Entrusted Tones – Kenny Thacker & Friends

One of the hidden gems in the bluegrass world is Kenny Thacker. Kenny may not be known to you yet, but let me introduce him to y’all. He is a gifted storyteller, songwriter, guitar player, and a soulful singer who was raised in a holler in Slone Fork, Kentucky. Kenny jokes that his family has lived in those hollers since Noah landed the ark!

He started playing guitar on the front porch at six years old and was hired into his Uncle Ray’s band, The Slone Family, at the ripe old age of 11. Life changed when they were discovered at a bluegrass festival by the father of the genre, Bill Monroe. That put the family band on a path that would ultimately end up on the stage of the Grand Ole Opry.

A call to ministry changed Kenny’s course in a very positive way, but after years of pastoring, some of his musician friends chastised him for not sharing his God-given musical gifts with the world. This record, Entrusted Tones, is his second effort at being faithful in the usage of those gifts.

Joining in on his new 15-song album are various bluegrass pals such as Vince Gill, Ron Block, Carl Jackson, Aaron Ramsey, Clay Hess, Tim Crouch, Mark Fain, Jamie Johnson, Suzanne Cox, and Buddy Greene. They have created one of the finest bluegrass projects of 2024. The album was done to raise support for SoundWord, a ministry to which he gives the majority of his time and attention. Kenny travels extensively across the nation, providing care and equipping to pastors and leaders of mostly smaller churches.

Bottom line, this album is hard to stop listening to; it is powerful, honest, soulful, and true to Kenny’s family heritage. Let me draw your attention to five of his songs, though all are worthy of their own article.

The first song on the album is 100 Miles from Home, a happy, toe-tapping song that evinces Kenny’s extraordinary artistry with words. The banjo intro, mandolin, guitar, and fiddle breaks are as good as any you will hear. Carl Jackson adds harmony vocals.

I left home a running, I left home a’ flyin’, I left home a hurryin’, but I ain’t made no time.
Looking for my fortune, looking for my fame, looking for somebody to even know my name.

My favorite song on the album is Katie Blythe. Goodness, it will make the hairs on your arm stand up. Tim Crouch’s fiddle part is so soulful, dynamic, and expressive that it really is next level. Kenny’s deep baritone voice, phrasing, and unexpected pauses are magical. And Vince Gill’s harmony is beautiful.

Blue as the Bluegrass is a fiddle-forward song with stellar harmonies with Jamie Johnson, Kenny’s cousin, on loan from The Grascals.

The most heartwarming song on the album, Come Go With Me, was written when Kenny found a longlost 1975 recording of his late granny, Dora Slone, that she recorded on a cheap cassette player. Kenny polished it up a bit and added some verses.  It’s lonesome and unvarnished. If that ain’t authentic bluegrass, nothing is!

Hillbilly Dreams has gotten the most attention so far. A clean, driving number that features Kenny’s rich, deep voice, and a portrait of the simple rural life of yesteryear. The instrumental breaks are so good. This song may showcase Kenny’s ability as a storyteller best. 

Hillbilly dreams, simple and plain, not cluttered or clouded, with fortune or fame
When your head hits the pillow, when you lay down to sleep, If you’re troubled or blue
The best thing you could do is have hillbilly dreams.

The album name, Entrusted Tones, sums up Kenny’s respect for the music and the people who gave us this gift we call bluegrass.

If There’s a Will There’s a Way – Junior Sisk

The newest offering from Junior Sisk on Mountain Fever Records is the masterfully recorded and produced, If There’s a Will, There’s a Way. Junior shared, “We played and sang our hearts out, and strived to come up with the best project for all our fans and many radio listeners.” This is a winsome 10-song bluegrass project that you will want to keep on repeat, with two very special appearances. More on those later.

