Bill Monroe & BG Boys in the smokies ca 1969

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  • čas přidán 17. 08. 2015
  • This is a live performance of Bill Monroe & The Blue Grass Boys in the Smokey Mountains.
    If you enjoy this please consider a donation to help me continue the output.
    www.paypal.me/TJohansson
    I don't know exactly where so any information regarding location would be welcome. Banjoist Rual Yarbrough was hired for the first time on 3/24/1969 so we can assume that the recording of this performance took place in that year. The MC points out that Bill Monroe had been a member of the Opry for 29 years at the time of the taping of the show and - of course he joined The Grand Ole Opry in the fall of 19 and 39.
    James Monroe - Guitar
    Kenny Baker - Fiddle
    Rual Yarborough - Banjo
    Douglas B "Ranger Doug" Green - Bass
    U P D A T E !!! Ranger Doug Green posted some valuable comments below... recording date was May 31. 1969 in Gatlinburg...Thank you very much, Doug...
  • Hudba

Komentáře • 52

  • @lindseywalker6925
    @lindseywalker6925 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I met a 19 boy from Rising Fawn Georgia at Ralph's festival in McClure. We became friends immediately. That fall he called me and said Bill's playing a Moose lodge in Grayson in January. We met. We sat on the floor in front of row 1 for the whole show. This same lineup. It cost $6 @ the door and fountain Pepsi in wax cups were 15 cents. One of the biggest nights in my life.

  • @randyjones7818
    @randyjones7818 Před 5 lety +7

    Baker can kill a fiddle tune at any age..even in 1969.there..awesome fiddle licks on that tape..he is the king of bluegrass fiddle..kenny baker..love to watch this tape..he is so good.muleskinner blues..rj.

  • @rangerdoug193
    @rangerdoug193 Před 9 lety +11

    In Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Great memories.

  • @petercyr3508
    @petercyr3508 Před 3 lety +2

    I told Ranger Doug one time that him being a Bluegrass Boy was kind of like being an astronaut. Very select group.

  • @rangerdoug193
    @rangerdoug193 Před 9 lety +19

    It was filmed May 31st, 1969!

    • @JanJohanssonmusic
      @JanJohanssonmusic  Před 9 lety +2

      +Ranger Doug
      Thank you very much for the infor, Doug...

    • @redlinemando
      @redlinemando Před 4 lety +1

      @Ranger Doug Thank you for your great contributions to music!!!!!!! The time jumpers were one of my all time favorite groups!!!!!!! So much talent & respect for each other. I actually got to travel some with Dawn & Kenny in Amsterdam & Norway back in the summer of 2008. I was playing mandolin for Audie Blaylock at the time & that trip was an awesome experience for me!!!!!!!

  • @brasspick
    @brasspick Před 8 lety +7

    Rual Yarborough, in my opinion played some of the best backup Banjo ever. Banjos have a tendancy to override. yet Rual blended his licks in behind the lead singing and playing and matched like it was molded that way. Ray Goins had that touch; fit so well you could barely tell who was who.. There's an art to this, folks!

    • @redlinemando
      @redlinemando Před 4 lety +2

      @brasspick It's all about listening to everybody else. Honor thy vocalists & then come in strong when it comes your time!! Bluegrass 101 & these guys knew how to get it done. The Bluegrass Album Band knew how to do it too. That's why there could be 6 of them on stage at one time. No one was there to outshine the other. That's what makes a band. There's no I in band!!!! lol

    • @CAROLUSPRIMA
      @CAROLUSPRIMA Před rokem +2

      Thank you for mentioning Ray Goins. Incredible musician and great guy.

  • @MrMusicguyma
    @MrMusicguyma Před 7 lety +3

    Doug Green (here on bass) has been the guitarist and lead singer in Riders in the Sky for decades. Great swing rhythm guitarist and entertainer.

  • @MrRontac
    @MrRontac Před 9 lety +7

    Kenny Baker was the smoothest with a bow .... loved to listen to him fiddle Mule Skinner blues

    • @redlinemando
      @redlinemando Před 4 lety +1

      @Ronnie Tackett Kenny baker & Benny Martin had the best fiddle tone in bluegrass during that time!!

    • @MrRontac
      @MrRontac Před rokem

      @@redlinemando indeed 💯💯

  • @ericlewis2416
    @ericlewis2416 Před 8 lety +3

    love this Bluegrass is my top favorite

  • @tonymarcus1827
    @tonymarcus1827 Před 9 lety +17

    James Monroe looks terrified every time he has to play the G run in Uncle Pen...sometimes the simplest things are the hardest.

    • @klezmando
      @klezmando Před 9 lety +1

      +Tony Marcus It's the timing.

    • @MrMusicguyma
      @MrMusicguyma Před 7 lety +4

      James fudges the G run in Uncle Pen nearly every time. Unfortunately.

