Showing posts with label Bill Monroe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Monroe. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 7, 2017

Little Jimmy Dickens and Bill Monroe honored with bronze statues

Bill Monroe Statue at the Ryman Auditorium
Two of the most profound musical innovators in country and bluegrass music will forever remain part of the Soul of Nashville with the installation today of life-size statues of Little Jimmy Dickens and Bill Monroe at the historic Ryman Auditorium.

The Ryman, which is recognized as the Soul of Nashville, was founded as a beacon of hope for the faithful; it has become an international symbol of cultural significance drawing millions of people to Nashville to find their own inspiration in the wood pews under the famed stained-glass windowpanes.

The bronze likenesses were commissioned by the Ryman Auditorium in recognition of the 125th Anniversary. Sculpted by artist Ben Watts, the life-size statues took one year to create. Little Jimmy Dickens’ statue is adjacent to the landmark statue of riverboat captain Thomas G. Ryman on Fourth Avenue. The replica of the Father of Bluegrass Music Bill Monroe is located near the Fifth Avenue driveway.

The iconic brick building, which is on the national registry of historic places, rose to prominence first as Nashville’s largest venue for civic gatherings and later for attracting national touring shows including the biggest names in music, theater, and entertainment including Katharine Hepburn, Harry Houdini, Bob Hope, the Ziegfeld Follies, and countless others including President Theodore Roosevelt.

The Ryman became the home of the Grand Ole Opry in 1943, and the world of broadcast entertainment changed forever as the live radio and TV show brought the likes of Roy Acuff, Johnny Cash, Patsy Cline, Minnie Pearl, Elvis Presley, Marty Robbins, and Hank Williams to the stage and into living rooms around the country. The program’s 31-year Ryman ignited the growth of country music.

Dickens and Monroe were instrumental to that burgeoning popularity.

Little Jimmy Dickens Statue
Dickens was born James Cecil Dickins, but was world famous as “Little Jimmy.” He was known for his humorous novelty songs, his small size (4'11"), and flashy wardrobe, but his contributions to country music were far greater than his diminutive stature. He started as a member of the Grand Ole Opry in 1948 and was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1983.

Little Jimmy Dickens was a beloved fixture at the Opry, on stage and backstage. He passed away on Jan. 2, 2015. Before his death, he was the oldest living member of the Grand Ole Opry.

Dickens recorded many novelty songs including "Country Boy," "A-Sleeping at the Foot of the Bed,” "I'm Little but I'm Loud,” and his biggest hit, the No. 1 “May the Bird of Paradise Fly Up Your Nose.”  His song "Take an Old Cold Tater (And Wait)" inspired Hank Williams to nickname him Tater. 

Over the years, Dickens made appearances in music videos by close friend and fishing buddy, fellow West Virginia native Brad Paisley. Along with joining on bonus comedy tracks on several of Paisley’s albums, Dickens also joined Paisley and his CMA Awards co-host Carrie Underwood in several show monologues. Upon Dickens’ death in 2015, Paisley lamented the loss of his hero and “the best friend a human being could ask for” and has performed numerous tributes to Dickens’ life and career.

"This was a man who was honing his craft before Hank Williams, who we sort of credit as the father of modern country music in many ways," said Paisley during the unveiling today. “He saw everything in those decades that he stood on that stage, like Patsy Cline and Loretta Lynn and Garth Brooks. By the time Jimmy left us, he had become the Grand Ole Opry. On a night that he wasn't there, you were cheated out of something and he knew that. He realized when he was well enough to do it, he went. He knew that he owed it to the younger generation that wanted to see him, it was another lesson in how you entertain people. He gave them everything that he had on that stage and in this building for many many years. So I think it's really appropriate that he's going to be one of the statues that's a permanent reminder of what we should be in this building."

Speaking on behalf of Monroe was Ricky Skaggs, whose own career was heavily influenced by the mandolin player. Skaggs was only six years old in 1960, when he first got to perform on stage with Monroe and his band at the high school in Martha, Kentucky.

