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24-Apr 2 Hours only Southern Flavor Bill Monroe Country Music Hall of Fame Brown's Ferry Blues Delmore Brothers Brown's Ferry Blues Uncle Pen Bill Monroe Music of Bill Monroe 1936-94 Wildfire Mac Wiseman The Singles Little Birdie Ralph Stanley Ralph Stanley 1971-73 Big Black Train Flatt & Scruggs Flatt & Scruggs 1948-59 Big Spike Hammer Osborne Brothers Osborne Brothers 1956-68 Drifting and Dreaming Jim & Jesse Jim & Jesse Story Girl From the North Country Country Gentlemen Early Rebel Recordings Matterhorn Country Gentlemen Early Rebel Recordings Little Georgia Rose Seldom Scene Act Three Wheel Hoss Kenny Baker Kenny Baker Plays Bill Monroe I Believe In You Darling Bluegrass Album Band Lonesome Moonlight Milk Cow Blues Nitty Gritty Dirt Band Will the Circle Be Unbroken Vol III Blues For Dixie Asleep at the Wheel Tibute to Bob Wills Along the Navajo Trail Asleep at the Wheel Still the King You Must Come In At the Door Doc Watson On Praying Ground Jesus Is Waiting Reno & Smiley King Collectors Box Old Train Tony Rice Manzanita Lonesome Night Ricky Skaggs Ancient Tones Cheap Mike Del McCoury Del & Woody Big Blue Roses Feller & Hill Feller & Hill & Bluegrass Buckaroos On My Mind Earls of Leicester Earls of Leicester Wilma Walker Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver In Session Darling Do You Know Who Loves You Junior Sisk Mountains Are Calling Me Grandma's Hands Tim O' Brien Where the River Meets the Road Kentucky Morning Bobby Osborne Original Moon Over Memphis Balsam Range Five You Are What I Am Rickey Wasson Croweology King of California Volume Five Voices Money Will Not Save You Junior Sisk Mountains Are Calling Me Speaking To That Mountain Becky Buller Single Raw Hide Bill Monroe Anthology.
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  • SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION 803 By

    SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION 803 By

    SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION 803 By Henry A RESOLUTION to honor the memory of Earl Scruggs, an American musical treasure. WHEREAS, the members of this General Assembly and music fans around the globe were greatly saddened to learn of the passing of bluegrass music legend and American treasure, Mr. Earl Scruggs; and WHEREAS, Earl Scruggs was revered around the world as a musical genius whose innovative talent on the five-string banjo pioneered modern banjo playing and he crafted the sound we know as bluegrass music. We will never see his superior; and WHEREAS, born on January 6, 1924, in Flint Hill, North Carolina, Earl Eugene Scruggs was the son of George Elam Scruggs, a farmer and bookkeeper who played the banjo and fiddle, and Lula Ruppe Scruggs, who played the pump organ in church; and WHEREAS, after losing his father at the age of four, Earl Scruggs began playing banjo and guitar at a very young age, using the two-finger picking style on the banjo until he was about ten years old, when he began to use three - the thumb, index, and middle finger - in an innovative up-picking style that would become world-renowned and win international acclaim; and WHEREAS, as a young man, Mr. Scruggs' banjo mastery led him to play area dances and radio shows with various bands, including Lost John Miller and His Allied Kentuckians. In December of 1945, he quit high school and joined Bill Monroe's band, the Blue Grass Boys; and WHEREAS, with his magnificent banjo picking, the group's popularity soared and Earl Scruggs redefined the sound of bluegrass music, as evidenced on such classic Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys tracks as "Blue Moon of Kentucky," "Blue Grass Breakdown," and "Molly and Tenbrooks (The Race Horse Song)"; and WHEREAS, with his mastery of the banjo and guitar matched only by his beautiful baritone, Mr.
  • Voices in the Hall: Sam Bush (Part 1) Episode Transcript

