube channel membership option for the Banjo Heritage community. The video's hashtags indicate a focus on banjo music, bluegrass, and Americana.
This YouTube video features Clifton Hicks showcasing a 1940s Gretsch New Yorker banjo. The description provides extensive links to the creator's Patreon, Banjo Heritage website for courses and forums, merchandise, Bandcamp, Spotify, and iTunes for music streaming and downloads, as well as PayPal and Venmo for donations, and YouTube channel memberships. The video also includes relevant hashtags related to the creator and musical genres.
This video features Clifton Hicks playing "William Hall," a traditional banjo tune with apparent pre-Civil War origins, as evidenced by lyrical content mentioning a "French cannon ball." Hicks plays a circa 1947 Bacon Belmont banjo, a Gretsch-made instrument, tuned to fCFAC. He utilizes La Bella No. 17 nylon strings and a Joel Hooks solid maple bridge. The description also includes extensive links to his various online platforms, including Patreon, SubscribeStar, Bandcamp, and streaming services, as well as a YouTube channel membership invite.
This video showcases a rare 1940s Gretsch Bacon "Belmont" banjo. The description details the banjo's history, tracing its lineage back to Fred Bacon's factory destroyed by the Great New England Hurricane of 1938. It explains how Gretsch acquired the Bacon name and produced these instruments for Montgomery Ward between 1946 and 1950. The video provides details on the original price and its modern equivalent value, highlighting the instrument's historical significance and collectible nature.
This video showcases a 1930s Gretsch "Broadkaster" Banjo, highlighting its historical significance as the same model used by the master banjoist Gus Cannon in his later years. The description also includes links for supporting banjo heritage through Patreon, as well as the artist's Bandcamp, Spotify, iTunes, Venmo, and PayPal for further engagement and support.
This video showcases a late 1940s Gretsch "New Yorker" Banjo, highlighting its aluminum Broadkaster pot. While the title and description focus entirely on a musical instrument, the provided links lead to content related to a banjo player's music and financial support channels. There are no mentions of firearms, calibers, manufacturers, or any related topics that would qualify this video for a firearms-related category.
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