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	<title>The Bluegrass Blog &#187; Danny Paisley</title>
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	<description>News at the speed of Bluegrass!</description>
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		<title>Light In The Window</title>
		<link>http://www.thebluegrassblog.com/light-in-the-window/</link>
		<comments>http://www.thebluegrassblog.com/light-in-the-window/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 03 May 2009 15:08:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Richard Thompson</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bluegrass recording news]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Danny Paisley]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[High Windy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kenny & Amanda Smith]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Longview]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mashville Brigade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Infamous Stringdusters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Williams & Clark Expedition]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[<a href=http://www.thebluegrassblog.com/light-in-the-window/><img src=http://www.thebluegrassblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/.thumbs/.mercury.jpg class=imgtfe hspace=5 align=left  border=0></a>This column, containing brief reviews of recent CD releases by Richard Thompson, is published in the current (Spring 2009) edition of British Bluegrass News. As it is a lengthy piece, we will break it into two parts, and run the rest next Sunday.
A series of rambles about CDs by bluegrassmercury‚Ä¶
A big bundle of CDs has [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.thebluegrassblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/mercury.jpg" title="Richard F. Thompson aka bluegrassmercury" rel="lightbox"><img src="http://www.thebluegrassblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/.thumbs/.mercury.jpg" alt="Richard F. Thompson aka bluegrassmercury" title="Richard F. Thompson aka bluegrassmercury" class="alignright" border="0" width="120" height="80" /></a><em>This column, containing brief reviews of recent CD releases by Richard Thompson, is published in the current (Spring 2009) edition of British Bluegrass News. As it is a lengthy piece, we will break it into two parts, and run the rest next Sunday.</em></p>
<p>A series of rambles about CDs by bluegrassmercury‚Ä¶</p>
<p>A big bundle of CDs has landed on my desk in the recent past. They include those by Danny Paisley, the Infamous Stringdusters, Williams &amp; Clark Expedition, Kenny &amp; Amanda Smith Band, Daughters Of Bluegrass, High Windy, Gold Heart, Cherryholmes, Earl Scruggs, The Mashville Brigade, Crowe Brothers, Ralph Stanley II, Longview, Big Country Bluegrass.<br />
<em><br />
<a href="http://www.infamousstringdusters.com" title="Visit The Infamous Stringdusters online">The Infamous Stringdusters</a> </em>- Travis Book (bass, vocals), Jesse Cobb (mandolin), Andy Falco (guitar), Jeremy Garrett (fiddle, vocals), Andy Hall (dobro, vocals) and Chris Pandolphi (banjo) &#8211; are a bunch of young honchos who have just released their second album. This self-titled collection (Sugar Hill 4043) is growing on me. Book&#8217;s soulful vocals shine on <em>Won‚Äòt Be Coming Back</em>, the melodic <em>Bound For Tennessee</em> and the bluesy <em>Get It While You Can</em>. Garrett is a fine vocalist as well, as demonstrated on <em>Three Days In July</em> (historians, think Gettysburg, 1863), <em>I Wonder</em> and <em>You Can‚Äòt Handle The Truth</em>. There&#8217;s three enjoyable instrumentals in <em>Glass Elevator</em> by Pandolphi, <em>Golden Ticket</em> by Cobb and <em>Black Rock</em> by Hall, keeping interest going until the end. Overall the sextet produces a warm, full sound with fiddle and Dobro ¬Æ prominent, rather than just having one or other, as a lot of groups do.</p>
