Great Bluegrass Players

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Brad

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Looking for names of some great bluegrass guitar players. I know very little about this genre, but I'd like to hear some good stuff.

Any suggestions / lists of personal favorites?
 
Clarence White was like the Charlie Christian of Bluegrass guitar. He developed the single note lead style that has caught on as a staple of the genre - as you will hear now with players like Tony Rice.

The other giants of the genre who developed contemperaneously with Clarence White are folks like Doc Watson (perhaps most recognized as "the original") and Chet Atkins (AKA "Mr. Guitar.") Although Chet was not a "bluegrass" stylist so much as a complete pathbreaker for the instrument itself, his influence is felt everywhere, including in Bluegrass guitar.

Bluegrass music depends on rock solid rhythm playing. Listen to the Del McCoury band, to Mac Weissman, and Peter Rowan. These are lifelong pros who are as solid as granite. It is actually harder to do top notch rhythm playing than it is to do lead, particularly because many standards are in nearly open tunings (keys of G, C, A, D). This means that basic lead comes naturally; the backup, on the other hand, requires that you develop a very strong and reliable sense of rhythm, because everyone will depend on it. (These pearls of wisdom come from a strictly mediocre rhythm and lead guitar player...)

The top of the heap in Bluegrass is, of course, Bill Monroe. He was a mandolin player, but his band set the pace a generation ago and his tenor voice is the origin of the "high lonesome sound" that characterizes bluegrass harmonies. He is also responsible for writing the bulk of the genre himself, and he did it because it was right for him to do - it became popular many years later. Fortunately he lived a long and productive life and came to see the world appreciate his creations. Grab some old Monroe collections and listen carefully; you'll pick up the communication tricks between musicians that allow them to be up on the stage with a game of musical volleyball. Amazing stuff.

Finally, you should become familiar with the concept of the Winfield championships. Every year in September the National Flatpicking Championships are held at the Walnut Valley Festival in Winfield, Kansas. These are really international championships, and the contest is respected enough so that the winner is generally regarded as among the tops in the world. The neatest thing is that the level of competition is so high that the difference between the winner, second place, or fifth, sixth or seventh can be hard to see - and the contestants each respect the others.

Look for these names. Each is a Winfield champion.

Mark O'Connor (this guy won the championship at 14 years of age).
Peter McLaughlin
John Shaw
Mark Cosgrove
Gary Cook
Mike Whitehead
Jason Shaw
Stephen Bennett
Robert Shafer
James Gyles
Randy Rogers
Orrin Star
Roy Curry
Steve Kaufman

Of these names, some have gone on to do amazing things. For instance, Mark O'Connor, having made his mark as a premier guitarist, returned to his first love - the fiddle. He has since made or participated in over 400 albums.

Steve Kaufman runs guitar training camps at his home year round that are nationally famous and pull nationally known artists as faculty. Look him up in the back pages of Acoustic Guitar magazine. And his performance at Winfield? Well, suffice it to say that he won the title three times.

Good luck - delving into this genre of music is like striking gold. There is no end to it...
 
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The guy that I grew up and play with now occasionally is Richard Gulley. He won this competition in 1981 (Could be '82 check the past winner archive). Although he did not pursue a pro career in music, he is still one of the best players I know. We just completed a CD for a local guy in my town as I have July off before I hit the road again. We get together everytime I'm home to play and it is always amazing because of him. His dad is a helluva banjo player.

Richard released an album as a result of the Flatpicking championship that is now out of circulation. If you can find a copy of this, get it. It's got some amazing licks on it.
 
I saw Clarence play 3 times and that boy could put a serious ass woopin on that guitar. The last time I saw him was at the last Byrds concert in the Capitol theatre in N.J. Gene Parsons and Skip Battin had left the band and Clarence was the only one that night who carried his weight. I had bragged to all my buddies how good these guy were and then the lineup of Mcguinn, Clarence White, the origanil bass player and drummer (Hillman? and ?)show up instead; and it was a really poor show. Except for Clarence we could have thrown tomatoes and my reputation for taste in music was tarnished. But the first two times I saw them, with Gene Parsons and Skip Battin with White and McGuinn, were two of the best concerts I have ever been to. Clarence rarely moved, almost like a statue, incredable, today he would be a monster, his musical abilities were growing and expanding daily.
He was a hell of a mandolin and fiddle player also which is rarely mentioned, got to see him play a few tunes on those also.
 
'bout time!

well it's about time!!!!!! It does this old North Carolina mountain boy's heart good to see a post about some bluegrass pickers on here.

Treeline listed a lot of players in his post, here is a couple more.....

Brian Sutton
Norman Blake
Jerry Douglas (THE dobro MASTER!)
Richard Watson (Doc's Grandson)

By the way........Doc Watson is the King of Flatpickers and Tony Rice is heir to the throne.

There are just so many good pickers out there, some guys are local (north carolina, tenn) and haven't had any national exposure. Bluegrass is the one of the only remaining music forms almost fully supported by local talent and radio stations. In bluegrass you can still go down to your local studio, record a tune and take down the road to the radio station and hear it played next Saturday night. If people liked it you'll hear the saturday and so on.......If you've never been to a bluegrass festival-----you've got to go to one. Thye biggest and best festivals around here is Merlefest in N. Wilksboro, NC and Bass Mountain Blugrass Festival in Snow Camp, NC. Merlefest was started in memerory of Doc Watson's son Merele who died a fews years back and is held early spring. Plus there are hundreds of smaller festival nearly every weekend all around blugrass country from March untill October. I'll stop going on and on now, but I've got a passion for the music. My grass is truely blue..........
 
Earle Scruggs

Oh I forgot..........

Earle Scruggs, the All Mighty King of Banjo is also a great guitar flat picker. Did you guys know that he frets with his finger nails instead of the meaty part of his fingers. He's over 70 yrs old and has groove worn into his nails......
 
Heh heh. Yep. That's how it goes. Some of my favorite Tony Rice stuff is his earlier work, before his voice went all to pieces. (It is coming back, though). And the Rice / Grisman Rounder Bluegrass album is priceless. Somewhere along the path of " I wanna play like Tony" I got off the bus at "This is about as far as you'll get in that direction, buster..." and ended up playing like myself, warts and all. But what an inspiration that guy is.

Have you ever heard Bill Keith's banjo cover of the Duke Ellington / Juan Tizol tune "Caravan?" Flat out amazing. Guess who played the guitar and mandolin? Rice and Grisman. Fiddle? Vassar Clements. One hot tune.
 
Yeah Tony's voice is still under all that hard livin' some where. I saw him this past spring at Merlefest. He was playing with Peter Rowan and the Texas Trio and took up back up vocals for one song and everybody who was in the know about Tony losing his voice went crazy. Very scratchy but that Tony Rice tone was still there...........what gives, how can any one person get so much talent? The guy plays guitar like anything and could sing circles and circles anourd just about everybody. Guys like Tony Rice do one of two things to you or both at the same time. They either inspire to become the best player you can be or make give up the intsrument.....oh well, I guess it's a little cold on the shoulder.
 
Mark O'Connor. All the classical folks try to record with him so they can look "cool" ( Josh Bell, Yo-Yo Ma, Nadja Sonnenberg), but even though the classical guys have far better technique, he sounds much better at bluegrass and "session" stuff.
 
jeezuz! I was expecting maybe 3 or 4 names!

Just kidding. Thanks guys! I will be checking into some of the names mentioned.

Brad

P.S. C7sus - thanks for the heads up on Shade Tree Music. I am going to be in SJC sometime in the next few weeks - I'll put that on my list of places to check out.
 
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