Difference between revisions of "Bill Monroe" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
(import Bill Monroe)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[Image:Bill Monroe.jpg|thumb|right|Bill Monroe]]
 
[[Image:Bill Monroe.jpg|thumb|right|Bill Monroe]]
  
'''Bill Monroe''' ([[September 13]], [[1911]] [[September 9]], [[1996]]) developed the style of [[country music]] known as [[bluegrass music|bluegrass]], which takes its name from his band, the "[[Blue Grass Boys]]," named for his home state of [[Kentucky]].  Monroe's performing career spanned 60 years as a [[singer]], [[instrumentalist]], [[composer]] and [[bandleader]]. He is often referred to as ''"[[List of people known as the father or mother of something|the father of bluegrass]]."''
+
'''Bill Monroe''' (September 13, 1911 – September 9, 1996) developed the style of [[country music]] known as [[bluegrass music|bluegrass]], which takes its name from his band, the "[[Blue Grass Boys]]," itself named for his home state of Kentucky.  Monroe's performing career spanned 60 years as a singer, instrumentalist, composer and bandleader. He is often referred to as ''"the Father of Bluegrass Music."''
  
Monroe was born in [[Rosine, Kentucky|Rosine]], [[Kentucky]].  His father was a well-to-do farmer while his mother, née Malissa Vandiver, was from lower down the social scale.  Malissa and her brother, Pendleton "Pen" Vandiver, were both musically inclined, and Bill Monroe learned old-time music from his "Uncle Pen," who was an itinerant fiddler.
+
Although many other singers and musicians contributed to the genre and its roots can be traced to earlier traditional forms, Monroe is rightly credited with having created a unique musical form within the country music field. For more than half a century, with his blues-influenced driving mandolin playing, his intensely high-ptiched tenor singing, and and his leaderhip of the Blue Grass Boys, Monroe was the unquestioned master of his art. His band became a training ground for many outstanding musicians, and his style influenced musicians as diverse as the Everly Brothers, Elvis Presley, George Jones, Emmylou Harris, Dolly Parton, and rock star Jerry Garcia. His early records with the Blue Grass Boys are considered classics, and many of his songs have been covered later country and bluegrass recording artists.
 +
 
 +
==Biography==
 +
 
 +
Monroe was born in Rosine, Kentucky, the youngest of eight children.  His father was a prosperous farmer while his mother, née Malissa Vandiver, was of more humble social origins.  Malissa and her brother, Pendleton "Pen" Vandiver, were both musically inclined. Bill's mother passed on her knowledge of traditional ballads having their origins in Britain and Ireland, while "Uncle Pen" taught him the old-time fiddle playing that became a characteristic of the bluegrass style. Monroe learned guitar from a black musician named Arnold Shultz, who sometimes played with Bill and "Uncle Pen" at local dances.
 +
 
 +
Monroe's professional career began in the 1930s when he and his older brothers, Birch and Charlie, began performing as a trio, the Monroe Brothers, at a radio station in South Bend, Indiana, near Hammond, where they worked in an oil refinery.  Birch left the music scene early on in the Monroes' career, and the younger two brothers continued to perform and record as the Monroe Brothers.  In 1939, after the brothers parted ways, Monroe formed the first edition of the Blue Grass Boys, and in October of the same year became a regular on the [[Grand Ole Opry]].
 +
 
 +
As a [[mandolin]] player, Monroe brought a virtuosity previously unknown in country music to his instrument.  In 1945 he hired [[Earl Scruggs]], whose three-finger picking style similarly elevated the role of the [[banjo]]. This version of the Blue Grass Boys, which also included singer/guitarist [[Lester Flatt]], Chubby Wise on fiddle, and  Cedric Rainwater on upright bass, made the first recordings that featured all the elements that later came to be known as bluegrass music.
  
Monroe's professional career began in the [[1930s]] when he and his older brothers, Birch and Charlie, began performing as a trio, the Monroe Brothers, at a radio station in [[South Bend, Indiana]] near [[Hammond, Indiana]] where they worked in an oil refinery.  Birch left the music scene early on in the Monroes' career, and the younger two brothers continued to perform as the Monroe Brothers.  In [[1939]], after the brothers parted ways, Monroe formed the first edition of the Blue Grass Boys, and in October of the same year became a regular on the [[Grand Ole Opry]].
 