    Voices in the Hall: Sam Bush (Part 1) Episode Transcript

    VOICES IN THE HALL: SAM BUSH (PART 1) EPISODE TRANSCRIPT PETER COOPER Welcome to Voices in the Hall, presented by the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. I’m Peter Cooper. Today’s guest is a pioneer of New-grass music, Sam Bush. SAM BUSH When I first started playing, my dad had these fiddle albums. And I loved to listen to them. And then realized that one of the things I liked about them was the sound of the fiddle and the mandolin playing in unison together. And that’s when it occurred to me that I was trying on the mandolin to note it like a fiddle player notes. Then I discovered Bluegrass and the great players like Bill Monroe of course. You can specifically trace Bluegrass music to the origins. That it was started by Bill Monroe after he and his brother had a duet of mandolin and guitar for so many years, the Monroe Brothers. And then when he started his band, we're just fortunate that he was from the state of Kentucky, the Bluegrass State. And that's why they called them The Bluegrass Boys. And lo and behold we got Bluegrass music out of it. PETER COOPER It’s Voices in the Hall, with Sam Bush. “Callin’ Baton Rouge” – New Grass Revival (Best Of / Capitol) PETER COOPER “Callin’ Baton Rouge," by the New Grass Revival. That song was a prime influence on Garth Brooks, who later recorded it. Now, New Grass Revival’s founding member, Sam Bush, is a mandolin revolutionary whose virtuosity and broad- minded approach to music has changed a bunch of things for the better.
  • Combining the Musical Styles of the Father of Bluegrass with the Okie from Muskogee Is an Exciting Proposition

    Combining the Musical Styles of the Father of Bluegrass with the Okie from Muskogee Is an Exciting Proposition

    Combining the musical styles of the Father of Bluegrass with the Okie from Muskogee is an exciting proposition. Feeling that “Bluegrass and Traditional Country music is America’s music, the stories of the common man and the sounds of the mountains,” Tim Raybon and Daniel Grindstaff have formed the new band Merle Monroe. With the goal of choosing songs that relate to everyday life and go “back to the country,” they, along with bandmates Jayd Raines and Josh Doss, hope to take your mind away from today’s current distractions on their new self-titled project for Pinecastle Records. They have worked extremely hard looking for and writing songs they feel will be different, yet still reflect their heroes’ music from years past. Tim and Daniel first met in the mid 2000’s when Daniel was performing with Marty Raybon at IBMA Fan Fest. They had only a short time to rehearse before they performed their set, but Tim will always remember his first impression of Daniel: ”He was the best banjo player I had ever heard and an adamant professional.” Daniel recalls that since first hearing Tim Raybon, “I have held his vocal abilities as being one of the best-kept secrets in WWW.MERLEMONROEBAND.COM WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/MERLEMONROEBAND the music business.” From the beginning they held a common bond in their love of the Osborne Brothers, Jim and Jesse, and Bill Monroe; they hit it off and have remained friends ever since. Tim Raybon has a natural vocal ability that has been described as “real” – so real that it needs no electronic masking of any sort.
  • The Bourbon Aristocracy Plays Cask- Strength Kentucky Bluegrass

    The Bourbon Aristocracy Plays Cask- Strength Kentucky Bluegrass

    The Bourbon Aristocracy plays cask- strength Kentucky bluegrass. The Bourbon Aristocracy is a 4-piece band that comprises fiddler/vocalist Ryan Hin- shaw, banjoist/vocalist Joe Rauen, bassist Pete Wojtowicz, guitarist/vocalist Ethan Taylor Sellers, and occasional guests on mandolin and dobro. The Bourbon Aristocracy’s repertoire in- cludes bluegrass classics from artists such one of Sellers’ distant relatives from Ken- as Bill Monroe, Lester Flatt and Earl Scrug- tucky, E.H. Taylor. nephew of U.S. President gs, Jimmy Martin, Del McCoury, Stanley Zachary Taylor. E.H. Taylor was the father Brothers, and many more - alongside more of the modern bourbon industry, through recent bluegrass favorites and songs by clas- his distillery and his efforts to pass the sic country artists like Hank Williams and Bottled-in-Bond Act of 1897 and Pure Food Johnny Cash. and Drug Act, which together ensure the authenticity and purity of bourbon whiskey. In addition to a variety of private perfor- mances, the band’s recent engagements have The Bourbon Aristocracy plays bluegrass included Shedd Aquarium, Horse Thief worthy of this heritage. Hollow Brewing Company, Glenview Park District, Chicago Park District, Downtown The band can go straight-up acoustic for in- Oak Park, and the Louisville Kentucky Con- timate engagements, use the venue’s sound vention and Visitors Bureau. Louisville has system, or bring its own as required. chosen The Bourbon Aristocracy to repre- sent the Bluegrass State to their high-profile For booking/demos/info: clientele for three years running. Ethan Sellers (773) 580-2108 The Bourbon Aristocracy name pays tribute [email protected] to Kentucky’s gift to the whiskey world and http://www.bourbonaristocracy.com.
  • Dave Cobb Episode Transcript

