Buddy Melton departing Balsam Range

Buddy Melton, fiddler, vocalist, and founding member of perennial bluegrass headliners Balsam Range, has announced his departure from the group.

Since the band’s founding in 2007 by five friends living in Haywood County, NC – just west of Asheville – Melton has been a critical creative force in the band, and probably their most recognizable lead singer. During this time they have released 13 successful recordings, and acquired 13 IBMA awards. Multiple single releases have made it to the #1 spot on our Bluegrass Today Weekly Airplay chart, many of them with Buddy’s voice out front.

But the time has come for him to move on, as he makes plain in a statement issued today about this change.

“After a lot of thought and prayer, and trust me, this has been a long debating process in my head, I have made the decision to step away from Balsam Range.

The Balsam Range time period has been an incredible chapter in my life. I am extremely proud of all we have accomplished, and I hope my contributions to Balsam Range have had a positive impact on others. We have taken the heritage of Haywood County, NC, around the world and created a musical legacy that will continue for years to come. I am very proud of all the hard work put into this chapter of my life and grateful for the sacrifices made to help make this journey possible.

I am honored to have recorded and shared the stage with each of the incredible men who have been and are Balsam Range. I will forever be grateful for their friendships and look forward to seeing and supporting what great things they do. I am equally thankful for all the support received from my family, friends, and the entire bluegrass community.

My departure from Balsam Range is just the beginning of new things. I am definitely not departing from the music I love. It is and will always be a big part of who I am. I am at a point at which I want to pursue other interests on my own schedule. Lots of fun projects in the works, so stay tuned.

So many incredible memories! So many incredible people met along the path. So many wonderful friendships developed! My time with Balsam Range has been nothing short of amazing!!!!

All I can say, with much Love, is Thank You!!”

Balsam Range says that they support their fellow founder as he steps aside.

“After long reflection of successfully working as a key member in a thriving engineering business v. 25 years of heavy commitments in the entertainment business, our partner and friend, Buddy Melton, is stepping away from Balsam Range. Buddy is (and has been) a dedicated professional in all of his undertakings, but he has come to the decision to focus on directions that give him room to rejuvenate, while at the same time, being more productive locally.

We love Buddy and his family, and we have enjoyed some amazing times together, both on and off the stage. Millions of miles traveled and thousands of shows performed have created a lifetime of incredible memories. Buddy, your dedication and passion have left a lasting impact on all of us. As you move forward into the next chapter, we are happy to support you in whatever you do. Here’s to the future and all it holds for you. Tim, Caleb, Marc, and Alan look forward to 2025, to continue taking the music and love of Balsam Range to music halls and festivals across the US. We will have special guests with us that folks will recognize and want to hear.

Our long-time agent, Mike Drudge, continues to work closely with our dear friend and marketer, Mandy Tenery, to keep Balsam Range continuously moving forward, and making us available to our fans and friends.

Time moves on, and things change. This is not always a bad thing, as it can provide progress in new, exciting ways. This said, let’s all remember the fun times in the past and look forward to the exciting new future!

We sincerely hope our Balsam Range friends and supporters will continue to grow with us in this time of change….onward and upward!”

There can be no doubt that Balsam Range will continue to roll on, and that Buddy Melton will likewise provide us with compelling original music.

Best of luck to all of them!

A Diamond Took My Place from Buddy Melton

The owner/operators of the Melton & Miller Music record label have been trading singles this past two weeks. Last Friday we had Talking To Myself from Milan Miller, and today Buddy Melton has A Dimond Took My Place.

We all know Buddy as fiddler and vocalist with Balsam Range, with whom he was twice named Male Vocalist of the Year by the IBMA. He likes to record on his own as well, with songs that might not be a snug fit for the band.

He says that this one, written by Miller, appeals to him in a number of ways.

“I have been a fan of A Diamond Took My Place since I first heard it several years ago. I am often lucky enough to hear Milan’s original songs first, and when he sent a demo of this one I knew it was one I wanted to record. It is a clever lyrical song with a fun uptempo groove in a minor key that supports the storyline. I guess you can say it checks a lot of boxes for what I consider to be a great song. I have been compiling new solo material for some time now, and am so excited to start releasing the new recordings.” 

