~ About Our Next Banjo Camp ~

Dates for Next Camp:

MARCH 12-15, 2026

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Annual Camp Details

About Our Program

About Our Program

Suwannee Banjo Camp is devoted to offering serious instruction in old-time and bluegrass music, all taught by outstanding musicians who are also gifted and empathetic teachers. Over the years we have come up with a cadre of instructors who fit the bill, and who go way out of their way to make sure students have every opportunity to learn in a warm, non-judgmental environment.

Suwannee Banjo Camp runs straight through from Thursday mid-afternoon through Sunday lunch. We offer nine class sessions —  three on Friday, four on Saturday, and two on Sunday — with just under a dozen class options offered per session. Each session is one hour and fifteen minutes long. There are staff concerts on both Friday and Saturday evenings; over the course of the weekend you’ll have the opportunity to hear most (and perhaps all) of our staff in concert. Rounding out the program are demonstrations; and staff-led bluegrass and old-time jams conducted at slow, intermediate, and “up-to-speed” skill levels. We also offer jams with a vocals focus. For a full description of aspects of our program, such as classes, concerts, jams and other activities, go back to the Program menu and select the items you are interested in. See below for an overview.

Classes

For information on our banjo, guitar, fiddle, and mandolin classes go to the Classes page and select the tab for the instrument and style that most interests you.

Demonstrations

“Demos” take place on Friday afternoon. They are presentations or mini-performances combined with explication and Q&A sessions. They are similar to the kind of round-robin events called “workshops” at many Folk and Bluegrass Festivals. Click here for more on Demos.

Faculty Concerts

We offer two faculty concerts at SBC — one on Friday evening and the other on Saturday evening. During the course of SBC you’ll have an opportunity to hear our entire staff in concert. To get the idea of what to expect, here is a selection of videos from past SBC Faculty Concerts.

Jams

Faculty-led bluegrass and old-time jams at three different levels are held following each concert. We also feature jams for vocalists and other specialized interests.

Schedule

To get the idea, check out the 2025 SBC Program schedule, still up on the website. It lists all classes, demonstrations, concerts, and jams for the 2025 program.

Orientation

Student Orientation takes place on Thursday evening right after dinner, prior to the start of the Thursday evening activities.

Thursday Evening Activities

On Thursday evening following orientation, we kick off our program with a student open mic and band scramble, in which students can perform as soloists, in groups of their own choosing, or in randomly assigned ensembles (some people call these band scrambles).

WHAT ARE BAND SCRAMBLES? Participants fill in strips of paper with the following information: name, instrument(s), playing level, and preferred style (old-time or bluegrass). We then use this information to create several old-time and bluegrass bands, and – to make the experience more rewarding – assign an instructor to serve as coach for each ensemble. Scramble bands then have about an hour to prepare a single number for performance that evening.

The Thursday evening program concludes with staff-led jams at different levels featuring either old-time or bluegrass music. We also offer a jam with a vocals focus.

This Was Our 2025 Faculty

  • Old-Time Banjo: Paula Bradley, Hilarie Burhans, Joe Decosimo, Adam Hurt, Michael Miles, and Ken Perlman
  • Bluegrass Banjo: Scott Anderson, Greg Cahill, Eli Gilbert, Casey Henry, Gerald Jones, Alan Munde
  • Fiddle: Erynn Marshall (principal instructor); classes will also be taught by Joe Decosimo and Adam Hurt
  • Guitar: Tim May (principal instructor); classes will also be taught by Paula Bradley and Alan Munde
  • Mandolin: Carl Jones (principal instructor); classes will also be taught by Gerald Jones

Photos and bios of our ’25 staff are posted on the 2025 Instructors page.

Starting and Ending Times for Full Camp and Weekend-Only Option

Check-in for the full Camp Opens at 3:00 PM on Thursday March 12; hands-on classes start promptly at 9:15 AM on Friday March 13. Camp ends following lunch at 1:30 PM, Sunday March 15. Check-in for the Weekend Only Option starts at 11:00 AM Friday, March 14; your first camp meal is lunch (12:15 pm)*. Your program begins 1:30 pm that afternoon and continues through lunch on Sunday, March 15.

*Note: Returning students note that the weekend option now includes Friday lunch.