<p>There aren&#8217;t any surprises on <a href="http://www.dannypaisley.com/" title="Visit Danny Paisley online">Danny Paisley&#8217;s</a> <em>The Room Over Mine</em> (Rounder 0589); he continues where he and his father left off. The 13-tack collection epitomizes the hard-driving Galax area mountain-style of bluegrass, with fiddle kick-offs and driving banjo ringing loud and clear. There‚Äòs a couple of outstanding new ‚Äòold&#8217; songs in Chris Stuart&#8217;s opener, <em>Don&#8217;t Throw Mamma&#8217;s Flowers Away</em> and <em>Drowning Sailor</em>, both of which suit Paisley to a ‚ÄòT&#8217;. Most of the rest are bluegrass versions of songs from the classic country catalogue, with a couple from his dad&#8217;s repertoire, now re-done. In the former category are <em>The Convict And The Rose</em>, written by Betty Chapin and Robert A. King and recorded by Marty Robbins and Charlie Moore among others, <em>I Thought I Heard You Calling My Name</em>, done in a honk-tonk style with walking bass and <em>I&#8217;m Coming Back But I Don&#8217;t Know When</em>, a song Danny first heard done by Charlie Monroe.</p>
<p>In the second group are <em>At the End of a Long Lonely Day</em>, now done in different way and with different lyrics and <em>A Memory of You</em>, previously recorded by Jim and Jesse. Donnie Eldreth Jr does a great job having learned how to follow Danny&#8217;s lead singing and does likewise when he is singing lead as on <em>Another Bridge to Burn</em>, a song from Ray Price&#8217;s repertoire. Those Paisleys and the Lundy brothers know how to do it and they do it exceptionally well.<span id="more-5793"></span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.highwindyband.com" title="Visit High Windy online">High Windy</a> is a North Carolina-based quintet that has been together for a few years. <em>A Greater Storm</em> (on the Mountain Home label, # 11292) is their first album. I have been listening to this CD for a while now and get a lot of enjoyment each time that I play it, which is often.</p>
<p>How would I describe High Windy? They&#8217;re not traditional, they&#8217;re not contemporary, they are both at the same time. If I were to mention that the banjo player, Patrick McDougal, wrote the hit song <em>Wheels</em> for Dan Tyminski, then perhaps you will understand what I am saying. McDougal wrote five of the songs featured on this album, including <em>Stuck in the Rain</em>, the gospel song <em>The Richest Man to God</em>, <em>Dance Around the Daisies</em>, which has an old-time and Celtic edge, and <em>Four Winds,</em> all of which McDougal sings with great authority and soul, with a slight mountain edge.</p>
<p>Shane Lail (guitar) sings lead on five songs also, three of which, <em>Love of a Lifetime, Good Ole Days</em> and <em>Coming Home</em>, are written by him. He has a slightly lighter voice, but that doesn&#8217;t detract from his soulfulness. Last but by no means least in terms of song writing ability is mandolin player, Ty Gilpin&#8217;s <em>Iron Horse</em>, an ode to the fact that the industrial age didn&#8217;t always bring a good life. Anchoring everything is Mark Davis on bass and harmony vocals. While Tim Gardner plays some excellent fiddle lines and clawhammer banjo on <em>Dance Around the Daisies</em>, as well as providing harmony vocals on three songs. High Windy has been getting a considerable amount of air play and is a band that should go very far. Very highly recommended.</p>
<p><em>Brand New Set Of Blue</em>s is the fifth career CD for <a href="http://www.williamsandclarkexpedition.com/" title="Visit Williams &amp; Clark Expedition online">Williams &amp; Clark Expedition</a>, a quartet from Sparta, Tennessee. The Williams referred to is, in the first instance, Blake Williams, well known as the banjo player for Bill Monroe for many years. Additionally, there is Kimberly Williams, the bass player and Blake&#8217;s wife, who shares the lead vocal duties with guitarist Wayne Southard. Bobby Clark, (mandolin, vocals), from Oklahoma originally, but living in Nashville for the past 25 years, working with Vassar Clements, Larry McNeely, Peter Rowan, the Bluegrass Cardinals and Mike Snider, completes the line-up. They are ably assisted by Tim Crouch (fiddle), Buck White (piano) and harmony singers Claire Lynch and Jonathan East.</p>
<p>The members of the band provide almost all of the 13 numbers here, many from Blake Williams or from Williams in collaboration with Southards. Williams composed the banjo showcase <em>Highlands Ramble</em> and Clark the mandolin piece <em>Jalapeno Quickstep</em>. The album begins with the mid-tempo title song, followed by the bouncy <em>Destiny&#8217;s Highway</em> then the more sedate <em>In My Heart</em>. Other highlights are the singing of Southards on <em>(Love is Coming to) A Heart Near You</em>, the up-tempo gospel song <em>Travelin&#8217; Heaven&#8217;s Road</em> which Southards leads with Ms Williams harmonising, similarly another gospel number <em>Marching</em>, on which the roles are reversed, the jazzy fiddle, the piano solo and the split guitar/mandolin break on the swinging <em>Goodbye Heartache (Hello You)</em> and the waltz-like <em>Heaven On Earth</em>, with Ms Lynch singing the harmony part.</p>