It tells a story of a man who only finds out he has lost his true love when he offers her a ring, and she confesses her love for another. We won’t give away the twist in the song title, as you’ll hear it in the chorus.

Melton is supported here by Tim Crouch on fiddle, Milan Miller on guitar, and Seth Taylor on banjo and mandolin. Buddy plays bass and sings the lead, with harmonies from Miller.

Check it out.

A Diamond Took My Place is available now from popular download and streaming services online. Radio programmers will find the track at AirPlay Direct.

Missy Armstrong is NOT going down to the river

For their latest single, Melton & Miller Music has called upon the underutilized talents of bluegrass songstress Missy Armstrong. In it, she tells the story of a woman who spurns the advances of the allegorical brute who ended the lives of so many unsuspecting ladies in mountain ballads of yore.

Ain’t Going Down To The River is about a woman who has learned the lessons conveyed in previous songs like Knoxville Girl, Pretty Polly, and the like, which of course, is the reason why those songs existed in the first place – to warn young women of unscrupulous men with evil intentions.

And Missy delivers it with the same confident air she used in a similar song, Juliet, recorded with Detour and written by Jeff Rose that covered the same theme. But this one, from Beth Husband and Milan Miller confronts the ne’er do well with the inescapable logic that when those other girls go down to the river with him, “they don’t come back no more.”

Armstrong tells us that she loved this song right away, remembering that her first reaction to those maiden murder ballads was dumbstruck shock.

“Detour was the first band I ever played in, and I didn’t grow up around bluegrass music. I’ll never forget the first time I heard one of those songs at a festival. I thought, ‘what in the world is going on?'”

Her new label has nothing but high praise for Missy’s singing, starting with Buddy Melton of Balsam Range fame.

“Every once in a great while a voice comes along that touches your very soul. The first time I heard Missy sing was one of those moments for me. When I finally got to meet her, I quickly learned that in addition to having a great voice, she is one of the most down to earth and genuine people on the planet. I can’t wait for the world to hear Ain’t Going Down to the River and the other songs that we have recorded with her.”

A sentiment quickly seconded by songwriter, Milan Miller.

“Aside from being my favorite female singer in the genre, Missy has the rare ability of delivering a lyric with such honesty and emotion that the characters and images come to life. As a songwriter, there is no greater thrill than having someone with that gift singing songs that I have written.”

For this first single with Melton & Miller, Missy is accompanied by Terry Baucom on banjo, Aubrey Haynie on fiddle, Seth Taylor on mandolin, Buddy Melton on bass, and Milan Miller on guitar. As you might expect with this lineup, it’s a crackerjack of a bluegrass number.

Missy says she entered into this partnership with Buddy and Milan without any contract or paperwork, or even having heard the songs they had in mind. But trusting them both as artists and friends, she was swayed by their easygoing attitude and no pressure vibe.

“When I first agreed to talk to them about it, I hadn’t even heard the songs. Milan said he had a few saved back that he thought I would sound good on.

We have two more songs we are working on, and I love them all. At this point we’re not sure if there will be an album, or just these three singles. Buddy is really busy, and I’m not looking for something that will take me away from home. It’s pretty relaxed, and that’s what I think is making it so much fun. There’s no big agenda, and no pressure. 

We’ll see how it’s accepted before sinking more money and effort into a full project.”

Ain’t Going Down To The River is available now wherever you stream or download music, and to radio programmers at AirPlay Direct.

Buddy Melton talks Balsam Range and the evolution of bluegrass

Any attempt to tally the number of awards and accolades Balsam Range has accumulated since the band’s formation in 2007 is no easy task. Given their multiple citations by the IBMA both individually and collectively (a total of 13 awards in all), their continuous tenure at the top of the charts (including the three number singles that reached #1 here at Bluegrass Today), and the audience acclaim spawned from appearances from coast to coast, one could be tempted to pigeonhole them as bluegrass traditionalists who make music strictly within past parameters.

