Tennessee Bluegrass Band announces new members

Just last summer we were introducing everyone to an exciting new group, The Tennessee Bluegrass Band, which included several of the most promising young artists in our business. They were swiftly signed by Billy Blue Records who swept them into the studio to start work on a debut album.

And here we are less than a year later announcing some new members of the band. But in the true bluegrass way, the show must go on!

The group is still headed up by the team of Aynsley Porchak on fiddle and Lincoln Hensley on banjo, both recent graduates of the bluegrass music program at East Tennessee State University, with fellow founding member Tim Laughlin on mandolin. Despite their youth, both Aynsley and Lincoln have already amassed real experience in bluegrass, Porchak with Carolina Blue and Hensley with Bobby Osborne. Tim is a veteran sideman having played with a number of top artists, including Larry Sparks, Dale Ann  Bradley, and Marty Raybon.

Now coming into the band are Lincoln Mash on guitar and Tyler Griffith on bass. Both likewise come with a stellar resume. Lincoln has been playing guitar since he was a boy, and working professionally in bluegrass since he was 14 years old. Of late he has been part of the Coal Cave Hollow Boys, a fast rising group from Ohio, who took first place in the Pinecastle Records National Bluegrass Band Competition in 2019.

Tyler came into bluegrass through the time tested method of the family band, who also studied at ETSU. A talented multi-instrumentalist, he has worked previously on bass with Michael Cleveland & Flamekeeper, Jeff Parker and Company, and King Springs Road.

Porchak tells us that they are delighted with their new bandmates and the sound they are getting.

“We’re thrilled to welcome Lincoln Mash and Tyler Griffith into the Tennessee Bluegrass Band! Lincoln brings a soulful, old-school blend of bluegrass and country music to his lead vocals and guitar playing that audiences already love, and together with Tyler’s high harmony vocals and solid bass playing, these guys truly help to bring the band’s sound to the next level. Both Lincoln and Tyler have already brought great musicianship and enthusiasm to the table, and have really been a God-send to this band. We can’t wait to see you out on the road and show you just how awesome these new additions truly are!”

She also mentioned that they will all be headed back to the studio next week to finish up their project with Billy Blue.

The band will continue to focus on the hard driving sound from the early days of bluegrass music, and the first generation of artists, through both classic and original material.

Tennessee Bluegrass Band already has a busy schedule booked for this season, with new dates still coming in. You can learn more bout the group by visiting them online.

Prayers sought for Lincoln Mash following motorcycle accident

Family and friends of young Ohio grasser Lincoln Mash have been serving as prayer warriors this weekend, after the 19 year old guitarist and singer for the Coal Cave Hollow Boys was seriously injured in a motorcycle accident near his home on Saturday.

Mash had just gotten his motorcycle that morning, and had headed out for a quick first ride around 11:00 a.m., as the family was planning to head off to the SamJam festival in the early afternoon. Not five minutes later, Lincoln’s dad received a phone call from an unfamiliar number. It was his son, telling him that he had hit a gravel patch at a curve in the road, lost control of the bike, and wrecked.

Medical personnel airlifted him to Grand Medical Center in Columbus, and once his family and girlfriend, Heather Alley, reached the hospital, Lincoln seemed to be in good spirits, joking with them about the accident, and calling a fellow band member to say that his hands were fine, and not to cancel any gigs.

But things took a dark turn the next morning, when nurses discovered Mash to be incoherent, unable to speak or communicate with them. He had been wearing a helmet, but fears of some sort of brain damage began to enter the picture.

Following an MRI the next morning, doctors diagnosed Lincoln as having suffered a Diffuse Axonal Injury (DIA), meaning that nerve fibers in his brain had been suddenly stretched in the crash, leaving behind lesions scattered in the white matter of his brain. But he showed rapid signs of progress later Sunday afternoon, and underwent surgery on Monday to repair damage to the leg broken in the accident.

Doctors are now questioning the DIA diagnosis, and are optimistic for a full recovery.

Additionally, Heather shared a very positive update just now.

“We got great news this morning. His mom let us all know that the nurses woke him up this morning, and he has finally started talking. It’s an absolute miracle! There’s still been no definite diagnosis, and there have been a few things thrown around concerning what could have happened, but Lincoln is fighting so hard, and he is the most stubborn, strongest guy I’ve ever met.”

Heather and Lincoln’s family continue to urge everyone to pray that he continues to heal, and will be back on stage – though hopefully not on his bike – sometime soon.

Here’s a video of Lincoln with the band, shot just a month ago. With Mash on guitar, Thomas Adams is on on mandolin, Isaiah Sparling on bass, and Todd Sams on banjo. Heather is sitting in on fiddle.

Further updates on his condition will be posted on the Coal Cave Hollow Boys’ Facebook page, where there will soon be information about how fans and friends can help with medical expenses by purchasing T-shirts being designed and printed by Adams and Todd Sams’ daughter, Kenzie Owings.

Get well soon, Lincoln!

UPDATE 9/10 – A GoFundMe campaign has been launched in support of helping the Mash family with medical expenses. Donations can be accepted online using any major credit card or PayPal.

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