HOMESPUN
From Old Time to Bluegrass
Taught By Ralph Stanley.
Level 4
90-min. video, Includes tab book
With the Clinch Mountain Boys
This intimate look at Ralph Stanley's pioneering banjo style begins with the
first tunes he learned from his mother in the old-time clawhammer technique,
and progresses through the three-finger bluegrass picking he helped make famous.
Included are both detailed instruction and full-band performances of some of
the most beloved Stanley Brothers tunes: "
Little Maggie," "
Hard
Times," "
Dickenson County Breakdown," "
Little
Birdie," "
Clinch Mountain Backstep," "
Train
45," more.
Produced by Smithsonian/Folkways and Homespun Video
Reviews:
"Until someone can get Earl Scruggs to do an instruction video, (this video)
will have to suffice. And anyone who loved Homespun's Bill Monroe videos which,
like this one, had much to interest non-picking bluegrassers, will want this
one too. . . .Stanley doesn't just demonstrate: He breaks it down and explains
how he plays each tune. . . Just as interesting are his discussions of his early
musical influences, including his five-string "Stanleytone" banjo and
some of the tricks he uses to create his distinctive picking style."
-- Country Music Magazine
". . . More than any other bluegrass performer, Ralph Stanley has preserved
the original elements of traditional "mountain" music which were at
the heart of his early sound. Old-time music fans and pickers will be pleased
with the emphasis given here to Ralph's clawhammer banjo picking . . . Highly
recommended for all Ralph Stanley fans and disciples, as well as anyone who would
like to learn more about the traditional roots of bluegrass music."
-- Old-Time Herald
Ralph
Stanley, one of the pioneers of bluegrass banjo, comes from a musical family
with a long and rich tradition rooted in the mountains of southwestern Virginia.
He is a powerful and compelling singer as well as an innovative instrumentalist
whose music has remained vital throughout four-and- a-half decades of performing
and recording, first with his late brother Carter and then as leader of the Clinch
Mountain Boys. A recipient of numerous awards, Ralph was inducted into the Bluegrass
Hall Of Fame in 1992.