    Dave Cobb Episode Transcript

    VOICES IN THE HALL DAVE COBB EPISODE TRANSCRIPT PETER COOPER Welcome to Voices in the Hall, presented by the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. I’m Peter Cooper. Today’s guest, producer extraordinaire Dave Cobb. DAVE COBB When we approach these records we approach it much the way a record would’ve been done in 1965, 1970. And it’s humans playing together. There are mistakes all over the record. There’s timing issues, there’s tuning issues, there’s pitch issues, there’s flubs of words. The same way people are seeking out organically grown food, I think people are seeking out organically grown music at the same time. The moment I heard Chris Stapleton I was like, “Man I’ve got to track him down.” If I can just get to Nashville I’d run into him and I’d run into Jason Isbell and try to sucker them in to make records. I like to fly by the seat of my pants. Walk in and see what’s going to grab you that day. To me it was a really cool thing about linking really great artists that I like now, and linking Nashville, what Nashville is today. Taking kind of a snapshot of it. And I love it when I get to introduce somebody to somebody else I think is talented. And you see there eyes both sparkle. And I love the unity in the scene. That’s why I moved here. PETER COOPER It’s Voices in the Hall, with Dave Cobb. “4th of July” - Shooter Jennings (Black Magick / Universal South) PETER COOPER “Fourth of July,” from Shooter Jennings.
  • A Piece of History

    A Piece of History

    A Piece of History Theirs is one of the most distinctive and recognizable sounds in the music industry. The four-part harmonies and upbeat songs of The Oak Ridge Boys have spawned dozens of Country hits and a Number One Pop smash, earned them Grammy, Dove, CMA, and ACM awards and garnered a host of other industry and fan accolades. Every time they step before an audience, the Oaks bring four decades of charted singles, and 50 years of tradition, to a stage show widely acknowledged as among the most exciting anywhere. And each remains as enthusiastic about the process as they have ever been. “When I go on stage, I get the same feeling I had the first time I sang with The Oak Ridge Boys,” says lead singer Duane Allen. “This is the only job I've ever wanted to have.” “Like everyone else in the group,” adds bass singer extraordinaire, Richard Sterban, “I was a fan of the Oaks before I became a member. I’m still a fan of the group today. Being in The Oak Ridge Boys is the fulfillment of a lifelong dream.” The two, along with tenor Joe Bonsall and baritone William Lee Golden, comprise one of Country's truly legendary acts. Their string of hits includes the Country-Pop chart-topper Elvira, as well as Bobbie Sue, Dream On, Thank God For Kids, American Made, I Guess It Never Hurts To Hurt Sometimes, Fancy Free, Gonna Take A Lot Of River and many others. In 2009, they covered a White Stripes song, receiving accolades from Rock reviewers.
  • A RESOLUTION to Recognize and Honor the Grand Ole Opry on Its 5,000Th Saturday Night Broadcast

    A RESOLUTION to Recognize and Honor the Grand Ole Opry on Its 5,000Th Saturday Night Broadcast

    <BillNo> <Sponsor> HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION 518 By Beck A RESOLUTION to recognize and honor the Grand Ole Opry on its 5,000th Saturday night broadcast. WHEREAS, the members of this General Assembly are proud to specially recognize a legendary institution that has contributed significantly to the country music industry and brought acclaim to the State of Tennessee the world over; and WHEREAS, on October 30, 2021, the Grand Ole Opry will send over the airwaves its 5,000th Saturday night broadcast, a momentous occasion in the history of this touchstone of American culture; and WHEREAS, "the show that made country music famous" began on Saturday, November 28, 1925, when a young announcer on Nashville radio station WSM introduced an eighty-year- old fiddle player, Uncle Jimmy Thompson, as the first performer on a new show called The WSM Barn Dance; and WHEREAS, announcer George D. Hay, who labeled himself "The Solemn Old Judge," but was neither old nor a judge, realized he had started a good thing that fateful night; and WHEREAS, this acclaimed radio show followed an NBC network radio program on Saturday nights called The Music Appreciation Hour; in 1928, Mr. Hay announced on the air, "For the past hour we have been listening to music taken largely from the Grand Opera, but now we will present the Grand Ole Opry"; the name stuck and the rest is history; and WHEREAS, crowds of people would come to the studio and stand in corridors to enjoy the Grand Ole Opry in person; WSM then decided to move the Opry to its own home, Studio C, wisely believing
  • Hillbilly Music and the Roots of Bluegrass Guitar