Junior and his band are top level singers and players, and, together, they have built a fine body of work. Johnathan Dillion is an absolute stud of a mandolin player who brings hard-driving chops and fluid solos that are “Whoa, Nelly” fast. Curt Love is becoming one of the premier bass players in bluegrass – his tone, accuracy, and rock-solid rhythm remind me of a younger Jason Moore. Junior tells me that Tony Mabe is a bluegrass “Swiss Army knife” – he can play any instrument and sing any part. Heather Mabe is more than a harmony singer; check out her lead vocal on Bluegrass Country. Dare ya’ not to tap your foot along! Lawd, that song is good! Interestingly, Del McCoury released it in 2001 under a slightly different name, The Bluegrass Country. Young mandolin players, take note of Johnathan’s rhythm on this cut. 

Tim Crouch sits in on the fiddle. He has played with Alan Jackson, Dolly Parton, George Jones, Ricky Skaggs, and Marty Stuart, to name a few, and was the Grand Ole Opry’s staff fiddle player. Enough said.

Junior has an iconic voice. Such rare voices are immediately recognizable due to their unique character. Think of Elvis, Frank Sinatra, Aretha Franklin, Van Morrison, Johnny Cash, George Jones, and Ralph Stanley. Add Junior to that elite group. No one in bluegrass sounds like Junior. Whether singing an old Stanley Brothers tune or a new one he just wrote, Junior’s voice transports you back in time to a 1950s gospel sing on Smith Ridge deep in the Hills of Home. It’s his unique sound, feel, and honesty.

The late Ralph Stanley gave sage advice in his autobiography Man of Constant Sorrow: My Life and Times.

“Dad taught me to pick songs to suit my style. I don’t understand why so many singers don’t know this and try to sound like someone else. It’s best to find your own voice and stick with it no matter what. . .”

Junior has done just that! Like his hero, Ralph Stanley, Junior’s voice is his own . . . haunting, soulful, lonesome, country, and hard forged in the heart of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Junior Sisk and his A-list bandmates wisely travel in the traditional bluegrass lane. According to Junior, even his redos of forgotten country songs are re-recorded “in the Junior Sisk Style,” to introduce them to traditional bluegrass fans.

The tracks are heartfelt and, in places, even “lonesome,” but not depressing. 

Junior and Heather call us, convincingly, to thankfulness and joy in the opening track, What a Wonderful Life. Matt Lindsey sent this song to Junior in 2012, but a band from Nova Scotia recorded it first. So, Junior wisely sat on it until now. How providential is this song, with its message of joy, to resurface now when we are in a time when our country is divided, discouraged, and on edge? The title cut, If There’s a Will, There’s a Way, also a message of encouragement, reminds us that in the Savior, there is always hope, always a way forward . . .  

Two titles on this album quickly grab your attention. Both are big-time “surprise” duos. A Man Like Me features Junior singing lead with Dan Tyminski singing harmony. Memories of Mother features Junior singing lead with Ricky Skaggs adding a chilling Stanley-esque harmony. This may be one of Junior’s all-time bests. It is reminiscent of Skaggs and Whitley singing with Ralph in the early 1970s. That two bluegrass and country music megastars were delighted to sing with Junior on this album shows the respect they have for him. 

A Man Like Me, an old 1958 Roger Miller song, was first recorded by Johnny Paycheck. The cry comes from a man walking alone, unable to mend his broken heart in the honky-tonks, and instead turns to the Heavens . . . Junior is passionate about taking honest country songs lost to this generation and Sisking them into “new to us” bluegrass numbers.

The hidden gem on this album is These Are They. Junior heard the McPeak Brothers sing this gospel song in 1996. While this song is a “sacred” number based on Revelation 7:9-17, it is not preachy. That’s not Junior’s style. Instead, These are They, is a joyful, toe-tapping shout-out to the faithful disciples who served the Lord well and await their great reward. Goodness, the hairs on your arm will stand up:

These are they who’ve won the battle;
these are they who’ve stood the test,
clothed in garments pure and spotless,
the redeemed, the pure and blessed.

