Chris Warner: What Jimmy Martin taught me

This recollection of Jimmy Martin’s lessons to his heralded banjo player Chris Warner is a contribution from Thomas Cook. Chris is widely regarded as one of the finest exemplars of the Jimmy Martin style on banjo, behind only J.D. Crowe and Bill Emerson. The photos are from Warner’s personal collection.

What made the first generation bluegrass music so powerful? Why does it still resonate 80 years after Earl Scruggs and Lester Flatt joined Bill Monroe’s Blue Grass Boys and musically tore down the Grand Ole Opry? What made these musicians and the music they created so great? It is too late for todays’ bluegrass musicians to go and hear Bill Monroe, Flatt & Scruggs, Reno & Smiley, The Stanley Brothers, and Jimmy Martin. But we can still learn from the musicians they fostered, such as the great banjo player, Chris Warner. 

Chris, along with J.D. Crowe, Bill Emerson, Kenny Ingram, and others, was among Jimmy Martin’s definitional banjo players. Also an excellent mandolin player and baritone singer, he served two stints with the Sunny Mountains Boys (1967-’69 and again 1985-’89), and helped Jimmy Martin record some classic songs, including Freeborn Man, Milwaukee, Here I Come, Slowly, and Arab Bounce.

He also backed up or played for Del McCoury, Bill Monroe, Jim & Jesse, Rhonda Vincent, and Doyle Lawson, to name a few.  Through it all he was listening and paying attention, and has some thoughts to impart to the younger generation of pickers and singers. Chris is serious about bluegrass, and he is of the opinion that there is fundamentally a right way and a wrong way to play the music. And he believes that what he learned from Jimmy Martin should be taken seriously by anyone who wants to play the music well, as opposed to simply thrashing at it. 

Jimmy Martin is seen by many as a comic figure, given his brash stage presence and ebullient personality. While he certainly knew how to command the attention of his audience, he was very deliberate about his music, and set high standards for his band members. Knowing exactly what each vocal and instrumental part should sound like, each musician was expected to know his part and play it to Jimmy’s satisfaction under any circumstances. Hundreds of songs were recorded over a 50 year career, with a constantly rotating cast of musicians, yet his sound remained remarkably unchanged. He taught his Sunny Mountain Boys what he wanted, and those lessons are worth studying.

Jimmy was a fanatic about timing. He drilled his musicians to play the way he heard his music, and went so far as to forbid  Sunny Mountain Boys to jam at a festival with lesser players because of the deleterious impact on their rhythm. As Chris Warner puts it, “When I went with Jimmy the first time from 1967 to 1969, I could play the notes that were on the records, but I couldn’t play them with his timing. That took a lot of work. Jimmy kept talking about timing, and I thought he meant meter. I was getting frustrated until Vassar Clements took me aside, and said in his understated way that, by timing, Jimmy meant meter, tone, bounce, syncopation, and dynamics.”

Chris refers to Jimmy’s timing as a shuffle, similar to the shuffle of a fiddle bow on a hoedown, which is much easier to demonstrate than to describe. This “one, two, and three” syncopated beat underlies all of Jimmy Martin’s music, both instrumental and vocal. 

Jimmy Martin referred to the lack of dynamics in bluegrass rhythm as being like, “a dog trotting in dry leaves.” This is Jimmy’s slang for lesser singers and instrumentalists who perform with a sing-song quality to their music. Jimmy Martin insisted that the instruments play the way a great singer holds and slurs notes to create emotion. He believed that a great lead singer doesn’t sing in a monotone, or phrase his words mechanically.

This shuffle rhythm does not come naturally to many beginning players, but it can be learned. Chris says that he had to really work on not only the timing in his banjo playing, but learn to pronounce vowels the way Jimmy did for singing baritone, being from Pennsylvania rather than Tennessee. If you don’t pronounce words the same, says Chris, it is very difficult to get a good vocal blend.

“Open your mouth when you sing,” Jimmy would tell him. Chris relates that you have to extend your jaw out to achieve the “braying” vocal tone used by Jimmy, as well as Lester Flatt and Curly Seckler.

Chris points out that the great first generation bluegrass bands can be easily identified by their rhythm – the Stanley Brothers were very different from Flatt and Scruggs. Both are fine, in Chris’ opinion, just different. One of the things which created the Jimmy Martin sound was his exemplary rhythm guitar playing, which powered the Sunny Mountain Boys. Jimmy played on top of the beat with a syncopated double strum, plus runs.

