Sunday, March 30, 2008

March Closure

Today the Sunday Bluegrass Breakdown pulled off its fourth broadcast of March. The show continues to rumble along, blending traditional, gospel, and progressive Bluegrass, offering up old-time favorites, new releases, and offbeat covers.

Cover image courtesy of John Hartford.

Set List: Tasty Licks - Blue Days Black Nights, John Starling & Carolina Star - South Riding Tango, Steep Canyon Rangers - Don't Ease Me In, John Hartford - With a Vamp in the Middle, Stanley Brothers - Rabbit in a Log, Jody Stecher - Way Downtown, Shady Grove Band - About Right, Reams Hensley & the Barons of Bluegrass - We're the Kinda People That Make the Jukebox Play, Seldom Scene - Rider, J.P. Fraley - One Morning in May, Rudy Barrett - Whoa Mule Whoa, IIIrd Tyme Out - Out of Sight Out of Mind, Rice Rice Hillman and Pederson - Friend of the Devil, The Grass Cats - Weary Lonesome Brokenhearted Fool, The Grascals feat. Dolly Parton - Viva Las Vegas, The Privy Tippers - Elzic's Farewell, Front Range - Montana Girl, Old Home String Band - Shut Up in the Mines of Coal, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band feat. Iris Dement - Mama's Opry, Foghorn String Band - Lonesome Road Blues, Monroe Brothers - New River Train, Emmylou Harris - Green Pastures, The Wilders - When the Levee's Gone, Dread Clampitt - Walkabout, Butch Robbins - I'll Be On That Good Road Some Day, Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver - Blue Train, Buncombe Turnpike - On the Run, Marty Stuart - Get in Line Brother, Hornsby/Skaggs - The Dreaded Spoon, Lynn Morris - You'll Get No More of Me, The Louvin Brothers - Satan is Real, BlueRidge - He'll Set Your Fields on Fire, Lonesome Standard Time - Bream, Bluegrass Etc. - I Can See Clearly Now, Dave Dowling - Tail Feathers Up, Laurie Lewis - the Wood Rushes Song, Daryl Mosely & Tim Graves - Tupelo County Jail, Laurel Canyon Ramblers - Wait a Minute, The Cumberlands - Soldier's Joy, Country Gentlemen - Sit Down Young Stranger, Larry Stephenson - Knoxville Boy, Coon Creek Girls - Banjo Pickin' Girl, Kirk Suthpin - Lonesome Road Blues, Connie Babe & Red Roberts - Cruel Willie, Kathy Kallick - Griddle in the Middle, Coal Creek Bluegrass Band - Barefoot Nelly, Kane's River - Foisted Possum, Bluegrass Album Band - Home Sweet Home, Josh Graves - False-Hearted Lover, Bill Emerson - Hills of Roane County, Johnson Mountain Boys - Blue Diamond Mines

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Gamble Rogers to Appear at Gamblefest 2008

GAMBLEFEST 2008

Legendary singer/guitar player/storyteller Gamble Rogers will make several special appearances at the 13th Annual Gamble Rogers Festival thanks to a combination of popular demand and modern technology!

Gamblefest will take place May 2-4, 2008 at the St. Johns County Fairgrounds. Those attending this year’s festival on Saturday, May 3, will be treated to special recorded live performances by Gamble on the Baby Grand Theater stage via DVD and big screen projection. These showings will run at regular intervals throughout the day on Saturday, May 3rd.

“Our goal this year is to re-create the mythical Oklawaha County whose residents were the characters for much of Gamble’s storytelling,” explains Festival president Paul Linser. “We are especially thankful to the Gamble Rogers Memorial Foundation and its president, Charles Steadham, for allowing us to bring Gamble’s finger picking guitar style and singing/storytelling talents to life in St. Johns County for all those attending the festival this year.” In addition to Rogers himself, national, local and regional artists are scheduled to appear at the event; the complete lineup will be announced in the near future.

Rogers lived in St. Augustine and became famous on the folk circuit with his songs and tales of Oklawaha County. He died tragically October 10, 1991 unsuccessfully trying to rescue a drowning tourist in the waters off Flagler Beach. The Gamble Rogers Festival is dedicated to ensuring that the memory and music of Gamble Rogers will continue to be an integral part of Florida folk music tradition.

Quality Inn at I95 and CR207 is offering a special Gamble Rogers Festival rate; for more info or to book rooms please contact the hotel at 904-829-3435

Sunday, March 23, 2008

March 23, 2008

I hope everyone enjoyed the show. Big thanks for the positive feedback from Michael, Diana, and Thomas.

