Clicky

Bill Monroe – Father of Bluegrass Music | Americana Roots

Featured Posts

Drunk On Crutches - People.Places.Things. Have you ever decided to listen to new CD, not knowing what to expect? Sure you have. And when the first song starts, you are not only surprised, but ready to hear what’s next? Well, that’s what happened...

Read more

The Council of Smokers and Drinkers- Grizzled Nashville, Austin, Memphis......Anchorage??  Last year we wrote about Alaska band The Whipsaws on our site.  I'm happy to report that we have another tasty musical export from the Cold North.  Ladies...

Read more

Tinariwen- Old Town School of Folk Music This post is actually more about the venue than the show.  I have a list of some of the live music venues I'd like to get to in various cities and was able to knock one off the list this past weekend...

Read more

THE STEEL WHEELS - RED WING When you attempt to define true Americana music, you must believe in a blend of different genres. The term Americana represents artists who refuse to be stereotyped into one specific genre, and allows...

Read more

Diana Catherine and the Thrusty Tweeters Missed this one last year, but better late.... The Spirit Ranch Sessions by Diana Catherine and the Thrusty Tweeters; now this disc I flat out love!  Many things fall under our Americana umbrella, ...

Read more

twitter

Follow on Tweets

  •  

Bill Monroe – Father of Bluegrass Music

Category : Reviews

The film is a fantastic document allowing Mr. Monroe to tell his own story in a series of front porch interviews with John Hartford. Hartford, being a musician and bit of historian himself knew the right questions to get the responses we wanted to know. Seeing these two departed icons on screen together talking and playing is nearly reason enough to get the DVD.

But there is more, of course. There are interviews with Emmylou Harris, Marty Stuart, Ricky Skaggs, Jerry Garcia and others, including Roy Acuff in one of his last appearances. All of these artists talk in-depth about Mr. Monroe and his influence on not only their music, but personally. Footage of Mr. Monroe and Skaggs sitting around a camp fire talking casually and picking “Uncle Pen” on fiddle and mandolin give a glimpse into the special relationship they shared. In a solo interview Skaggs recounts the first time he met Mr. Monroe, as a six year-old kid at a show near his hometown.

Also interviewed in the film are several former Blue Grass Boys including Del McCoury, Bill Keith, Chubby Wise, Kenny Baker, Bobby Hicks, Doug Green and James Monroe. Each of them talks about meeting Mr. Monroe and how they came to be a Blue Grass Boy.

Although only 90 minutes long, the film serves as an introduction to Mr. Monroe and his music. For someone new to bluegrass, this film would serve as an excellent primer on Mr. Monroe’s career and what it meant to the larger music culture. Filled with many excellent performance clips, from Mr. Monroe shows at Bean Blossom to appearances on shows with Dolly Parton and others, the viewer is afforded the opportunity to see varying configurations of Blue Grass Boys, some of which did not last very long.

Gebhardt shot many hours of footage of Mr. Monroe, from around the house to the tour bus to back stage at various concerts. According to the excellent “The Music of Bill Monroe” by Neil V. Rosenberg and Charles Wolfe, Gerhardt also recorded 130 songs in live performance, a few of which were released in 2002 on CD as Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys Live, Vol. 1. Rosenberg and Wolfe note that a second volume was scrapped in 2004 due to “difficulties in obtaining permissions from some artists involved.” Hopefully, some time in the future, we might be able to see not only more volumes of the recorded work, but an expanded edition of this wonderful documentary. Until then, this DVD is an excellent addition to the bluegrass lovers video library.

Related posts:

  1. Working Girl Blues: The Life & Music of Hazel Dickens – Hazel Dickens and Bill C. Malone
  2. Jim Lauderdale – The Bluegrass Diaries
  3. Between Ragged and Right: Bluegrass Explosion
  4. Bluegrass Explosion 2007, pt. 1
  5. Merle Haggard – The Bluegrass Sessions

This website uses IntenseDebate comments, but they are not currently loaded because either your browser doesn't support JavaScript, or they didn't load fast enough.

Comments are closed.

Americana Roots is Digg proof thanks to caching by WP Super Cache