"I don't know if you ever get another Bill Monroe in a century," said Skaggs. "There's not a lot of people that I know of who could be cited as creating a whole new genre of music, but he did. He had the ear to hear it, the talent to play it and the heart to keep it alive because he was strong, he was powerful. I don't know any person who could have withstood, pushed through and made it like him. He had music in his veins. It was the thing that pushed him so much. It wasn't just to make a living. It was to get something out of him and take to people that he loved, and that was the fans that loved this music. I have traveled all over the world into places you would think that bluegrass music would never make it to ... and you meet someone there that actually plays the music. So this music has totally gone around the world."

The Father of Bluegrass was a gifted player, singer, and songwriter. The genre takes its name from his band, the Blue Grass Boys, named for Monroe's home state of Kentucky. Monroe's performing career spanned 69 years before he died on Sept. 9, 1996 – just shy of his 85th birthday.

Monroe formed the first edition of the Blue Grass Boys in Atlanta, Ga. The band eventually featured more than 150 performers including Earl Scruggs and Lester Flatt. In October 1939, Monroe successfully auditioned for a regular spot on the Grand Ole Opry impressing Opry founder George D. Hay with his energetic stage performance – he soon started recording and developing what would eventually become his signature style with fast tempos, instrumental virtuosity, and musical innovation. His recordings have become classics including “Blue Grass Breakdown," "My Rose of Old Kentucky,” and Monroe's most famous composition, “Blue Moon of Kentucky.”

Monroe, who was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1970, remained a mainstay at the Opry. There he settled into a role as a musical patriarch influencing generations of young musicians including Emmylou Harris, Waylon Jennings, and the Oak Ridge Boys.

With a $14 million renovation in 2015, the Ryman is widely considered one of the finest performance venues in the world hosting performers from all genres of music. Today, the Ryman draws artists from all corners of the globe eager to experience the thrill of walking to the front of the stage to perform.

Monday, June 5, 2017

Bill Monroe Estate offers rare ownership of prized possessions

Bill Monroe - Photo Courtesy of  Monroe Enterprises
Fans of the “Father of Bluegrass Music” have a unique opportunity to own the rights to the name and likeness to Bill Monroe. Regarded as the man who started the format, Monroe joined the WSM Grand Ole Opry in 1939, and was a member for almost six decades – until his passing in September 1996. One of the few members of both the Country Music Hall of Fame and The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Monroe’s musical legacy included legendary stints on Columbia Records and MCA / Decca, with whom he was associated for forty years. Monroe cast a shadow over music by influencing a wide variety of musical artists.

Monday, January 16, 2017

Bill Monroe box set to feature outtakes of popular songs

Bill Monroe Box Set - from Richard Weize Archives
Bluegrass music fans will enjoy hearing that very unique limited edition box set will be released of Bill Monroe recordings.  The recordings for DECCA in 1950-51 from the Castle Studio have been released through the Richard Weize Archives, a division of Rockstar Records, Ltd.  The recordings feature lead singers Jimmy Martin, Carter Stanley, and Edd Mayfield.  Unlike other box sets, this one will include all of the outtakes of all tracks, none of which were previously issued.  The box set will be released on February 24, 2017.

For musicians and careful listeners who have studied that spectacular recording for years, it's as though a new set of Stone Tablets has been found. It also means the "tape blip" we've always tolerated in "The First Whippoorwill" is now corrected, as the previously issued take was from a faulty tape dub whereas the new 1951 version is from the original master.

Accompanying the box set is a  revised discography by Neil Rosenberg, and notes by Dick Spottswood (edited by Rosenberg) with recollections by Monroe fiddler Charlie Smith.  Below is a track listing per cd, but note that each song has multiple recorded versions on each cd.  Only 1,000 copies of this collection will be released, so be sure to order a copy.  To order your copy of the box set, be sure click here to visit Rock Star Records.

