Don Parmley remembered 

Notable banjo player and distinguished baritone singer Freeman D. “Don” Parmley passed away on July 30, 2016, after experiencing complications related to Alzheimer’s disease.

Parmley was born on October 19, 1933, in Monticello, Kentucky.

As a 12-year-old he began learning claw-hammer/drop thumb banjo from his grandfather, but it was the driving three-finger banjo style of Earl Scruggs that he heard on the Grand Ol’ Opry that soon led to him taking up that method of picking the 5-string. Playing firstly just for family entertainment, Parmley quickly made a name for himself in the region, securing stints with popular touring groups of the era such as Carl Story and Hylo Brown.

He enlisted in the U.S. Army during the Korean War. He was trained as a tank driver, but it wasn’t long before his musical talents became known among the ranks and his duties were expanded to provide music from “back home” to entertain his fellow troops. After his discharge, Don returned home and on May 26, 1956, he married Betty Jean Abbott.

Faced with a severe shortage of employment opportunities in south central Kentucky, the Parmleys soon moved west to southern California where Don found a steady job and entry into a welcoming music community.

He performed with the Golden State Boys regarded at the time as the top bluegrass band in the region.  As well Parmley, the Hillmen featured future Country music icon Vern Gosdin and his brother Rex, noted for his song-writing skills. 18-year-old mandolin prodigy Chris Hillman joined late in 1963.

The band subsequently became known as The Blue Diamond Boys and then the Hillmen.

The best known album from the quartet was the Together album, The Hillmen (ST-T 1012) that was re-issued by Sugar Hill Records (SH 3719) in 1981.

Also, Parmley recorded with Glen Campbell, Doug Dillard and Billy Strange, the last named helped Parmley with an album mixing ‘Blue Grass and Folk Blues’, according to LP’s sleeve, as the duo played 5-string banjo and 12-string guitar (GNP Crescendo, GNP 94).

From 1964 he played the banjo for the TV series The Beverly Hillbillies, contributing background music to the show throughout its nine seasons.

In 1974 Don Parmley formed the Bluegrass Cardinals with his 15-year-old son David (lead vocals and guitar) and tenor singer and mandolin player Randy Graham.

The band’s calling card was their eponymous LP for Sierra Briar (SBR-4205, released in 1976) that prompted the Parmley family and the Bluegrass Cardinals to move east to settle in Virginia where they quickly established themselves as a top name on the bluegrass festival circuit, charming audiences with their solid, tasteful picking and beautiful vocal harmonies.

According to the band’s manager/agent, the late Lance Leroy, a noted bluegrass and early country music historian, the Bluegrass Cardinals were the first bluegrass band to record bluegrass Gospel a cappella style. Many bands performed in that style long before but, for whatever reason, they didn’t record in that style.

Their popularity led to a deal with Rounder Records that produced one LP Welcome to Virginia (Rounder 0097).

In all the Bluegrass Cardinals recorded prolifically during their 25-years existence; with five excellent LPs for Martin Haerle’s CMH label; Livin’ in the Good Old Days (CMH 6229), Cardinal Soul (CMH 6235), Sunday Mornin’ Singin’ (CMH 6247), Live & on Stage: the Bluegrass Cardinals with Special Guests (CMH 9023) and Where Rainbows Touch Down (CMH 6259).

In November 2002 CMH issued a 24-track compilation CD The Essential Bluegrass Cardinals: The Definitive Collection (CMH 8415).

During the mid-1980s in partnership with Sugar Hill Records the band released three LPs; Cardinal Class (SH 3731), Home is Where the Heart Is (SH 3741) and Shining Path (SH 3751).

Latterly, the Bluegrass Cardinals issued albums on their own label. On Stage in Nashville [at the Station Inn] (BGC 1001) was quickly followed by New and Old Favorites (BGC 1002), What have You done for Him? (BGC 1004), My Kinda Grass (BGC 1005) and Mountain Girl (BGC 1006).

In 2006 the band released a two-fer, On Stage in Nashville & New & Old Favorites (BGR-1001).

