Diane Sanabria, BanjoQueen profile picture

Diane Sanabria, BanjoQueen

About Me

I edited my profile with Thomas' Myspace Editor V4.4Diane Sanabria, "Banjo Queen of the Pioneer Valley", has been wowing audiences with her unique fiery banjo playing for over twenty-five years. Her life's vocation is the result of a potent combination of her parents' creativity genes. She recalls speaking Music first, and then learning English as a second language. Formal arts training began at four years old with classical accordion lessons from her musician father. The rest is herstory: Diane is an award winning performer and educator who is a veteran of New York's High School of Music and Art. She developed her fretted instument skills with Jerry Willard's mentoring during formal academic studies as a classical guitar performance major at SUNY Stony Brook. American music, folklore, and banjo studies with the Red Clay Ramblers' Tommy Thompson inspired and fueled her music's stylistic, cultural and philosophical odyssey in the summer of 1975. She later earned a degree in music education from the University of Massachusetts. The traditional music, dance and folklore community is a vibrant part of Western Massachusetts' cultural brilliance. This reputation is largely due to the vision and dedicated works of members of the Pioneer Valley Folklore Society. The society's 1980's projects greatly enriched the community's educational and entertainment offerings. PVFS projects included artist residencies in the schools, workshops and concerts, as well as research and publications about folk arts, artists, and cultural history. Valuable archived documentation of the region's cultural history exists today as a result of PVFS' legacy. Diane contributed to this important education and documentation through her artistic and intellectual input as a PVFS board member, artist, educator and author during that decade. The Banjo Queen earned her royal title when she became the first and only woman to place first at the now legendary Newfane, Vermont banjo competition. She has lent her musicianship, creativity, quick wit and sense of humor to groups such as Rude Girls and the Briar Hill Ramblers, and duo work with Lyn Hardy. She also plays and calls for contra and square dances throughout the New England area. The many musicians she inspires through banjo or guitar lessons affectionately address her as Queenee, and much of the clawhammer banjo style you hear in the Pioneer Valley of western Massachusetts has roots in Diane Sanabria's playing style and teaching. Diane's professional resume reflects a wide range of music interests and skills. Her students include members from an eclectic list of social groups, generations and abilities. She worked as an artist in residence and music specalist in the valley's public schools for a decade, and currently enjoys her position as banjo instructor at area colleges such as Amherst and Smith. She is also the founding mother and director of BanjoMucho, an eccentric and lovable turn of this century mostly banjo community band. Folk music's memorable melodies help maintain its' vital role in a community's cultural identity and legacy. The Banjo Queen helps maintain her vital role in this community's cultural identity and legacy by keeping an analytical and truthful ear on history's memories, putting an intuitive and forgiving finger on popular culture's current pulse, and sustaining a hopeful, open minded creative vision for the invisible future. Diane Sanabria teaches music lessons in Florence, Massachusetts. Downtown Northampton's summer main street is often decorated with the sounds of her banjo streetplaying tunes. Stop by and say hello, toss a greenback dollar into the banjo case, and offer her a double espresso. You can then request your favorite song and probably engage her in a lively philosophical rant about almost anyhing.

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 8/21/2006
Band Website: banjoqueen.com
Band Members: "Howie"s Hop":Diane Sanabria, Banjo; Michael Daves, Guitar; David Wertman, Bass."Old Joe Clark": Diane Sanabria, Clawhammer Banjo; Tony Trischka, Bluegrass Banjo.Diane plays solo clawhammer banjo on the tune medlies.
Influences: All the music I've heard.
Sounds Like: Nobody I've heard.
Record Label: BanjoQueen
Type of Label: None

My Blog

Medley Tunes Identified

D Minor Medley: Sally in the Garden/Dreamer's DanceSally is traditional; I wrote Dreamer's Dance around 1982A Minor Medley:Bonaparte Crossing the Rockies/Cold Frosty Morning/Kitchen Girl/Growling Old ...
Posted by Diane Sanabria, BanjoQueen on Mon, 09 Apr 2007 08:47:00 PST

They Tried To Tell You You're Too Young

They told you you're too young or too old to take music lessons, so now you think you should stop listening to that little voice. You know. The nudge that keeps picking organized sounds on guitar, or ...
Posted by Diane Sanabria, BanjoQueen on Sun, 07 Jan 2007 09:22:00 PST

Play It Again Queenee, Again

I am nocturnal. My big sister is an early bird who lives and works on Long Island. She called me around 10:00am on 9/11/01 to make sure I was OK. "Whaddayou, nuts? Of course, I'm OK-I was sleeping!" "...
Posted by Diane Sanabria, BanjoQueen on Tue, 05 Sep 2006 10:15:00 PST

Play It Again, Queenee

OK, OK, Allright, Already! I admit it! I'm a genuine 'Sixties Living Fossil! Nineteen Sixties, that is... My first vocal rant made news in a Brooklyn, NY hospital in 1954. I was ten when Murray the K,...
Posted by Diane Sanabria, BanjoQueen on Mon, 04 Sep 2006 01:40:00 PST

Tommy Thompson, My Banjo Guru

Tommy Thompson stands as a Giant Big Man in American cultural history. He founding fathered the Red Clay Ramblers, an ensnaringly charismatic, musically brilliant, wholistically eccentric, totally in ...
Posted by Diane Sanabria, BanjoQueen on Mon, 28 Aug 2006 11:45:00 PST