The Bluegrass Reader

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2004-04-01
Publisher(s): Univ of Illinois Pr
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Summary

Like rock n' roll, bluegrass exploded out of a post-World War II atmosphere in which more Americans opened their ears to more different kinds of music than ever before. All around the country, musicians were searching for new sounds and approaches: country blues went fully electric in Chicago, bebop boiled over as jazz hit the hippest notes yet and country music followed Hank Williams into new, sexier, harder-hitting territory. The developments in bluegrass proved every bit as galvanic.InThe Bluegrass Reader, Thomas Goldsmith joins his insights as a journalist with a lifetime of experience in bluegrass to capture the full story of this dynamic and beloved music. Inspired by the question "What articles about bluegrass would you want to have with you on a desert island?" he assembled a delicious, fun-to-read collection that brings together a wide range of the very best in bluegrass writing.Goldsmith's judicious selections include a fascinating combination of older, more obscure, and previously unavailable publications with pieces that are classics in the history of writing about bluegrass: Alan Lomax inEsquire, Mayne Smith's groundbreaking dissertation, Ralph Rinzler'sSing Outpiece on Bill Monroe, and Mike Seeger's Folkways liner notes.The Bluegrass Readeralso features writers as disparate as Marty Stuart, David Gates, and Hunter Thompson writing for magazines likeThe New Yorker, theAtlantic Monthly, and theMuleskinner News.In an age where musical trends flit by like models on a runway, bluegrass has endured changes while faithfully checking its advances against the formative years. Goldsmith follows its history through three roughly twenty-year periods: From 1939 to 1959, from 1959 to 1979, and from 1979 through the present. Goldsmith's substantial introduction describes and traces the development of the music from its origins in Anglo-American folk tradition, overlaid with African American influences, to the breakout popularity of Ralph Stanley, Alison Krauss, and theO Brother, Where Art Thou?soundtrack. He introduces each selection offering a wealth of additional information, makingThe Bluegrass Readerboth enjoyable and invaluable for new fans of the music as well as for its lifetime devotees.

