Nearly 50 years after the Earl Scruggs Revue concert I saw at the University of Maine, an internet search led me to Jaime Michaels of the opening act, Beckett. He still has vivid memories from that night in Orono. I sent him a copy of my report. He wrote back, saying:
I have no idea about the song titles but it was nice that my ’63 Gibson J50 got a mention … I still have it.
He has vivid memories of his time backstage with Scruggs.
… at the very end of Earl’s set as he walked back out for his 3rd or 4th encore he stopped and said to me “If I’d just play the darned thing right, I wouldn’t have to keep going back out …”
A little later as we were all loading out Earl came up to us and said, “Do you guys want to see my new bus?” He took us for the grand tour. I was still pretty young and had never seen a real tour bus before.
He was such a sweet guy with this humble self-effacing humor.
Earl was proud of that bus, I reckon; heâd named an instrumental after it.
When I saw them in 1975, the Earl Scruggs Revue was a polished Nashville rock act that had been together since 1969. Debuting at a folk festival that May, not long after Scruggs split from Lester Flatt, it featured Earlâs sons.
The two oldest, Gary (then 20) and Randy (then 16) were already Nashville recording studio veterans. Theyâd been in the Columbia studios multiple times (Gary 11 sessions, Randy 15 sessions) since May 1967, helping on the last three albums Lester and Earl made before their split (Changinâ Times, The Story of Bonnie & Clyde, Nashville Airplane).
Also new to Flatt & Scruggs, in the fall of 1967, was Columbia producer Bob Johnston, then 35. Concerned about declining record sales, Columbia had replaced Frank Jones and Don Law, highly regarded Nashville veterans whoâd been producing F&S since the fifties, with Johnston, who was producing Bob Dylan.
Dylan had stunned the folk world when he went electric at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965. He first recorded in Nashville in 1966, completing Blonde On Blonde there using mainly Nashville studio musicians. In the next two years he returned, making John Wesley Harding and Nashville Skyline.
Flatt & Scruggsâ final albums reflected their move to Johnston, a leading producer at forefront of Columbiaâs move from acoustic folk into electric folk rock.
Later, when asked about what led to the split with Earl, Flatt spoke of his difficulty in singing the bandâs new songs. âJohnston,â He said, â…also cut Bob Dylan and we would record what he would come up with, regardless of whether I liked it or not. I canât sing Bob Dylan stuff. I mean, Columbia has got Bob Dylan, why did they want me?â
Of the final three F&S albums, both Changinâ Times and Nashville Airplane had folk-rock repertoires. At the very first session for Changinâ Times, four folk-rock favorites were cut, three Dylan hits, one by Ian Tyson: “Donât Think Twice,” “Four Strong Winds,” “Blowinâ In the Wind,” and “It Ainât Me Babe.” Here, Earlâs boys Gary (singing) and Randy (lead guitar) were together for the first time in the studio with Flatt & Scruggs and Johnston.
Imagine the dismay of Lester (who, soon after splitting with Earl, would record “I Canât Tell The Boys from the Girls“) at this session! It seemed as if the young longhairs with their strange new music were taking over.
Released in January 1968, the back cover of Changinâ Times was filled with the image of a rock poster. Unsigned notes beside it read:
With their smash appearance at the Avalon Ballroom (a West Coast temple of rock and light-shows) when they turned on the whole of San Francisco, there are no new worlds left for Flatt and Scruggs to conquer. Flatt and Scruggs are for everyone.
One of the albumâs 11 tracks was a remake of Earlâs “Foggy Mountain Breakdown,” which had just become a hit through the soundtrack of Bonnie and Clyde. Five tracks were by Dylan; the album closed with Woody Guthrieâs “This Land is Your Land.”
Gary and Randy Scruggs personified the Lovinâ Spoonfulâs “Nashville Cats,” but also in the studio for that album were other, older, Nashville cats â Charlie Daniels, Grady Martin, Bob Moore, Charlie McCoy and other A-team studio musicians. Randy and Gary would come to know these men well as they built life-long careers in the Nashville studios. These careers were forged during their years (1969-82) with the Earl Scruggs Revue.
Fortunately, the Revueâs earliest days were chronicled in a television documentary. David Hoffmanâs ninety-minute NET TV special, Earl Scruggs: The Bluegrass Legend – Family and Friends, was recorded in 1969-70. It has been issued on DVD several times since then and can be seen on YouTube.
Itâs fascinating to watch Hoffmanâs documentation of Scruggs as he narrates his past, voices his present, and sets out his future directions. Along the way, Hoffman captures Earlâs music-making with a wide variety of performers and audiences. By the end of those 90 minutes, Scruggsâ cultural and political perspectives are manifest; likewise the breadth of his musical tastes.
Hoffman filmed in New York, North Carolina, Nashville, Washington, D.C., and California. The documentary opens with a five-minute jam session: Earl, Gary, and Randy are in upstate New York visiting Bob Dylan at the home of illustrator and sculptor Tom Allen, who had done many Flatt & Scruggs album covers. After Bob sings “East Virginia Blues,” Earl asks him if heâd like to hear their version of “Nashville Skyline Rag,” the instrumental title track from Dylanâs most recent album. I donât know when this jam took place, but in mid-August of 1969, when Earl was in the studio with Lester to record Final Fling: One Last Time (Just For Kicks), an album theyâd agreed to make after their split, the first track they recorded was “Nashville Skyline Rag.”
