“I think my favorite description of bluegrass music is from Bill Monroe: ‘Itâs Scottish bagpipes and ole-time fiddlin’. Itâs Methodist and Holiness and Baptist. Itâs blues and jazz, and it has a high lonesome sound.’ It is that and more to me. It is simple and complex. It is death and life. It is impossible to put together anything close to a definitive playlist of such things so here are a few songs I really like.” — Crowder
“A Far Cry” – Del McCoury Band
Del McCoury is the epitome of the progressive conservation of that âhigh lonesomeâ sound.
“Angel Band” – Stanley Brothers
This is it for me. An old gospel song from a poem originally titled âMy Latest Sun Is Sinking Fast.â
“The Prisonerâs Song” – Bill Monroe
This origin of this song goes back to the beginning of recorded âhillbillyâ music and nothing better than the Father of Bluegrass’ take on it with electric guitar, piano, and drums. Heretical!
“Ruby” – Osborne Brothers
Those falsetto jumps and holds, if youâre not smiling we canât be friends.
“Shady Grove” – Ricky Skaggs
Mr. Skaggs is one of my favorite humans ever made and he and Kentucky Thunder slay this traditional Appalachian courtinâ song thatâs found its way into the repertoire of all the greats.
“Walls of Time” – Bill Monroe
A classic written by Monroe and Peter Rowan, but not recorded until after Rowan left the group. The lyrics are perfectly haunting.
“Freeborn Man” – Jimmy Martin
âKing of Bluegrassâ after the addition of Gloria Belle. That female vocal sitting above Martinâs cutting tenor is supreme.
“Mama’s Hand” – Hazel Dickens
Known for her singing style as well as her advocate songs for coal miners and the working folk and to be one of the first women to record a bluegrass album. This song tells the story of the day she left her familyâs home in West Virginia.
“Carry Me Across The Mountain” – Dan Tyminski
This guy is legend. Popping into the universal ethos and consciousness of popular culture every so often, from his updated version of âMan of Constant Sorrowâ to vocal feature on Aviciiâs international hit âHey Brother.â
“Blue Train” – Nashville Bluegrass Band
I love how these guys incorporate black gospel and spirituals. Just a line as simple as âcoming for to carry meâ brings with it the momentum and mass of a locomotive.
“Salty Dog Blues” – Flatt and Scruggs
The original meaning of âsalty dogâ comes from rubbing salt into the coat of your dog as a flea repellent. That infers that a âsalty dogâ would be your favorite person or your best friend. I like that.
“Oh, Death” – Ralph Stanley
No vocalist will ever fit a song more perfectly.
“The Little Old Log Cabin in the Lane” – Fiddlinâ John Carson
The first âhillbillyâ song ever recorded with vocals and lyrics. When I moved to Atlanta I landed in Cabbagetown on Carroll Street living in the Fulton Bag and Cotton Mill that he and his children worked in. Thatâs as close as Iâve ever come to greatness.
Photo credit: Eric Brown