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|    alt.music.bluegrass    |    Cotton-pickin twangy southern goodness    |    2,344 messages    |
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|    Message 2,180 of 2,344    |
|    Mitch Dickson to Jim Cate    |
|    Re: "Real" Bluegrass Groups?    |
|    19 May 09 09:28:17    |
      From: mitchelldickson@bellsouth.net              Jim, you are NOT going to find any regional groups at Amazon. That is not       going to happen :) Take a cursory listen to the bluegrass station on XM or       Dish and you will find a handful of the "picks" promoted by the major       labels. These represent maybe 1 % of bluegrass on a good day!               To hear the core of bluegrass you got to go to the regional and amateur       festivals that dot the landscape in the spring and summer. The "Pros" don't       really care for us you know. They want it all to themselves and have       forgotten that Bluegrass is a product of the people, not 16th avenue in       Nashville. Occasionally a few of these professionals blunder into a       situation where they have to follow the likes of an Avery Trace, or a       Southern Breeze and get their hat handed to them :) (this is similar to the       old rule that you never follow kids or anyone in a Buick)              Six years ago we, Southern Cross, arranged and recorded a sound track for a       documentary for PBS called "12 days in Dayton". That Documentary went on to       win an Emmy! Know how many bluegrass groups can say they did the soundtrack       for an Emmy winner? Much less an amatuer group :) There is some great new       music out there Jim, but at Amazon you will not get past the limited       selection you will find on Sirius Bluegrass. Don't get me wrong, there are       some great professionals! I buy anything by Carl Jackson, J.D. Crowe,       Skaggs, and John Starling to name a few. I am just saying that there is       more to bluegrass than just a select handful.              I know you have heard Crowe, Jim Mills, and Kenny Ingram play banjo, but       have you ever listened to Raymond Fairchild, Ed Allison, Gary Davis or Ed       James play one? They can bring it son! Ron Stuart and Stuart Duncan can       play fiddle as well as anyone that ever squatted between a pair of shoes!       But Keith WIlliams, Chuck Nation, Tim Passmore, and Aubrey Haney can deal       with the Devil's Box themselves!              Mitch                     "Jim Cate" |
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