A landmark recording project pitched Don and David Parmley with Del, his sons Ronnie and Robbie McCoury for Parmley & McCoury Families of Tradition (BGC 1003). The CD won the IBMA’s Recorded Event of the Year award for 1991.

Under Parmley’s leadership, the Bluegrass Cardinals provided a learning ground and springboard for the careers of Dale Perry, Mike Hartgrove, Larry Stephenson, Norman Wright, Bill Bryson, Barry Berrier, Warren Blair, Don Rigsby and Ernie Sykes.

Parmley retired from full-time touring in 1997, settling in Franklin County, Virginia.

In April 2007 a ‘Day with Don Parmley’ was held in Wayne County, Kentucky. The event featured some great musical performances and a chance for local residents to spend time with Parmley. Signs stating “Welcome to Wayne County, Home of Don Parmley, Founding Member of the Bluegrass Cardinals” were erected on KY 90 at the Clinton and Pulaski county lines.

At Parmley’s funeral Eddie Stubbs asserted ….

“The Bluegrass Cardinals rose very quickly to become a very important product of their time, the late 1970’s and all through the 1980’s.

Their standard of excellence on record and in person was second to none. There was a lot of complexity within the Bluegrass Cardinals’ music, made in three-chord songs they were doing, but it was that complexity within the simplicity that made that music so great.

It’s only a matter of time, I feel like, before the International Bluegrass Music Association recognizes the Bluegrass Cardinals with an induction into its hall of fame. What Don and David Parmley did, and their vision and the music that they made, was extraordinary.”

continued on page 2…

Don Parmley funeral arrangements

Funeral arrangements for Don Parmley, who passed away on Saturday morning (July 30), have been announced.

Services will be held tomorrow, August 2, at the Hicks-Vaughn Funeral Home in Monticello, KY. The family will receive friends at 5:00 p.m., with a funeral service beginning at 7:00 p.m. Eddie Stubbs is listed as officiating.

A private internment will occur at a later date at Elk Spring Cemetery.

The family has requested that memorials be expressed in the form of donations to the Kentucky Alzheimer’s Association.

 

 

Don Parmley passes

Don Parmley, lifelong banjo player and patriarch of the legendary Bluegrass Cardinals, has died. He was 83 years old.

A native of the Bluegrass State, Parmley’s family moved west to California when he was a very young boy. There he developed a fascination with bluegrass and the Earl Scruggs style on banjo. In the early 1960s, Don was a founding member of The Hillmen, also known as The Golden State Boys, which included future icons Vern Gosdin and Chris Hillman as well.

The Hillmen became quite popular in southern California, appearing frequently on television, a connection that proved very valuable with Don being tapped to play all the incidental banjo music for the huge CBS hit program, The Beverly Hillbillies in the ’60s. Earl Scruggs, of course, played on the show’s prominent theme song.

When Hillman left the band to accept a job with The Byrds, The Hillmen disbanded and Don started The Bluegrass Cardinals. His son, David, was only 15 years old at the time the group debuted, and already turning heads as a unique and soulful vocalist. He has gone on to be recognized as among the finest singers of his generation in bluegrass music.

Don kept the Cardinals going for 20 years, with many top artists joining him along the way. Randy Graham was the founding mandolinist, a position also shared by Larry Stephenson, Norman Wright, Herschel Sizemore and several others. Fiddle players included Mike Hartgrove, Warren Blair, and Don Rigsby. The band recorded a number of albums considered essential in the bluegrass canon, and debuted does of songs now part of the standard repertoire.

 

After an absence of several years from the bluegrass stage, David Parmley is back this year with a new band he calls Cardinal Tradition. Don’s legacy in our music is on solid ground. His lifetime contributions to bluegrass are deserving of special mention, something that will hopefully be recognized soon by the IBMA.

Health problems have troubled Don in recent years, but a legion of fans and friends in the bluegrass community will morn his loss.

R.I.P., Don Parmley.

Vern Gosdin, R.I.P.

Vern Gosdin, who was known simply as "The Voice," passed away yesterday (4/28) in a Nashville hospital. The cause of death is not known at this time, but Gosdin is reported as having suffered a stroke a few weeks ago.