  
As a [[mandolin]] player, Monroe brought a virtuosity previously unknown in country music to his instrument.  In [[1945]] he hired [[Earl Scruggs]], who similarly elevated the role of the [[banjo]]. This version of the Blue Grass Boys, which also included [[singer]]/[[guitarist]] [[Lester Flatt]], [[Chubby Wise]] on [[violin|fiddle]], and [[Cedric Rainwater|Howard Watts aka "Cedric Rainwater"]] on [[upright bass|bass]], made the first recordings that featured all the elements that later came to be known as bluegrass music.
 
  
 
More than 150 musicians played in the Blue Grass Boys over the years.  Many later became stars in their own right, including [[Mac Wiseman]], Clyde Moody, [[Sonny Osborne]], [[Jimmy Martin]], [[Don Reno]], [[David "Stringbean" Akeman]], [[Del McCoury]], [[Vassar Clements]], [[Peter Rowan]], [[the Stanley Brothers|Carter Stanley]], and [[Randall Franks]].
 
More than 150 musicians played in the Blue Grass Boys over the years.  Many later became stars in their own right, including [[Mac Wiseman]], Clyde Moody, [[Sonny Osborne]], [[Jimmy Martin]], [[Don Reno]], [[David "Stringbean" Akeman]], [[Del McCoury]], [[Vassar Clements]], [[Peter Rowan]], [[the Stanley Brothers|Carter Stanley]], and [[Randall Franks]].
Line 23: Line 29:
 
[[category:art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 
[[category:art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 
{{credit|Bill Monroe|65958301}}
 
