Bill Monroe Memorial Park & Campground
Bean Blossom, IN How many of you have been at the festival all 6 days? Why Bluegrass?
When I was 4 or 5, my mother's sister's family left Pittsburgh to live in North Wilkesboro, NC. Summer trips to visit meant very early starts and a long time in the car. The new Pennsylvania Turnpike got us into the heart of the mountains, and US 19 got us to the Blue Ridge Parkway and on down to North Carolina. All along the way, the local AM stations were playing "mountain music." Some of it was what we might call "folk." Some was country and country-western, following the play-list of WSM's Grand Old Opry, WWVA, or the local station-sponsored barn dances and jamborees. But each year more and more featured that hard-driving three-fingered w I grew up with the Bluegrass Boys, Flatt and Scruggs, and the Osborne Brothers -- and never knew it. I couldn't understand why most of the tunes I was hearing had a different sound -- a nasal, whiny, key of C flatness. I didn't realize that the music I liked wasn't folk or country or mountain, so I was lured away by Buddy Holly. He was talkin' to me. When Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Merle Haggard, Lefty Frizzel and Bobby Bare brought me back to the music I had avoided because of rhinestone jackets and hoop skirts, I discovered Hank Williams, Buck Owens and Bob Wills. I was remembering something from my childhood. Something that had been planted by Bill Monroe, brought to adolescence by Buddy Holly and kindled into adulthood by the Outlaws and honky tonk. The Not Too Bad Bluegrass Band It took the local Not Too Bad Bluegrass Band, then playing as the 5:45 Bluegrass Band in an offbeat food, wine, beer emporium and music venue to wake me up. They were playing "my" music. But there was more: New stuff from Gillian Welch and John Prine; some Flatt and Scruggs that I had missed when they left Monroe; old time mountain songs re-arranged to the bluegrass format.I am now a groupie. And any band that plays Uncle Pen with that wonderful á-capella G run Late in the evening, about sundown
High on a hill and above the town Uncle Pen played the fiddle, lordy, how it'd ring you could hear it talk, you could hear it sing will have me following them around the country -- if they'd let me carry the instruments in the back of Old Red. But now even that old red truck has been chopped for parts. My haulin' is now limited to what'll fit in the back of of Jeep TJ Wrangler.
Diatonic Reference Harps
Harmonica Lessons Harmonicas and Stuff Jack Earl Hohner™ Golden Melody™ Kevin's Harps Visions of County Brown Weed Patch Hill...PokerHoller...Greasy Creek... Gnawbone...Bear Waller... Scarce O' Fat...Slippery Elm Shoot...Pole Cat Ridge ...Stoney Lonesome...Salt Bridge...I can smell my way home in the dark. ...Taterbug...Bean Blossom Creek...My dog don't lie! -- Klug & Miller, Liars' Bench Honky Tonk Chordie Songs / Chords
Harmony Central History of Country Music Andy Ruff, of The Dew Daddies, Carl, Linda, and Daddy Jerry Ruff at the late Just Plain Folks lamented Wild Beet in Bloomington, IN. Next week, Carl plays The Streets of MusicArrangers.com Laredo on harp. -- photo by Nancy Ruff. Dara and Jake Krack
Bloomington's Old Time Fiddler The New York Times did a recent story about Jake and the apprenticeship program at Augusta Heritage Center of Davis & Elkins College. CNN picked up on the story and were at their house for three days recently to do filming for a show called "CNN & Time". The show has a segment featuring Jake. It aired Sunday, October 24, at 9PM. Watch for repeats. |

eave of rhythm and melody banjo style popularized by the Bluegrass Boys. Back then, "bluegrass" meant the Monroe brothers, usually Bill, and their bands. The music was probably "folk" or "country" or "mountain," but it wasn't. The vocal lead reached above the accompaniment, each instrument had solo runs, the harmony had an edge. It wasn't my mother singing "On the Trail of the Lonesome Pine." 