In truth, nothing could be further from the truth. While the North Carolina-based band draws inspiration from certain archival efforts, the nine albums they’ve tallied so far make a point to emphasize contemporary material, and open up songs to their own interpretation. Their latest album, Aeonic is no exception, thanks to the inclusion of favorite songwriters Milan Miller and Adam Wright, as well as deft covers by George Harrison (!) and Ray LaMontagne. 

We spoke to singer, fiddler and IBMA Best Vocalist winner Buddy Melton to get his thoughts on the reasons behind Balsam Range’s ongoing surge of success.

BLUEGRASS TODAY: With all the awards you’ve accumulated over the past decade, do you feel pressure to maintain a certain standard?

BUDDY MELTON: I don’t think it’s the awards so much as the fact we set the bar higher and higher for ourselves every year. We’re just working harder and harder to achieve new goals. Like most artists, we’re harder on ourselves than anyone else might be. It is an honor to be recognized. The awards do give you the feeling that you’re doing something right.

You’re very modest. But does the fact that you’ve achieved all the success you have in the past ten years surprise you at all?

We do feel blessed, and shocked, and surprised. In the beginning, we just got together, five guys from the same county that just wanted to play music together just for the fun of it. Sometimes the best things in life just come to you. You can try and try and try, and you work so hard to make things happen, and then it just leads to a lot of frustration. We just got together for the fun of it and so here we are. It’s just a great feeling. We were just living in the same town and happened to be great friends, so it was an ideal scenario.

The title of the new album, Aeonic, is a Greek word that translates as “timing” and “endurance,” so it appears that the meaning that’s implied ties in to your entire trajectory. 

This album very much recognizes where we are as a group. The artwork and the title kind of translate that way. When you’re in a band, it’s like a group of gears. One gear turns the other gear. All the gears impact each other, and when it’s working right, they’re more efficient. Our music has continued to evolve. We have both contemporary songs and traditional sounding songs. The traditions move forward with a new generation of players. 

How did you go about choosing the material for the new album?

The process is always very similar. We’re always compiling songs. One of my favorite things to do as far as listening to music is to listen to new songwriters that haven’t been widely heard. We try to find songs that will fit the band, so we get together and listen to all those songs we’ve complied over the last year or so. Oftentimes, there are songs that we’ve listened to that don’t make the final cut.

On the new album, there are songs we’ve wanted to record for a while. Sometimes there are songs that stand out, but they don’t make it for one reason or another. Every song has its own life to it, and every song has its place, so putting together an album is like putting together a good live show. You try to have something for everybody. It’s a process. Sometimes we work songs up and it doesn’t work out, and they end up getting worked up differently a year later. It’s quite a process but it’s a fun process really to come up with those different arrangements, and sing the things we like to sing. Everybody brings something to the table.

The Hobo Blues song, for example, was something Caleb was singing in soundcheck for the last couple of years. It was a guitar/vocal thing and we’ve actually played around with it for years, although now seemed like a good time to do something with it. Every song kind of had a story to how it came about and the vision we had for it. We’ve talked about some of these songs several times in the past and so we tried it out this time around and it just seemed to fit the project. 

You record a lot of other people’s songs. Does the band contribute to the songwriting as well?

Many of these songwriters that we use are folks we’ve had relationships with ever since the beginning. You develop these relationships over time. For me, it’s about having a great song and material that represents the band properly, whether it’s written within, or written from the outside. We all bring songs to the table. We’re not adamant about strictly using songs written by the band, but if we have a good one, we’ll get it out there. As with any band, it’s important to have your own sound and to have songs that fit the originality of that approach. So it’s always been all about that.

For example, the first song on the album, The Girl Who Invented the Wheel, wasn’t written as a bluegrass song. It was a very quirky kind of slow-sounding song, and I just loved the lyrics, and I could hear it with a banjo and a fiddle. In my mind, I could hear that kind of arrangement. It’s not about getting songs presented to us when we’re getting ready to record. We rarely do that. We just try to put our twist to the songs we have.

How would you describe your trajectory up to this point?