 

2025 Home Page

* * SUWANNEE BANJO CAMP* *

Next Camp: Thursday – Sunday MARCH 12-15, 2026

Registration for the ’26 Camp Opens Up in Mid-to-Late August

*This Was the SBC 2025 Program Schedule*

 25 or Under? Check Out Our Youth Scholarship Opportunities

Come study 5-string banjo in gorgeous natural surroundings with some of today’s best players and teachers. Our program features hands-on classes, demonstrations, and two big faculty concerts, and still leaves lots of time for jamming with your fellow banjo enthusiasts. Suwannee Banjo Camp offers four levels of serious instruction in clawhammer, old-time fingerpicking, and bluegrass banjo styles. We also offer full-time programs in old-time fiddle, bluegrass guitar and – new this year – mandolin.

Note: Clawhammer and old-time fingerpicking together are often referred to as old-time banjo.

Suwannee Banjo Camp runs straight through from Thursday afternoon to Sunday afternoon. We offer nine class sessions — three on Friday, four on Saturday and two on Sunday. Each session is one hour and fifteen minutes long. There are staff concerts on both Friday and Saturday evenings; over the course of the weekend you’ll have the opportunity to hear our entire staff in concert. Rounding out the program are “demonstrations,” presentations, and staff-led bluegrass and old-time jams conducted at a variety of skill levels. For a full description of our program including classes, demonstrations, concerts, jams and other activities, see the Program menu item. For an overview, start with the About Our Program page.

Here’s The 2025 Suwannee Banjo Camp Program Schedule

The SBC 2025 Camp Photo

Click to Access & Download a High Res Version of our 2025 Camp Photo

Attendance Options: Full Camp vs. Weekend-Only Option

The Full Camp option starts mid-Thursday afternoon and runs through early Sunday afternoon; it includes nine hands-on class sessions and all meals from Thursday dinner through Sunday lunch. If you can’t take an extra day off, our Weekend-Only Option is for you. Weekend-Only begins with the first class Friday afternoon. Included are seven hands-on classes and all meals from Friday dinner through Sunday lunch. Included in both options are the two faculty concerts, staff-led jams on Friday and Saturday evenings, and demonstrations on Friday afternoon. Rates for Full-Camp and Weekend-Only Options are on the Registration & Fees page.

Lodging Must Be Reserved Separately

Lodging must be reserved and paid for directly through our host, Cerveny Conference Center. For lodging options and lodging reservation instructions, see the Lodging page.

Commuting

You can easily commute to camp – and pay only for tuition and meals – either from home or from an area hotel or B&B. For more info, go to the Lodging page.

Banjo Classes

For descriptions of our old-time and bluegrass banjo programs, go to Classes, and then choose either the Old-Time Banjo tab or the Bluegrass Banjo tab.

Full-Time Fiddle, Guitar and Mandolin Tracks

For more information on our full-time programs in fiddle, guitar, and mandolin go to Classes, and then choose either the Fiddle Track tab, the Guitar Track tab, or the Mandolin Track tab.

Location

Suwannee Banjo Camp takes place at beautiful Cerveny Conference Center at Camp Weed in Live Oak, Florida. For more info, visit the Cerveny Conference Center website.

Starting and Ending Times for Full Camp and Weekend Only Option

Check-in for the full Camp Opens at 2:00 PM on Thursday March 12; hands-on classes start promptly at 9:15 AM on Friday March 13. Camp ends following lunch at 1:30 PM, Sunday March 15. Check-in for the Weekend Only Option starts at 11:00 AM Friday, March 13; your first camp meal is lunch (12:15 pm). Classes for the weekend option begin at 1:30 pm that afternoon and the program continues through the morning of Sunday March 15.

Note to Returning Students: Beginning this year, the weekend option includes Friday lunch.

Scholarships

We are usually in a position to offer several partial scholarships. We would like to particularly encourage those under 25 to apply. We also offer a few work-trade scholarships. For more information or to apply, visit our Scholarships page.

This Was Our 2025 Faculty

  • Old-Time Banjo: Paula Bradley, Hilarie Burhans, Joseph Decosimo, Adam Hurt,  Michael Miles, and Ken Perlman
  • Bluegrass Banjo: Scott Anderson, Greg Cahill, Eli Gilbert, Casey Henry, Gerald Jones, and Alan Munde
  • Fiddle: Erynn Marshall (principal instructor); classes will also be taught by Joseph Decosimo and Adam Hurt
  • Guitar: Tim May (principal instructor); classes will also be taught by Paula Bradley and Alan Munde
  • Mandolin: Carl Jones (principal instructor); classes will also be taught by Gerald Jones

Photos and bios of our 2025 staff are posted on the 2025 Instructors page.

