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THE GRASSY KNOLL BOYS
www.grassyknollboys.com
Leaning
into a single microphone for a three-part harmony, stepping
back to make room for a burning banjo break or skirting
around the upright bass, members of The Grassy Knoll Boys
look exactly like what they started out as: five musicians
who loved bluegrass enough to learn how to nail the hot
picking and tight harmony singing that virtuoso style
requires. A closer listen, however, reveals a band with much
more on its mind than just reproducing the music of an
earlier era.
From the outset, The Grassy Knoll Boys have been more
interested in thinking like Flatt and Scruggs or Bill
Monroe than in imitating them. In practice, this has meant
writing original material and scouring the lost corners of
American music for songs the band could make its own, and
the band's debut CD, BUCKEYED RABBIT, reveals the success of
this approach. From the sly minstrel lyrics of the title cut
to the blazing banjo breakdown "Panther's Bluff," from Blind
Lemon Jefferson's "See That My Grave is Kept Clean" to the
a capella work song "Old Hannah," The Boys cut a wide
swath through the roots of Southern music while putting
their own, decidedly individual stamp on all of it.
The Austin band's name plays on bluegrass history in a
self-deprecating way: Flatt and Scruggs had their Foggy
Mountain Boys, the Stanley Brothers the Clinch Mountain Boys
ö while the Texas Hill Country offers these musicians the
occasional knoll. At the same time, the reference to events
just up the road in Dallas situates the band squarely both
in the modern era and their home state and hints at the
band's dry sense of humor onstage.
The Grassy Knoll Boys was begun by vocalist and guitarist
Will Walden, a Texas native, and David Hamburger, a recent
immigrant from the deepest Northeast. When Hamburger left
behind a successful session and sideman career in Brooklyn,
New York to move to Austin, he expected to shelve his Dobro
for a while and concentrate on playing some guitar and
writing a few songs. What changed all that was meeting
Walden, who was ready, after the dissolution of his
successful Austin-based indie rock band The Barkers, for a
return to acoustic music. He persuaded Hamburger to join his
search for three more like-minded musicians, and soon
mandolinist-tenor vocalist Alex Rueb and banjo player Mark
Cavage were on board. Bassist Vance Hazen signed on after
Hamburger and Walden spotted him playing a honky-tonk gig at
Austin's legendary Continental Club.
After a handful of early gigs, the band caught the ear of
Austin Lounge Lizard member Tom Pittman, who admired the
band's emphasis on songs and singing. He gave them airplay
on KUT-FM, brought friends and fellow musicians out to
shows, and invited the band to play the Austin Friends of
Traditional Music's winter concert, where their electrifying
performance resulted in the band's opening for Del McCoury
Band's Austin shows in 2004 and 2005.
During the next year, The Grassy Knoll Boys continued to
expand the fan base, headlining shows across the state while
gigging steadily in Austin and making a first appearance in
the Northeast. In summer 2005, the band appeared at Grey Fox
Bluegrass Festival and headlined at
Kerrville Wine and Music Festival, where its combination of
superlative musicianship and creative song choices appealed
to folk audiences and bluegrass fans alike.
Currently, The Grassy Knoll Boys is expanding its range even
further, both musically and geographically, while holding
down a popular weekly residency at Jovita's in South Austin.
As BUCKEYED RABBIT continues to get airplay around the
country, the band is performing more and more original
material and arranging songs from sources as diverse as
Beck, Buck Owens and Nick Drake in preparation for making
its next record this winter.
Whether contemporary or traditional, it's all filtered
through the band's identity as a bluegrass-inspired
vocal-driven group. When audience members see them dodge and
weave around the microphone in a kind of choreography that
goes back to the first days of bluegrass, they realize that
the exhilarating tug between tradition and innovation is
alive and well in The Grassy Knoll Boys.
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Artist Information:
Bio
Fact Sheet
Press Releases:
January 26, 2006
January 23, 2006
Listen: "Chickens"
Visit Artist Website
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