Serious students of bluegrass music would do well to listen to Jimmy’s guitar playing on such songs as Foggy Old London, Chattanooga Dog, and Hold Whatcha Got, which create the pace and tone of the song. Many contemporary guitar players are followers of Tony Rice and Clarence White, without realizing that both were excellent, solid rhythm players in addition to their lead work. Both admired Jimmy’s guitar playing. Chris says that guitar players in a band context should focus on the rhythm; the cake being more important than the frosting.

Chris points to the recorded version of Sunny Side of the Mountain as a good example of the classic Jimmy Martin style. The kickoff is a syncopated triplet – counted “trip-o-let-four-and” – which is economical, driving, and exact. During the break, Vernon Derrick plays the melody with double stops; at the end of the lines he executes a classic signature motif; he uses an upstroke of the pick over four strings to create syncopation and rhythm.

Another classic is the Paul Williams’ mandolin treatment on Drink Up and Go Home. Listen to how Paul lingers over the notes the way a singer would. It frames the melody with elegant punctuation and ornamentation, which complements rather than overwhelms the song. It’s a perfect set up for Jimmy, one of the great vocalists of bluegrass music, to tell the story. 

Chris credits Jimmy Martin with teaching him how to play his style of backup on the banjo as well. Jimmy has, with occasional exceptions, two basic rules for backup: 1. Don’t play the same notes that the person at the mic is hitting. When the melody goes down, you go up. 2. Keep it simple; “don’t detract from what the lead vocal is doing. Your job on back up is to make the singer or picker sound good.”

He also believed that the first three or four notes of a lead instrumental break are important and should “pop” or “bounce.” They should be distinctly emphasized. Jimmy wanted his players to lead up to the melody note and really hit it, and then back off creating dynamic tension and resulting interest for the listener. J.D. Crowe learned this so well because Jimmy spent more time teaching J.D. than any other banjo player he had, and perhaps because Crowe was so young when he entered The Sunny Mountain Boys.

Musicians who insert too many fancy licks and run excessive scales risk tiring the listener and losing the narrative thread of the song. Playing the melody during a break reinforces the song because, in Jimmy’s view, too much improvisation was aimless noodling, and was to be avoided. Jimmy and Hershel Sizemore used to fight over this; later in life Herschel admitted that he should, in retrospect, have done it Jimmy’s way.

Sizemore was, of course, one of the great mandolin players in bluegrass, and had excellent technique. Many lesser players attempt fancy playing but haven’t done their homework. Jimmy Martin’s credo was, “listen to the record, learn the music, practice and be able to play it with drive, taste, and dynamics.”

Chris points to Earl Scruggs. “Earl wasn’t a fancy player. He was a strong musician with great taste, power, timing, and dynamics.” Chris notes that Jimmy Martin loved the singing and playing of Paul Williams. Paul always played exactly the right lick in the right spot on his mandolin. His playing is deceptively simple, yet careful listening reveals that Paul, like Earl, played with taste, tone, and touch due in part to Jimmy’s coaching.

In Jimmy’s view, a solo, like a letter, should have a salutation or beginning, contain full sentences which say something meaningful, have appropriate punctuation, and an ending which summarizes and completes the statement. The instrumental break, like the lead singing, should convey meaning and emotion, although he couldn’t articulate it in quite that way. Chris quotes Jimmy as telling him to just, “play it pretty.”

Jimmy made exceptions for hot players who “had what it takes,” meaning that they understood melody and dynamics and could bring something new to the Sunny Mountain Boys. A good example is the nice mandolin style of Vernon Derrick who played mandolin with Jimmy, and pedal steel with Kitty Wells, before a long stint on fiddle with Hank Williams, Jr. Vernon loved the music of Chuck Berry and worked on converting Berry’s guitar licks to the mandolin, and delivering them on stage with some real moves. See Jimmy Martin & the Sunny Mountain Boys with Vernon Derrick and Alan Munde play Tennessee on the Del Reeves Show. Jimmy let him do it because Vernon could instrumentally pull it off, and could really sell it to an audience.

Jimmy Martin’s music wasn’t easy to play, but it was simple in structure. Jimmy didn’t want things cluttered; he wanted to emphasize the melody. A few hot licks were OK if they fit the song, but his musicians had to remember they were playing for an audience who were there to hear Jimmy’s music.