Covid Protocol

  • We strongly recommend that all attendees be fully vaccinated against Covid-19 and continue to get annual boosters as recommended by the CDC and medical community.
  • We will also follow common sense precautions re Covid testing, masking, and social distancing.
  • We reserve the right to ask all attendees to take a home Covid test before setting off for Camp (anyone who tests positive should of course stay home)

This Was Our SBC 2025 T-Shirt Design

This was our great T-shirt design for 2025, featuring our logo rising out of a beautiful White Lake sunrise (viewable from the glass wall of our Dining Room).

2025 Instructors

2025 Instructors

Old Time BanjoBluegrass BanjoFiddleGuitarMandolinGuest Faculty
Paula Bradley

Paula Bradley. A West Virginia-born multi-instrumentalist residing in the Berkshire Hills of Massachusetts, Paula has been involved in old-time and roots music for many years. Known for her strong, spirited vocals, as well as deep knowledge of old-time music, she has toured with old-time darlings “Uncle Earl”; with old-time powerhouse Bruce Molsky (on guitar and banjo uke); recorded and toured with Tony Trischka and Bruce as part of the acoustic roots trio “Jawbone”; and, performed and recorded with old-time trio “The Rhythm Rats.” She has been an instructor at many camps and gatherings, including: Augusta, Swannanoa, Ashokan, Mars Hill, Bluff Country, MBOTMA, and Stephen Foster Old-Time Weekend. She was a founding member of the popular New England honkytonk combo (on piano) “Girl Howdy,” and with her late husband, Bill Dillof, old-time duet “Moonshine Holler” in which she played guitar, banjo, and banjo ukulele. Currently, she leads her own popular juke joint swing combo “Miss Paula & The Twangbusters,” and performs with a variety of old-time musicians.

Hilarie Burhans

Hilarie Burhans

Hilarie Burhans has been playing and teaching clawhammer banjo for more than 45 years. She lives in the Appalachian foothills of Athens, Ohio and is a much in-demand player at old-time music festivals thanks to her intensely rhythmic, driving banjo style. Hilarie co-founded the Hotpoint Stringband, a nationally-touring contradance band with whom she has recorded five albums. HBO used a song she recorded on the critically acclaimed show Deadwood, and she has collaborated on too many other musical projects to count! More than 5,000 subscribers enjoy her banjo YouTube channel, and her instructional videos on the Patreon platform have many devoted subscribers who praise her clear, relaxed teaching style.

Joseph Decosimo

Joseph Decosimo has introduced audiences around the world to the beauty and vitality of the fiddle, banjo, and song traditions from the Appalachian South. A student of the last master traditional musicians in his native Tennessee, Joseph draws on a well of profound creativity and repertoire even as he creates fresh sounds. A sought-after, supportive teacher, and PhD holding folklorist, he served on the faculty of East Tennessee State University’s Bluegrass, Old Time, and Country Music Studies Program. He is a national old-time banjo champion, winner of the Clifftop fiddle contest, and a member of the prize-winning Bucking Mules. His most recent recordings, While You Were Slumbering and The Aluminum Wonder have resonated in the Old-Time scene and far beyond.

Adam Hurt

Adam Hurt (Old-Time Banjo) Deemed a “banjo virtuoso” by the Washington Post, Adam Hurt has fused several traditional old-time idioms to create his own elegantly innovative clawhammer banjo style, having been introduced to the instrument at age eleven in his native Minnesota. A respected performer and teacher of traditional music, Adam has played at the Kennedy Center and conducted banjo workshops around the country and abroad at such prestigious events as the Swannanoa Gathering, the Augusta Heritage Center, Midwest Banjo Camp, American Banjo Camp, Suwannee Banjo Camp, and Sore Fingers. Since moving to the South in 2002, Adam has placed in or won most of the major old-time banjo competitions, including three first-place finishes at Clifftop, and he has claimed several state banjo and fiddle championships. Adam’s music can be heard on multiple recordings, including Earth Tones, Perspective, Insight, and his most recent, Artifacts. adamhurt.com