    • @sandyrothman2430
      @sandyrothman2430 Před 7 lety +5

      But not so simple if you've never done it! James had taken the guitar chair in the band that spring, having played bass for a few years just prior (with no musical background), and knowing only the basic guitar chords. As he did with the bass, James eventually became a good guitarist.

    • @MrMusicguyma
      @MrMusicguyma Před 7 lety +4

      Fitting the specific G run into Uncle Pen does require precise timing.

    • @Galvan198
      @Galvan198 Před 4 lety

      @@sandyrothman2430 "no musical background"? wasn't he Bill's Son??

  • @randyjones7818
    @randyjones7818 Před 5 lety +2

    Monroe's old 75000 loar.mando sounds awesome here..before the Gibson rework on it later..its a loud 50 year old mando there not touched..awesome..for the archives..rjones.

  • @donclark8673
    @donclark8673 Před 2 lety +1

    Goodness gracious that's good

  • @gomez8733
    @gomez8733 Před 7 lety +1

    Brasspick - great comment and I agree. Rual really understood support.

  • @nancyhall4376
    @nancyhall4376 Před 3 lety +1

    Love his music

  • @mikekirley
    @mikekirley Před 8 lety +1

    Wonderful stuff Doug.

  • @fuzzyallan
    @fuzzyallan Před 9 lety +1

    nice. thanks

  • @procol0616
    @procol0616 Před 7 lety +5

    Wanna play Bluegrass fiddle?
    Listen to Kenny here on Muleskinner and learn it.
    Then, listen to what you ended up playing, then re-listen, then learn it again.,LOL
    He was simply the best--he Compliments, then, stays clear of the vocals, But, at
    the same time ADDS to them.. Elegant Mr. Baker ..you are very much missed......

  • @user-cf9np9cy8q
    @user-cf9np9cy8q Před rokem +1

    man kenney Baker could burn up a fiddle beautiful talent!

  • @andrewmartin538
    @andrewmartin538 Před 2 lety

    Wow. This just..I dont know, it just gives me faith in mankind again .

  • @randyjones7818
    @randyjones7818 Před 5 lety +2

    Kenny.b.is 45 here..1968 he starts play in for Monroe band till I guess.81 or 82...this is not with his famous acuff.black fiddle that he owned later...which made his playing a lot louder on stage..r

    • @mosswareproaudio6328
      @mosswareproaudio6328 Před rokem +1

      Kenny started playing with Bill in 1955 as I remember. I think I have some tapes of those shows that I rescued from a tape over with another type of machine. There he is also doing the part of Spark Plug and singing parts. The instrumental album is another source. He went back to the coal mines at one point, then joined again a few years later. Then he walked off the stage in 1984.

  • @billytyler2380
    @billytyler2380 Před 4 lety +1

    Ten Brooks

  • @mosswareproaudio6328
    @mosswareproaudio6328 Před rokem +1

    Doug Green got much better on the bass in the years to come. He sounds great on the show they did at Humboldt University in 1973. James also got much better with G-Runs. Baker told me that in the 1960s, the later 1960s, he got some instruction from a violinist in Washington which changed his fiddle sound to what you hear on this tape and later. Before then he had more of a scrubbing sound. You can tell in his earlier, maybe 1950s, performances. He also didn't yet have Blackie then.

  • @colinburns6664
    @colinburns6664 Před 9 lety +1

    Who is the MC doing the introduction?

  • @rickpardue1431
    @rickpardue1431 Před 9 lety +2

    weedoggies granny! thanks Jan that ain't no "candygrass"

  • @billylittleton3395
    @billylittleton3395 Před 2 lety

    Father Jimmie Martin the king bill the father

  • @WildwoodvalleyBoy
    @WildwoodvalleyBoy Před 6 lety +6

    ....about that 'Uncle Penn' G lick,....James is starting it on the wrong note,...trying to get one too many notes in,...that first note doesn't belong !

    • @redlinemando
      @redlinemando Před 4 lety +1

      @wildwood valleyboy He does the same thing on the intro of "Muleskinner Blues". There's no doubt that Bill let him know about it later. lol

  • @lindseywalker6925
    @lindseywalker6925 Před rokem +1

    Bill wasn't the King of Bluegrass. He was the father of bluegrass. Jimmy Martin was the King of Bluegrass.

  • @bjlittleton8074
    @bjlittleton8074 Před 5 lety

    The father not the king j martin the king

  • @jasonpope4828
    @jasonpope4828 Před 7 lety

    Are you sure this date is correct?? 🤔

    • @JanJohanssonmusic
      @JanJohanssonmusic  Před 7 lety +1

      Jason Pope - The date info was given by Ranger Doug Greene who played bass in the video above.