Vern Gosdin was born in Woodland, Alabama, on August 5, 1934. He idolized The Louvin Brothers and The Blue Sky Boys as a young man and sang in the local church where his mother played the piano.

As a teenager, his family hosted The Gosdin Family Gospel Show on a radio station in Birmingham, Alabama.

In 1961, he moved to California, where he joined the West Coast Country music movement, first as a member of the Golden State Boys, then the Hillmen before forming The Gosdin Brothers with brother Rex. The duo hit the charts in the late 1960s with Hangin’ On on the Bakersfield International label, then with Till The End on Capitol Records.

It was while with the Golden State Boys and then with another bluegrass group, the Hillmen, that Gosdin became known within bluegrass music circles. In 1963 and 1964 the quartet of Vern Gosdin, brother Rex, Don Parmley and Chris Hillman did some recordings that were released on the Together label. With its forward-looking sense of exploration, the album helped to pave the way for other progressive bluegrass groups like the New Grass Revival and the Seldom Scene.

The eponymous album was later released by Sugar Hill Records (SH-3719).

Gosdin went on to have an illustrious career in country music. His recording of Yesterday’s Gone reached No. 9 on the country chart in 1977. After that he enjoy much success with his recordings of I Can Tell by the Way You Dance (You’re Gonna Love Me Tonight), Do You Believe Me Now, Chiseled in Stone, Set’ Em Up Joe and I’m Still Crazy.

His last Top 10 singles Right in the Wrong Direction and Is It Raining at Your House? were released in 1990.

One of the most recognisable voices in traditional country music is now silent.

Don Parmley commemorative road sign

This past April, we told you about a special celebration in Monticello, KY honoring Don Parmley, founder of The Bluegrass Cardinals. He performed on banjo with the Cardinals for years along with his son, David Parmley. Other members of the band over the years include Don Rigsby, Randy Graham, Jimmy Haley and Herschel Sizemore.

On July 28, Wayne County, KY continued the honorifics by unveiling a commemorative highway sign which reads “Welcome to Wayne County (KY) ‚Ä¢ Home of Don Parmley ‚Ä¢ Founding member of the Bluegrass Cardinals.”

Don is retired now, but occasionally appears in Bluegrass Cardinals reunion shows with fellow founding members David Parmley and Randy Graham.

Congratulations Don – you’re immortal!

A Day with Don Parmley – April 14

We got a note from Randy Graham, mandolinist and tenor singer with David Parmley and Continental Divide, about an event scheduled this weekend to celebrate the life and musical career of Don Parmley.

Here’s Randy’s note:

I want to take a moment to tell everyone about a special event coming to the Aspire Center in Monticello, KY, next Saturday, April 14th. “A Day with Don Parmley,” will honor Don and his many achievements and contributions in bluegrass music.

As many of you know, Don was the studio banjo player for the Beverly Hillbillies TV show for most of it’s run on CBS, and a co-founder of the Bluegrass Cardinals who toured worldwide from the mid-seventies until he retired in the mid-nineties. Under Don’s leadership, the Bluegrass Cardinals served as a learning ground and springboard for the careers for many bluegrass artists touring today. Included among these are: Don’s son, David Parmley, Dale Perry, Mike Hartgrove, Larry Stephenson, Norman Wright, and myself, to name but a few. Don’s professional resume also includes collaborative efforts with: legendary country vocalist, Vern Gosdin, Chris Hillman, of the Byrds, and multiple Grammy nominated guitarist, Billy Strange.

Festivities began at noon and run until 7:00 PM. On hand to entertain are: Sage Knoll and New Harvest, plus appearances by David Parmley & Continental Divide and a rare performance by the three original Bluegrass Cardinals: Don and David Parmley & myself. The Aspire Center is located at: 225 Highway 1275 N Monticello, KY… Phone: (606) 340-9362. You can Google a map from your door to the Aspire Center in Monticello, KY.

Looking for another reason to come?? NO ADMISSION CHARGE… THE EVENT IS ABSOLUTELY FREE TO THE PUBLIC.

We’ve looked forward to this event a long time. Hope to see you there!!

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