presents THE EARLS OF LEICESTER www.EarlsOfLeicester.com

Jerry Douglas – Dobro Shawn Camp - lead vocals, Charlie Cushman - , guitar Johnny Warren - – vocals, bass

"This is something I've been waiting my whole life to do," veteran Dobro master Jerry Douglas says of The Earls of Leicester, the all-star dream team combo that he has assembled, organized and produced.

The band encompasses Douglas plus acclaimed writer, producer, and solo artist Shawn Camp on lead vocals and guitar, renowned Nashville banjoist Charlie Cushman on banjo and , second- generation fiddle phenom Johnny Warren, and Barry Bales, Douglas' longtime bandmate in and Union Station, on vocals and bass.

The new group is the product of Douglas's lifelong passion for the music of bluegrass pioneers and and their band the , whose seminal work in the '50s and '60s created the template for what we know as contemporary bluegrass, and transcended traditional genre barriers to popularize the music with an unprecedented mass audience.

On their debut, the punningly-titled The Earls of Leicester revisits 14 timeless favorites from the Flatt and Scruggs songbook, infusing such rousing numbers as "Big Black Train," "Don't Let Your Deal Go Down," "Shuckin' the Corn," "Dig A Hole in the Meadow" and "Dim Lights, Thick Smoke" with fresh energy, while maintaining the same emotional authenticity, instrumental expertise and vibrant creative spirit that made the original versions such enduring classics.

Flatt and Scruggs initially captured Douglas' imagination when he saw them perform when he was just seven years old, and their visionary musical approach and irreverent attitude have remained constant touchstones for him in the decades since, as he's risen to his current stature as one of the roots/acoustic music world's most in-demand instrumentalists and today's preeminent practitioner of the Dobro.

"Flatt and Scruggs were the major influence on me when I was growing up," recalls Douglas, who was first inspired to pick up his instrument by Flatt and Scruggs' legendary Dobroist . "I was around seven years old when I first saw them, and there were two or three more times after that. It had a huge impact on me. I remember the warmth of the auditorium, I remember the smell of the popcorn, I remember the outfits they were wearing. It's still all very vivid to me, and it's still influencing me 50 years later.

"They were miles ahead of everybody else," he continues. "It wasn't just their musicianship, although they could play better than anybody -it was that they had this whole different style of playing and performing and listening to each other. They were progressive musically and added all kinds of different musical elements, and at the same they made it inclusive and entertaining and accessible to many people who didn't know anything about . Flatt and Scruggs did so much to popularize , though they didn't want to be pigeonholed as a bluegrass band, so they never used the word."

Douglas had long dreamed of rounding up a band to perform Flatt and Scruggs material, but held off until he could gather musicians of sufficient caliber to do justice to the material. His plans finally began to take shape when he played on a session with fiddler Johnny Warren—the son of Fiddlin' Paul Warren, a longtime mainstay of Flatt and Scruggs' band—and Johnny's longtime banjo-playing partner Charlie Cushman.

"The banjo, the fiddle and the Dobro came together in a way that sounded exactly what I'd heard so many years ago, the first time I saw Flatt and Scruggs," Douglas recalls. "Right then, it dawned on methat this was my chance to complete that dream, and I didn't want to let it go by. So I called Barry Bales. The hardest part for me was finding the right lead singer, but then my wife suggested Shawn Camp. We got everyone together one night and had a rehearsal, and I realized that we had to do this."

With Douglas producing, the musicians largely replicated Flatt and Scruggs' original recording methods and played appropriate vintage instruments, while using many of the same unconventional tunings that contributed to Flatt and Scruggs' distinctive sound. The songs were selected to focus upon the band's most successful and innovative years, roughly from 1954 to 1965.

"It's kind of an introduction to Flatt and Scruggs, the way I hear them," Douglas notes, adding, "much of my motivation was selfish, because I just wanted to hear this sound again. It took me a long time to find the right people who could pull it off and make it sound authentic and not corny, and make you feel like you're listening to Flatt and Scruggs during those years."

The same abiding musical passion that drove Douglas to create The Earls of Leicester has been a constant throughout a career that spans four decades and encompasses more than 2000 recordings. In addition to his renown as an instrumentalist, the 13-time Grammy winner and three-time Country Music Association Musician of the Year—who's been described as "my favorite musician" by and "the Muhammad Ali of the Dobro" by —has established a reputation as a ceaselessly inventive artist who's adept at incorporating elements of bluegrass, country, rock, jazz, and Celtic into his distinctive musical vision.

As a band member, collaborator, session musician and genre-bending solo artist, Douglas' inventive, eloquent playing graces over 2000 albums, including 13 under his own name, along with releases by artists as varied as , , , John Fogerty, Bill Frisell, Charlie Haden, , , , , the Chieftains and his early hero Earl Scruggs, as well as the eight-million-plus selling soundtrack to O Brother, Where Art Thou? and its spinoff live disc .

As a producer, Douglas has helmed albums by such notable acts as the Del McCoury Band, Maura O'Connell, and the . He's been part of such distinguished groups as , J.D. Crowe and the New South, and Strength in Numbers. Since 1998, he's been a key member of Rounder labelmate Alison Krauss's much-loved band Union Station, touring extensively and playing on a series of platinum albums.

Douglas is distinctly excited about the future of The Earls of Leicester. "I built this with the idea that it would be an event band, not a band that's gonna go out and hit the road for three years," he says. "I want to feel six years old every time I play this music, and it wouldn't feel that way if we had to do it every night. I want us to enjoy every time we do it, and I want us to remember why we enjoy it.

"I believe this band has the potential to have its own evolution, beyond just doing Flatt and Scruggs tunes, but this record is very, very exciting for me," he continues. "I'm hoping people will hear it and ask 'What's that?', thendo some investigating and discover where this stuff came from. We have a younger audience for this kind of music now, and it is important to me that the listeners understand the origins of what they are hearing."

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VIDEOS (YouTube): “On My Mind” (in the studio) “Don’t Let Your Deal Go Down” (live from Grey Fox Festival) “I Wonder Where You Are Tonight” (live from Franklin Theatre) “Why Did You Wander” (live from The Station Inn) Earls of Leicester – album EPK