Michael Miles

Michael Miles is one of America’s most innovative clawhammer banjo players. His musical background is steeped in the folk & blues of Chicago, in Bach and Motown, rock ‘n’ roll, and the American Songbook hits that his blue collar father sang in the car. With expansive unpredictable repertoire and high-reaching musicality, his work was described by Banjo Newsletter as: “a brilliant tour-de force that effectively obliterates the limits of what was thought possible on clawhammer banjo.” Hailed by the Chicago’s legendary WXRT as “Genius,” the Chicago Sun-Times simply says, “Give the banjo to Michael J. Miles you’ll hear a mighty soul stirring sound.” When Pete Seeger heard Michael’s very first recording his response was, “This is enough to make me want to learn the banjo all over again.” Michael has published more than a dozen books with such companies as Hal Leonard and Mel Bay; he has recorded several CD’s with great collaborators including Bela Fleck, Darol Anger, and some of Chicago finest musicians. His websites are www.MilesMusic.org and www.ExistentialBanjo.com.

Ken Perlman

kenbnj02Perhaps the best-known exponent of the “melodic” clawhammer style, Ken Perlman is known where-ever banjos are played as a master of clawhammer technique and an expert teacher of clawhammer mechanics. He was a Banjo Newsletter columnist from the early 1980s till the magazine closed down in 2021; he has written several books on clawhammer instruction including Melodic Clawhammer Banjo and Clawhammer Style Banjo, he has recorded several series on audio and video banjo instruction, and he has taught at well over a dozen music camps including Augusta Folk Heritage, Common Ground on the Hill, the Festival of American Fiddle Tunes, the Puget Sound Guitar Workshop, Rocky Mountain Fiddle Camp, the Swannanoa Gathering, and the Tennessee Banjo Institute; he has also been music or co-director of several banjo camps including American Banjo Camp, Banjo Camp North, the Bath International Banjo Festival,  Maryland Banjo Academy, and Midwest Banjo Camp. Ken toured for nearly fifteen years with renowned Appalachian-style fiddler Alan Jabbour (1942-2017), and recorded two CDs with him: Southern Summits and  You Can’t Beat the Classics. His most recent solo recording is Frails & Frolics; his most recent banjo books are Appalachian Fiddle Tunes for Clawhammer and Cape Breton & Prince Edward Island Fiddle Tunes for Clawhammer. In the summer of 2017, Ken was invited to offer a Master’s Showcase at the Appalachian String Band Festival  (AKA: “Clifftop”) an event set up to “showcase the legends who have dedicated their lives to the preservation and presentation of old-time music.” kenperlman.com

Scott Anderson

Scott AndersonNative Floridian Scott Anderson has been performing in professional bluegrass bands since the late 1980s; his first groups were Tom Henderson’s Bluegrass Parlor Band and a band he co-founded called Endless Highway. He has since toured in the US and abroad as banjoist and vocalist with the Jim Hurst Band and Keith Sewell; and he has performed or recorded with such well-known bluegrass figures as Claire Lynch, Vassar Clements, Larry Rice, Byron Berline, Adam Steffey, Clay Hess, Newtown, Chubby Wise, Allen Shadd, and Chief Jim Billie. He has also played banjo with the Naples Philharmonic Orchestra. Scott has been a featured artist in Banjo Newsletter, for which he also writes features and conducts interviews. He now fronts Medicine Springs and The Scott Anderson Band and teaches private banjo and guitar lessons from his home in Gainesville. His recordings include Endless Highway, Rivers, Another Day (with his daughter Amanda), and his most recent, Tales from the Swamp.

Greg Cahill

Greg Cahill formed the Special Consensus in the Chicago area and began touring nationally (and internationally) in 1975. Greg has appeared on all 20 of the Special Consensus recordings and has released three solo recordings (two with internationally renowned mandolinist Don Stiernberg, one with mandolin maestro Jethro Burns), and one European bluegrass music recording (with renowned Czech guitarist Slavek Hanzlik). He has also released four banjo instructional videos/DVDs (Musician’s Workshop), one banjo lessons book and one banjo tablature book (both co-authored with Michael Miles, Hal Leonard publishing). Greg has appeared on numerous recordings by other artists and on countless national television and radio commercials (jingles) and conducts workshops and master classes at bluegrass camps and festivals worldwide. His teaching credits include Nashcamp, the Maryland Banjo Academy, Banjo Camp North, Midwest Banjo Camp, Suwannee Banjo Camp, Nashville Banjo Camp, Augusta Heritage Bluegrass Week, Steve Kaufman’s Acoustic Kamp, the British Columbia Bluegrass Workshops, the Sore Fingers Summer School (UK), and Bluegrass Camp Germany. Greg has taught at the Old Town School of Folk Music in Chicago for over 40 years and became the first adjunct professor teaching banjo for the Columbia College (Chicago) Strings Department in 2011. Greg is a regular contributor to Banjo Newsletter, received the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) Distinguished Achievement Award in 2011 and was inducted into the Society for the Preservation of Bluegrass Music in America (SPBGMA) Hall of Greats in 2019.

