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Thread: RIP Earl Scruggs

  1. #1
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    RIP Earl....

    Darn - Earl Scruggs passed away .....

    Damn shame - finest banjo picker ever....

    http://blogs.voanews.com/breaking-ne...gs-dead-at-88/

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    He had a broad fan base, that's for real. 88 is a good innings, and by all accounts he wouldn't be one to complain.

    http://www.bbcamerica.com/anglopheni...cripple-creek/
    If a man is alone in the woods and there isn't a woke Hollywood around to call him racist, is he still white?



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    I have a gread DVD of him playing with Bob Dylan and a whole bunch of famous folks in his house. Its so hokey its heart warming.

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    Right in the middle of the Good Ole Boys trying to kill Joan Baez back in the day, he worked with her and when asked by a bunch of very angry Good Ole Boys why he did that he replied along the lines of, "She has as fine a voice as I've heard on a person."

    The Good Ole Boys went to the backup plan of character assassination instead of burying 4 bits of her at a crossroad.

    Music, not politics seems to be a good message to take from his life and how he lived it, closely followed by "play anything with anyone".
    If a man is alone in the woods and there isn't a woke Hollywood around to call him racist, is he still white?



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    Always liked the "Beverly Hillbillies" theme song that he did.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XgLSowrUQKU


    "...you meet the weirdest people riding a Guzzi !!..."

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    RIP Earl Scruggs

    R.I.P. Earl Scruggs



    by Steven Hyden March 29, 2012

    A peerless musician who can only be described as one of the finest and most important instrumentalists of the last century—and, on his instrument, the greatest who ever lived—bluegrass legend and world-champion banjo shredder Earl Scruggs died Wednesday of natural causes. He was 88.

    Scruggs lived such a long, eventful life that in some ways he outlived the breadth of his influence. The footprint he put on modern music is still indelible, and hearing it is as easy as turning on a radio or a TV. He is an architect of country music, a model for every player who picks up a banjo, and a major contributor to what we’ve come to know as a sound that forms part of our national identity. Scruggs’ influence is so big and wide-ranging that it’s hard to believe that one guy could have actually originated it. Not that Scruggs invented bluegrass music (that credit usually goes to Bill Monroe, who Scruggs played with in the 1940s) but Scruggs played an integral role in popularizing the form, and exploding its possibilities. As a banjo player, Scruggs’ achievements have been likened to what Paganini did for the violin, or what Jimi Hendrix did for the guitar. Scruggs’ playing technique—he used three fingers instead of the standard clawhammer style—transformed the instrument into a vessel for electrifying leads and awe-inspiring feats of virtuosity, as well as previously untouched areas of personal expression. He made the banjo the cornerstone of a new sound that would change the course of American pop culture.

    A North Carolina native born in 1924, Scruggs was only 21 when he joined Bill Monroe’s Blue Grass Boys in 1945. He made his debut with Monroe in the most nerve-wracking of settings, appearing at the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville for a radio broadcast that was heard across almost the entire country. Scruggs admitted years later that he was nervous about the appearance, because he wasn’t sure how his revolutionary style of playing would go over. Scruggs didn’t go over as much as he zoomed over stunned listeners like a Learjet. While no recordings of the Dec. 8, 1945 broadcast were left behind, the show has been described in terms that make it sound like the era’s “Beatles on Ed Sullivan” moment, with the sheer velocity, clarity, and power of Scruggs’ playing instantly recalibrating people’s ideas of what this music could be. A friend of Scruggs who was listening likened it to rock ‘n’ roll, a “new sound” that would capture the public’s imagination for years to come.
    In 1948, Scruggs left Monroe’s band with guitarist Lester Flatt to form the Foggy Mountain Boys, which later became known as Flatt & Scruggs. For the next 21 years, until they parted ways in 1969 due to the inevitable creative differences, Flatt & Scruggs reigned as the best bluegrass band of all-time. Among their first recordings was “Foggy Mountain Breakdown,” a song that’s become a stand-in for the boilerplate bluegrass sound, only at the time it was something that these two players simply conjured out of their imaginations.
    Flatt & Scruggs became the most recognizable ambassadors for bluegrass, touring constantly and appearing in films and on radio and TV shows. In the ’50s, they crossed-over to the budding folk-music market, and they even became pop stars, scoring a series of hit singles on the country charts, including “The Ballad Of Jed Clampett,” also known as the theme song from The Beverly Hillbillies.
    Flatt & Scruggs’ successful partnership started to come undone as the ’60s waned, with Scruggs pushing to expand the group’s sound and image (he wanted to record Bob Dylan’s “Like A Rolling Stone” and play rock venues) while Flatt favored a more traditional approach. In 1969, Scruggs performed “Foggy Mountain Breakdown” at an anti-war rally in Washington D.C., which further set him apart from the country-music establishment. In the ’70s, Scruggs formed the Earl Scruggs Revue with his sons Randy and Gary, and drifted toward a country-rock sound, covering songs by Dylan and Elton John, among others.
    Lester Flatt’s death in 1979 prevented the dream reunion that many bluegrass fans hoped for, but Scruggs kept playing shows and collecting awards for the next several decades. He had hip replacement surgery, and then a heart attack, in 1996, but as soon as he was well he went back to playing gigs. Over time, his innovative style seeped into the playing of thousands of other players. After a while, if you didn’t know any better, it might’ve been hard to tell what exactly made Earl Scruggs so special at one time. But only until he’d fire up another fierce banjo lick, and remove all doubt.

    And I to my motorcycle parked like the soul of the junkyard. Restored, a bicycle fleshed with power, and tore off. Up Highway 106 continually drunk on the wind in my mouth. Wringing the handlebar for speed, wild to be wreckage forever.

    - James Dickey, Cherrylog Road.

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    Another real talent gone. I grew up listening to those two! Lester and Earl were two of my favourite musicians! Makes me want to find a CD if there is one.
    You don't get to be an old dog without learning a few tricks.
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    I've spent the morning listening to everything of his I can find on Ewe Choob...great man.

    Really like this.

    . “No pleasure is worth giving up for two more years in a rest home.” Kingsley Amis

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