{{credit|Bill Monroe|65958301}}
 +
 +
 +
 +
 +
Monroe lost both his parents by the age of sixteen, and subsequently he followed some of his brothers north to the Chicago area, where he labored in a Sinclair Oil refinery, performed as a square dancer on Chicago’s WLS National Barn Dance, and sang and played mandolin with brothers Charlie (who played guitar) and Birch (who fiddled) on local radio. Birch soon left the trio, and Bill and Charlie decided to pursue music full time as the Monroe Brothers, first gaining exposure on stations in Iowa and Nebraska.
 +
 +
The Monroes really hit their stride, however, after moving in 1935 to the Carolinas, where they based themselves mainly at Charlotte, North Carolina’s 50,000-watt WBT. Their popularity soon equaled that of any of the era’s many duos, and they distinguished themselves by their hard-driving tempos, piercing harmony, and Bill’s lightning-fast mandolin solos. 1936 RCA producer Eli Oberstein recorded them for the first time. Early releases like “What Would You Give in Exchange for Your Soul” sold well, and before long the team was winning a sizable regional audience with help from WBT’s signal and recorded radio shows. However, the headstrong Monroes feuded as brothers will, and the act broke up in 1938. Bill would record two more sessions for RCA with his new band, the Blue Grass Boys, named for Kentucky, the Bluegrass State.
 +
 +
After rehearsing his group and working Carolina radio, Monroe headed for Nashville to audition for the Grand Ole Opry. WSM’s George D. Hay, Harry Stone, and David Stone, impressed with Monroe’s talent and star power, hired him in October 1939 on the strength of his performance of his trademark “Mule Skinner Blues,” formerly a hit for the legendary Jimmie Rodgers. WSM’s 50,000-watt transmitter and guest spots on the Opry’s NBC network portion quickly made Monroe’s name a household word. By 1943 he was grossing some $200,000 a year from show dates, many of them staged as part of his own Opry tent show, which combined music and comedy in delighting rural and small-town audiences throughout the South.
 +
 +
While no one was yet calling Monroe’s style “bluegrass” (this would not come until the mid-1950s), many of its basic elements were already present, including its pulsing drive and the intensity of Monroe’s high-pitched vocals. During World War II he added the banjo, first played by Stringbean (Dave Akeman), and experimented briefly with the accordion and harmonica, which complemented the basic mandolin-guitar-fiddle-bass combination he would always retain. (Where guitar was concerned, Monroe himself was a formidable instrumentalist and set high benchmarks for his bandmembers through the years.) In 1945 he added the revolutionary three-finger banjo picking of Earl Scruggs, which provided bluegrass with its final building block. Monroe’s late-1940s recordings for Columbia, made with Scruggs and Lester Flatt, his singer-guitarist at the time, are now widely regarded as definitive.
 +
 +
In 1948 Scruggs teamed with Flatt to form the Foggy Mountain Boys, and by the early 1950s several bands were playing their own variations of the bluegrass style, including the Stanley Brothers, Jim and Jesse McReynolds, and Reno & Smiley. Monroe made his band sound higher, bluer, and more lonesome than ever, with help from singer-guitarist Jimmy Martin and other expert sidemen, some of whom (including Martin) later launched bluegrass bands of their own. As ever, his repertoire included both sacred and secular material as well as both songs and instrumentals, and he composed much of his material himself or with members of his band. Over the years, Monroe originals like “Uncle Pen,” “Raw Hide,” “Blue Moon of Kentucky,” “Jerusalem Ridge,” “I Want the Lord to Protect My Soul,” and dozens of others have formed the basis of the bluegrass canon for professionals and amateurs alike.
 +
 +
Through the 1950s and beyond, Monroe’s acoustic sound provided an alternative to honky-tonk, country-pop, and rockabilly. By 1963 he began to attract the attention of the urban folk music audience, with help from folklorist and promoter Ralph Rinzler, who promoted Monroe as the true Daddy of Bluegrass to listeners who thought bluegrass began and ended with Flatt and Scruggs. The year 1965 saw the first multi-day bluegrass festival making Monroe the centerpiece, and in 1967 he launched his own annual festival at Bean Blossom, Indiana, where he had long run a country music park. By 1970, when he won election to the Country Music Hall of Fame, he had become the acknowledged patriarch of the bluegrass movement, a cult figure to hordes of fans for whom bluegrass was akin to a religion.
 +
 +
Until his death, Monroe continued to propagate the gospel of bluegrass to worldwide audiences, appearing in all fifty states and Canada as well as on tours of Japan, England, Ireland, Holland, Switzerland, and Israel. His venues ranged from rural festivals to urban performing arts centers and the White House. He kept recording as well, and his career total topped more than 500 selections, most of them made for MCA (formerly Decca).
 +
 +
Monroe also won recognition for his accomplishments. In 1982 the National Endowment for the Arts gave him its prestigious Heritage Award, and in 1988 he won a Grammy for his album Southern Flavor—the first bluegrass Grammy ever bestowed. A 1991 inductee into the International Bluegrass Music Association Hall of Honor, Monroe was also 1993 recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS), an honor that placed him in the company of Louis Armstrong, Chet Atkins, Ray Charles, Paul McCartney, and other such legends. Although bluegrass constitutes only a small part of country music’s annual sales, such honors testify to the enormous influence Monroe’s music continues to exert among musicians in many fields.
 +
 +
A stroke suffered in April 1996 ended Monroe’s career as a touring artist and hastened his death on September 9 of that year. “We all knew that if he ever got to the point where he couldn’t perform that he wasn’t going to make it,” said Emmylou Harris. “Music was his life.” Memorial services at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium and later in Monroe’s native Rosine, Kentucky, where he is buried, united hundreds of friends and fellow musicians who continue to nurture his legacy as one of country music’s great historical personalities. - John Rumble

Revision as of 04:49, 30 September 2006

Bill Monroe (September 13, 1911 – September 9, 1996) developed the style of country music known as bluegrass, which takes its name from his band, the "Blue Grass Boys," itself named for his home state of Kentucky. Monroe's performing career spanned 60 years as a singer, instrumentalist, composer and bandleader. He is often referred to as "the Father of Bluegrass Music."