Eli Gilbert

Eli Gilbert is one of the most watched and supported banjo instructors online today. His videos have been viewed on YouTube millions of times, with over 60,000 subscribers. In addition to his online educational resources, Eli has taught at numerous bluegrass and banjo camps, including Banjo Summit, Augusta Bluegrass Week, Banjo Camp North, and Ashokan Bluegrass Camps. As a performer Eli has toured throughout the US and Canada with such artists as Dale Ann Bradley, Alan Bibey, Chris Jones, and Rick Faris; he now tours with Missy Raines and Allegheny. Eli is an alumni of the Jazz Studies program of the Peabody Institute of the Johns Hopkins University, as well as the Bluegrass and Country Music Program at East Tennessee State.

Casey Henry

Casey Henry After spending a decade in Nashville, Casey Henry now plays and teaches banjo in Winchester, Virginia. She started out as a bass player for her family band and then went on to play banjo with Uncle Earl, the Dixie Bee-Liners, Tennessee Heartstrings, and her own band, Casey and Chris and the Two-Stringers. She now plays with a new trio, the Gooseneck Rockers, with Tom Adams and Marshall Wilborn. Casey has taught at Kaufman Kamp, Banjo Camp North, Augusta Heritage Bluegrass Week, and many other camps. She has done several instructional DVDs for the Murphy Method and co-hosts three camps a year in Winchester with her mom, Murphy Henry; she teaches the Murphy Method way: by ear (no tab)! Casey’s newest instructional DVDs are Banjo Backup for Fiddle Tunes, Beyond Vamping: Fancy Banjo Backup, and Easy Songs for Banjo. She has a banjo CD titled Real Women Drive Trucks. http://www.caseyhenry.net

Gerald Jones

Gerald Jones, life-long Texan, has been involved with the performing, production and teaching of music for well over 30 years. He’s a skilled player in many different styles including bluegrass, western swing, country, classical, jazz, and Polish war hymns… He’s played or recorded with with Jim “Texas Shorty” Chancellor, Mark O’Connor, Vince Gill, Sam Bush, Hank Thompson, Red Steagall, Jerry Douglas, Junior Brown and many more. He’s the editor of Mel Bay’s webzine Banjo Sessions (http://BanjoSessions.com), and was a frequent contributor to Joe Carr’s Mandolin Sessions. Gerald invented the Acoustic Plus pickup used by Earl Scruggs, Bela Fleck, Alan Munde, Bill Keith and many other great banjo players. Gerald is also a favorite instructor at many bluegrass and roots music camps around the nation, teaching banjo, mandolin, and many special topics such as “Jam Survival Skills.” Joe Carr said of Gerald, “students love him because he jams a lot with them and teaches as much out of class as in!”

Alan Munde

Alan Munde needs no introduction to long-time Bluegrass fans. From his early creative work with Sam Bush in Poor Richard’s Almanac to his traditional bluegrass apprenticeship with Jimmy Martin and the Sunny Mountain Boys to his 21-year stint anchoring the landmark Country Gazette, Alan has blazed a trail as one of the most innovative and influential banjo players of all time. Along the way, Alan has recorded and contributed to numerous instrumental recordings, including the 2001 IBMA Instrumental Album of the Year — Knee Deep in Bluegrass. Alan has supplemented his recorded work with several instructional publications for the banjo; from 1986-2006 he taught Bluegrass and Country Music at South Plains College in Levelland, Texas. He was recently elected to the IBMA Bluegrass Hall of Fame.