I feel like it’s been a continuing climb. We’ve been getting out and playing more places and meeting new people and expanding our musical style. It’s exciting. When we did the first project we didn’t even have a name. I remember our producer, Mickey Gamble, coming to us and suggesting we do a Bill Monroe tribute album. We’d be the core band and have a whole bunch of guests on it. That was supposed to be our first album, but we all sat down and decided that that wasn’t what we wanted to be early on. We didn’t want to be a cover band where there’s not a lot of originality to it. We started that project and about half the songs were Bill Monroe covers. But we decided to put some original songs on there and started merging the material so we could have some originality. I’m glad we did that.

So let’s talk about that originality factor. How have you seen your music evolve over the course of the past ten or eleven years?

It’s matured a bit, just as we have as individuals. On the new album, for example, there are traditional sounding songs and then there are some contemporary covers, like the Beatles song, If I Needed Someone. If you look back over our past albums, there’s always been some variation in style. Everybody in our band likes different things, so I think that helps the process. Caleb and Tim tend to like jazz, so we’ll play some jazzy things from time to time. Marc likes traditional bluegrass stuff. I have different likes and interests in music. We all have different interests in music. So when we bring that all together, it brings originality to it all. I think we’ve grown, but that doesn’t mean it’s gotten any more complicated. We’re just willing to try something new. 

You took a really original move by recording a couple of albums, including your last one, Mountain Overture, with the Atlanta Pops Orchestra Ensemble. How did that come about?

That was something I wanted to do for a long time and it made for a unique sound. We’ve had more and more of our songs scored for orchestra and it’s fun artistically because it’s such a big full sound, and we enjoy hearing all those other parts. It also opens the doors for other listeners who might not enjoy bluegrass, but can still come to a concert series and hear the orchestra and the songs, and maybe come away as a bluegrass fan and enjoy the music as a whole — not just our music, but the genre overall. So its an opportunity to expose the music outside of the typical setting in which it’s usually presented. 

Given your willingness to expand your template, have you gotten any negative pushback from the traditionalists? Have you found the need to balance your approach in any way?

I think there’s always going to be a need to balance. Everybody has their opinion on what music should be, whether it’s bluegrass or country — new country or old country — or rock and roll. Everybody has their favorite. The first generation of fans grabbed onto bluegrass, and forever more figured that’s what it should always be. There’s nothing wrong with that if that’s what you like, and there are plenty of great artists doing that. Then there are other artists trying different things stylistically, and it all sort of works together. A really great festival has a lot of different things and a variety of music that the fans can enjoy. 

What kind of comments do you get from your listeners?

We have gotten some feedback from folks who only like traditional bluegrass, but then we’ve also had people who have come to us and said they’ve always been a fan of a particular song we’ve covered, or maybe an original tune that touched their lives in a certain way. That’s when you know you’re doing something right, when people’s lives are impacted in a positive way because of something you’ve done musically. It makes me feel good about being willing to push for new things. Everyone has troubles in life, so anything that can help them through their struggles is a powerful thing. If the music moves somebody, then that makes their day a bit better. So all our projects have a little bit of both. It is a balancing act. We love the traditional stuff — we’re not turning our back on it — but we’re also trying to do new things as well. 

There are a lot of labels people attach to bluegrass music these days — it can be “jam,” “grassicana,” “nu-grass” or simply “Americana.” What’s your take on it all?

Over the years I’ve played with different bands and performed different genres of music, and there’s always someone trying to figure out what to call it. I don’t know. It’s hard to determine. I don’t really worry about it that much, or whether it goes to one extreme or another. We’re just aiming for quality music… great lyrics, great harmonies, real quality.

In my opinion, good music is good music, no matter what you qualify it as. We just push for that and don’t really care if someone calls it bluegrass or nu-grass or any of these other broader definitions. I just care whether it’s good music.

Secrets In The Shadows video tease from Buddy and Milan

Buddy Melton and Milan Miller have released a video tease for another of the songs from their current Secrets, Dreams and Pretty Things duo project.