Although many other singers and musicians contributed to the genre and its roots can be traced to earlier traditional forms, Monroe is rightly credited with having created a unique musical form within the country music field. For more than half a century, with his blues-influenced driving mandolin playing, his intensely high-ptiched tenor singing, and and his leaderhip of the Blue Grass Boys, Monroe was the unquestioned master of his art. His band became a training ground for many outstanding musicians, and his style influenced musicians as diverse as the Everly Brothers, Elvis Presley, George Jones, Emmylou Harris, Dolly Parton, and rock star Jerry Garcia. His early records with the Blue Grass Boys are considered classics, and many of his songs have been covered later country and bluegrass recording artists.

Biography

Monroe was born in Rosine, Kentucky, the youngest of eight children. His father was a prosperous farmer while his mother, née Malissa Vandiver, was of more humble social origins. Malissa and her brother, Pendleton "Pen" Vandiver, were both musically inclined. Bill's mother passed on her knowledge of traditional ballads having their origins in Britain and Ireland, while "Uncle Pen" taught him the old-time fiddle playing that became a characteristic of the bluegrass style. Monroe learned guitar from a black musician named Arnold Shultz, who sometimes played with Bill and "Uncle Pen" at local dances.

Monroe's professional career began in the 1930s when he and his older brothers, Birch and Charlie, began performing as a trio, the Monroe Brothers, at a radio station in South Bend, Indiana, near Hammond, where they worked in an oil refinery. Birch left the music scene early on in the Monroes' career, and the younger two brothers continued to perform and record as the Monroe Brothers. In 1939, after the brothers parted ways, Monroe formed the first edition of the Blue Grass Boys, and in October of the same year became a regular on the Grand Ole Opry.

As a mandolin player, Monroe brought a virtuosity previously unknown in country music to his instrument. In 1945 he hired Earl Scruggs, whose three-finger picking style similarly elevated the role of the banjo. This version of the Blue Grass Boys, which also included singer/guitarist Lester Flatt, Chubby Wise on fiddle, and Cedric Rainwater on upright bass, made the first recordings that featured all the elements that later came to be known as bluegrass music.


More than 150 musicians played in the Blue Grass Boys over the years. Many later became stars in their own right, including Mac Wiseman, Clyde Moody, Sonny Osborne, Jimmy Martin, Don Reno, David "Stringbean" Akeman, Del McCoury, Vassar Clements, Peter Rowan, Carter Stanley, and Randall Franks.

Bill Monroe was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1970, the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Honor as an inaugural inductee in 1991, and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (as an "early influence") in 1997. He is the only performer honored in all three. His well-known song "Blue Moon of Kentucky" has been covered by both rock and roll and bluegrass artists.

In 2003, CMT had Bill Monroe ranked #16 on CMT 40 Greatest Men of Country Music.

External links

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.



Monroe lost both his parents by the age of sixteen, and subsequently he followed some of his brothers north to the Chicago area, where he labored in a Sinclair Oil refinery, performed as a square dancer on Chicago’s WLS National Barn Dance, and sang and played mandolin with brothers Charlie (who played guitar) and Birch (who fiddled) on local radio. Birch soon left the trio, and Bill and Charlie decided to pursue music full time as the Monroe Brothers, first gaining exposure on stations in Iowa and Nebraska.

The Monroes really hit their stride, however, after moving in 1935 to the Carolinas, where they based themselves mainly at Charlotte, North Carolina’s 50,000-watt WBT. Their popularity soon equaled that of any of the era’s many duos, and they distinguished themselves by their hard-driving tempos, piercing harmony, and Bill’s lightning-fast mandolin solos. 1936 RCA producer Eli Oberstein recorded them for the first time. Early releases like “What Would You Give in Exchange for Your Soul” sold well, and before long the team was winning a sizable regional audience with help from WBT’s signal and recorded radio shows. However, the headstrong Monroes feuded as brothers will, and the act broke up in 1938. Bill would record two more sessions for RCA with his new band, the Blue Grass Boys, named for Kentucky, the Bluegrass State.

