Old-time, country and bluegrass music in the big city.
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201 posts tagged Bluegrass
The New York Times: Doc Watson, the guitarist and folk singer whose flat-picking style elevated the acoustic guitar to solo status in bluegrass and country music, and whose interpretations of traditional American music profoundly influenced generations of folk and rock guitarists, died on Tuesday in Winston-Salem, N.C. He was 89… “He is single-handedly responsible for the extraordinary increase in acoustic flat-picking and fingerpicking guitar performance,” said Ralph Rinzler, the folklorist who discovered Mr. Watson in 1960. “His flat-picking style has no precedent in earlier country music history.”
Associated Press: Doc Watson was born in what is now Deep Gap, N.C., in the Blue Ridge Mountains. He lost his eyesight by the age of 1 when he developed an eye infection that was worsened by a congenital vascular disorder, according to a website for Merlefest, the annual musical gathering named for his late son Merle… He came from a musical family. His father was active in the church choir and played banjo, and his mother sang secular and religious songs, according to a statement from Folklore Productions, his management company since 1964… Doc Watson’s father gave him a harmonica as a young child, and by 5 he was playing the banjo, according to the Merlefest website. He learned a few guitar chords while attending the North Carolina Morehead School for the Blind in Raleigh, and his father helped him buy a Stella guitar for $12.
Stars pay tribute: Chely Wright, Rosanne Cash and Steve Martin are among the stars who have paid tribute to Doc Watson following his death… Cash lamented, “To lose Earl Scruggs, Levon Helm and Doc Watson in one year is just too, too much”, while Chely Wright simply stated: “Rest in peace”… Country singer Ricky Skaggs said in a statement, “An old ancient warrior has gone home. He prepared all of us to carry this on. He knew he wouldn’t last forever. He did his best to carry the old mountain sounds to this generation.”
Rolling Stone: Watson won seven Grammys and received the Recording Academy’s Lifetime Achievement award in 2004. In 1997, then-President Bill Clinton presented Watson with the National Medal for the Arts, in recognition of his significant impact on national heritage music.
Slate: But Watson didn’t restrict himself to the “old-time” tunes. He bought his first guitar from Sears Roebuck with money he got from chopping down chestnut trees on the family field and selling it “for pulpwood to the tannery.” And he took quickly to rockabilly, which he played throughout the 1950s. In the early ’60s, however, the folklorist Ralph Rinzler suggested he go back to the acoustic guitar and play the songs he’d learned growing up. Watson took his advice and became a star of the ’60s folk scene.
CNN: Watson got his nickname during a live radio broadcast. “The announcer remarked that his given name Arthel was odd and he needed an easy nickname,” according to a biography on the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame website. ”A fan in the crowd shouted ‘Call him Doc.’ The name stuck ever since.”
Veteran pickers The Seldom Scene put the blues in bluegrass on this performance from the 2010 Jenny Brook Bluegrass Festival. For more on this tune, visit www.secondcousincurly.com.
more videos in my blog:
Sittin’ On Top of the World – From Blues to Bluegrass
My uncle is the guitar player- wish I had been in that little country church for this show!
“Some still like the old ways best. For 25 years, MerleFest has drawn fans of roots music—a broad term encompassing numerous genres of American folk music—to the charming little town of Wilkesboro, in North Carolina’s Brushy Mountains. This year around 80,000 attended the four-day event. Headline acts included Los Lobos, a band from East Los Angeles that blends rock and American folk with Mexican genres such as norteño; Bela Fleck, a banjo player and composer whose music sounded like a marriage of bluegrass and the Grateful Dead; and the Punch Brothers, a talented young band comprising the traditional five bluegrass instruments but with an extraordinarily wide range (their bluegrass version of Radiohead’s “Kid A” is, against all expectations, revelatory: by using a bowed bass for the vocal part, they highlight that in the original version, Thom Yorke was less a singer than just another band member, using his muffled and electrified voice as just another instrument).”
Six Deadly Venoms on Court Street! Catch guitarist Rick Snell and other Venoms at Mona’s Bluegrass Jam on Mondays.
Val Mindel and Debra Clifford have teamed up to create the Traveling Old Time Music School. More information here: http://oldtimemusicschool.com/
Free track from Trampled By Turtles via WNYC Soundcheck- the Turtles appeared today on the show.
A Bluegrass Top 10 hit and critical acclaim are nice – but when you’ve had a stretch of hometown highway named after you? That’s when you know you’ve arrived. Minnesota’s fast-playing bluegrass band Trampled By Turtles join us live in studio with a just-released album called “Stars and Satellites,” and to tell us about the newly christened “Trampled By Turtles Trail.” (Pilgrims, take note: it’s on I-35 between Minneapolis and Duluth).
40 Plays | Download
Free Michael Daves track- Rain and Snow- from WNYC’s Gig Alert. Daves plays a set every Monday at Rockwood Music Hall at 10 pm, and hosts a bluegrass jam at Parkside Lounge every month on the first Monday of the month.
60 Plays | Download
This video was filmed partially at Brooklyn’s Jalopy Theatre. It also features John McEuen and Steve Arkin. It’s worth your three minutes.
We lost a legend today. Earl Scruggs died today at the age of 88. Once known as “the boy who made the banjo talk”, he mastered the three-finger picking style now simply called Scruggs-style. Not limited to strictly bluegrass, he crossed over into multiple genres playing with pop, jazz and international artists.
R.I.P.
“I always felt like Earl was to the five-string banjo what Babe Ruth was to baseball. He is the best there ever was, and the best there ever will be.” - Porter Wagoner
(via countryandwestern)
RIP Earl Scruggs.
We’re working on a proper obituary right now, but in the meantime, hear the story behind his iconic song, “Foggy Mountain Breakdown.” Death of a legend.
ALSO: Earl Scruggs, Bluegrass Pioneer, Dies at 88 via NYT
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