Chris says it may sound like a paradox, but that it is a challenge to play simple music well. One key is constant practice. Chris quotes Jimmy as saying, “learn your break! Listen to the records!” That way, a musician could perform to a high level no matter what the conditions. Chris notes that the really good players – citing J.D. Crowe and Doyle Lawson – never overplay. They know exactly the volume they should perform at, and never vary it, no matter how deficient the sound system might be. Overplaying leads to choppy rhythm, bad tone, and missed notes. Lesser musicians beat on their instruments – “thrashing” in Jimmy’s slang – meaning volume at the expense of finesse. 

What would Chris say to aspiring bluegrass musicians who want to play in a way that Jimmy Martin or Earl Scruggs would approve of? Chris notes that he is discussing the music of Jimmy Martin and that the following tips are fundamental rules of thumb. Different styles call for different approaches; fancy playing is OK if the style of music calls for it, and it is played with the aforementioned drive, punch and dynamics

1. Keep your pick(s) moving, put rhythm to it. At the end of a phrase, put in a little bit of extra something. Give it a little syncopation without losing the melody. It should be exciting and not mechanical. You can use off-time licks tags as long as you keep the overall timing.

2. Learn the melody of every song you play, and don’t lose sight of it! Don’t show off with lots of fancy licks unless the style of bluegrass calls for fancier playing. Remember that you are playing for an audience, and don’t play to impress other musicians by showing what you know. Audiences like melodies. Also, that fancy lick that you can do in your living room may not be so easy to play live. Practice your break until it is fixed in your brain and the notes are clean. 

3. Every note should be distinct. Go for tone and play pretty. Don’t noodle, go for clarity. Every break or kickoff should tell a story with a beginning, middle, and end. Every break should begin with a bouncy pop leading up to the main note, maybe with a slide or double stop to emphasize it. Then, lighten up. 

Play the melody, choosing the notes you want to emphasize. Build the solo like a singer would. Play consistently with dynamics and emotion. End with a flourish. If you are playing two breaks, play simply the first time and fancier the second, if you can do it without losing timing and tone. 

4. Play with dynamics. Every note shouldn’t be played at the same volume. Build to a crescendo with solid, well-executed notes. Create an ebb and flow. Slide or hammer into important notes like a singer would. Create off-time runs with hammer-ons, pull-offs, and varied right hand patterns. 

If you are interested in hearing Chris demonstrate his precepts; give a listen to his CD, Goin’ To the Dance, on Patuxent records. It is a Master Class on bluegrass timing from a bluegrass master who really knows his subject.

Goodness gracious, it’s good.

Three fine new banjo CDs

Banjo CDs are coming out of the woodwork, it seems. Just in the past few weeks, we have received stellar releases from Dan Menzone, Jessie Baker and Chris Warner. Each is distinctive in its own way, and all should have appeal for five string pickers and fans of banjo music.

Dan Menzone was not a familiar name to me until Wyatt Rice called to let me know about Frostbite, Dan’s latest CD. Wyatt had recorded the album at his studio, and also provided the guitar. Along with Menzone on banjo, other players include Rickie Simpkins on fiddle and mandolin, Ronnie Simpkins on bass and Roger Williams on resonator guitar.

Dan wrote 8 of the 13 tunes on the CD, and he plays with a solid, driving, bluesy sound often associated with pickers from the VA, TN, NC, KY region, though he was born and raised in south-central Massachusetts. He currently performs with TrueGrass, based in Connecticut.

Wyatt told us that he had a very high opinion of Frostbite, but since he had been so intimately involved in its production, wanted to get a more objective read from big brother, Tony.

“Tony really liked this CD. I handed it him while we were riding to a gig, and he stuck in the player of his Mustang and listened all the way through. He liked the CD so well he provided a quote for the cover.”

Not too shabby…

In addition to his originals, Dan includes his takes on classics like Black Jack, Wheel Hoss and Randy Lynn Rag. You can hear audio samples from all the tracks on Menzone’s web site or CD Baby.

Chris Warner’s is a name familiar to any serious banjo lover. His work with Jimmy Martin cemented his name in the five string firmament, and the whole banjo community has been delighted to have Chris active again, both performing and recording, in recent years.

His newest release on Patuxent is Goin’ To The Dance, and while it’s not a purely banjo CD, Warner’s name and presence earn it a mark in that checkbox. In fact, it sounds more like a band project, a powerful testament to Warner’s skills as a producer.