CD 1
Bluegrass Ramble
New Mule Skinner Blues
My Little Georgia Rose
Memories of You
I'm On My Way to the Old Home
Alabama Waltz
I'm Blue, I'm Lonesome
I'll Meet You In Church Sunday Morning
Boat of Love

CD 2
The Old Fiddler
Uncle Pen
When the Golden Leaves Begin to Fall
Lord Protect My Soul
River of Death
Letter From My Darlin
On the Old Kentucky Shore
Raw Hide

CD 3
Poison Love
Kentucky Waltz
Prisoner's Song
Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
Angels Rock Me to Sleep
Brakeman's Blues
Travelin' Blues

CD 4
When the Cactus is in Bloom
Sailor's Plea
My Carolina Sunshine Girl
Ben Dewberry's Final Run
Peach Pickin' Time in Georgia
Those Gambler's Blues
Highway of Sorrow
Rotation Blues

CD 5
Lonesome Truck Driver's Blues
Sugar Coated Love
Cabin of Love
You're Drifting Away
Get Down on Your Knees and Pray
Christmas Time's A-Coming
The First Whipporwill

Thursday, November 3, 2016

Kentucky stars shined bright on CMA Awards

Chris Stapleton at CMA Awards.
Photo by Erika Goldring/FilmMagic
If you noticed carefully throughout the night, several Kentucky country music stars were featured on the CMA Award 50th anniversary broadcast.  Here are a few of those highlights:

Keith Whitley Remembered Twice
During Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood's melody of hits, they performed Keith Whitley's "Don't Close Your Eyes."  Then when Alan Jackson sang "Remember When" and George Strait sang "Troubadour," a photo of Keith Whitley was shown in the background as to honor the legends.

Trisha Yearwood pays tribute to Crystal Gayle & Loretta Lynn
Trisha Yearwood performed "Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue" as Crystal Gayle looked on in the audience beside her sister Loretta Lynn.  Trisha Yearwood and Garth Brooks also sang "Louisiana Woman, Mississippi Man," in tribute to Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty.

Bill Monroe and Keith Whitley Memoralized
During Alan Jackson and George Strait's duet, you will see photos on the wall in the background that included Bill Monroe and Keith Whitley among those that helped build the foundation of country music.


Ricky Skaggs & Dwight Yoakam Pickin' and Grinnin' in Opener
During the CMA Award show opener, Ricky Skaggs and Brad Paisley picked their way through "Country Boy," complete with fast guitar picking skills.  We also got to see Dwight Yoakam singing "Guitars, Cadillacs" during the opener.
Ricky Skaggs, Brad Paisley, and Charlie Daniels at the CMA Awards. Photo by Rick Diamond/Getty Images.

Roy Clark looks on as Dwight Yoakam sings "Guitars, Cadillacs" at the CMA Awards.
Photo by Gustavo Caballero/Getty Images
Dwight Yoakam and Chris Stapleton singing "Seven Spanish Angels"
Here is some six degrees of Kentucky: Pikeville native Dwight Yoakam performed with Paintsville native Chris Stapleton on the hit tune, "Seven Spanish Angels."  That song was made famous with the performance by Ray Charles and Willie Nelson.  Willie Nelson leased part of Renfro Valley Entertainment Center back in the day, but has never played there.  One of the co-writers of that song, Eddie Setser, is from Corbin, Kentucky, which is home of the original KFC.
Chris Stapleton Takes Home 2 Awards
A humbled Chris Stapleton took home the award for Best Male Vocalist, along with Best Video for the powerful tune "Fire Away."

Darrell Scott is Long Time Gone
Laurel County native, Darrell Scott, has made a living on songwriting and performing.  He wrote "Long Time Gone" that the Dixie Chicks sang last night alongside Beyonce at the CMA Awards.  Ironically the tune is about the dismay of country music with the lyrics, "Now they sound tired but they don't sound Haggard / They got money but they don't have Cash / They got Junior but they don't have Hank..."