<p>Anybody who has seen this band live will know that Blake Williams is a bit of a comedian; they will be pleased to know that there is a bonus track of some jokes, obviously recorded at a festival or concert. Clark, Southards and Williams are all virtuoso pickers and that element of their talents that is given as great a profile as the vocals from Ms Williams and Southards.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.myspace.com/mashvillebrigade" title="Visit Mashville Brigade on MySpace">The Mashville Brigade</a> is a &quot;young but seasoned&quot; assembly of pickers who periodically moonlight away from their regular bands by playing at the world-famous Station Inn. Rural Rhythm Records has released an album, <em>Bluegrass Smash Hits Volume 1</em> (Rural Rhythm 325), of recordings ‚Äòlive&#8217; at the Station Inn. I say &quot;live&quot; in this instance to indicate that all tracks were done without any overdubs or editing, rather than in front of an audience.</p>
<p>Anyway, the Brigade consists of Randy Barnes (acoustic bass), Ashby Frank (mandolin, vocals), Aaron McDaris (banjo, vocals), Jim Van Cleve (fiddle) and Darrell Webb (guitar, vocals), who play their way through a set of 16 songs and tunes of long-standing popularity. Individual credits aren&#8217;t given on a track-by-track basis, but Webb and Frank share the lead vocal duties with McDaris providing the harmonies. Although there isn&#8217;t any doubt that the material chosen is, in the present-day parlance, a &#8216;hit&#8217;, the group digs a little deeper to avoid the blindingly obvious like <em>Rocky Top</em>. Without rejecting their grounding, the Brigade play their arrangements of <em>My Home&#8217;s Across the Blue Ridge Mountains, White House Blues, Bury me beneath the Willow, I&#8217;ll Remember you Love in my Prayers, Ain&#8217;t Nobody Gonna Miss Me When I&#8217;m Gone, Little Maggie, Going Across The Sea</em> and <em>Salt Creek</em> with a modern attitude. I bet they&#8217;re fun to watch.</p>
<p><em>Live And Learn</em> (Rebel 1828) is the latest CD from the <a href="http://www.kenny-amandasmith.com" title="Visit Kenny and Amanda Smith online">Kenny and Amanda Smith Band</a>. It features 13 tracks with Amanda Smith taking the lead on all but three, those featuring husband Kenny. The duo share the harmony work along with guest Alan Bartram. Zachary McLamb (bass) and Aaron Williams (mandolin) round out the band. The quartet is further supplemented by Ron Stewart (fiddle and banjo).</p>
<p>Ms Smith&#8217;s demonstrates the vocal capacity to deal with slower numbers such as <em>Ramblers Blues, Just One More Time, Words You Use</em> and <em>Man Looks On The Outside</em> as well as the up-tempo ones like the rockabilly <em>I&#8217;d Jump The Mississippi, You&#8217;re Gonna See Me Shine</em> and <em>Heartbreak Express</em>. The first group appeal more so than the latter. The stand-out track is the well-arranged traditional song <em>Cruel Willie</em> with excellent close harmony and top-notch fiddle playing. The tracks on which Kenny Smith sings lead are well programmed into the mix, <em>Changing</em> kicking off the album with <em>Randall Collins</em> and <em>Icicle Canyon</em> placed at strategic intervals. Bluegrass very much in the modern groove.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.myspace.com/longviewbluegrassband" title="Visit Longview on MySpace">Longview</a> is an ad-hoc band, a combination of pickers from other bands doing a bit of moonlighting. Their latest CD, <em>Deep In the Mountains</em> (Rounder 0578), is the fourth using the Longview name. However, the personnel here is slightly different from previously, Dudley Connell, Joe Mullins and Glen Duncan having been replaced by Lou Reid, JD Crowe and Ron Stewart. James King, Don Rigsby and Marshall Wilborn remain from the original aggregation.</p>