Photo courtesy of Paul Kelly.

Set list: Ida - Lil Sack of Sugar, The Country Gentlemen - Roving Gambler, Alison Krauss - Union House Branch, Lynn Morris - Scraps from Your Table, Bluegrass Patriots - When it's Springtime in the Rockies, Little Green - A heartbeat Less, BlueRidge - lead me Not, Paul Kelly & the Stormwater Boys feat. Kasey Chambers - You're learning, dick & jacquie Schuyler - Drill Ye Tarriers, Del McCoury - 1952 Vincent Black Lightning, Ricky Skaggs & Tony Rice - Talk About Suffering, Jim Silvers - Katy Daly, Palm Valley String Band - Autumn Leaves (live), the Dillards - Reuben's Train, Larry Sparks & Andy Griggs - Georgia peaches, Boone Creek - In the Pines, the Bluegrass Cardinals - Blue-Eyed Boy from Boston, Ralph Stanley II - Mountain Dew, Uncle Earl - there is a time, Bernard Glansbeek - FB Rag, Bluegrass Album Band - Foggy Mountain Rock, The Stonemans - Blue Ridge Mountain Blues, Mac Wiseman - Shackles & Chains, jerry Douglas - Patrick Meets the Brick Bats, NRPS - glendale Train, Old & in the Way - Hobo song, Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver - Jesus Walked on the Water, Wilma lee Cooper - You Tried to Ruin My name, Ralph Stanley & Bob Dylan - the Lonesome River, Blue Highway - In the Gravel Yard, Johnny Staats project - Timbuktu, the Merritts - headin' west, Dry Branch Fire Squad - Dip your Fingers in some Water, Carl Jackson - Keep on the Sunny Side, Grandpa Jones - Tragic Romance, Bill Monroe - A Beautiful Life, Pat Enright - Heavy Traffic Ahead, Cherryholmes - How Long?, Hazel Dickens - Coal Tattoo, Jeremy Stephens - Scarlet Banjo, Hot Rize - High on a Mountain, Jim & Jesse - are You Tired of me My Darling?, Alan O'Bryant - Molly and Tenbrooks, Jim Lauderdale & Ralph Stanley - Zacchaeus, John Cowan Band - Long Distance Runaround (Yes cover), Nitty Gritty Dirt Band - Get Back (Beatles cover) -- TRACKED FAILED IN MID-PLAY--Yonder Mountain String Band - 40 Miles to Denver, Bluegrass Gospel Project - Will There Be Any Stars in my Crown, Vern Williams - When Springtime Comes Again, Steve Earle - The Mountain

Monday, March 17, 2008

Lordy, Lordy, Ronnie's 41!

Born in York County, Pennsylvania in March 1967, Ronnie McCoury celebrated his 41st birthday on Sunday the 16th. Having played with his dad, Del McCoury, since 1981, Ronnie has released a handful of solo and other non-Del McCoury Band releases, including 1999's "Mandolin Extravaganza" with David Grisman and 2000s "Heartbreak Town."

Photo courtesy of Ronnie McCoury.

Monday, March 10, 2008

Hot for Teacher?

Cover image courtesy of David Lee Roth.

I had recently joked with a friend about the possibility of finding a Bluegrass cover of Van Halen's "Hot for Teacher" and a quick Google search put me face-to-face with a surprising reality...Dave had actually teamed up with a Bluegrass band and allowed for Bluegrass covers of Van Halen's music. I haven't heard the whole album, as a matter of fact, I jumped right to David Grisman & Sons version of "Hot for Teacher." The song was featured during yesterday's Sunday Bluegrass Breakdown.

I had a great time spinning the show and got a good deal of positive feedback from several callers in. Thanks to all of you for listening!