Loretta Lynn and Crystal Gayle in the audience
Believe me when I say this, it was just a disgrace that Loretta Lynn and Crystal Gayle were only given a few seconds of screentime rather than have them up on stage performing showing how it is done.

What were some of your favorite moments of the awards? Did your favorite win?

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Bluegrass music fans work to save Jerusalem Ridge Bluegrass Festival

When you think of bluegrass music, you cannot help but think of the original father of bluegrass, Bill Monroe. The innovator of the only true American made music was born and raised in Rosine, Ky. Over the years, much work has been done to restore his legacy with his childhood home, as well as the old home place where bluegrass was born.

For years, the Jerusalem Ridge Bluegrass Festival has been held on the grounds by the home place of Bill Monroe. This year’s festival is scheduled to be held Oct. 4-7, 2012.
This year the festival was threatened to not exist due to a local landowner that blocked access to parking and most of the existing stages. Up until this year, the landowner worked with organizers by providing access.

Festival organizers have asked for approval from the Ohio County Fiscal Court for eminent domain. Judge Executive David Johnston issued a statement that said to the effect: “We are 100% behind the Jerusalem Ridge Foundation and the festival, we are one with them; we just aren’t ready to vote on eminent domain; we are still working through the process, looking at all options, etc.”

The small town of Rosine opens its doors each year welcoming bluegrass music fans. The amount of income brought in from lodging, meals, souvenirs, and more, helps the community that calls Bill Monroe as its son. Without the Jerusalem Ridge Bluegrass Festival, it would be devastating to the local economy.

The 2011 festival was six days long and celebrated the 100th anniversary of Mr. Monroe's birth on Jerusalem Ridge. Over 55 bands entertained 18,000 folks from 49 states and 10 countries. Highlights from the festival are broadcasted nationally on RFD-TV’s hit show, “The Cumberland Highlanders.”

Campbell Mercer is leading the efforts to help save the festival. After exploring several options, they are working to move the main stage next door to Mercer’s farm and keep a smaller stage at the home place. He, along with other volunteers have built new stages on one of Mercer’s farms originally owned by Bill Monroe’s grandpa, then his uncle Andrew, and then Clarence Wilson. Wilson was Uncle Pen’s best friend and the two worked on this farm. According to Mercer, “Clarence was perhaps the first banjo player that young Bill Monroe ever heard. When Bill added the banjo with Kentuckian Stringbean Akeman to the Blue Grass Boys in the 1943 he said that he wanted to recreate the ‘sound I heard back on the farm in Kentucky.’ This is likely the farm he was talking about.”

With this option, fans would be able to shuttle, drive, or hike to the home place from the main stage area. Camping would be free, but there would be no hook-ups.

Lots of work has been completed in the last two weeks to be ready in time for the festival. Campbell Mercer updated everyone, noting that, “in the last 13 days the crew has nearly finished the new stage (99.9%), cut a mile of new roads, widened existing roads, cut a ford thought the creek, and removed over 100 trees and hundreds of saplings from the seating area. We left hundreds of trees that require pruning and stumps that require grinding. We also cut a golf cart/hiking trail linking the two halves of the farm. This move puts the farthest reaches of the farm within a 3-10 minute walk where it was a 15-20 minute walk before. The walk is hilly so shuttles will be available.”

More work still needs to be completed, including widening the railroad crossing and existing bridge, tile the creek at the new cross, run waterlines to the vending area, and much more. Volunteers are needed to donate materials and time before and during the festival.

The current effort of the park addition is not being funded by the county or Jerusalem Ridge Foundation. It is currently being funded by the Mercer family to preserve the festival. If you are unable to attend and want to donate to the efforts, you can go to www.jerusalemridgefestival.org/paypal/donate-link.php .

