Matt Munsey – sometimes heroes play guitar

Photo of Matt Munsey © Angela Richardson-Newman, Littlerocker Photography

Tomorrow is a very special day for Matthew Munsey, founder and mandolinist/guitarist with Monroeville, a popular bluegrass group in east Tennessee. And like most who do spectacular things, he swears it’s no big deal.

On November 9, he travels to Nashville’s Vanderbilt Center where he will be admitted to donate one of his kidneys to his sister, Rachel Munsey Jackson. She is a school teacher in Murfreesboro who has been pursuing an adoption with her husband, though that has been postponed when her kidney began to deteriorate over the summer.

While we may all like to think that we would surely do the same for a sibling, close friend, or family member, it is not a simple surgery, requiring several days in hospital, and typically up to six weeks away from work to recover.

Matt and Rachel grew up in a novel family environment. Their father was a missionary Free Will Baptist preacher, and they moved from east Tennessee to south Texas when he was very young, along with an older sister and Rachel, with their mom and dad. Munsey Sr. set up a ministry there, which spread to a number of churches across the region before long. Rachel was diagnosed quite young with polycystic kidney disease, an illness that causes fluid-filled cysts to grow in the kidneys, and if there are too many, can lead to a degradation in kidney function or outright kidney failure.

Matthew recalls that often his parents would have to go off to the hospital with his sister, though he didn’t really understand why as a boy.

“We knew that eventually she would need a kidney, so this isn’t a big surprise.

We played together as a family band when we were young. We toured around and raised funds for the various pastors in my dad’s ministry. Rachel would sing with us, and she was always such a positive person. At shows she would tell of her medical problems as an encouraging story of survival. At age eight she got a kidney from my dad.

He passed away about a year after that from a brain tumor, and the ministry suffered a huge loss from his passing. We moved back to Tennessee and I began making music with my cousins and my friends. We started a band called Mountain Edge with my cousin, Carter Moore.

Rachel’s been carrying dad’s kidney now for 23 years. Her kidney function has been declining, so we all got tested and I was a match. There is a lot of strenuous testing to be approved for this. My older sister and I both tested positive, but ultimately they chose me. In the end of September I was cleared for a transplant. Rachel was awaiting an adoption and had to postpone everything as she was so sick.

I’ll be so happy to help her to start her own family. We all sort of knew that this was coming. That’s the reality of living with organ transplants.”

Monroeville works as many as six days a week, appearing at the Ole Smoky Distilleries in Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg, TN. Though this keeps their outside touring to a minimum, they perform before an astonishing number of people each year, sharing their distinctive brand of bluegrass and acoustic country with visitors who come from all over the world to stay in these popular Smoky Mountain resort towns.

A former bandmate, Chevy Watson, has agreed to come back for a few weeks to keep the group working, and Matthew is hoping to be well enough to return for their shows at Dollywood later this month. Monroeville is booked as part of the Appalachian Christmas shows during Dollywood’s annual Christmas festival.

For Munsey, the pain and recovery from surgery is something he is happy to go through for his sister.

“She’s such a sweet person, and uses her life as a sort of testimony. I don’t really like this kind of attention… it seems like nothing to me.”

Rachel is a very popular teacher at her school, as you can see in this brief video of all the students lining the halls to give her a standing ovation as she left on Thursday afternoon to prepare for surgery.

Should you find yourself at Ole Smoky Distilleries or Dollywood and see Monroeville perform, give Matthew a big pat on the back, both for the quality music, and for facing surgery and recovery for the sake of someone he loves.

Monroeville is back on track this year after a very tough 2020. Like all performers, they were out of work when Ole Smokey shut down their visitors facilities for a full twelve months. Several bands earn a living there and all were laid off when shutdowns predominated.

Munsey said that government programs helped them survive. Monroeville includes his wife, Brittany, along with multi-instrumentalist McCoy Borg, and bassist Kyle Dillow.

“The CARES act helped, and we helped everyone get unemployment and PPP loans. We made it through OK at the end of it. We even recently hired another bluegrass drummer, Joe Stephens.”

For Munsey, Monroeville is more than just a musical group, or a source of income. He feels like it’s part of his family, and how he can continue to persist as an artist.

“Monroeville has always been a no limits sort of band… how I put my music out there. We’ve learned to play whatever we felt like. Right now we’re sticking in that acoustic/bluegrass/country vein.

I’m the kind of person that would rather do what I enjoy, and not worry about being seen, and all the politics of the music business. We play before millions of people every year at Ole Smoky. My wife is a big part of the band now, and I see some really cool stuff for us in the future. She has a beautiful clear voice… she’s just a natural.”