Erynn Marshall

Erynn MarshallErynn Marshall is an old-time fiddler, living in Hillsville, Virginia who is known internationally for her traditional music. Erynn learned the nuances of Appalachian old-time fiddling from archival recordings and directly from visiting 80-95 year-old southern fiddlers. Her effortless, transportive way of playing expresses joy, mournfulness, and stays true to the old tunes while revitalizing the tradition. Her original tunes are becoming common repertoire in fiddle circles. Erynn won first place fiddle at “Clifftop” (the first woman to do so) and the Mt Airy Fiddlers’ Convention. She tours regularly with husband/musician Carl Jones, has recorded numerous albums, appeared in five films and is featured in the books As Has It and Singing at the Clothesline. Erynn is coordinator for Swannanoa Old-Time Week (NC) and previously was director of music programs at the Blue Ridge Music Center in Galax, VA and Alleghany JAM (Junior Appalachian Musicians). She is excited to be returning to Suwannee Banjo Camp!

Other Fiddle Instructors

Fiddle classes will also be taught by Joseph Decosimo &  Adam Hurt. Check out the 2025 SBC Online Schedule when it comes out for their class topics.

Tim May

Tim MayTim May is a recording artist, sideman and performer whose projects have included touring with Patty Loveless, Eddie Rabbitt, Rodney Dillard and John Cowan. He was a regular performer for years on the Grand Ole Opry with Mike Snider and was solo guitarist on Charlie Daniel’s recording of I’ll Fly Away in 2005 (from Songs From the Long-Leaf Pines), nominated for Best Country Instrumental Performance Grammy that year. In 2012 The Nashville Scene selected Tim as Nashville’s Best Instrumentalist in their Reader’s Choice Poll. In 2017 he performed in legendary Carnegie Hall in New York. He currently tours with mandolinist Steve Smith, fingerpicker Richard Gilewitz, with his wife Gretchen Priest-May, and with country music artist Kathy Mattea. Tim is co-author of the eight-volume series Flatpicking Essentials: the Mandolin Player’s Practical Guide to Scales and Arpeggios, and is a contributing writer to Bluegrass Unlimited magazine.

Other Guitar Instructors

Guitar classes will also be taught by Alan Munde & others TBA. Check out the 2025 SBC Online Schedule when it comes out for their class topics.

Carl Jones
Carl JonesCarl Jones is an American songwriter and multi-instrumentalist born in Macon, Georgia. He is widely respected for his instrumental talents and original songs about the joys and tribulations of life in the south. Carl’s songs have been recorded by The Nashville Bluegrass Band, Kate Campbell, Rickie Simpkins w/ Tony Rice, and others. His song,”Last Time On The Road” was on the Grammy award winning album, Unleashed by The Nashville Bluegrass Band. He played mandolin and recorded with Norman and Nancy Blake as part of the Rising Fawn String Ensemble and currently tours with his wife, fiddler Erynn Marshall.  www.dittyville.com

Other Mandolin Instructors

Mandolin classes will also be taught by other instructors TBA. Check out the 2025 SBC Online Schedule when it comes out for their class topics.

TBA

 

We have no guest instructors at the moment; check back periodically for updates.

2025 Banjo Camp Classes

2025 Banjo Camp Classes

Old Time BanjoBluegrass BanjoFiddleGuitarMandolinSpecial Classes

Old-Time Banjo Program

We offer four levels or tracks of instruction in clawhammer style banjo: Novice, lower intermediate, upper intermediate, and advanced. Another common name for the style is “frailing.” Over the years, it has also been known as stroke-style downpicking, knocking, and rapping. Reflecting the interests of our faculty, we also offer classes in various kinds of old-time fingerstyle banjo (see below).

The Novice Track

The Old-Time Banjo Novice Track in old-time banjo is for students who are just starting out on the instrument, and have with well under one year’s playing experience. Recognizing that students just getting underway have unique learning requirements, we offer a course of instruction designed to impart both needed skills and effective practice-attitudes.

Lower Intermediate Level

The lower intermediate level is for those players who are above the novice level but are still in the process of mastering basic techniques. The focus here is overwhelmingly on acquiring the skills you’ll need to grow as a player. Our best guess is that students who have been playing between nine months and two years will feel most comfortable here.

Upper Intermediate Level

This level is for students who have been playing at least two years. Classes in this track are not necessarily technically demanding, but they generally require that students have considerable familiarity with the instrument.

Advanced Level

These challenging classes give our instructors the opportunity to offer students the full depth of their expertise and experience.