This time the guys take a horror film-themed approach, complete with grainy black & white images and creepy music to introduce the track, Secrets In The Shadows. It’s a fun way to preview the song – unless scary movies give you fits.

Miller, who wrote the song with Glenn Simmons, said that their composition is a contemporary murder ballad.

“There is no illusion of a happy ending in this song. From the first notes of Terry Baucom’s banjo kick off, it is clear that something bad is going to happen.”

Oooooooooo……

 

Secrets, Dreams, and Pretty Things is available from Milan and Buddy’s web site and wherever bluegrass music is sold. Radio programmers can get the tracks from Airplay Direct.

Video tease from Buddy and Milan

Buddy Melton and Milan Miller have released a video to introduce everyone to their new duo album, Secrets, Dreams & Pretty Things. Buddy, of course, is the fiddler and tenor singer with Balsam Range, and Milan is a noted songwriter who has contributed many songs to their, and many others’, bluegrass records.

The guys chat a bit about the project, now available from their web site and popular download services, along with some quick bits from the folks who helped them record it.

As the video plays you’ll hear snippets of the various tracks.

 

Radio programmers can get the tracks from Airplay Direct.

Adeline video from Buddy Melton & Milan Miller

It’s always great to see fine people achieve success in bluegrass music, or in any other endeavor in life.

Such is the story of Buddy Melton and Milan Miller, a pair of picking buddies from western North Carolina this 20 plus years, who have both found notoriety in our music for their artistic contributions. Most bluegrass fans know Buddy for his soaring tenor voice and fiddle playing with Balsam Range, and Milan as the songwriter of such hits as Pretty Little Girl From Galax for IIIrd Tyme Out, and Papertown for Balsam Range.

People in the industry know these two as hard working, serious men with good heads on their shoulders and a kind word for everyone they meet. Sometimes good things do happen to good people.

Buddy and Milan have come together to create a new album combining their talents, called Secrets, Dreams & Pretty Things. It’s set for a March 11 release, with a video now available for the opening track, Adeline.

Milan wrote the song for Buddy, to capture the father’s pure love that Melton has for his daughter, Adeline.

 

Assisting these two in the studio were a who’s who of bluegrass superstars: Sammy Shelor, Aubrey Haynie, Adam Steffey, Terry Baucom, Marc Pruett, Darren Nicholson, Rob Ickes, John Cowan, Carl Jackson, Missy Armstrong, Adam Wright, Mark Bumgarner, Ron Shuffler, Seth Taylor, Caleb Smith, Tim Surrett, and Ron Stewart.

Audio samples for all 12 tracks can be heard on Buddy and Milan’s web site, where download purchase of the single is also enabled. Radio programmers can get Adeline now from Airplay Direct.

George Shuffler is The Boy From Valsese

As we approach the 70th anniversary of the original bluegrass band, we find ourselves missing a good many of the pioneers that brought it to life. Many have received flowers while they were living, while others passed before seeing bluegrass stabilize into a widely recognized music form, or witness their own elevation into the IBMA Hall of Fame.

George Shuffler, credited with creating the now staple crosspicking style for guitar, has enjoyed both. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2011, and has found multitudes of younger players imitate his playing.

A long time member of The Stanley Brothers in the 1950s and ’60s, Shuffler has said that he developed the crosspicking technique during lean years with the Stanleys. Often they worked as just a trio, with George swapping between bass and guitar, helping to solo and ‘fill the holes’ with his six string.

Remembering his legacy as a bluegrass icon, modern practitioners Milan Miller and Buddy Melton have released a new recording of The Boy From Valdese, which Miller wrote for Songs From Burke County, an album from 2013 with a focus on North Carolina history. It tells the story of one George Shuffler, who was born and raised in that town.

Melton takes the lead vocal with Miller on guitar, Terry Baucom on banjo, Adam Steffey on mandolin, and Ron Shuffler (George’s younger brother) on bass. Harmony vocals come from Miller and Carl Jackson.

They are offering a free download of the track as a tribute to Shuffler.

George Shuffler – hip… hip… hooray!

