Absolutely not. Banjos are tuned differently and played much differently. Learning one or the other may be easier if you have experience with another instrument, but it's most certainly not a requirement.
a banjo is more country - like than a guitar. plus,you can plug in a guitar.
She plays the piano, guitar, banjo, ukulele, and the ganjo (guitar-banjo hybrid).
just a banjo. but a guitar is guitarra. HOPE I HELPED!
To learn to play the banjo to a high standard requires many years of practice. It is sometimes considered easier than the guitar due to the fact that in most cases the banjo has one less string and has a narrower fret board.
Guitar and Banjo
A banjo teacher or a guitar teacher who plays the banjo. Otherwise it would be like going to a trumbet teacher to learn the trombone. they are quite different instruments even though the principle is th same. the tuning of a 4 or 5 string banjo is different to a guitar and the way it is played/musicality is different.
a banjo is more country - like than a guitar. plus,you can plug in a guitar.
I'm not a banjo expert, but i know a lot about music, and i would say yes, a banjo is usually smaller than a guitar.
She plays the piano, guitar, banjo, ukulele, and the ganjo (guitar-banjo hybrid).
yes
just a banjo. but a guitar is guitarra. HOPE I HELPED!
None of these intruments are part of the brass section. The Banjo though is most like a guitar.
yes you can
To learn to play the banjo to a high standard requires many years of practice. It is sometimes considered easier than the guitar due to the fact that in most cases the banjo has one less string and has a narrower fret board.
Actually, when I think of the banjo, I think of the Old West. A banjo is sort of like a round guitar.
Guitar and Banjo
Guitar and Banjo