Saturday 19 June 2021

Lester Flatt born 19 June 1914


Lester Raymond Flatt (June 19, 1914 – May 11, 1979) was an American bluegrass guitarist and mandolinist, best known for his collaboration with banjo picker Earl Scruggs in The Foggy Mountain Boys (popularly known as "Flatt and Scruggs").

Flatt's career spanned multiple decades, breaking out as a member of Bill Monroe's band during the 1940s and including multiple solo and collaboration works exclusive of Scruggs. He first reached a mainstream audience through his performance on "The Ballad of Jed Clampett", the theme for the network television series The Beverly Hillbillies, in the early 1960s.

Lester Flatt was born in Duncan's Chapel, Overton County, Tennessee to Nannie Mae Haney and Isaac Columbus Flatt and learned to play banjo from his father at an early age. He didn't particularly like the banjo, so quit that to pick up guitar before he was seven. By ten years old, Flatt was playing guitar and singing in local schools and churches.

As a teenager, he moved to North Carolina to work in a silk mill. While there, he married his wife, Gladys, with whom he began performing as a duo. When the mill shut down, the Flatts returned to Tennessee for a short time before moving to Virginia. As the result of a bout with rheumatoid arthritis, Flatt quit the mill permanently to focus on a career in music and played with a handful of groups, before being invited by Charlie Monroe to join the Kentucky Pardners in North Carolina. Charlie had Flatt playing mandolin and singing tenor, neither of which pleased Flatt too much.

Upon finally leaving the Kentucky Pardners, Charlie's brother Bill Monroe immediately invited Flatt to join his Blue Grass Boys as a guitar player and lead singer. His first gig with the band was in 1945 at the Grand Ole Opry, with no prior rehearsal. Soon after, banjo player Earl Scruggs joined the Boys, as well, and the group surged to popularity, holding down a rigorous tour schedule for nearly three years. Tired of the road, Scruggs left the band in 1948, followed soon after by Flatt and Cedric Rainwater. Together, the three formed Flatt & Scruggs' Foggy Mountain Boys, and for the next twenty years Flatt and Scruggs and the Foggy Mountain Boys were one of the most successful bands in bluegrass.


                             

The duo broke up in 1969, and although the reasons for the split were never made known, the most logical assumption is that Mr. Flatt resisted Mr. Scruggs's increasingly overt interest in pursuing a country‐rock fusion. Flatt formed a new group, the Nashville Grass, hiring most of the Foggy Mountain Boys to record and perform live shows, including the Grand Ole Opry. 

He performed at more than 50 colleges a year until illness forced him to cut back his schedule. Flatt had been hospitalized three times since 1975, when he had open‐heart surgery, and suffered a brain haemorrhage during November 1978. Yet he managed return in March 1979 to the stage of the Grand Old Opry, where he had been a fixture for 35 years. He entered Baptist Hospital on April 23 for treatment and evaluation of his heart condition where he died on 11 May 1979. He was 64 years old.

Some of the songs Flatt wrote through the years were “My Cabin in Caroline,” “Come Back Darling,” “I’ll Never Shed Another Tear,” “Down the Road,” “Head Over Heels in Love with You,” “Why Did You Wander,” “We’ll Meet Again, Sweetheart,” “I’m Gonna Sleep with One Eye Open,” “Bouquet in Heaven,” “God Loves His Children, “Get in Line, Brother,” “I’m Going to Make Heaven My Home,” “I’m Working on a Road to Gloryland,” “Be Ready for Tomorrow May Never Come,” “Little Girl [of Mine] in Tennessee,” “Don’t Get Above Your Raisin’,” “Cabin on the Hill” and “The Old Home Town.”

His role as lead singer and rhythm guitar player helped define the sound of traditional bluegrass music. He created a role in the Bluegrass Boys later filled by the likes of Jimmy Martin, Mac Wiseman, Peter Rowan and Del McCoury. His rich lead voice is unmistakable in hundreds of bluegrass standards. He is also remembered for his library of compositions. The Flatt songbook looms titanic for any student of American acoustic music. "Flatt and Scruggs" will always be remembered as one of the greatest duos in Bluegrass music and were inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1985.

He was posthumously made an inaugural inductee into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Honour in 1991. His hometown of Sparta, Tennessee held a bluegrass festival in his honour for a number of years, before being discontinued a few years prior to the death of the traditional host, resident Everette Paul England; Lester Flatt Memorial Bluegrass Day is part of the annual Liberty Square Celebration held in Sparta.

 (Edited from mainly Wikipedia & also New York Times)

13 comments:

boppinbob said...

A big thank you to Dennis who suggested today's celebrity birthday.