New single from Summer McMahan

Summer McMahan, the talented lead singer for Mountain Faith, has struck out on her own with a new self-produced solo project, The Story Of My Life. In reviewing the band’s last album, Battlefield, we offered high praise for her singing and songwriting, making this solo project a welcome one here at Bluegrass Today.

She is assisted by her Mountain Faith bandmates, including her brother Brayden on banjo, her cousin John Morgan on guitar, and Dustin Norris on mandolin, along with Corey Hensley on bass and Stephen Burrell on fiddle.

A debut single, Your Love Holds The Key, has been released to radio. It’s a new song from Johnny Williams which finds Summer in duet with Buddy Melton, of Balsam Range fame.

 

The album is available from the Mountain Faith web site, and radio programmers can download the single now from Airplay Direct.

Daylight coming soon from John Driskell Hopkins and Balsam Range

John Driskell Hopkins, bass player with the Zac Brown Band, has teamed up with Balsam Range to record an album of his original music, Daylight, which will be independently released on January 22, 2013.

The bulk of the music is performed with Hopkins on guitar and vocals, with Balsam Range providing accompaniment. Several guest artists are featured as well. Tony Trischka and Jerry Douglas appear on one track each, and Zac Brown lends his chart-topping lead vocals to a song, as does Brown protege Levi Lowrey. Joey and Rory Feek (Joey + Rory) sing a lovely duet on another.

Though his career has been in country music, John claims a life-long fascination with bluegrass and says that when his plans for a solo project solidified, he reached out to Balsam Range to assist.

BR banjo picker Marc Pruett tells us that the call came out of the blue.

“Hopkins contacted us through our web site a couple of years ago about the possibility of doing a CD. He had heard us do Blue Mountain on Sirius-XM. Evidently, it moved him to find us and, at first, we were not sure what might happen.

But we met him one night for a practice session. He drove up to Clyde from Marietta, and we all had a good time, saw that he is a real, sincere person, and that he is a great picker, singer and family man. (My son is an Eagle Scout, and John is as well! So we had that as common ground for conversation.)”

It took a full year to find sufficient down time in both the Balsam Range schedule and in Hopkins’ commitments with Brown, but they rehearsed when they could, and did some shows togethers to get the material down in front of an audience.

Sessions were tracked alternately at the Crossroads Music studio in North Carolina, and John’s home studio in Atlanta. Final production and mixing were completed at Zac’s Southern Ground Studios in Nashville.

Pruett feels like he’s made a friend in the process.

“John Hopkins is a serious student of all kinds of music, and I think it comes through well in the songs he writes. He really runs the gambit from soft, Gospel-sounding acoustic, to hard, driving rock-swing things. John is a ‘power singer,’ and man he can deliver.

The most satisfying thing for me is in the fact that he invited us to write with him, and I guess I pushed into it enthusiastically enough that he wrote one with just me. I hope it can find a home sometime on a disc, and I learned a lot writing with him.

I consider him a friend, mentor, and fellow ‘music-warrior’ on this adventure of life. I’m glad I met him, and I treasure his friendship. “

Buddy Melton, vocalist and fiddler with Balsam Range, says that working with a musician who appreciates bluegrass, but works outside the boundaries of the style was a valuable artistic opportunity.

“We love to listen to bluegrass as we travel but also like to listen to other genres. The same is true for artists in those different genres. John and the guys with the Zac Brown Band often listen to bluegrass as they travel. Funny how good music seems to find a path to those we think aren’t listening and even inspires them.

The John Driskell Hopkins project was a lot of fun to create. John is an extremely talented guy and his song writing and production took us in directions we might not have otherwise gone. It is rewarding as an artist to have the opportunity to expand our minds and musical approach.

There are some great songs on this project and along with Balsam Range there are some special guest like Zac Brown and Jerry Douglas that make for a fun collaborative musical project.”

And Hopkins himself gave the band an oddly-phrased thumbs up.

“Being on stage with Balsam Range is like body-surfing in warm butter-cream icing with hillbilly cherubs. Smooth…..”

 

The CD won’t be available to ship until January 22, but it appears that MP3 downloads can be purchased now from John’s web site, where you can also stream the entire album.

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