The tune became a fixture in the Revue concert repertoire, used, for example, as the show opener at Orono in 1975 and in 1977 when they played PBSâs Austin City Limits. Earl had recorded it again in 1970 for his first solo album, Nashvilleâs Rock.
After the jam with Dylan, the filmâs next twenty minutes take the viewer with Earl and the boys to his North Carolina home with visits to the Morris Brothers (the first group heâd worked with), Doc Watson, and Scruggs family and friends in the Flint Hill community. It closes with a shot in which Earl speaks of how heâd taken the banjo to different types of music: âNow itâs easy to blend with todayâs music. It works very well. Iâm really happy. I had dreams of this.â
The next five minutes come from a jam session with the Byrds at a ranch outside Nashville. It begins with them doing âNothing To Itâ (the title Earl used for âI Donât Love Nobody,â when he recorded this tune with Doc Watson) followed by “You Ainât Goinâ Nowhere,” a Dylan tune that was on the Byrdsâ Sweetheart of the Rodeo, the 1968 album that is often thought of as a foundational statement of country rock.
Itâs followed by four minutes with electronic music pioneer and composer Gil Trythall, who plays along on Moog synthesizer with Earl and Randy doing “Foggy Mountain Breakdown.”
Then comes an interview with Charlie Daniels, at the time an associate of Bob Johnston, soon to become one of country rockâs leading figures. The focus shifts as he, Earl, and the Revue attend the second Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam, held in Washington, D.C. on November 15, 1969 â generally considered to be the largest demonstration ever in Washington. After performing “Foggy Mountain Breakdown” there, Earl speaks of his opposition to the war.
Back in Nashville, Daniels is co-producing (with Neil Wilburn) All The Way Home, the first Scruggs Brothers album, for the New England folk and classical label Vanguard. The film follows them into a Nashville studio.
Earl is also working on an album, his first post F&S solo project, Nashvilleâs Rock. After listening to a demo of one track at the Scruggs home, we see an old friend of Earlâs, Dr. Nat Winston, give testimony to his character, and then Earl demonstrates how he creates his music, explaining that heâs self-taught. Next, we meet Earlâs wife Louise, whoâs worked as his manager for fifteen years. She points out that Earl was immersed in the music from age five and that their son Randy has had the same experience.
A shift of focus to Randy follows, as we see him picking “Black Mountain Rag” (a guitar performance reflecting the Scruggs affinity for Doc Watson), and then go with him to class at Madison High and have a chat with his principal, who talks about Randyâs âskipping school.â
After hearing from Louise about how she met Earl at the Grand Ole Opry, we drive on a spring afternoon (in 1970) with the Scruggs family from home to the Ryman Auditorium in downtown Nashville. Inside, Earl, with Randy, joins Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys in a backstage dressing room for a jam and then we witness the Revueâs debut on the Opry stage.
In the center is Earl on banjo, flanked by Randy on guitar and Gary on bass and vocals. Also in the band is Jody Maphis, a contemporary of the Scruggs brothers and son of country stars Joe and Rose Maphis, on guitar. He would subsequently move to drums and remain in the Revue for about a decade. On piano and tambourine is Leah Jane Berinati. Except for Earl, this was a group of kids, dressed like young flower power types. They perform two very conservative old traditional songs, “Nine Pound Hammer” and “Reuben,” to an enthusiastically appreciative audience.
The last twenty-five minutes of the documentary follow the Scruggs family as they travel, early in 1970, to Californiaâs Bay Area for a visit and a jam in Joan Baezâs home. Joan, with her young newborn son Gabriel nearby, chats with Earl about their 1959 meeting at the first Newport Folk Festival. She sings two songs (both are Dylan compositions) and then, while photos are shown of her husband â Gabrielâs father David Harris, whose Vietnam protests had led to federal imprisonment for draft refusal â she sings “If I Was A Carpenter” with Gary. A heady mix of politics and music.
The film closes with Earl back in North Carolina talking again about his musical aspirations:
Keep up with the times and make as much progress with the banjo along with other instruments as long as it blends in as possible.
As the credits roll, we hear Earl playing âFolsom Prison Bluesâ using his tuners.
This documentary, aired at the height of the Vietnam war, included a forthright statement of opposition from a leading figure in Nashville, where there was considerable support for the war. The documentary was also a carefully crafted showcase of the Revueâs folk/country rock repertoire, musical style, and cultural connections.
The albums that Earl and his two oldest sons were working on while Hoffman was making the documentary released before its broadcast and both contain songs and tunes that appear in the film. A couple of examples: “Train Number Forty-Five” (F&Sâs radio theme in the early days), which is heard in Earl and Randyâs backstage jam with Bill Monroe, is also heard on Earlâs album Nashvilleâs Rock. Similarly, Randyâs version of “Black Mountain Rag,” an acoustic guitar solo in the documentary, is heard on the Scruggs Brothersâ album, All The Way Home, in an extended version with not only acoustic and electric guitar breaks but also a banjo break in his fatherâs style.
In the next Bluegrass Memoir weâll see how, by 1971 and 1972 when this documentary was broadcast, the Earl Scruggs Revue was appearing on a series of albums that realized Earlâs aspirations and helped launch his touring.
(Editor’s Note: Read our prior Bluegrass Memoir on the Earl Scruggs Revue here.)
Neil V. Rosenberg is an author, scholar, historian, banjo player, Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame inductee, and co-chair of the IBMA Foundationâs Arnold Shultz Fund.
Photo of Rosenberg by Terri Thomson Rosenberg.Â
Edited by Justin Hiltner.