Tuesday 13 September 2022

Bill Monroe born 13 September 1911


William Smith Monroe (September 13, 1911 – September 9, 1996) was an American musician who helped develop the style of music known as bluegrass, which takes its name from his band, the "Blue Grass Boys," named for Monroe's home state of Kentucky. Monroe's performing career spanned 60 years as a singer, instrumentalist, composer and bandleader. 

Bill Monroe was born in Rosine, Kentucky. Credited as "The Father of Bluegrass," the music he created evolved from the folk and country music he heard growing up in a musical family as the youngest of eight children. As a child, he also backed up his uncle Pendleton Vandiver ("Uncle Pen") at local dances. 

Orphaned by age 16, Monroe eventually moved to Chicago and formed a group with brothers Birch and Charlie, with Bill on mandolin. While in Chicago, he worked in an oil refinery and as a square dancer on Chicago's WLS National Barn Dance. Birch soon dropped out, but Bill and Charlie continued on as the Monroe Brothers, finding their most enthusiastic audiences at Charlotte, N.C.'s radio station WBT. They soon recorded several sides for RCA's Bluebird label, including "John Henry," "Nine Pound Hammer" and "What Would You Give in Exchange for Your Soul." 

Charlie & Bill Monroe

In 1938, the highly successful duo split up, and Bill formed his first band, the Kentuckians. It was a year later that Monroe changed the name of the band to the Blue Grass Boys and soon set his sights on Nashville. Monroe was only 28 years old when he joined the Opry cast on Oct. 28, 1939. Introduced by George D. Hay, the Opry's founder, Monroe performed a the Jimmie Rodgers hit "Muleskinner Blues" and got three encores that first night at the War Memorial Auditorium. He quickly became an Opry favourite. 

In the 1940s, Monroe began adding lyrics to his melodies and wrote such classic hits as "Blue Moon of Kentucky" and "Uncle Pen." He hired banjo picker Earl Scruggs, singer-guitarist Lester Flatt and fiddler Chubby Wise on fiddle to create what is widely recognized as the most important bluegrass band ever. In 1948, Flatt & Scruggs left the band to form the Foggy Mountain Boys. (Wise also left the band that year.) 

                              

The early 1950s turned out to be a golden era for Monroe and his music. He wrote and recorded such classics as Footprints In The Snow, Kentucky Waltz, Uncle Pen, Roanoke, Scotland, Walking In Jerusalem and I’m Working On A Building. A young Elvis Presley chose to sing a cover of Blue Moon Of Kentucky when he auditioned for the Grand Ole Opry in 1954 and recorded the song for his first Sun Records single. Presley later apologised to Mr. Monroe for changing the arrangement of his song. 

Monroe's fortunes began to improve during the "folk revival" of the early 1960s. Many college students and other young people were beginning to discover Monroe, associating his style more with traditional folk music than with the country-and-western genre with which it had previously been identified. The word "bluegrass" first appeared around this time to describe the sound of Monroe and similar artists such as Flatt and Scruggs, the Stanley Brothers, Reno and Smiley, Jim and Jesse, and the Osborne Brothers. 

While Flatt and Scruggs immediately recognized the potential for a lucrative new audience in cities and on college campuses in the North, Monroe was slower to respond. Under the influence of Ralph Rinzler, a young musician and folklorist from New Jersey who briefly became Monroe's manager in 1963, Monroe gradually expanded his geographic reach beyond the traditional southern country music circuit. Rinzler was also responsible for a lengthy profile and interview in the influential folk music magazine Sing Out, which  first publicly referred to Monroe as the "father" of bluegrass. Accordingly, at the first bluegrass festival organized by Carlton Haney at Roanoke, Virginia in 1965, Bill Monroe was the central figure. 

Monroe was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1970, and he earned the National Endowment for the Arts' esteemed Heritage Award. His Southern Flavour LP won the first Grammy award ever given for bluegrass music in 1989, and he earned the Grammy's Lifetime Achievement award in 1993. In 1995, he was awarded a National Medal of Honour by President Clinton at a ceremony conducted at the White House. 

Monroe's last performance occurred on March 15, 1996. He ended his touring and playing career in April, following a stroke. Monroe died on September 9, 1996, in Springfield, Tennessee, four days before his 85th birthday. A year later, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inducted him as an early influence of rock 'n' roll. 

Monroe described his beloved bluegrass as music with "a hard drive to it. It's Scotch bagpipes and ole-time fiddlin'. It's Methodist and Holiness and Baptist. It's blues and jazz, and it has a high lonesome sound. It's plain music that tells a good story. It's played from my heart to your heart, and it will touch you. Bluegrass is music that matters." 