    Hillbilly Music and the Roots of Bluegrass Guitar

    Gregory N. Reish Chicago College of Performing Arts Roosevelt University Hillbilly Music and the Roots of Bluegrass Guitar READING COPY ONLY The guitar is an instrument that seems to need defending in bluegrass, as Bill Monroe once did by affirming its central importance to the music’s ensemble sound. “It don’t only take the fiddle or the banjo,” Monroe pointed out; “the guitar man, he’s got to learn too. It’s a style. A guitar means as much in a bluegrass band as anything else.”1 Indeed, the instrumental character of bluegrass has traditionally been defined by its original lead instruments, the fiddle, banjo, and mandolin, the last of which Monroe’s modesty may have prevented him from including in his comment. Yet even before the guitar began to emerge as a full-fledged lead instrument in the 1960s, its ubiquity in early bluegrass music bespeaks the essential role it played. And just as bluegrass evolved from the hillbilly music of the 1920s and 1930s, itself multifarious in style and repertory, so too did the essential elements of bluegrass guitar. One of the guitar’s primary functions in hillbilly music was to provide simple, unobtrusive accompaniment to singing by means of open-position chords and rudimentary bass motion. Jimmie Rodgers, whose guitar skills were scarcely polished or sophisticated, nevertheless exerted a tremendous influence with the understated effectiveness of his self-accompaniment. His “Blue Yodel #12,” recorded just a week before his death in May 1933, demonstrates all of the essential elements of his style (which
  • “Blue Moon of Kentucky”—Bill Monroe and His Blue Grass Boys (1947) Added to the National Registry: 2002 Essay by Richard D

    “Blue Moon of Kentucky”—Bill Monroe and His Blue Grass Boys (1947) Added to the National Registry: 2002 Essay by Richard D

    “Blue Moon of Kentucky”—Bill Monroe and his Blue Grass Boys (1947) Added to the National Registry: 2002 Essay by Richard D. Smith (guest post)* Bill Monroe Illuminating a major juncture in American popular music history--the crossroads of country music and rock 'n’ roll–is the “Blue Moon of Kentucky.” Originally composed as a lonesome but lovely waltz by Bill Monroe (1911-1996)--the innovative Rosine, Kentucky-born singer/bandleader/mandolinist who became a pillar of the Grand Ole Opry, was a major figure in the Folk Music Revival and is renowned as “The Father of Bluegrass”--it was later covered by the young Elvis Presley during his first commercial recording sessions. Indeed, it is musically and culturally significant that Presley's first single consisted of his crooning and insinuating version of Delta blues singer/guitarist Arthur Crudup's “That's All Right” on one side and a rollicking rockabilly arrangement (in 4/4 time) of Monroe's waltz on the other. The roots of rock in African American music are well known, but the parallel influence of white country music deserves greater understanding. The story of “Blue Moon of Kentucky” provides this. Bill Monroe’s earliest-known performance of “Blue Moon of Kentucky” was on the Grand Ole Opry on August 25, 1945. Monroe recorded it during his first session for Columbia Records (having previously been on RCA Victor Bluebirds) on September 16, 1946. The session was historic, both for its material and Monroe’s sidemen in the Blue Grass Boys. Participating in their first recordings with Monroe were superb lead vocalist/guitarist/songwriter Lester Flatt and the brilliant and seminal three-finger-style banjo picker Earl Scruggs.
  • Introductory Essay “Hearing History in Bluegrass's High, Lonesome Sound,” by Rachel Rubin, Professor of American Studies at the University of Massachusetts

    Introductory Essay “Hearing History in Bluegrass's High, Lonesome Sound,” by Rachel Rubin, Professor of American Studies at the University of Massachusetts