Tom Adams plays guitar and handles much of the lead vocals, Michael Cleveland and Patrick McAvinue provide the fiddle, with Dick Laird and Mark Seitz on mandolin, and Steve Street and Heath Laird on bass.

Al of the tracks are songs/tunes that Warner wrote, with the exception of two traditional fiddle tunes (Bonaparte’s Retreat and Turkey Buzzard – the latter a top flight duet with Cleveland), a new song from Carroll Swam, and a retelling of Leavin’ Town, the classic Jimmy Martin/Paul Williams instrumental. Out of 14 tracks, 8 are vocals, with Darren Beachley singing on two of them. The rest are banjo tunes.

All of the music is hard-driving, traditional bluegrass with a strong Jimmy Martin vibe, as this audio from the title track attests..

Goin’ To The Dance – Listen Now       [http://www.pxrec.com/assets2/audio/Chris_Warner__Goin_to_the_Dance.mp3]

Great stuff. You can order the CD from Patuxent Music.

Jessie Baker is a relative newcomer in the banjo world. Not yet 20 years old, he has been touring with Michael Cleveland & Flamekeeper for just over a year, and had stints with Wildfire, The Wildwood Valley Boys, The Karl Shiflett and Big Country Show, and his family’s band, The Baker Boys before hooking up with Michael.

But you’d never guess his age from listening to the music from his debut solo release, Yessir!, also on Patuxent. Other than the title track, which is a Baker original, all the songs are popular banjo standards where Jessie pays homage to those who have come before him. There are two from Don Reno (Follow The Leader and Banjo Riff), one Earl Scruggs classic (Farewell Blues), and one that traces to former Johnson Mountain Boys banjoist Richard Underwood (Johnson Mountain Chimes).

Baker also includes tuneful banjo renditions of Nine Pound Hammer, San Antonio Rose, Bury Me Beneath The Willow and a Jim Mills-esque arrangement of Jesus Savior Pilot Me. He plays with power and authority throughout.

Baker is assisted by Dudley Connell on guitar, David McLaughlin on mandolin, Marshall Wilborn on bass, and Michael Cleveland on fiddle.

You can hear samples from all the tracks, and purchase downloads at CD Baby or DigStation.

Tom Adams to Sweet Dixie Band

Tom Adams will be joining Bill Emerson and the Sweet Dixie Band on guitar as of September 5.

We reported just two months ago that Tom was launching a new endeavor, Diamond Joe, with banjoist Chris Warner but that group has now disbanded. Tom says that the recordings the band has already made will be incorcorated into an upcoming Chris Warner release on Patuxent Records, and they will continue to track with Chris for this project.

You can find the tour schedule for The Sweet Dixie Band on their MySpace page.

Chris Warner and Tom Adams in Diamond Joe

When we posted last week about Chris Warner’s CD reissue of two previous LP releases, we included a passing reference to Tom Adams’ non-denial of the rumor that he and Chris were starting a band.

Tom’s coyness aside, Chris has verified that they have indeed begun rehearsals and expect to launch Diamond Joe in the very near future. He tells us that they will be recording later this month and plan to send out a two-song promo CD to festival and event producers soon. A full-length CD release is anticipated for 2009.

Banjo players may quickly notice that Chris and Tom in the same band suggests something of a bonus in the banjo department, but no…. this will not be a double banjo act.

As we noted last summer, Tom Adams has decided to give up on the banjo as a result of his battle with focal dystonia, a nervous system disorder that has troubled him this past six years. He had initially attempted to continue performing on banjo in a modified two finger style, but was not able to play up to his own standards, and made the difficult decision to lay the banjo down.

But he didn’t give up on bluegrass music, and has since been working seriously on the guitar. The disease had affected his right hand, making for unpredictable results when playing banjo in a roll style, but Chris says that Tom has no trouble using a flatpick in a closed hand.

“Tom has been working hard on guitar, and has become a fine player. He and I actually played in a band together many years ago, with me on banjo and him on guitar, so this isn’t really a first.”

Rounding out the band are fellow Pennsylvanians Mark Seitz on mandolin and Steve Streett on bass.

Diamond Joe is booking now, and can be reached through Tom Adams’ web site until the band’s new site is complete.

Chris Warner is Back Again

Banjo players – and fans of Jimmy Martin – know Chris Warner for his driving style and hard hitting approach to the five string. Chris worked twice for Martin as a member of his Sunny Mountain Boys, from 1967-69, and again in the late 1980s.