Tickets for the festival can be purchased by going to www.jerusalemridgefestival.org , or by calling 270-274-9181.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Kentucky to celebrate the Father of Bluegrass Bill Monroe centennial birthday

Bill Monroe
Kentucky will be celebrating bluegrass music in a huge way in a yearlong celebration. On Thursday, September 9th, the Kentucky Historical Society and the Kentucky Arts Council will host the Bill Monroe Centennial Kick-Off Concert. It will be from 6:30 PM to 9:00 PM in the Cralle-Day Garden at the Thomas D. Clark Center for Kentucky History in downtown Frankfort.


The Bill Monroe Centennial Kick-Off Concert will begin a year of celebration to honor the Father of Bluegrass Music, Mr. Bill Monroe, who would have been 99 years old on September 13th. The concert will feature Jim Smoak and Danny Jones, former members of Monroe’s band the Blue Grass Boys, and master bluegrass musicians Michael Cleveland, Steve Cooley and Larry Raley. Smoak played the banjo in the Blue Grass Boys during the early 1950s, when he was still in his teens. He later played with country artists Little Jimmy Dickens and Hylo Brown and the Timberliners, and released albums under his own name. Jones has been at the epicenter of the bluegrass music scene since the 1960s. He started out in the Grayson County Boys and then went on to play a mandolin in the Bluegrass Alliance. Jones later joined Monroe, Bluegrass Generation and the Goins Brothers.



In between performances, bluegrass music scholar Thomas A. Adler, Ph.D., will interview the musicians and show a multimedia presentation about the life of Bill Monroe.



The concert is free with admission to the KHS history campus: $4 for adults, $2 for youth ages six to 18 and free for children five and under. For more information, email Mark Brown or call him at 502-564-1792.



Beginning September 10th, the International Bluegrass Museum in Owensboro, Kentucky, will open their Bill Monroe Centennial Exhibit. It will feature many of Monroe's personal artifacts, including two that have never been on display before - Uncle Pen's fiddle and the famous headstock veneer from Bill Monroe's mandolin. The fiddle owner, Pendleton Vandiver, was influential in Bill Monroe's life. It was aquired by Terry Woodward, who has graciously loaned the instrument to the museum for the celebration. It has been used in recent recording sessions, including a soundtrack for a movie on Monroe's life. Golden Globe nominee, Peter Sarsgaard, will star as Bill Monroe. His real-life wife Maggie Gyllenhaal will star as Bessie Lee Mauldin. Legendary producer of Americana films and music, T-Bone Burnett will serve as music director.



The other piece of history to be on display will be the original headstock veneer from Monroe's famous Gibson 1923 F-5 Lloyd Loar Mandolin. It is a legendary piece as after a disagreement with Gibson instrument company, Bill Monroe removed the company's name from the headstock with a pocketknife, leaving only the word "the." It would go on to be auctioned off in December of 2009 and purchased by Laura Weber Cash, the wife of John Carter Cash, son of Johnny Cash. She has now loaned the piece to the International Bluegrass Museum for the Centennial Celebration.



The Bill Monroe Centennial Exhibit is the second of three special shows that will be open during the two-year Bill Monroe Centennial Celebration. The Bill Monroe Centennial Art Exhibit is the first exhibit in the set, which opened to an overflowing crowd at the museum during the Blue Grass Boys Reunion on opening day of ROMP 2010.



The third Bill Monroe Centennial Exhibit will open on Monroe's 100th birthday, September 13, 2011, and will feature artifacts of the Blue Grass Boys, as well as expand upon the Bill Monroe Centennial Exhibit.



Monroe remains the only person ever to be inducted into the trio of the Bluegrass, Country, and Rock and Roll Halls of Fame. He received the National Medal of the Arts from President Clinton in 1995.  Even with the great loss of Bill Monroe several years ago, it is good to know that the blue moon of Kentucky will keep on shining with his musical spirit that lives on.