Well done, Matthew Munsey, and best of luck, Rachel!

Pluck It Music Brand offers variety of bluegrass merchandise

Pluck It Music Brand is a new entry in the casual clothing and merchandise line, offering a variety of bluegrass-themed items with a focus on the instruments used to make the music.

The company is the brainchild of Matthew Munsey, mandolinist, vocalist, and primary songwriter with Monroeville. And the concept was another COVID-inspired strategy, birthed from the idle time and reduced income Munsey and the band were experiencing last year.

Matthew is a highly creative individual, with a knack for graphic arts, so he was a natural to pursue this notion for creating more pleasing and authentic images of bluegrass instruments, and making them available on t-shirts and loungewear.

“The idea came from understanding that there is a serious lack of accurate instrument designs in the merchandise market. Google the banjo and see how many ‘bluegrass’ banjo designs come up. Of course bluegrass is the starting point, but the brand will include all designs music related. I draw all of them myself.

I’ve been drawing using the iPad and finishing in Adobe illustrator for printing. I have probably invested at least 150 hours since January in all of it so far.”

Munsey is determined to maintain the highest quality in both the materials used, and the details of the printed output. At this stage he is having a print on demand service manufacture the various items on the Pluck It Music Brand web site, but plans to eventually have inventory to take to sell at festivals and shows.

Also in the works is a Pluck It Live web broadcast, featuring Monroeville and other bluegrass and acoustic artists, but that is still on the drawing board. Assisting Munsey in this venture is his Monroeville bandmate, McCoy Borg.

Currently available are clever and often whimsical designs based on the six primary bluegrass instruments, offered on shirts, sweats, coffee mugs, and stickers. Unisex sizes are used for the shirts, with children’s sizes available as well. All offer a fine way to represent the grass wherever you go.

To see what Pluck It has available, visit their web store online.

Kyle Dillow to Monroeville

Monroeville has announced the addition of bassist Kyle Dillow to the group. A native Virginian, Kyle now lives in east Tennessee where the band is based. Bluegrass fans may have seen Dillow on stage previously with Cane Mill Road.

It’s been an interesting road for Monroeville, since Matt Munsey started the group back in 2010. At the start, they were a fiery young band, and we do mean young. Some members at the launch were still ion high school. They played a highly original and appealing sort of contemporary bluegrass, very much in keeping with their Tennessee roots. But over the years, as members have come and gone, their direction has begun to shift towards a sound approaching modern country. But there is still plenty of grass in the tank, as anyone who catches one of their regular shows at the Ole Smoky Moonshine Distillery can attest.

Kyle joins Munsey on mandolin and lead vocals, McCoy Borg on banjo and guitar, and Chevy Watson on guitar. On larger shows, they also bring along Evan Pitchers on drums.

Here’s a look at their most recent video, Just Move On, released last fall, for a taste of their style.

Monroeville has recently released their first live CD, also available on DVD, called Momentum. It was shot live in Kettering, OH with the Fairmont Youth Orchestra back in October 2019. Orders can be placed online.

Let Love Show video from Monroeville

It’s bluegrass… it’s country… it’s pop! No… it’s Monroeville, and their latest release, Let Love Show.

Matt Munsey and the Monroeville boys are continuing in their efforts to take bluegrass to a different audience by merging essential elements of the style with sounds more accessible to modern listeners. Munsey writes and sings this material with an unmistakable bluegrass pedigree, arranged and performed by the band using the familiar bluegrass instruments. But by adding drums to the mix, and starting with a song conducive to such treatment, you end up with an appealing hybrid that should please fans of both styles.

The structure and melody of Let Love Show would be right at home in a pop band setting, but the acoustic instruments – and the low-tuned banjo – bring out a whole different vibe. Munsey is clearly at home with modern popular music, just as he is with the traditions of his bluegrass heritage.

Here’s their new video, which mixes images of Matt singing the song in a variety of natural locales with scenes of an artist composing a painting signifying a broken heart.

Let Love Show is included on the new Monroeville album, Worlds Apart, which is available from popular online resellers and the band’s web site.

Monroeville takes to the streets of St. Augustine

When the weather starts getting cold in the mountains, folks with the ways and means start looking for ways to head south for a bit. The guys with Monroeville, based in east Tennessee, found a three-night booking in St. Augustine, FL this week, and decided to use their one night off last night to do what bluegrass pickers always do.

They took to the streets to play some music, sans amplification, and offer the good people living and visiting that fair city a chance to interact with a bluegrass band up close and personal.