<p>Just like the Bluegrass Album Band, Longview re-energises the old songs; neglected gems from classic bands or lesser-known regional acts. I say old songs, <em>Room at the Top of the Stairs, Baptism of Jessie Taylor</em> and <em>Weathered Grey Stone</em> are relatively recent, of course. It&#8217;s great to see bands mining the Dudley Connell song book. King, Rigsby and Reid share the bulk of the vocal duties, singing either lead or harmony, with Stewart, Crowe and Wilborn covering the baritone part. Crowe sings a low tenor on <em>At the First Fall of Snow</em>. Other classic songs with matching performances are <em>Don&#8217;t Leave Me Alone, Eating Out Of Your Hand, Old Log Cabin, I Love You Yet, Georgia Bound</em> and <em>I&#8217;ll Love Nobody But You</em>. Heart-warming stuff!</p>
<p><em>To be continued&#8230; </em></p>
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		<title>Danny Paisley debut release on Rounder</title>
		<link>http://www.thebluegrassblog.com/danny-paisley-debut-release-details-made-known/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Apr 2008 12:21:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Richard Thompson</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bluegrass recording news]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Danny Paisley]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rounder Records]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.thebluegrassblog.com/danny-paisley-debut-release-details-made-known/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<a href=http://www.thebluegrassblog.com/danny-paisley-debut-release-details-made-known/><img src=http://www.thebluegrassblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/4/.thumbs/.Danny_Paisley.jpg class=imgtfe hspace=5 align=left  border=0></a>Rounder Records has announced details of the debut release by Danny Paisley and the Southern Grass. The CD entitled The Room Over Mine (#0589) is scheduled for release on June 24. It is the band&#8217;s first release since signing with Rounder Records in August 2005.
Recorded during three separate sessions at Bias Studios, Springfield, Virginia, the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.thebluegrassblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/4/Danny_Paisley.jpg" title="Danny Paisley" rel="lightbox"><img src="http://www.thebluegrassblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/4/.thumbs/.Danny_Paisley.jpg" alt="Danny Paisley" title="Danny Paisley" class="alignright" border="0" height="80" width="120" /></a>Rounder Records has announced details of the debut release by <a href="http://www.southerngrass.net" title="Visit Danny Paisley online">Danny Paisley and the Southern Grass.</a> The CD entitled <em>The Room Over Mine </em>(#0589) is scheduled for release on June 24. It is the band&#8217;s first release since signing with Rounder Records in August 2005.</p>
<p>Recorded during three separate sessions at Bias Studios, Springfield, Virginia, the material featured on the album comes from the classic country music period, a more recent country song, old band favourites, two instrumentals and a couple of newly written songs.</p>
<p>Of the newer songs, there is one penned by Chris Stuart and Ivan Rosenberg, <em>Don&#8217;t Throw Mamma&#8217;s Flowers Away</em>, and a Stan Keach song that is tailor-made for the Southern Grass treatment, <em>The Drowning Sailor.</em></p>
<p>Other tracks include <em>Raising Cain In Texas,</em> a song that singer Gene Watson recorded and was a Top Twenty hit on the Billboard country chart for him in 1980, which Danny arranged Jimmy Martin-style and a few older country songs: <em>The Convict And The Rose,</em> written by Betty Chapin and Robert A. King and recorded by Marty Robbins and Charlie Moore among others; <em>At the End of a Long Lonely Day,</em> a song that Danny&#8217;s father recorded, but now done in a different way and with different lyrics; <em>I Thought I Heard You Calling My Name,</em> done in a honky-tonk style with walking bass; <em>A Memory of You,</em> another song that Bob Paisley sang and that was previously recorded by Jim and Jesse; <em>I&#8217;m Coming Back But I Don&#8217;t Know When,</em> a song Danny first heard done by Charlie Monroe and <em>Another Bridge to Burn,</em> a song that A&amp;R man Ken Irwin sent Danny&#8217;s way. Donnie Eldreth Jr. does a great job singing this song from the repertoires of Little Jimmy Dickens and Ray Price.</p>
<p>The band do a reprise of the popular <em>The Room Over Mine,</em> recorded a few years ago for one of Bob Paisley&#8217;s Brandywine CDs, and <em>Leaving Detroit,</em> a Charlie Moore song that Danny did for Rounder [Rounder 0142, 1981], along with a couple of old instrumentals, <em>Sweet Potato Rag</em> and <em>Mountain Sally Ann,</em> the latter of which finds Bobby Lundy using a special banjo tuning to get an old-time sound.<span id="more-4113"></span></p>