During that second stint with Martin, Chris recorded two albums for Webco, All Original and Chris Warner & Friends, released as LPs and now out of print. He has recently compiled them both as a CD, Back Again, with 24 tracks featuring Warner as both banjoist and vocalist.

The tracks from All Original have Chris singing all lead vocals, with Del McCoury on tenor, and those from Chris Warner & Friends, have singing duties shared among Warner, Dudley Connell and Audie Blaylock.

But don’t think that banjo tunes get short shrift here. Chris knocks out 11 instrumentals mixed with 13 vocal tracks.

Newly minted bluegrass fans may not be aware of Warner’s top flight picking – and even long time listeners may not know him as a vocalist. Kudos to Chris for making this material available again, and to Pinecastle Records for their assistance in making it happen.

Audio samples for each track and online ordering are enabled on the Tom Adams web site, where Tom addresses the rumor that he and Chris are starting a band.

“With no official band name, no dates booked, and a disagreement over whether or not to wear matching shoes, I’d have to say yes, I believe there is a rumor that Chris and I are starting a band.”

I guess that settles that.

Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver: new members

We wrote earlier today to tell you about the new hires in Doyle Lawson’s band Quicksilver. At the time we promised to bring you more details when we got them.

The official announcement just landed in my inbox, including a quote from Doyle and a little back ground info about the new players.

I don’t like changes when they occur, but when they do, you just get on with life,” Lawson says. I’m really happy that I was able to find replacements this quickly. The good thing is that both of these players are really strong, quick studies. I’m excited.

Chris Warner, Quicksilver’s new banjo player and baritone singer originally hails from Dover, PA and has worked with the legendary Red Allen, and more recently with Audie Blaylock & Redline. Doyle’s history with Warner goes back to 1967, when the latter began a two year stint with the legendary Jimmy Martin. "He has the pop that I like," mentions Lawson.

Alan Johnson, who has most recently been finishing out the season with Blue Ridge, is the new fiddler for the band. Trained in bluegrass and a one-time member of Larry Cordle & Lonesome Standard Time, Alan has also played with several mainstream country artists, including Lorrie Morgan and Terri Clark.

Not long ago we covered the announcement that Jamie Dailey will be leaving the band at the end of 2007, but his replacement has not been named at this time.

Doyle’s new CD, More Behind The Picture Than the Wall, will be released later this month on Rounder Records. The release date is March 27th and Doyle will debut the new band line up that night on the Grand Ole Opry.

Doyle Lawson adds new band members

Doyle Lawson commented yesterday afternoon on his bulletin board that he is hiring fiddle player and bass singer Alan Johnson (formerly with BlueRidge) to take Mike Hartgrove’s place, and banjo player Chris Warner (formerly with Jimmy Martin) in place of the departing Terry Baucom. Warner will be singing baritone in the band.

More details about start dates, etc., should be forthcoming later today.

Stay tuned…

Audie Blaylock & Redline join Lonesome Day

Guitarist and vocalist, Audie Blaylock (former member of Jimmy Martin’s Sunny Mountain Boys and more recently Rhonda Vincent & The Rage), has signed with Lonesome Day Records to record and release the debut CD for Blaylock and his band, Redline.

Joining Audie in Redline is another Jimmy Martin alumnus, Chris Warner, on banjo along with Bobby Davis on bass, Stephen Mougin on mandolin, and young fiddle prodigy Patrick McAvinue. Could the band name be a reference to the hard shell cases used by the Gibson company in the 1930s, which feature a thin, red “pinstripe” along the outer edge of the case, and are generally described as “red line” cases? Or perhaps more a reference to pushing the limits, a la “redlining” the tachometer on a hot rod – as a look at the graphcs on their web site suggests? In either event, congratulations to Audie and the boys for coming up with a fine new bluegrass band name.

When we asked Audie for his reaction to this new partnership with Lonesome Day, he had this to say:

“We are very excited about our upcoming album on Lonesome Day Records. Randall Deaton and his team have done an amazing job of becoming a major label in the bluegrass industry in such a short amount of time. This is evidenced by their newest releases from Randy Kohrs, Lou Reid, Blue Moon Rising and more. We are proud to be associated with them.”

This first as-yet untitled Audie Blaylock & Redline CD on Lonesome Day Records is already being recorded, and a release date is being projected in early 2006.

© Bluegrass Today [year]
powered by AhSo

Exit mobile version