    Session Four: Country and Blue Grass Introductory Essay “Hearing History in Bluegrass's High, Lonesome Sound,” by Rachel Rubin, Professor of American Studies at the University of Massachusetts Bluegrass is generally considered a sub-genre of country music that developed in the second half of the 20 th century. Although for purposes of radio airplay bluegrass songs were programmed on country music stations beginning in the late 1940s, bluegrass as a musical form did not develop directly out of the generation of recorded commercial country music that preceded it. Rather, the two forms share the same roots in the traditional music of the Appalachian region and the Irish and Scottish ballads that informed it. The description commonly offered of bluegrass that distinguishes it from mainstream country music is its’ “high lonesome sound.” This phrase was coined in 1963 by New Lost City Ramblers co-founder John Cohen, who used it to name a short film he made about Kentucky mountain music. The “high lonesome sound” quickly became a familiar catch-phrase for bluegrass music's emotionally intense, soaring-to-the-point-of-audible- strain vocal style, a style that often gives even happy songs an undercurrent of bleakness. Musician Bill Monroe, considered the “father of bluegrass,” used to claim that he would practice a song by singing it as high as he could—and then go on stage and sing it a half- step higher. Monroe's boast seems to indicate that part of the bluegrass aesthetic is an underlying anxiety that you might not make it to that “high, lonesome sound”—and a combination of pride and relief when you do.
  • American Country Music of the Second Half of the Twentieth Century

    American Country Music of the Second Half of the Twentieth Century

    PALACKÝ UNIVERSITY OLOMOUC FACULTY OF ARTS Department of English and American Studies Martin Hujčák AMERICAN COUNTRY MUSIC OF THE SECOND HALF OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY Master thesis Supervisor: Mgr. Jiří Flajšar, Ph.D. Olomouc 2015 UNIVERZITA PALACKÉHO V OLOMOUCI FILOZOFICKÁ FAKULTA Katedra anglistiky a amerikanistiky Martin Hujčák AMERICKÁ COUNTRY HUDBA DRUHÉ POLOVINY 20. STOLETÍ Diplomová práca Vedúci práce: Mgr. Jiří Flajšar, Ph.D. Olomouc 2015 Prehlásenie Prehlasujem, ţe som diplomovú prácu na tému: American country music of the second half of the twentieth century vypracoval samostatne pod odborným dohľadom vedúceho diplomovej práce a uviedol som všetky pouţité podklady a literatúru. V Olomouci dňa……. ….……….. Podpis ……………………… Ďakujem vedúcemu mojej diplomovej práce Mgr. Jiřímu Flajšarovi, Ph.D. za uţitočné rady a pripomienky. Ďalej pánu doktorovi ďakujem za podnetné diskusie a trpezlivosť pri odpovedaní mojich otázok. V Olomouci 2.12.2015 Martin Hujčák Contents: Introduction ....................................................................................... 8 1 Country music background ............................................................... 10 1.1 American Folk music ..................................................................... 10 1.2 Society and the birth of Folk music ................................................ 11 1.3 Western music ................................................................................ 13 1.4 The beginning of commercial development ................................... 14 1.5 The
  • Country and Blue Grass Introductory Essay

    Country and Blue Grass Introductory Essay

    Country and Blue Grass Introductory Essay “Hearing History in Bluegrass's High, Lonesome Sound,” by Rachel Rubin, Professor of American Studies at the University of Massachusetts Bluegrass is generally considered a sub-genre of country music that developed in the second half of the 20th century. Although for purposes of radio airplay bluegrass songs were programmed on country music stations beginning in the late 1940s, bluegrass as a musical form did not develop directly out of the generation of recorded commercial country music that preceded it. Rather, the two forms share the same roots in the traditional music of the Appalachian region and the Irish and Scottish ballads that informed it. The description commonly offered of bluegrass that distinguishes it from mainstream country music is its’ “high lonesome sound.” This phrase was coined in 1963 by New Lost City Ramblers co-founder John Cohen, who used it to name a short film he made about Kentucky mountain music. The “high lonesome sound” quickly became a familiar catch-phrase for bluegrass music's emotionally intense, soaring-to-the-point-of-audible- strain vocal style, a style that often gives even happy songs an undercurrent of bleakness. Musician Bill Monroe, considered the “father of bluegrass,” used to claim that he would practice a song by singing it as high as he could—and then go on stage and sing it a half- step higher. Monroe's boast seems to indicate that part of the bluegrass aesthetic is an underlying anxiety that you might not make it to that “high, lonesome sound”—and a combination of pride and relief when you do.