Table of Contents

Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction: From the Big Bang to the Big Time 1(34)
PART 1: The Big Bang, 1939--59
``Bossman Bill Monroe''
35(10)
James Rooney
``Flatt and Scruggs''
45(5)
Marty Stuart
``The Stanley Brothers''
50(4)
Rich Kienzle
``Interview with Don Reno''
54(4)
Peter Wernick
``Jimmy Martin: You Don't Know My Mind''
58(3)
Neil V. Rosenberg
``From Grass Roots to Bluegrass: Some Personal Reminiscences''
61(5)
Mac Wiseman
Paul F. Wells
``The Osborne Brothers---Part Two: Getting It Off''
66(6)
Neil Rosenberg
``The Grass Is Greener in the Mountains''
72(5)
Jack Tottle
``An Introduction to Bluegrass''
77(14)
L. Mayne Smith
``Additions and Corrections''
91(2)
L. Mayne Smith
``Into Bluegrass: The History of a Word''
93(8)
Neil V. Rosenberg
``Mountain Music Bluegrass Style''
101(3)
Mike Seeger
``Bristol's WCYB: Early Bluegrass Turf''
104(4)
Joe Wilson
``Jim Shumate---Bluegrass Fiddler Supreme''
108(10)
Wayne Erbsen
``Rudy Lyle---Classic Bluegrass Banjo Man''
118(5)
Doug Hutchens
``Late News Report from Sunset Park, West Grove, Penn. Five-String Banjo Picking Contest''
123(3)
Mike Seeger
``Earl Taylor and Jim McCall: Twenty Bluegrass Favorites---Rural Rhythm''
126(1)
Jon Weisberger
``Don Reno and Red Smiley''
127(4)
Bob Artis
``Bluegrass Background: Folk Music with Overdrive''
131(6)
Alan Lomax
PART 2: The Reseeding of Bluegrass, 1960--79
``Bill Monroe---The Daddy of Blue Grass Music''
137(4)
Ralph Rinzler
``Dayton Bluegrass''
141(2)
Tom Teepen
``In Harmony with the Hills: Bluegrass Pioneer Hazel Dickens Struck a Rich Vein of Music That's Being Mined Still''
143(4)
Richard Harrington
``The Lilly Brothers of Hillbilly Ranch''
147(5)
Sam Charters
``Working the Hillbilly Ranch''
152(2)
Michael J. Melford
``New York Bluegrass''
154(3)
Hunter S. Thompson
``Dave Freeman and County Records''
157(7)
Charles Wolfe
``Rockbluerollgrass/bluerockandrollgrass Recordings''
164(3)
Neil V. Rosenberg
``The Country Gentlemen''
167(8)
Doug Tuchman
``The Kentucky Colonels''
175(3)
Peter V. Kuykendall
``Kenny Baker''
178(6)
Alice Foster
``The Carlton Haney Story''
184(7)
Fred Bartenstein
``The Plight of the Bluegrass Widow''
191(1)
Connie Walker
``Larry Sparks. . .on the Road''
192(7)
Tom Teepen
``So You Don't Like the Way We Do It (or Damn Your Tape Recorder)''
199(3)
John Duffey
``Believing in Bluegrass''
202(9)
Robert Cantwell
``Ralph Stanley and the Clinch Mountain Boys: Cry from the Cross''
211(1)
Walt V. Saunders
``Sam Bush''
212(3)
Alice Foster
``The Bluegrass Alliance''
215(3)
John Kaparakis
``Old and In the Way: Breakdown. Original Live Recordings from 1973---Vol.2''
218(2)
Peter Rowan
Vassar Clements
David Grisman
``Showing `Em How It's Done''
220(5)
Kathy Sawyer
``Bluegrass Mandolin 1/3rd Century Later''
225(5)
Jack Tottle
``Banjo Playing: Reno, Thompson, Scruggs, Keith Style and Beyond''
230(9)
Steve Arkin
PART 3: Another Roots Revival, 1980--2000
``Hot Rize: Pete Wernick's Secret Ingredient''
239(7)
Dick Kimmel
``Record Reviews. The Bluegrass Album, Vol. 2''
246(1)
John Hartley Fox
``Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver: The Original Band''
247(6)
Tim Stafford
``The Johnson Mountain Boys: At the Old Schoolhouse''
253(9)
Bill Vernon
``Peter Rowan: Wandering Boy Returns to His Roots''
262(4)
Alan Steiner
``The Early Days of Bluegrass, Vol. 117 (Fiction)''
266(3)
Charles Wolfe
``An Instrumentalist with a Name''
269(3)
Jack Bernhardt
``Country Preview: From Roots to Wings---The Nashville Bluegrass Band's Deference to Tradition Allows Its Music to Soar''
272(1)
Jack Bernhardt
``IBMA's World of Bluegrass''
273(4)
Thomas Goldsmith
``Country Artist of the Year: Alison Krauss''
277(2)
Jim Macnie
``Focusing on the Music, Not on Those Playing It''
279(2)
Ben Ratliff
``It's All in the Emotion: Dale Ann Bradley Is `Real Deal' Bluegrass''
281(1)
Robert K. Oermann
```Little Darlin's Not My Name': Women in Bluegrass''
282(6)
Robert Oermann
Mary Bufwack
``Is There a Link between Bluegrass Musicianship and Sexuality?''
288(10)
Thomas A. Adler
```Women in Bluegrass': Keynote Address at the IBMA Trade Show''
298(7)
Murphy Henry
``Keynote: `Bones to Pick'''
305(3)
Pete Wernick
``First Christmas without Bill''
308(4)
Sandy Rothman
``From True Adventures with the King of Bluegrass''
312(4)
Tom Piazza
``Fiddling and Picking His Way to Perfection''
316(3)
Neil Strauss
``Going Back to Old Kentucky: Ricky Skaggs Rediscovers the Rules of Bluegrass''
319(5)
Jon Weisberger
``Progress Rooted in Tradition: Del McCoury Talks about Work with Bill Monroe, Steve Earle''
324(3)
Baker Maultsby
``Annals of Bluegrass: Constant Sorrow---The Long Road of Ralph Stanley''
327(12)
David Gates
Index 339

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