For “Lester Flatt - Flatt On Victor Plus More (6 CD Box - BCD 15 975 - 1999)” go here:

Part 1
https://workupload.com/file/xEJ9h3TRHsA

Part 2
https://workupload.com/file/skCfhYaA7t2

CD1
1: I've Heard The Wind Blow Before
2: Passing Through
3: I'll Never Understand
4: I'm A Man Of Constant Sorrow
5: Take Me Home To Mama
6: Before You Die
7: Shut Your Face, I'm Talking To Your Head
8: Walk Slow
9: I'll Figure My Loss
10: Don't Get Above Your Raisin'
11: I Think Of You
12: Girl Of The North Country
13: I Want To Come Home To You
14: Walk Right In
15: Cotton Fields
16: Foggy Mountain Breakdown
17: Sing A Little Baby To Sleep
18: Rainy Day Women #12 And 35

CD2
1: Highway 41
2: Walkin' The Railroad Tracks
3: Great Big Woman
4: I Live The Life Of Riley
5: I Been Walkin'
6: Aiken, South Carolina
7: Regina
8: Lil' Dave
9: Mississippi Flood
10: Don't Wake Me
11: Ten Years Of Heartaches
12: Before I Met You
13: Maiden's Prayer
14: Lookin' For A Break
15: Vic's Ride
16: Reuben James
17: See Ruby Fall
18: Rainbow Of My Dreams
19: She Belongs To Me

CD3
1: I Can't Tell The Boys From The Girls
2: Let Our Love Shine Through
3: Flatt Lonesome
4: Everybody Has One (But You)
5: I'll Be Over You
6: The Good Old Fashioned Way
7: Pick Away
8: She's A Little Bit Country
9: Backin' To Birmingham
10: Head Over Heels In Love
11: Father's Table Grace
12: Little Cabin Home On The Hill
13: Cabin On The Hill
14: Cedar Hill
15: Everything We Had Goin' Is Gone
16: The Bluebirds Singing For Me (& MAC WISEMAN)
17: We'll Meet Again Sweetheart (& MAC WISEMAN)
18: How Lonely Can You Get (& MAC WISEMAN)
19: Will You Be Loving Another Man(& MAC WISEMAN)
20: Sweetheart You Done Me Wrong (& MAC WISEMAN)
21: Homestead On The Farm (& MAC WISEMAN)
22: Jimmie Brown, The Newsboy (& MAC WISEMAN)
23: Now That You Have Me (& MAC WISEMAN)
24: I'll Never Love Another (& MAC WISEMAN)
25: You're The Best Of All The Leading Brands (&
26: MAC WISEMAN)
27: Love Is Like A Flower (& MAC WISEMAN)
28: Special (& MAC WISEMAN)

CD4
1: Don't Take It So Hard Mr. Webster
2: Up A Creek Without A Paddle
3: She Didn't Say Goodbye
4: Jesus Gold
5: Is Anybody Goin' North To Cincinnati?
6: Cuttin' The Grass
7: Good Ole You Know Who
8: I Got It On My Mind, Today
9: Kentucky Ridgerunner
10: Roll In My Sweet Baby's Arms
11: The Martha White Theme
12: You're Still Mine Tonight
13: I'll Stay Around (& MAC WISEMAN)
14: Salty Dog Blues (& MAC WISEMAN)
15: Just A Strand From A Yellow Curl (& WISEMAN)
16: Mama's And Daddy's Little Girl(& MAC WISEMAN)
17: Blue Ridge Cabin Home (& MAC WISEMAN)
18: Me And Your Memory (& MAC WISEMAN)
19: Waiting For The Boys To Come Home (& WISEMAN)
20: On The South Bound (& MAC WISEMAN)
21: I'm Waiting To Hear You Call Me Darling (&
22: MAC WISEMAN)
23: Are You Coming Back To Me (& MAC WISEMAN)
24: When You Are Lonely (& MAC WISEMAN)
25: You Can't Trust A Friend Anymore (& WISEMAN)
26: February Snow
27: It's Sad To Be Alone
28: Love Is The Key
29: Foggy Mountain Breakdown

boppinbob said...

CD5
1: Have You Come To Say Goodbye?
2: Her Sweet Love's Callin' Me
3: My Little Girl's Little Girl
4: Nashville Grass Breakdown
5: Don't Get Above Your Raisin'
6: Feudin' Banjos
7: The Country Boy
8: I'm Gonna Get My Picture Took
9: I'd Like To Have Papa Show Me Around
10: My Arms Will Make You Forget
11: No Place To Pillow My Head
12: The Haskel Stomp
13: One Bad Case Of The Blues
14: Love's Come Over Me
15: The Girl I Love Don't Pay Me No Mind LESTER FLATT & MAC WISEMAN
16: I'll Go Stepping Too LESTER FLATT & MAC WISEMAN
17: Ain't Nobody Gonna Miss Me When I'm Gone LESTER FLATT & MAC WISEMAN
18: I'm A Stranger In This World LESTER FLATT & MAC WISEMAN
19: There's More Pretty Girls Than One LESTER FLATT & MAC WISEMAN
20: When My Blue Moon Turns Too Gold Again LESTER FLATT & MAC WISEMAN
21: Over The Hills To The Poorhouse LESTER FLATT & MAC WISEMAN
22: 'Tis Sweet To Be Remembered LESTER FLATT & MAC WISEMAN
23: This Man Jesus
24: Crazy Life
25: She Left Because I Drink
26: I've Been Away So Long
27: McCormick String Picnic
28: Never-Ending Song Of Love
29: Before You Go
30: Country Living