(Info edited from CMT & Wikipedia)

4 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Bill Monroe – Bluegrass 1950-1958”
Label: Bear Family Records – BCD 15423 DH
4 x CD, Compilation
Released:1989……..............Go Here:

CD 1& 2

https://www.imagenetz.de/bu6jQ

CD 3 & 4

https://www.imagenetz.de/mahJv

1-1 Blue Grass Ramble
1-2 New Muleskinner Blues
1-3 My Little Georgia Rose
1-4 Memories Of You
1-5 I'm On My Way To The Old Home
1-6 Alabama Waltz
1-7 I'm Blue, I'm Lonesome
1-8 I'll Meet You In Church Sunday Morning
1-9 Boat Of Love
1-10 The Old Fiddler
1-11 Uncle Pen
1-12 When The Golden Leaves Begin To Fall
1-13 Lord Protect My Soul
1-14 River Of Death
1-15 Letter From My Darling
1-16 On The Old Kentucky Shore
1-17 Rawhide
1-18 Poison Love
1-19 Kentucky Waltz
1-20 Prisoner's Song
1-21 Swing Low Sweet Chariot
1-22 Angels Rock Me To Sleep
1-23 Brakeman's Blues
1-24 Travelin' Blues
1-25 When The Cactus Is In Bloom
2-1 Sailor's Plea
2-2 My Carolina Sunshine Girl
2-3 Ben Dewberry's Final Run
2-4 Peach Pickin' Time In Georgia
2-5 Those Gambler's Blues
2-6 Highway Of Sorrow
2-7 Rotation Blues
2-8 Lonesome Truck Driver's Blues
2-9 Sugar Coated Love
2-10 You're Drifting Away
2-11 Cabin Of Love
2-12 Get Down On Your Knees And Pray
2-13 Christmas Time's A-Coming
2-14 The First Whipoorwill
2-15 In The Pines
2-16 Footprints In The Snow
2-17 Walking In Jerusalem
2-18 Memories Of Mother And Dad
2-19 The Little Girl And The Dreadful Snake
2-20 Country Waltz
2-21 Don't Put It Off Til Tomorrow
2-22 My Dying Bed
2-23 A Mighty Pretty Waltz
2-24 Pike County Breakdown
2-25 Wishing Waltz
2-26 I Hope You Have Learned
2-27 Get Up John
3-1 Sitting Alone In The Moonlight
3-2 Plant Some Flowers By My Grave
3-3 Changing Partners
3-4 Y'all Come
3-5 On And On
3-6 I Believe In You Darling
3-7 New John Henry Blues
3-8 White House Blues
3-9 Happy On My Way
3-10 I'm Working On A Building
3-11 A Voice From On High
3-12 He Will Set Your Fields On Fire
3-13 Close By
3-14 My Little Georgia Rose
3-15 Put My Little Shoes Away
3-16 Blue Moon Of Kentucky
3-17 Wheel Hoss
3-18 Cheyenne
3-19 You'll Find Her Name Written There
3-20 Roanoke
3-21 Wait A Little Longer, Please Jesus
3-22 Let The Light Shine Down On Me
3-23 Used To Be
3-24 Tall Timber
3-25 Brown Country Breakdown
3-26 A Fallen Star
3-27 Four Walls
3-28 A Good Woman's Love
3-29 Cry Darlin'
3-30 I'm Sitting On Top Of The World
4-1 Out In The Cold World
4-2 Roane County Prison
4-3 Goodbye Old Pal
4-4 In Despair
4-5 Molly And Tenbrooks
4-6 Come Back To Me In My Dreams
4-7 Sally-Jo
4-8 Brand New Shoes
4-9 A Lonesome Road
4-10 I Saw The Light
4-11 Lord, Build Me A Cabin In Glory
4-12 Lord, Lead Me On
4-13 Precious Jewel
4-14 I'll Meet You In The Morning
4-15 Life's Railway To Heaven
4-16 I've Found A Hiding Place
4-17 Jesus, Hold My Hand
4-18 I Am A Pilgrim
4-19 Wayfaring Stranger
4-20 A Beautiful Life
4-21 House Of Gold
4-22 Panhandle Country
4-23 Scotland
4-24 Gotta Travel On
4-25 No One But My Darlin'
4-26 Big Mon
4-27 Monroe's Hornpipe

Bob Mac said...

Thanks Bob, I didn't have much by Bill Munroe, so this certainly changes that.

Jacdaw said...

Thanks Bob. I've been missing some of these.

T.G. said...

Thanks a lot for this nice Bill Monroe releaae!