After rehearsing his group and working Carolina radio, Monroe headed for Nashville to audition for the Grand Ole Opry. WSM’s George D. Hay, Harry Stone, and David Stone, impressed with Monroe’s talent and star power, hired him in October 1939 on the strength of his performance of his trademark “Mule Skinner Blues,” formerly a hit for the legendary Jimmie Rodgers. WSM’s 50,000-watt transmitter and guest spots on the Opry’s NBC network portion quickly made Monroe’s name a household word. By 1943 he was grossing some $200,000 a year from show dates, many of them staged as part of his own Opry tent show, which combined music and comedy in delighting rural and small-town audiences throughout the South.

While no one was yet calling Monroe’s style “bluegrass” (this would not come until the mid-1950s), many of its basic elements were already present, including its pulsing drive and the intensity of Monroe’s high-pitched vocals. During World War II he added the banjo, first played by Stringbean (Dave Akeman), and experimented briefly with the accordion and harmonica, which complemented the basic mandolin-guitar-fiddle-bass combination he would always retain. (Where guitar was concerned, Monroe himself was a formidable instrumentalist and set high benchmarks for his bandmembers through the years.) In 1945 he added the revolutionary three-finger banjo picking of Earl Scruggs, which provided bluegrass with its final building block. Monroe’s late-1940s recordings for Columbia, made with Scruggs and Lester Flatt, his singer-guitarist at the time, are now widely regarded as definitive.

In 1948 Scruggs teamed with Flatt to form the Foggy Mountain Boys, and by the early 1950s several bands were playing their own variations of the bluegrass style, including the Stanley Brothers, Jim and Jesse McReynolds, and Reno & Smiley. Monroe made his band sound higher, bluer, and more lonesome than ever, with help from singer-guitarist Jimmy Martin and other expert sidemen, some of whom (including Martin) later launched bluegrass bands of their own. As ever, his repertoire included both sacred and secular material as well as both songs and instrumentals, and he composed much of his material himself or with members of his band. Over the years, Monroe originals like “Uncle Pen,” “Raw Hide,” “Blue Moon of Kentucky,” “Jerusalem Ridge,” “I Want the Lord to Protect My Soul,” and dozens of others have formed the basis of the bluegrass canon for professionals and amateurs alike.

Through the 1950s and beyond, Monroe’s acoustic sound provided an alternative to honky-tonk, country-pop, and rockabilly. By 1963 he began to attract the attention of the urban folk music audience, with help from folklorist and promoter Ralph Rinzler, who promoted Monroe as the true Daddy of Bluegrass to listeners who thought bluegrass began and ended with Flatt and Scruggs. The year 1965 saw the first multi-day bluegrass festival making Monroe the centerpiece, and in 1967 he launched his own annual festival at Bean Blossom, Indiana, where he had long run a country music park. By 1970, when he won election to the Country Music Hall of Fame, he had become the acknowledged patriarch of the bluegrass movement, a cult figure to hordes of fans for whom bluegrass was akin to a religion.

Until his death, Monroe continued to propagate the gospel of bluegrass to worldwide audiences, appearing in all fifty states and Canada as well as on tours of Japan, England, Ireland, Holland, Switzerland, and Israel. His venues ranged from rural festivals to urban performing arts centers and the White House. He kept recording as well, and his career total topped more than 500 selections, most of them made for MCA (formerly Decca).

Monroe also won recognition for his accomplishments. In 1982 the National Endowment for the Arts gave him its prestigious Heritage Award, and in 1988 he won a Grammy for his album Southern Flavor—the first bluegrass Grammy ever bestowed. A 1991 inductee into the International Bluegrass Music Association Hall of Honor, Monroe was also 1993 recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS), an honor that placed him in the company of Louis Armstrong, Chet Atkins, Ray Charles, Paul McCartney, and other such legends. Although bluegrass constitutes only a small part of country music’s annual sales, such honors testify to the enormous influence Monroe’s music continues to exert among musicians in many fields.

A stroke suffered in April 1996 ended Monroe’s career as a touring artist and hastened his death on September 9 of that year. “We all knew that if he ever got to the point where he couldn’t perform that he wasn’t going to make it,” said Emmylou Harris. “Music was his life.” Memorial services at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium and later in Monroe’s native Rosine, Kentucky, where he is buried, united hundreds of friends and fellow musicians who continue to nurture his legacy as one of country music’s great historical personalities. - John Rumble