Weâre just over a week and a half away from the International Bluegrass Music Associationâs annual awards show held in Raleigh, North Carolina. Bluegrass being a technical, virtuosic genre, the awards have always included efforts to note, encourage, and honor instrumental music and instrumentalists. Each year five bands or acts are nominated for Instrumental Group of the Year, as well as individual songs nominated for Instrumental Recording of the Year. Today weâll spend a little time with each of the nominees in the latter category, a collection of five instrumentals that showcase collaborative, exciting lineups, some acrobatic mandolin picking, and the exciting depth and breadth of the musical talent evident in the bluegrass community.Â
Appalachian Road Show — âThe Appalachian Roadâ
Appalachian Road Show is Barry Abernathy, Jim VanCleve, Darrell Webb, Zeb Snyder, and Todd Phillips, kicking off the Instrumental Recording category with our first supergroup of the bunch. Their titular tune, from the 2020 album, Tribulation, feels like an exciting, galloping journey with twists and turns and a slight darkness, like evening creeping over an Appalachian holler. Appalachian Road Show is the second-most nominated band this year at the IBMA awards, also up for New Artist of the Year â but donât be fooled, this group has been making fiery music like this centered on VanCleveâs signature sawing for several years now.
Bluegrass 2020 — âFoggy Mountain Chimesâ
Scott Vestal reprised his Bluegrass â95, Bluegrass â96, and Bluegrass 2001 records in 2020 with a new generation, filling out the band with IBMA Award winner and fiddler Patrick McAvinue, guitarist Cody Kilby, Hawktail mandolinist Dominick Leslie, and his brother Curtis Vestal on bass. His â95 edition included Wayne Benson, Adam Steffey, Aubrey Haynie, Barry Bales, and Clay Jones, while the â96 record featured Mark Schatz, Jeff Autry, and Rob Ickes â in addition to Haynie and Benson. In 2001, Autry and Benson were joined by John Cowan, Randy Kohrs, and Jim VanCleve.Â
Itâs easy to tell, from this 2020 rendition of âFoggy Mountain Chimesâ or from any sample taken from this series of recordings helmed by Vestal, that his commitment to traditional bluegrass, that constantly pushes the envelope, is matched only by his commitment to crafting recordings such as these, where the most tangible throughline â perhaps the only throughline, besides Vestal himself â is the community and the music-making first and foremost.
Bluegrass at the Crossroads — âGround Speedâ
And, another supergroup! Mountain Home Music Company, an imprint of Crossroads Label Group in Arden, North Carolina, has been releasing a series of recordings featuring crackerjack bands of artists and musicians from across their label community and friends. This lineup includes Kristin Scott Benson of the Grascals, Darren Nicholson of Balsam Range, Jeremy Garrett of the Infamous Stringdusters, Skip Cherryholmes of Sideline (and yes, Cherryholmes), and professor, bassist, and musicologist Kevin Kehrberg.Â
Itâs not uncommon for this IBMA Awards category to include traditional numbers from the bluegrass canon but itâs certainly a treat to have two such thoughtful â and downright fun â Earl Scruggs numbers up for the trophy this year.
Industrial Strength Bluegrass — âMountain Stringsâ
If you havenât had the good fortune to stumble upon it yet, scholar Neil V. Rosenberg has been taking BGS readers down memory lane, describing the 1989 Dayton Bluegrass Reunion that went on to inspire not only a book, Industrial Strength Bluegrass, but this new Joe Mullins-produced Smithsonian Folkways compilation album by various artists, too. This track features Sierra Hull with a band including Ben Isaacs, Kristin Scott Benson, Glen Duncan, Josh Williams, and the rarest of rare, bluegrass drums by Phil Paul. âMountain Stringsâ was originally recorded by Red Allen and its composer, mandolinist Frank Wakefield. The albumâs in-depth and museum-like liner notes get it right when they describe Hullâs rendering of the tune as inhabiting ârock and roll swagger,â much like the songâs originators. The ear-puckering cross tuning will stick in your craw, executed with a precision Hull accomplishes universally and deftly.
Justin Moses with Sierra Hull — âTaxlandâ
The Instrumental Recording of the Year category is always great at showcasing bluegrassâs endemic talent, but this year it really confirms and reconfirms the skill of many pickers, several of whom are nominated on more than one recording in this category, as you will have read already! Sierra Hull appears once again, this time on a track with her husband and musical compatriot Justin Moses, who assembled yet another Instrumental Recording supergroup on his Fall Like Rain project released in January of 2021. âTaxlandâ â a Tunesday Tuesday feature when it was released as a single in October 2020 â was inspired by all self-employed musiciansâ least favorite time of year and features some of Hull and Mosesâ signature double mandolin stylings, backed by Michael Clevelandâs jaw-dropping fiddle, Bryan Sutton on guitar, and Barry Bales on bass. Itâs a tune that feels rollicking and impressive, but entirely musical, too â a quality not all bluegrass instrumentals share.
Congratulations goes to all of this yearâs Instrumental Recording nominees, every one a deserving finalist for the award.