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   Message 834 of 2,344   
   Grover C. McCoury III to All   
   Bluegrass Singer Jimmy Martin Dies at 77   
   15 May 05 12:00:32   
   
   XPost: alt.music.country.classic, rec.music.country.western   
   From: gcmccoury@yahoo.com   
      
   Pioneering Bluegrass Singer, Guitarist Jimmy Martin Dies in Nashville   
   Hospice at 77   
   May. 14, 2005 (AP) - Jimmy Martin, a pioneering bluegrass singer and   
   guitarist who performed with the Blue Grass Boys and many other performers,   
   died Saturday. He was 77.   
      
   Martin died in a Nashville hospice, more than a year after he was diagnosed   
   with bladder cancer, said his son, Lee Martin.   
      
   "He loved bluegrass music, country music. Bill Monroe was his idol and   
   someone he patterned himself after musically," Lee Martin said, referring to   
   bluegrass legend Bill Monroe, head of the Blue Grass Boys.   
      
   After performing as lead vocalist for the Blue Grass Boys periodically   
   through 1955, Martin formed his own band, the Sunny Mountain Boys, and   
   recorded with Decca records for 18 years.   
      
   "In his heyday, he could take an audience of any size and have them eating   
   out of his hand," said Sunny Mountain Boy member Bill Emerson. "He'd just   
   smoke those people, and they'd be waiting in line for him when he got   
   offstage."   
      
   Martin recorded several bluegrass standards, including "Rock Hearts,"   
   "Sophronie," "Hold Watcha Got," "Widow Maker" and "The Sunny Side of the   
   Mountain."   
      
   Martin was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Association's   
   Hall of Honor in 1995. His life was also the subject of an independent   
   documentary film, "King of Bluegrass: The Life and Times of Jimmy Martin,"   
   which was released in 2003.   
      
   "Jimmy's strong, high vocal range pushed (Bill) Monroe's tenor up into the   
   sky, helping shape what has become known as the 'high lonesome sound,'"   
   wrote George Goehl in the liner notes to "Don't Cry To Me," a compilation   
   that accompanied the documentary.   
      
   According to the film's Web site, Martin was fired at the age of 21 for   
   singing on the job at a factory in Morristown. He then went to see the Grand   
   Ole Opry in Nashville and talked his way backstage, where he persuaded   
   Monroe to sing a couple of songs with him.   
      
   In the late 1950s and 1960s, Martin performed on both the "Louisiana   
   Hayride" and "WWVA Wheeling Jamboree," which were well-known country music   
   shows. He also made guest appearances on Nashville's Grand Ole Opry, but   
   never became a regular cast member, which was his childhood dream.   
      
   Martin collaborated with many other artists throughout his career, including   
   the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. His voice was the first heard on the Dirt Band's   
   "Will the Circle Be Unbroken" album in 1972, and his appearances on   
   subsequent albums brought his feisty spirit to audiences that might never   
   have attended a bluegrass festival.   
      
   "Jimmy's temperature is higher than the rest of ours," Dirt Band member Jeff   
   Hanna said in a 2002 interview. "He's a wild man in the best sense of the   
   term, and he's the only one who brought the fire of rockabilly music to   
   bluegrass."   
      
   Martin performed until his later years, usually from April until October. He   
   also served as a mentor to many musicians, including J.D. Crowe and Paul   
   Williams.   
      
      
   On the Net:   
      
   http://www.kingofbluegrass.com/   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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