<p>Paisley is understandably delighted ‚Ä¶‚Ä¶‚Ä¶.</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;I am very pleased with the new album. I feel the recording caught the sound and feel of the band perfectly. With producer Ken Irwin&#8217;s help, we were able to record some old songs that I&#8217;ve wanted to do for some time. Some are straight out hard-driving bluegrass, while others are old country tunes which we have reworked and made fresh again.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>The Southern Grass comprises Danny Paisley (guitar, lead and tenor vocals), Michael Paisley (upright bass), TJ Lundy (fiddle), Bobby Lundy (banjo and baritone vocals) and Donnie Eldreth Jr. (mandolin, lead and tenor vocals). Also included on the sessions was-former-band-member Josh Daniels (guitar), who toured with The Southern Grass for a little over a year.</p>
<p>The band has been very busy on the road, with club dates a new feature of their schedule. On a grander scale the band has visited Europe and played as the headline act at 10th European World of Bluegrass Festival, Voorthuizen, The Netherlands, in May, and played several dates in Australia, most notably the Harrietville Bluegrass Convention, last November. Arrangements are already in place for a busy summer, including an appearance at an Irish music festival in early September.</p>
<p>You can find their full schedule on the band&#8217;s <a href="http://www.southerngrass.net" title="Visit Danny Paisley online">web site.</a></p>
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		<title>Singing with Danny Paisley</title>
		<link>http://www.thebluegrassblog.com/singing-with-danny-paisley/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 29 Sep 2006 20:29:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>timkruzic</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[The B]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Danny Paisley]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[It was about 4:30 am on Thursday night after the awards show.&#160; I was getting tired and about to pack it in for the night but decided with a few friends to go cruising the hotel one last time for the night. &#160;I knew that Noam Pikelny, Danny Barnes, and Casey Driessen had been jamming [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It was about 4:30 am on Thursday night after the awards show.&nbsp; I was getting tired and about to pack it in for the night but decided with a few friends to go cruising the hotel one last time for the night. &nbsp;I knew that Noam Pikelny, Danny Barnes, and Casey Driessen had been jamming on the 20<sup>th</sup> floor at the end of the hallway with some guys because I saw part of that jam. &nbsp;Since I was with Tony Watt (who shares a house with Noam in Nashville), we decided to go back to the 20<sup>th</sup> floor to search out Noam. &nbsp;Well, that session was done and there was nobody around.&nbsp; So we started down the floors searching.</p>
<p>We came upon the Grey Fox suite and heard some music. &nbsp;Clearly, adult beverages had been consumed and these few folks were having a good time. &nbsp;I saw Jimmy Rollins from South  Carolina (a long time friend of mine since he grew up in Maryland) playing banjo with Danny Paisley playing guitar. &nbsp;Joe Zauner, a banjo player from Maryland, was also playing guitar and Mary Burdette was playing bass.</p>
</p>
<p>Jimmy was kind of sitting on the opposite side of the room from Danny. &nbsp;Jimmy got up and said &quot;I want to come over here and sing some tenor.&quot; &nbsp;If I can&#8217;t play banjo in a jam session, I sure like to sing baritone. &nbsp;So I got to sing baritone in the trios on some bluegrass chestnuts like &quot;I Hope You&#8217;ve Learned,&quot; &nbsp;&quot;When My Blue Moon Turns to Gold Again,&quot; and some other classics. &nbsp;On the second song (Blue Moon Turns to Gold) when it came to the end of the second line and the baritone hits the sweet note on the third, Danny looked up at me and smiled and nodded. &nbsp;What a great moment.&nbsp; It was after 5:00 when Danny decided to take a smoke break, so I headed off to bed. &nbsp;Another moment for the highlights of the 2006 IBMA week.</p>
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