If you only have time to listen to one song on the album, listen to Junior and Ricky Skaggs harmonizing on the 1956 Carter Stanley tune Memories of Mother. Listen to Junior sliding into notes, and especially listen for the harmony which begins at 0:50 . . . it will give you chills:

Mother’s at rest in a lonesome old graveyard,
on a hill far away, there stands her white tomb
with the grass covered o’er, it seems so neglected.
When the spring seasons come, sweet flowers will bloom… 

Well done, Junior. Well done, band. Sweet flowers WILL bloom.

Grassy Cove – debut single/video from Wyatt Ellis with Sierra Hull

Do you remember the short story of Rip Van Winkle, the mythical character who over-imbibed and “fell asleep” for 20 years? What a shock when Ol’ Rip finally woke up! The entire world had changed . . . a lot!

Imagine if Bill Monroe, the father of bluegrass music, awoke from his eternal rest and listened to today’s bluegrassers. One of Mr. Monroe’s greatest surprises would be 14-year-old Wyatt Ellis. Wyatt is a once-in-a-generation talent who has electrified the bluegrass world on YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, and at The Station Inn, MerleFest, and the Opry, attracting many new listeners to bluegrass.

I will let you read Wyatt’s biography on his website, but will share that Wyatt began playing mandolin at age nine, and got serious about his craft during the pandemic while taking Zoom lessons with one of the most gifted mandolin players in history, Sierra Hull. In addition to his upcoming album’s players, Wyatt has picked with or played in front of many of the greats, including childhood prodigies Marty Stuart, Ricky Skaggs, Billy Strings, Molly Tuttle, as well as Del McCoury, Ronnie McCoury, Peter Rowan, Sam Bush, Alan Bibey, Dan Tyminski, Chris Henry, C.J. Lewandowski, Alex Leach, and the late Bobby Osborne. Basically, the Who’s Who of Bluegrass. 

In 2021, at age twelve, Wyatt penned twelve original songs. During the misery of the COVID pandemic, he learned every song that Bill Monroe recorded, note for note. Wyatt’s first cut to be released, Grassy Cove, is like all the songs on his forthcoming Knee High Record album, a mandolin duo. Fitting that for his first release, Wyatt chose to play a song he co-wrote with Sierra Hull.

Grassy Cove is an inspiring, original played by Wyatt and Sierra, which is darn near flawless, and has a haunting melody. The joyful interplay between Sierra and her young apprentice is fun to watch. Wyatt has a dream band on this project made up of Wyatt (mandolin 1), Sierra (mandolin 2), Deanie Richardson (fiddle), Cory Walker (banjo), Justin Moses (guitar), and Mr. Metronome, Mike Bub (bass). One evening, coming home from his grandpa’s, Wyatt was riding through the picturesque East Tennessee community of Grassy Cove. Seeing lightning bugs illuminate the grassy field at dusk, Wyatt heard a simple melody in his head, which he crafted into rough form and finished with guidance from Sierra.

While the studio track was released July 9, today we get to watch the professionally produced music video for Grassy Cove, shot at The Station Inn. The video is aesthetically beautiful and inviting. It’s hard not to keep watching it over and over. If you wonder if Sierra is playing lead and young Wyatt is simply playing a few backing chords, WRONGO!

Watch the video. Behold the young man!  Wyatt has the fluidity, feel, timing, and “ancient tones” that make seasoned pros scratch their head in wonder. How does he do that? How did he get so good at such a young age? Aside from a fierce work ethic and the best tutoring, the young man has been given an extraordinary gift.   

Wyatt is as confident as he is humble. Once, I jokingly asked if he was tired of having folks say, “You are going to be the next Billy Strings!” Wyatt didn’t miss a beat and said, “I don’t want to be the next Billy Strings – I want to be Wyatt Ellis.” Honest, humble, and a winsome boyish grin.

Whether you see Wyatt live, in this video, or on social media, what will be immediately obvious is that this young man is not just an amazing talent, but he is also having a ball of fun, and he is happy for us to join him for the ride.

Grassy Cove is available now from popular download and streaming services online.

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