Ran Out of Road – Audie Blaylock tribute from Reed Jones

The entire bluegrass world was shocked when Audie Blaylock died unexpectedly earlier this year. Only 61 years of age, he had been present in professional bluegrass all of the past four decades, and in such a highly visible way, that it seemed like he would always be there. And yet he was gone.

Audie was only 19 when he hired on with Jimmy Martin, staying seven years as a Sunny Mountain Boy. He lived the life of a bluegrass journeyman, working stints with Red Allen in Nashville, with Chris Jones, and Lynn Morris, before taking the guitar gig with Rhonda Vincent & The Rage in 1999. After several years there, he worked with Michael Cleveland & Flamekeeper before dedicating himself to a solo career with his own group, Audie Blaylock & Redline.

Now, nearly a year on from his passing, Blaylock’s good friend and former bass player, Reed Jones, is set to release a memorial single written about his relationship with Audie. Titled Ran Out of Road, Reed says that he was inspired to write it by experience most of us will have had after losing someone close.

I wrote this song in the wake of what appeared to be a posthumous Audie sighting. It was like he was reminding me that he was still right there with me. And I know he is.

This song was written for me, my Redline brothers, and everyone who has experienced the pain of losing a loved one.  Each of those groups gets a part of this song, and I hear Audie all over it.”

Jones wrote a good bit of the material that Redline recorded in recent years, so his style is closely associated with theirs. And he brought in a number of Audie’s former bandmates to record the track, with both Evan Ward and Russ Carson on banjo, Patrick McAvinue and Mason Wright on fiddle, McAvinue on mandolin, and Darren Nicholson on harmony vocal. Reed himself played bass and guitar, using Blaylock’s vintage Martin, Thor, and sang the lead on Ran Out of Road.

Also appearing on the track are Vince Gill on tenor vocal and Harry Stinson on snare.

The studio reunion was a happy time for everyone, and Reed believes that it helped them all with their grief.

“All of us in Redline needed something like this to do together as part of our healing. We hope that healing is evident to everyone who hears this song, and that they can experience it themselves.”

Finally, Jones expressed why he cared so deeply for his friend, Audie Blaylock, both personally and musically.

“He listened tirelessly. He loved deeply. He lived passionately and intensely. He was fiercely loyal and incredibly sensitive. He was a musician’s musician, a singer’s singer. He was a kindred spirit. He was my brother.

In our first conversation, he told me, ‘we play bluegrass music, but we play it like rock stars.’ I could get behind that, and I found out very quickly he meant it. I also found out quickly that when he said, ‘I love you,’ he meant that too. In fact, I think that pretty accurately sums up Audie: he meant it.

Audie was a musical force. I would love it if Audie could hear this from the other side and think, ‘those are my guys, that is my music, and I can hear myself all over it.’ I hope he’d love it and be proud.”

Have a listen to a sample from Ran Out of Road, set to release January 10, 2025, the one year anniversary of Audie’s passing.

Look for the single on 1/10/25 from 615 Hideaway Records.

Red Rover drops for Audie Blaylock and Redline

Red Rover is the latest single to drop from Audie Blaylock, one from his upcoming project with 615 Hideaway Records.

Like many of his recent releases, this one was written by long time bassist, Reed Jones, who says that it was inspired by a story his grandfather had told him of years past living in eastern Kentucky. It draws on the game most of us will have played in childhood.

Red Rover feels classic and new all at the same time with its hard-charging pulse and free-flowing harmonies. The song is upbeat and bright, but the lyrics bring in just the right twinge of heartbreak and lonesome; it feels old, but the melody and progression smell fresh, like the whole thing was vacuum sealed 70 years ago and mailed to the present.

Red Rover demonstrates that just because it’s new, that doesn’t mean it can’t be traditional; and just because it’s traditional, doesn’t mean it’s not relevant. It also shows that nobody can do that like Audie Blaylock and Redline.”

With Audie on guitar and lead vocal and Reed on bass, the track is completed with banjo from Scott Vestal and many mandolin and fiddle from Patrick McAvinue. Blaylock sings the high harmony and Vestal the low.

Check it out…

Red Rover is set to release for download or streaming on March 24, and radio programmers can get the track now at AirPlay Direct. Pre-orders and pre-saves are enabled now online.

