About 1974 or maybe 75 O saw JD Crow at a small bar in Louisville on a Monday night. Nobody watching but me. He had Tony on guitar, Ricky Scaggs mandolin, Keath Whitney singing. Last were still teens
All that Tony Rice was was a very very good virtuoso guitar player, he was a weird jerk as a person, i heard a phone interview from before a couple years before he died, he sounded no different than your typical Marboro smoking trailer park dweller
One of my favorite tunes to pick also! A Great tune, Great player & Great sounding BANJO!!!!! Listen to that 4th string growl on the B part, It’s as deep as a 55 gallon drum 😊😊
Love love love this song. I heard it on Barbados for the first time when I was 23, which is 44 years ago. Never forgot this song, someone there gifted me a cassette tape back then, I played it till it fell apart. Now just 10 minutes ago I, for no reason at all, had to think of that song agin and decided to look it up on RU-vid. So happy I found this beauty, thank you for posting that video 🙏🏻❤️ much love from the Netherlands.
Love bill momroe Ralph stanley But hank sir and hank 111 soumd identical blue soul and boice gives me chills like ralph stanlys o deth sun by Ralph. Talent all of them.
Makes me homesick for Wolf holler & mt baldy along The Illinois river valley where I was raised spent many of my adult years in Texas now back to Illinois but now on a small river called the Vermilion I sure do miss those hills
The Bible says we are all at one time, a stranger in our walk in this world. Foreigners. But Jesus has made it possible that we are all adopted into the family of God and we must consider the possibility of living our lives with our actions towards others should be as brothers and sisters and children of God. I Couldn't be happier 😊❤❤❤❤❤
For anyone who is interested in knowing: Jordan often refers to the Ohio River. Who were "God's Redeemed keeping vigil" on the other side of the Ohio? Scottish Presbyterians who were often shot at and the victims of arson, for being conductors on the Underground Railroad: Rev. John Rankin, John Parker, Alexander Gilliland, Francis Huggins Pettijohn... There is real, passionate and riveting history behind this song.
This song was one of the first I heard Tony Rice play. It was from the album of Gordon Lightfoot covers. Always thought he had one of the best voices in Bluegrass. I've heard the original now & it's very clear that he was a huge fan. Thanks for the upload.