Set list: Ronnie Bowman - Crazy Train (w/ Ozzy intro), Tony Furtado - Waterslide, David Grisman & Sons - Hot for Teacher, The Morgantown Rounders - Picked Up a Hammer and Knocked 'Em in the Head, Abigail Washburn - Song for the Traveling Daughter, Mountain Heart - The Gospel Train, Alan Bibey - County Fool, New Lost City Ramblers - Brown's Ferry Blues, Bill Keith - Caravan, New River Bluegrass - Wires and Wood, The Bluegrass Album Band - Home Sweet Home, New Vintage - Consider the Lillies, The Byrds - I Am a Pilgrim, New Grange - Stone Coal West Virginia, Chatham County Line - Birmingham Jail, O.C.M.S. - Take 'Em Away, Comet Bluegrass Allstars - Gentle on My Mind, Peter Rowan & The Rowan Brothers - Rye Whiskey, Crooked Still - Can't You Hear Me Calling, Po' Girl - Old Mountain Line, The Dillards - I've Just Seen a Face, Rabbi John - Skin and Bone, IIIrd Tyme Out - John and Mary, Randy Howard - Kansas City Kitty, J.D. Crowe & The New South - Rock Salt and Nails, The Reeltime Travelers - Eyes Like Cherries, Jeff White - The Broken Road, The Roe Family Singers - Shallow Grave, John Hartford - Steam Powered Aero-Plane, Ron Block - He's Holding on to Me, Russ Barenberg & Bryan Sutton - Big Sciota, Kane's River - Same River Twice, Sam Bush - Howlin' at the Moon, Kathy Kallick - Burying Ground, Sam Pacetti - Triplesec, Lonesome River Band - Perfume Powder & Lead, The Stanley Brothers - Finger Poppin' Time, Seldom Scene - After Midnight, Laurie Lewis & Tom Rozum - The Oak and the Laurel, Split Lip Rayfield - Should Have Seen It Comin', Longview - I've Never Been So Lonesome, Miller's Crossing - Lonesome On'Ry and Mean, Ted Lundy - The Old Swinging Bridge, Leftover Salmon (feat. John Cowan on vocals) - Troubled Times


Sunday, March 9, 2008

Farewell Ferdinand Lionel Moyse III

This weekend, Greenville, MS resident Ferdinand Lionel Moyse III passed away after a six-year battle against cancer. "Big Ferd" as he was known by his family is the father of Hackensaw Boy Ferd "Four" Moyse. Our thoughts go out to the Moyses and their extended relations.

Monday, March 3, 2008

March Madness!

Sunday Bluegrass Breakdown entered into the fray of March Madness with a show spotlighting the work of Alison Krauss (see previous post). The 36 year old, 21-time Grammy Award winner has had an amazing 28-year career. Understated.

Other than songs by Alison and her usual suspects (Union Station), the show kicked out tunes by newer artists like AJ Roach and old favorites like Benny Martin's "Wabash Cannonball," Bill Monroe's "Y'all Come, " and The Country Gentlemen's "Fox On The Run."

First played among the non-Krauss songs was "Revelation," the title track by Virginia artist AJ Roach. This release has hit #1 in England, yet I've really not heard much press about it in the US. Maybe I should listen to more radio.


Set list: Alison Krauss - I've Got That Old Feeling, AJ Roach - Revelation, the Country Gentlemen - Fox on the Run, Alison Krauss - Steel Rails, Alan Shad - A cut Above, the Cox Family - When God Dips His Pen of Love In My heart, Aubrey Haynie - Forty years of Trouble, Alison Krauss - Every Time You Say Goodbye, Dan Crary - Whistlin' Rufus, Bad Livers - Uncle Lucius, David Davis & The Warrior River Boys - Chancellorsville, Alison Krauss - Another Day Another Dollar, the Bailey Brothers - Take Me Back to Happy Valley, David Grier - Eye of the Hurricane, Benny Martin - Wabash Cannonball, David Parmley & Continental Divide - I've Got a Home in That Rock, Bering Strait - Porushka Paranya, Delaware Rag - I'm Coming On, Alison Krauss - Oh Atlanta (Bad Compnay cover), Alison Krauss - I Will (Beatles cover), Bill Monroe - Y'all Come, Dolly Parton - Stairway to Heaven, Alison Krauss - So Long So Wrong, Dominion Bluegrass Boys - Bluegrass Hills, Blue Harvest - Just Around the Bend, Alison Krauss - Never Got Off the Ground, Blue Highway - Wondrous Love, Don Reno & Bill Harrell - I'm Using My Bible for a Roadmap, the Bluegrass Album Band - The Model Church, Alison Krauss - Choctaw Hayride, Dread Clampitt - Ridin' High, Bob Dylan - Turkey Chase, Dreadful Snakes - Who's That Knocking at My Door, Alison Krauss - Down to the River to Pray (live), Dry Branch Fire Squad - Touch The Hem Of His Garment, Bobby Hicks - Whiskey Before Breakfast, Feed&Seed - Stealin', Larry Sparks feat. Alison Krauss and Dan Tyminski - John Deere Tractor, Flatt & Scruggs - Big Black Train, Boone Creek - One Way Track, Front Range - Cowtown Boogie, Blue Ridge - Gettng Ready to Leave This World, Robert Plant & Alison Krauss - Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us, The Hackensaw Boys - Radio, Claire Lynch - If Wishes Were Horses, Blueground Undergrass - Black Muddy River (Grateful Dead cover)

