Never Ending Song Of Love from Hugh Moore & Friends

If you spend any time online, you will have seen some of these social distancing music videos where performers record a video together from various locations around the country, or around the world. They have popped up in every imaginable style, and at every conceivable level of expertise and quality.

Because of the relative ease of recording acoustic music, we have seen a great many from bluegrass and old time artists. Some arose as an effort to defeat the boredom of being stuck at home when you are used to touring on the road. And some of them have been inspired by a desire to stay in touch with fans during this enforced break, or even monetize their time while out of work. Others still have been an attempt to figure out the technical issues involved, and just give it a go.

Here’s one we discovered this week from a different perspective. Banjo player Hugh Moore created just this sort of project, and not for any reason but to give a gift to the bluegrass community he loves, and have a way to pick with friends again while so many of us are locked in at home.

Hugh has spent many years in our music, and ran the OMS Records label starting in the late 1990s. There he oversaw releases from Bobby Osborne, Kenny Baker, Johnny Russell, Josh Graves, Jesse McReynolds, Pam Gadd and others.

Recently he called on a number of his pickin’ buddies in the professional bluegrass world, and they all agreed to be involved. Hugh played banjo, Ray Legere was on fiddle, Chris Sharp on guitar, Allyn Love on steel, and Billy Troy on lead vocal. On a lark, Moore also reached out to Bobby Osborne to see if he would sing and play mandolin, along with his son Boj on bass.

With everyone on board, they set to work on the pop song Never Ending Song Of Love, which was a charting hit for Delaney & Bonnie & Friends in 1971. Since that time, it has been covered by grassers from Earl Scruggs to Country Gazette, Gary Brewer, and several others. Country singers have also embraced the song, with Skeeter Davis and Lynn Anderson covering it, as well as duets by George Jones & Tammy Wynette and Loretta Lynn & Conway Twitty.

Hugh knew that Billy Troy would do a great job singing it, and indeed he did. Billy has a solid bluegrass pedigree as the son of Uncle Josh Graves of Flatt & Scruggs fame, though he has worked in the pop music world as well during his career. Back in the grass now with 40 Horse Mule, we expect to hear more music from him soon.

Once everyone had recorded their individual parts, Hugh mixed the audio parts, and he and his wife Linda edited the videos.

Check out the final product they created, given as a love offering to bluegrass lovers wherever they may be. See how well they work in both a bluegrass and a country vibe in this arrangement.

This take on Never Ending Song Of Love isn’t being offered for sale, though it is available to radio programmers at AirPlay Direct.

Well done and thanks, Hugh, and all involved in this video!

Bobby Osborne Jr to The Price Sisters

The Price Sisters, bluegrass music’s traditional singing siblings, announced today that they have brought Bobby Osborne, Jr into the band on bass.

Bobby, who sometimes goes by the nickname, Boj, is the son of the great bluegrass superstar with whom he shares a name, and, therefore, the nephew of Sonny Osborne as well. He has played bass with his dad’s group for several years, and will continue to do shows with them as he is able.

Lauren and Leanna Price are twin sisters from Ohio, both recent graduates of the bluegrass music program at Morehead State University in Kentucky. They turned heads while they were still in school, not only for their striking similarity in look and sound, but for their faithful recreations of classic bluegrass from the 1950s and ’60s. Lauren plays mandolin in a style closely mimicking Bill Monroe’s, so much so that audiences often have to do a double take to make sure that the young woman on stage is really the one playing it.

Leanna plays the fiddle, and their duet harmony wins rave reviews wherever they go.

Completing the group are Scott Napier on guitar and Lincoln Hensley on banjo.

You can find more information about The Price Sisters, including their recordings and tour dates, online.

Wha’s up with Bobby Osborne?

Bobby Osborne has created a folksy YouTube video with info about what he and Rocky Top X-Press are up to in September – complete with outtakes at the end.

It was shot and edited by his son, Bobby Jr., who is also a member of his dad’s band, and figures prominently in the news shared below.

Let’s join the bluegrass legend in his parlor…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1YGUJajbTGQ

The new CD from Bobby Jr, who is billing as Boj Osborne, is called In The Tradition. It features a mix of bluegrass and traditional country music with Boj out front on lead vocals.

The core studio band is Papa Osborne on mandolin and tenor vocals, J.P. Mathes II on banjo, Mike Toppins on resonator guitar, Glen Duncan on fiddle and Osborne the younger on bass. Guests include Howard Levi on harmonica, Kathryn Boggess on harmony vocal, and Obe Golding on banjo for two tracks,

Boj also prevailed on Bobby Sr. for one track.

“On Sunny Side of the Mountain, Dad is singing lead, playing mandolin and fiddle, I’m playing bass and guitar, Matt DeSpain is playing dobro, Daniel Grindstaff is playing banjo, and Chris Pence is playing drums. I think that covers everyone. That’s what I get for cutting it over the course of three years!”

It is available for download now from iTunes and other popular digital resellers. Manufactured CDs can be ordered online, and radio programmers can download all the tracks at Airplay Direct.

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