CD6
1: Flint Hill Special
2: Lost All My Money
3: I'll Be All Smiles Tonight
4: Homestead On The Farm
5: Rawhide
6: Wabash Cannon Ball
7: Orange Blossom Special
8: Nine Pound Hammer
9: Get In Line Brother
10: The Fall Is A Lonesome Time For Me
11: I Know What It Means To Be Lonesome
12: Dig A Hole In The Meadow
13: Uncle Pen (BILL MONROE)
14: Blue Moon Of Kentucky (BILL MONROE)
15: My Old Used To Be (BILL MONROE)
16: Will You Be Lovin' Another Man (& B. MONROE)
17: My Little Cabin Home On The Hill (& MONROE)
18: Crying Holy Unto The Lord (& BILL MONROE)
19: Sally Goodin'
20: Muleskinner Blues (BILL MONROE)
21: Salty Dog Blues
22: Red Wing
23: Wreck Of The Old '97
24: Martha White Theme
25: Cumberland Gap
26: Foggy Mountain Breakdown
-----------------------------------------------

As a big bonus here’s the almost Complete Warped series:

Warped 5368 - Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs - 1953-1956
http://shareplace.org/?5339E6814

Warped 5722 - Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs - 1957-1959
http://shareplace.org/?29513E6F3

Warped 5973 - Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs - 1959 - 1960
http://shareplace.org/?DE31F4B911

Warped 6115 - Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs - 1961-1962
http://shareplace.org/?F2BF24AF3

Warped 6226 - Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs - 1962 Vol.1
http://shareplace.org/?A1E8842D3

Warped 6294 - Lester Flatt And Earl Scruggs - 1962 Vol.2
http://shareplace.org/?5F7E93C94

Warped 6459 - Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs - 1964 – 1965
http://shareplace.org/?4789C4034

Warped 6577 - Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs - 1965 – 1966
http://shareplace.org/?44AF799F3

Warped 6698 - Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs - 1966 – 1967
http://shareplace.org/?2A88A6859

Warped 6876 - Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs - 1968 – 1969
http://shareplace.org/?35BB21093

Missing . Can anyone help?

1948 – 1950
1950 - 1952
1963 – 1964

Uncle Gil said...

Here are the missing Warped

4890 - 5081 - 6348

https://we.tl/t-jVQ9fElDgt



boppinbob said...

Hello Uncle Gil, Thanks again for your help. Regards, Bob.

rev.b said...

Lester Flatt is one of those people who instantly make you feel at ease and right at home. I know I'll enjoy the time spent here. Thx Bob for the big box worth and Uncle Gil for filling in the blanks.

drl said...

Hello, Uncle Gil:
For the Lester Flatt post the missing Warped 4890 - 5081 - 6348 links are no longer active. Can you please re-post?
Thank you,
Doug

boppinbob said...

Hell DRL, I doubt that Uncle Gil will visit this page again so here are links for the three missing warped CD’s:

Warped 4890 - Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs - 1948 – 1950

https://krakenfiles.com/view/cXPB8U9FbY/file.html

Warped 6348F - Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs - 1963 – 1964

https://krakenfiles.com/view/ARiKeNcF4h/file.html

Warped 5081 - Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs - 1968 – 1969

https://krakenfiles.com/view/u0bSQvDtYR/file.html

Regards, Bob

Uncle Gil said...

@ boppinbob:

:) He he, you're wrong... and I have just uploaded the three albums...
So drl will have the choice :)

https://we.tl/t-COrN6v20Qz

Have a nice week-end, Bob !!!

drl said...

Well, well. Two posts for the one re-post request! Thank you both for responding and so quickly. I don't know what to say except, thank you very much. Now my Flatt & Scruggs collection is complete.
Take care,
Doug

Anonymous said...

Searching my heart out for "That Little Country Church House" from Flatt & Scruggs.
Can somebody please help me out. I Have hundreds of songs of them but not that one.
You may mail me.

Anonymous said...

Oke, i think i get it. This single version was from the Masters Family, coupled on the Cora is Gone single of Flatt & Scruggs. I'm all the time searching the wrong direction.

boppinbob said...

Hello a3kp, Glad you sorted yourself out :-)

a3kp said...

Hello Boppin,
Yeah i found out.
Meanwhile i search for Yodeling Slim Clark.
I think you noticed that already.
See other post.