Sunday Bluegrass Breakdown Spotlight Artist No. 1 - Alison Krauss

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alison Krauss
(born July 23, 1971) is an American bluegrass-country singer and fiddle player. She entered the music industry at a young age, winning local contests by the age of ten and recording for the first time on her brother's album at fourteen. She signed with Rounder RecordsAlison Krauss & Union Station (AKUS), and later released her first album with them as a group in 1989.
in 1985 and released her first solo album at sixteen in 1987. She was invited to join the band with which she still performs,

She has thus far released more than ten albums, appeared on numerous soundtracks, and has helped usher in a new interest in bluegrass music in the United States. Her soundtrack performances have led to further popularity, including the Grammy-winning O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack, an album also credited with raising American interest in bluegrass, and the Cold Mountain soundtrack, which led to her performance at the 2004 Academy Awards. During her career she has won 21 Grammy Awards—more than any other female artist and tied for seventh-most among all artists—along with numerous other awards.


Biography

Alison Krauss was born in
Decatur, Illinois, but was raised in Champaign, Illinois. She began studying classical violin at five years old but soon switched to bluegrass. At age eight she started entering local talent contests, and at ten she had her own band. At twelve she won the TexasWalnut Valley Festival Fiddle Championship,
State Fiddle Championship; at thirteen she won the and the Society for the Preservation of Bluegrass in America named her the Most Promising Fiddler in the Midwest.

Krauss made her recording debut in 1985 on her brother Viktor's independent album, Different Strokes. She performed with John Pennell, bassist and songwriter, from the age of twelve in a band called "Silver Rail". Pennell later formed Union Station,and Krauss joined at his invitation,Andrea Zonn. Pennell remains one of her favorite songwriters Later that year she signed to Rounder Records, and in 1987, at sixteen, her debut album Too Late to Cry was released with Union Station as her backup band. replacing their previous fiddler and wrote some of her early work including the popular "Every Time You Say Goodbye."

1989–1991: Early career

Krauss' debut solo album was followed shortly by her first group album with Union Station in 1989 Two Highways. Many traditional bluegrass numbers appeared on the album, along with a bluegrass interpretation of The Allman Brothers' "Midnight Rider." Krauss' contract with Rounder required her to alternate between releasing a solo album and an album with Union Station,and she released the solo album I've Got That Old Feeling in 1990. It was her first album to rise onto the Billboard charts, peaking in the top seventy-five on the country chart. The album also was a notable point in her career as she earned her first Grammy Award, the single "Steel Rails" was her first single tracked by Billboard.

1992–1999: Rising success

Krauss' second Union Station album Everytime You Say Goodbye was released in 1992, and she went on to win her second Grammy for Best Bluegrass Album of the year. She then joined the Grand Ole Opry in 1993 at the age of 21. She was the youngest cast member at the time, and the first bluegrass artist to join the Opry in twenty-nine years. She also collaborated on a project with the Cox Family in 1994, a bluegrass album called I Know Who Holds Tomorrow.

Now That I've Found You: A Collection, a compilation of older releases and some covers of her favorite works by other artists, was released in 1995. Some of these covers include Bad Company's "Oh Atlanta," The Foundations' "Baby, Now That I've Found You," and The Beatles' "I Will." The single "When You Say Nothing at All" reached the top five on the Billboard country chart; the album peaked in the top fifteen on the all-genre Billboard 200 chart, and sold two million copies to become Krauss' first double-platinum album. Krauss also was nominated for four Country Music Association Awards and won all of them.

So Long So Wrong, another Union Station album, was released in 1997 and won the Grammy for Best Bluegrass Album. Some critics said it was "untraditional" and "likely [to] change quite a few... Minds about bluegrass."

Her next solo release in 1999, Forget About It, included one of her two tracks to appear on the Billboard adult contemporary chart, "Stay." The album was certified gold, and charted within the top seventy-five of the Billboard 200 and in the top five of the country chart.

