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Bluegrass

Raven

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Bluegrass music is a form of American roots music, and is a sub-genre of country music. It has roots in Scottish, English, Welsh and Irish traditional music. Bluegrass was inspired by the music of immigrants from the United Kingdom and Ireland (particularly the Scotch-Irish immigrants in Appalachia), and African-Americans, particularly through genres such as jazz and blues. In bluegrass, as in some forms of jazz, one or more instruments each takes its turn playing the melody and improvising around it, while the others perform accompaniment; this is especially typified in tunes called breakdowns. This is in contrast to old-time music, in which all instruments play the melody together or one instrument carries the lead throughout while the others provide accompaniment. Traditional bluegrass is typically based on a small set of acoustic stringed instruments including mandolin, acoustic guitar, banjo, fiddle, resonator guitar and upright bass, with or without vocals.



Bluegrass as a style developed during the mid-1940s. Because of war rationing, recording was limited during that time, and it would be most accurate to say that bluegrass was played some time after World War II, but no earlier. As with any musical genre, no one person can claim to have invented it. Rather, bluegrass is an amalgam of old-time music, country, ragtime and jazz. Nevertheless, bluegrass's beginnings can be traced to one band. Today Bill Monroe is referred to as the founding father of bluegrass music; the bluegrass style was named for his band, the Blue Grass Boys, formed in 1939. The 1945 addition of banjo player Earl Scruggs, who played with a three-finger roll originally developed by Snuffy Jenkins and others but now almost universally known as Scruggs style, is considered the key moment in the development of this genre. (Jenkins, in interviews, has said he learned it from Rex Brooks and Smith Hammett in the 1920s.)



 
I like bluegrass but don't like country. I never knew much of the stuff you said.
 
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Glad to teach you summit haha
 
Resurrecting this thread instead of making a whole new one. Will update it with band bios and videos etc.



Just discovered these - Old Crow Medicine Show



Old Crow Medicine Show is a folk/country group from Nashville, Tennessee. Along with original songs, the band performs many pre-World War II blues and folk songs. The style of music they perform is sometimes called alt-country, but today more often referred to as Americana.



Their 2004 album “O.C.M.S.” was selected by CMT (Country Music Television) as one of the top-10 bluegrass albums of that year. Their current tour includes bars, festivals, and larger venues. They are best experienced in smaller settings, where their infectious high-energy style electrifies the crowd, often a mixture of older listeners and 20-somethings.



They make frequent guest appearances on A Prairie Home Companion.



The song Wagon Wheel is written based off a chorus composed by Bob Dylan for the film Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a9zEMuP-Puc



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uO0UQc8YKV8
 
I think bluegrass music was around a long time before WWII, but maybe nobody actually hung that name on it until then.



Some standards in the genera go back one hell of a lot further, such as the song below, although the example is many things, none of them traditional... ... traditional... well. It is many things, none of them traditional anything.



I use it because I did an article on the song several years ago, and this threat reminded me of



Where did you come from, where did you go, where did you come from Cotton Eyed Nebulous?

themediadesk.com/newfiles2/Nebulous.htm



The Video of the Country Sisters doing their version. And it is far from the worst version of the song I saw that day. (we won't talk about Rednex from Sweden of all places, they're mentioned in the article.





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





this is also mentioned in the article....



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