Old-Time Fingerstyle

Although most of our old-time banjo classes focus on clawhammer, we usually offer at least a few classes in old-time fingerstyle, including various 2-finger, 3-finger, and hybrid varieties. To see what the old-time fingerstyle offerings will be for our 2025 Camp, check out the 2025 schedule when it’s posted in mid-to-late December.

Note: You do NOT have to sign up in advance or make any special arrangements to attend any particular instruction level. Once you’re at Camp, you are completely free to make class selections as you please.

Bluegrass Banjo Program

We offer four levels or tracks of instruction in bluegrass banjo: novice, lower intermediate, upper intermediate, and advanced.

The Novice Track

The Bluegrass Banjo Novice Track is for students who are just starting out on the instrument, and have with well under one year’s playing experience. Recognizing that students just getting underway have unique learning requirements, we offer a course of instruction designed to impart both needed skills and effective practice-attitudes.

Lower Intermediate Level

The intermediate level is for those players who are above the novice level but are still in the process of mastering basic techniques. The focus here is overwhelmingly on acquiring the skills you’ll need to grow as a player. This track is for students who have been playing between nine months and two years.

Upper Intermediate Track

This level is for students who have been playing at least two years. Classes in this track are not necessarily technically demanding, but they generally require that students have considerable familiarity with the instrument.

Advanced Track

These challenging classes give our instructors the opportunity to offer students the full depth of  their expertise and experience.

Note: You do NOT have to sign up in advance or make any special arrangements to attend any particular instruction level. Once you’re at Camp, you are completely free to make class selections as you please.

Old-Time Fiddle Track

Although this is primarily a banjo camp, we offer a full time Appalachian-style fiddle track with considerable appeal to serious fiddlers. Erynn Marshall is our primary fiddle instructor for 2025. Some fiddle classes will be taught by Joseph Decosimo and Adam Hurt.

Level of Instruction: Because there is only a single fiddle track, instruction will almost certainly geared to an intermediate level. This is a good place for old-time fiddlers with at least a couple of year’s experience to burnish their skills and make their playing sound more authentic and professional. Classical violin players and fiddlers who play music from other traditions will find this program a good introduction to old-time fiddling.

Important Note. We do NOT have a program that teaches basic violin skills; you probably need at least a year or two of experience on the instrument in order to take full advantage of our program. Although we can’t get you started on violin, we can teach authentic fiddle style and help make you a better fiddler.

Also Note. Our 2025 SBC Program schedule is now up on the website. It lists all classes, demonstrations, concerts, and jams for the 2025 program.

SBC’s Guitar Track

SBC offers a full program in flatpick guitar. The focus is bluegrass accompaniment and soloing, but we generally also feature a couple of classes in other aspects of the instrument. Tim May is our principal guitar instructor for 2025. Some guitar classes will be taught by Paula Bradley, Michael Miles, and Alan Munde.

Level of instruction. Because there is only a single guitar track, instruction will almost certainly geared to an intermediate level. Students should probably have at least one year of playing experience. In practical terms, this means that you should be able to handle a flatpick and change relatively comfortably among the most common basic guitar chords.

Important Note. The SBC Guitar Track is NOT for total beginners. You should have at least a year or two experience on your instrument to take full advantage of our program.

Also Note. Our 2025 SBC Program schedule is now up on the website. It lists all classes, demonstrations, concerts, and jams for the 2025 program.

 

New This Year! SBC’s Mandolin Track

 

SBC now offers a full program in mandolin. The focus is on using the instrument to play in both old-time and bluegrass contexts. Carl Jones inaugurates our mandolin program as principal instructor for 2025. Some mandolin classes will be taught by Tim May and others TBA.

Level of instruction. Because there is only a single mandolin track, instruction will almost certainly geared to an intermediate level. Students should probably have at least one year of playing experience. In practical terms, this means that you should be able to handle a flatpick and change relatively comfortably among the most common basic mandolin chords.

Important Note. The SBC Mandolin Track is NOT for total beginners. You should have at least a year or two experience on your instrument to take full advantage of our program.

Also Note. Our 2025 SBC Program schedule – with all mandolin class topics included – is now up on the website.

We always feature a number of classes that don’t fit into our regular tracks. In the past, our special class offerings included topics on ukulele, bass, singing, and banjo set-up. To get the idea, check out the special classes offerings on the 2025 program schedule.