Welcome Grady Hixson!

Josh Hixson, bass player with Chattanooga’s Hamilton County Ramblers, and his wife Megan, are celebrating the birth of their son, Grady Charles Hixon on Monday, June 11.

He surprised his parents by popping in 5 weeks early, coming in at 5 lbs, 13 oz, and 20” long. Grady remains in the NICU for observation, but Josh says he is doing great, and big sister Carlee, nearly 5 years old, is delighted with him already.

Josh is currently enrolled in the Chattanooga Fire Department Academy, and chuckled as he mentioned that they are studying the basics of childbirth right now!

Megan and Josh hope they can bring Grady home this weekend if all continues to go well.

Congratulations to the growing Hixson family, and a big Bluegrass Today welcome to little Grady!

32 Arrangements and Ideas for Bluegrass Banjo

Are you a banjo picker who enjoys working through other musicians’ ideas, or perhaps a banjo student looking for new tunes to learn? Then here’s something you may appreciate.

Jim Pankey is the banjo player with Chattanooga’s Hamilton County Ramblers, and a past state banjo champion in both his native Georgia and his current home in Tennessee. He’s been teaching banjo both privately and at camps and workshops for many years, and is a former columnist for Banjo NewsLetter.

In recent years, Jim has been collecting his many tunes arrangements into downloadable PDF books, which he offers for sale through his website, Wild Jimbo’s Banjo Ranch. Several are available at very reasonable prices, including collections of tunes for bluegrass banjo, clawhammer banjo, and bluegrass guitar and mandolin.

The newest carries the plainly descriptive title, 32 Arrangements and Ideas for Bluegrass Banjo. It contains 31 tunes that should be familiar to any banjo lover, plus a section of licks and ideas in the melodic style.

Tunes shown include:

  • Amazing Grace
  • Antelopes a Prancin’
  • Ballad of Jed Clampett
  • Ballad of Jed Clampett with D-Tuners
  • Banjo Signal
  • Cluck Old Hen
  • Cripple Creek
  • Cumberland Gap
  • East Bound and Down
  • Farewell Blues
  • Foggy Mountain Breakdown (YouTube Lesson)
  • Foggy Mountain Breakdown
  • Hee Haw Theme
  • Home Sweet Home
  • How Firm a Foundation (Hymnal Version)
  • How Firm a Foundation (Bluegrass Version)
  • I’ll Fly Away
  • Jenkin’s Lament
  • Jesse James
  • Little Girl of Mine in Tennessee
  • Lonesome Road Blues
  • Melodic Licks and Ideas
  • Moving
  • Old Dangerfield
  • Pickaway
  • Reuben
  • Sailor’s Hornpipe
  • Sally Ann
  • Salt Creek
  • Santa Train
  • Uncloudy Day
  • Worried Man Blues

Jim’s web site also links to his collection of YouTube lessons and photos of his varied collection of banjos.

32 Arrangements and Ideas for Bluegrass Banjo can be downloaded for $8.99 from Jim’s Sellfy site.

Hamilton County Ramblers

Hamilton County Ramblers are a relatively new bluegrass group, based in Chattanooga, TN, and composed of veteran bluegrass performers with a wide range in age and interests. What they share is what matters, however: a passion for thoughtful, contemporary bluegrass played with precision and authority.

Hearing their new, self-titled album brought immediately to mind Marching Home, the celebrated debut from Balsam Range in 2007. Here was an exciting new voice in our music, a distinctive sound created without breaking beyond what is widely understood to be the mainstream of the style.

And so it is with Hamilton County Ramblers. Multiple lead singers add variety to their music, though mandolinist James Kee handles the lion’s share of the vocal leads. They’ve recorded a couple of new songs, but the bulk is culled from the rich catalog that bluegrass and folk music has created over the last few generations.

In their hands, numbers from James Taylor, Reno & Smiley, Alton Delmore, and Stephen Foster blend comfortably into a fresh mélange of present-day bluegrass. These guys don’t intend to rework or refashion this music, they just want to add their contribution to it in their own particular manner.

Their love of the old way is perfectly captured in the cover art, which is designed to resemble a well-worn LP that has been cherished and played through the years. Younger artists learning the music now may one day wax nostalgic when gazing at old CDs from their youth, but it was the 33 1/3 RPM records – and even the 78 RPMs before them – that nurture the memories of bluegrass old timers today.

We hear that love of music from an earlier age on Wave The Sea, an old time classic given an uptempo treatment, Standing On The Mountain, a hit for Jim & Jesse and The Delmore Brothers, and a lovely a cappella treatment of Hard Times, Stephens Foster’s iconic mid-19th century anthem of desperation and woe. Each gets an exactly appropriate rendition, true both to the sentiment of the song, and with reference to prior recordings.

The same is true for songs from the latter part of the 20th century, like James Taylor’s Copperline and Norman Wright’s Separating Hearts. It’s a widely understood truism in the music biz that covering Taylor’s music is rife with pitfalls, given his distinctive and universally-recognized voice, but Kee does a fine job with this one, which Taylor had recorded in 1991 with a similar acoustic/folk vibe.

Other favorites include Cora’s Gone, with a super-tasty banjo kickoff from Jim Pankey that closely resembles Earl Scruggs’ solo on the Foggy Mountain Boys’ recording, and I Hear Ya Talkin’, a Bob Wills standard that really swings. Lost love gets its proper treatment in a new song from Jon Weisberger and Sarah Siskind, I Just Came Back To Say Goodbye, and Reno & Smiley’s Wall Around Your Heart.

James Kee makes a pitch here to become one of the strong new singers in bluegrass, as does bassist John Hixson, who sings tenor on most of the tracks. The whole band shines with their instruments, rounded out by John Boulware on fiddle and Roy Curry on guitar. The album’s lone instrumental is an old times romp, Old Chattanooga, performed as a banjo/fiddle duet with Pankey on clawhammer banjo.

This is smooth, modern bluegrass, professionally played and sung by a band likely to leave quite a mark if they remain together going forward. Great stuff!

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