2000–present: Current career














Their next album, New Favorite, was released on August 14, 2001. The album went on to win the Grammy for Best Bluegrass Album, with the single "The Lucky One" winning a Grammy as well. New Favorite was followed up by the double platinum double album LiveThe Louisville Palace. in 2002 and a release of a DVD of the same live performance in 2003. Both the album and the DVD were recorded during a performance at

Lonely Runs Both Ways was released in 2004, and eventually became another Alison Krauss & Union Station gold certified album.

Truegrass Vs. Newgrass

On Sunday, February 27, the Sunday Bluegrass Breakdown dove into the seemingly wide crevasse between "old time" bluegrass and its more liberal younger sibling newgrass/progressive bluegrass/jamgrass. The show played like a bi-polar nightmare, with truegrass tunes such as Alan Shelton's 35-second-long "Sourwood Mountain" paired off against David Grisman's expansive "Mondo Mando," which clocks in at 8:58.

Photo courtesy of David Grisman.

I guess I overthought it, or just worried about it too much, but by the time the show was over, I felt like it hadn't worked at all. There just wasn't a nice ebb and flow. It was structured too extremely, even though that extreme was exactly what I had hoped to explore.

In some ways, the dichotomy is a farce. Bands such as Flatt & Scruggs indicated early on that the structure of bluegrass could include a variety of chord changes and song structures. It was this more expansive framework that was later capitalized on by artists such as David Grisman and Bela Fleck (among many others), and today by the likes of Blueground Undergrass and Leftover Salmon.

Set List: Alan Shelton - Sourwood Mountain, Sam Bush - Clover Leaf Rag, Jay Farrar - Buffalo Jump, Carl Jackson - Foggy Mountain Breakdown, Laurel Canyon Ramblers - RU4 Reel, The Doc Watson Family - Fisher's Hornpipe, David Grier, That's Just Perfect, Blue Highway - Mountain of the Lord, Larry Rice - Strodes Creek, Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder - Battle Cry, Vern & Ray - The Leather Britches, Benny Thomasson - Laughing Boy, Ralph Stanley - I'll Remember You Love In My Prayers, David Grisman - Mondo Mando, Nickel Creek - House Carpenter, Blue Highway - Whither Thou Go, Aubrey Haney - Maggie, The Doc Watson Family - Go Shoot Old Davey Dugger, Aaron O'Rourke Trio - Liza Jane (solo), Chatham County Line - Sun Up, Laurel Canyon Ramblers - The Weasel, Carolina Chocolate Drops - Dixie, Blueground Undergrass - Ole Love Ole Tune, Noam Pikelny - Souper Grouper, Paul Warren - Sally Goodin', Carl Jackson - Grey Eagle, Allison Krauss & Union Station - Little Liza Jane, Jason Titley - Jimmy's Barnyard Shuffle, Chris Thile - Ah Spring, Dry Branch Fire Squad - The Gospel Way, Paul Williams - Been A Hard Working Pilgrim, The Be Good Tanyas - Crow Waltz, David West - Maze, The Johnny Staats Project - Shafer's Reel, Vern & Ray - Hard Times, Benny Thomasson - Forked Deer, Merle Travis - 9 Lb. Hammer, Blue Highway - Some Day, Mark O'Conner - Dixie Breakdown, Ralph Stanley - Waiting For Me, IIIrd Tyme Out - Out of Sight Out of Mind, Cherryholmes - Makin' Time, New Grass Revival - Big Foot, Randy Howard - Houdini, Blue Highway - Three -inger Jack, Sam Bush - Crossing the Transippi, Jim & Jesse - Hard Hearted, Red Allen - Love Gone Cold, Steep Canyon Rangers - Feelin' Just a Little Like Dale, Byron Berline and John Hickman - Time Changes Everything, New Vintage - Old Chain Gang, Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder - Pig in a Pen, The Meat Purveyors - The Madonna Trilogy, the Infamous Stringdusters - Moon Man, The Del McCoury Band - Loggin' Man, Flatt & Scruggs - Dixie Flyer, Don Reno & Red Smiley - A Dime Looks Like a Wagon Wheel, The Osborne Brothers & Mac Wiseman - Midnight Flyer, Steep Canyon Rangers - I'll Be Long Gone, The Grass Cats - Down the Road I Go, Arthur Smith & Don Reno - Feudin' Banjos, David Grisman - I Ain't Broke But I'm Badly Bent, Don Reno & Red Smiley - Buck Ryan Rag, Baucom Bibey & Blueridge - Shifting Sands, Dry Branch Fire Squad - I'll Be No Stranger, Carl Story - Buck Creek, Jim Mills - Pick Along