And of course, they captured the entire thing on Facebook live.

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If you’re in St. Augustine this week, look for Monroeville tonight and Friday (12/29-30) at the Colonial Oak Music Park, located in the city’s Colonial Quarter.

After New Year’s you can find them back at home at the Ole Smoky Distillery.

Monroeville promoting Clyde Moody’s legacy

If you followed our video interviews during the 2013 World of Bluegrass in Raleigh, you may recall one we did with Connie Matthews, who is the nephew of the great Clyde Moody. Connie had recovered one of Clyde’s old guitars, his last in fact, and drove from coastal Carolina to give everyone at the convention a chance to see it.

The guitar is a custom 1973 D-28 which Martin built for Clyde with his name inlaid in the fingerboard.

Moody was a true pioneer of bluegrass and country music, being the first Blue Grass Boy hired by Bill Monroe. In addition to playing mandolin on the original cut of Muleskinner Blues, on which Big Mon played lead guitar, Clyde pitched for the Blue Grass Boys baseball team. He had previously worked with J.E. Mainer, and after leaving Monroe, worked as a lead singer for many years. In 1951 he has a hit with Shenandoah Waltz, which remained his signature song until in passed in 1989.

Now Monroeville has picked up the banner – and the guitar –  and are using it to promote Moody’s legacy before it is handed off to the Country Music Hall Of Fame Clyde Moody exhibit. They are carrying the guitar with them, and pulling it out to perform Shenandoah Waltz in Moody’s honor.

Here is a video they made with the guitar.

 

Watch Connie’s interview with us here.

Welcome James Munsey

Matt and Juliana Munsey are celebrating the birth of a son. James Alan Munsey was born this morning (4/14/14) at 5:53 a.m.

Matt is the mandolinist with Monroeville, whose new album Can’t Put Me Out has just recently been released.

He tells us that James was named for his paternal grandfather, now deceased, and came in at 8 lbs 6 oz, and 20 3/4″ tall.

Mother and child are said to be doing well, with big sister Liliana happy with her new brother.

Munsey also shared these two other pictures of James.

 

Congratulations Matt and Juliana, and a big Bluegrass Today welcome to James!

Can’t Put Me Out coming in April

Monroeville is on the verge of releasing their first full-length CD, Can’t Put Me Out, due on April 1.

The recently reformed outfit is still headed up by mandolinist/vocalist Matt Munsey, who produced and mixed the project at Hilltop Studios in Nashville. All of the songs were written by Munsey or other band members, save a re-arranged version of a Doc Boggs classic.

Along with Munsey, Monroeville is Corey Hensley on bass, Andy Ruff on reso-guitar, Matt Fox on guitar, and McCoy Borg on banjo. All but Borg share in the vocals.

Matt shared a few words about the title track, and sent an audio sampler of the songs on the new record.

“The song Can’t Put Me Out is for the underdogs – the ones that get underestimated and overlooked. You might get stepped on but they can’t put out your fire.

That was a fitting theme for the project that translated very easily to artwork. I had the idea of using some antique linotype letters in a fire. I set up for the shoot and almost burnt my hands trying to arrange the letters in the coals. They were hot! I think the results were great!”

Pre-orders are available now at the Monroeville site, and everyone who orders in advance will receive an autographed copy of the CD, along with a Monroeville pick.

They guys will be working through the summer at the Ole Smoky Moonshine distillery in Gatlinburg, TN and at concerts and festivals across the southeast.

Soggy Bottom Boys live stream on Saturday

There has been a good deal of excitement this past few weeks about the first-ever live performance of The Soggy Bottom Boys, the studio band that recorded Man Of Constant Sorrow for the soundtrack of O Brother, Where Art Thou in 2000.

Dan Tyminski, Barry Bales, Ron Block, Stuart Duncan and Mike Compton will reunite for a show this Saturday, March 22, on the Moonshine Holler Stage at the Ole Smoky Moonshine distillery in Gatlinburg, TN. The free show will also feature a set from Monroeville, and a special guest performance with Dr. Ralph Stanley. Late additions to the program are Josh and Bill from the popular Discovery Channel’s TV series, Moonshiners.

Ole Smoky is a legal distillery that makes moonshine whiskey the old fashioned way – with some modern technological enhancements. Tomorrow’s show kicks off their 2014 concert series, and will introduce their newest product, Ole Smoky Charred, i.e., brown liquor.

For those who can’t attend the show, Ole Smoky will broadcast a live video stream online, starting at 5:00 p.m. (EDT).

Sounds like fun.

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