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DICK WEISSMAN, NEAR AND FAR
DICK WEISSMAN NEAR AND FAR Heron Bay Records HB071 Dick Weissman started his music career when he formed The Journeymen with John Phillips and Scott McKenzie, to whom this CD is dedicated. Composing all the music for this project, Weissman also plays banjo, 12-string and electric guitars, and piano, to name a few of…
THE OSBORNE BROTHERS, NASHVILLE
THE OSBORNE BROTHERS NASHVILLE Pinecastle Records PRC 1184 This CD is the fourth and final release in a series documenting the Osborne Brothers’ career from their birthplace in Hyden, Ky., to Dayton, Knoxville, Detroit, Wheeling, and finally Nashville and the Grand Ole Opry. The first seven of the eight cuts are from a partially…
BALSAM RANGE, FIVE
BALSAM RANGE FIVE Mountain Home MH15322 The first time through on Balsam Range’s Five, my thought was that the recording may fall way short of Papertown. The second time through, the vocal and instrumental talents and the Balsam Range sound, all among the best in the business, had begun to work their magic, and…
DOBRO ROOTS: A PHOTO TOUR OF PREWAR WOOD BODY DOBROS
DOBRO ROOTS: A PHOTO TOUR OF PREWAR WOOD BODY DOBROS BY STEVE TOTH Centerstream Publishing 9781574243017. Foreword by Jerry Douglas, 216 pp., CD included, $55. (Centerstream Publishing, P.O. Box 17878, Anaheim Hills, CA 92817, www.centerstream-usa.com.) I don’t usually quote from the foreword of a book I’m reviewing, but in this case, Jerry Douglas says…
CHATHAM COUNTY LINE, TIGHTROPE
CHATHAM COUNTY LINE TIGHTROPE Yep Roc Records YEP-2387 This sixth studio album from Chatham County Line demonstrates increasing musical growth for the Raleigh, N.C.-based band. Dave Wilson (guitar and harmonica), John Teer (mandolin and fiddle), Chandler Holt (banjo and guitar), and Greg Readling (bass, pedal steel, and piano) blend their harmonies and classic string-band instrumentation with…
KATHY KALLICK, CUT TO THE CHASE
KATHY KALLICK CUT TO THE CHASE Live Oak Records 590 The saying “Cut to the chase”—meaning “Get to the important thing right now”—goes back to the early days of motion pictures. Movie makers quickly learned that the public didn’t want to sit through lengthy encounters or explanatory titles. Whether it was a scrambling Keystone…