Skip to content
Register |
Lost your password?
Subscribe
logo
  • Magazine
  • The Tradition
  • The Artists
  • The Sound
  • The Venue
  • Reviews
  • Podcasts
  • Lessons
  • Jam Tracks
  • The Archives
  • Log in to Your Account
  • Contact
  • Subscribe
  • Search
  • Login
  • Contact
Search
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
    • Festival Guide
    • Talent Directory
    • Workshops/Camps
    • Our History
    • Staff
    • Advertise
    • Contact
  • The Tradition
  • The Artists
  • The Sound
  • The Venue
  • Reviews
  • Podcasts
  • Lessons
  • Jam Track
  • The Archives

Home > Articles > Reviews > LARRY SPARKS

RR-LARRY-SPARKS

LARRY SPARKS

Bluegrass Unlimited|Posted on October 1, 2014|Reviews|No Comments
FacebookTweetPrint

Larry-SparksLARRY SPARKS
LONESOME AND THEN SOME…
A CLASSIC 50TH CELEBRATION

Rebel Records REB-CD-1846

It doesn’t seem all that long ago when Larry Sparks’ fortieth anniversary album was released, which finally garnered the lonesome legend the IBMA Album Of The Year, Recorded Event Of The Year, and Male Vocalist Of The Year awards. Since then, impressively, he has continued to record some wonderful traditional bluegrass music with albums such as The Last Suit You Wear and the excellent Almost Home.

Now, it is time to celebrate Sparks’ fiftieth year in the music business with his latest album Lonesome And Then Some. The recording is filled with the expected solid bluegrass music with help from guests such as long-time admirer Alison Krauss, former bossman Ralph Stanley, and IBMA Hall Of Famers Bobby Osborne, Jesse McReynolds, and Curly Seckler. Produced by Sparks and Steve Chandler, the album also features Judy Marshall, Ron Stewart, Tim Graves, Jackie Kincaid, David Harvey, Tyler Mullins, and Larry D. Sparks.

Krauss and Marshall join Sparks on a moving version of “Going Up Home To Live In Green Pastures,” and Stanley adds his old-school harmony vocals to “Loving You Too Well.” Seckler shows up on two cuts—adding harmony to “Dim Lights, Thick Smoke” and again with McReynolds on “I’m Gonna Sing Sing Sing.” There’s a new song on here that is classic Sparks, a true-life blues number along the lines of “John Deere Tractor,” sung as only he can do it. That cut is the uptempo yet moving “Bitterweeds,” about an old spinster woman who lives at the edge of town who missed the love of her life—or did she? The album ends with a live recording made with Bill Monroe in 1995.(Rebel Records, P.O. Box 7405, Charlottesville, VA 22906, www.rebelrecords.com.)DH

FacebookTweetPrint
Share this article
Facebook
X (Twitter)
Linkedin

Leave a Comment Cancel Reply





This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

May 2025

Flipbook

logo
A Publication of the Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame & Museum / Owensboro, KY
  • Magazine
  • The Tradition
  • The Artists
  • The Sound
  • The Venue
  • Reviews
  • Survey
  • New Releases
  • Online
  • Directories
  • Archives
  • About
  • Our History
  • Staff
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Subscriptions
Connect With Us
Facebook
Instagram
Twitter
YouTube
bluegrasshalloffame
tannerpublishing
tannerwest
Subscribe
Give as a Gift
Send a Story Idea

Copyright © 2025 Tanner Publishing Co. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy
Website by Tanner+West

Subscribe For Full Access

Digital Magazines are available to paid subscribers only. Subscribe now or log in for access.