On the Gravity of Tony Rice

This reflection on the importance of Tony Rice in contemporary bluegrass is a contribution from Reed Jones, bass player and songwriter with Audie Blaylock and Redline. We thank him for these insights.

The evolving story of bluegrass music is punctuated by defining moments. Some of its independent clauses are extensions of the previous idea, and they foreshadow and link up with the next brilliantly-chosen turn of phrase. They overlap in ways that keep it in the family and sustain its deep traditions, which often means adaptation and change. Think of the departure of Flatt and Scruggs from Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys to spin their own beautifully-crafted bluegrass tale, or how Jimmy Martin left Monroe’s outfit to later join forces with Bobby and Sonny Osborne, the latter of which also briefly featured in Monroe’s ongoing musical saga.

You also have the crossing and concurrent storyline of the Stanley Brothers, who obviously read their share of Monroe, but whose pen scratched down meaningful volumes informed by a slightly different, yet equally ancient tonality. And while there remain many others who contributed their own meaningful lines by putting musical pen to paper and baring their souls, few deserve the reverie typically reserved for the first generation like Tony Rice does. But this is no historical analysis, although the context is helpful in understanding the greatest guitarist bluegrass and acoustic music has ever known. This is about defining moments…and punctuation…and Tony Rice. He’s not only earned several chapters in the bluegrass history book, he accentuates and expands it, especially when placed within the longer arc of its story.

Tony Rice wielded “The Antique,” his 1935 Martin D-28 formerly owned by Clarence White, with the staying power of Shakespeare, the lyricism of Joyce, and the wit of Twain. In the same way the strokes of their pens told humanity’s story, bound it together in universal experience, and simultaneously helped form its future by expanding the boundaries of language, the strokes of Tony’s flatpick glued our music together and grew it with masterful expression. Informed by the past, he not only forged headlong into the musical future, he carefully and intentionally shaped it.

On a micro-level, he punctuated every song he played with the force of his unique rhythm and timing, while on a macro-level he was one of bluegrass’ few cataclysmic game-changers, putting a period on the end of the previous sentence and pushing the plot forward and deeper. As millions of needles followed the grooves of his records, he moved the needle with the same violent magnitude of Earl Scruggs, yet he did it with the calm beauty of his measured and graceful hands, efficiently navigating the strings and fretboard in the same way he did his ever-evolving musical landscape. And so in these moments of great loss, we are reminded of both the overarching and the personal, and how like Tony’s music, they cannot be so easily partitioned.

My associations with Tony were limited, but try telling that to my heart. His intro to Muleskinner Blues instantaneously changed my life at the age of 16, and caused me to drive an hour one-way to the nearest store that sold that recording. There was no Amazon Prime, no streaming, and there was no way I could wait to devour that album. I was on fire, and with that comes a compounding sense of urgency. When I put the CD in my car stereo and promptly set its volume to “destroy,” everything I knew about the guitar was exactly that: destroyed. The kickoff to that record’s opener, Cold On the Shoulder, was devastating.

I’m not sure I got past that song the entire hour’s drive home, and I bet the engine in that car is still whining in the key of Bb. In that moment, Tony did what he had been doing since he began publicly putting shell to string: changing the world. And do not be mistaken, that is not hyperbole, my world literally changed, much like the acoustic guitar world changed, and whether or not it understood, the entire music world changed, too.

When I was graduating from college with a degree in history, I was required to write a 25-page original research paper, so I chose to research The Bluegrass Album and how it helped re-orient bluegrass music in a more traditional direction, while its individual players were simultaneously expanding its boundaries. I had a lengthy phone conversation with Tony in the wee hours of the morning, because as he said, “I keep vampire hours.” That conversation confirmed what his music had been telling me for years, that he was a deep and thoughtful well of knowledge, passion, and genius. He was so arresting and articulate, establishing him in my mind as the bard of bluegrass and acoustic music.

The words he spoke came out in fully-developed paragraphs, punctuation and all. He rendered my prepared questions useless; he needn’t be led, only heard and heeded. Terrible as that paper was in hindsight, its existence did warrant a citation in his official biography, and seeing my name in the back of that book means more to me than I can express. When I missed his call returning my initial request for an interview, he left me a voicemail that I can never erase. “Hey Reed, this is Tony Rice…”

I saw Tony many times in concert in many different configurations. As a member of Audie Blaylock and Redline, I played on the same bill as him and shared some moments with him backstage. I remember him walking up to Audie, putting down the case that held “The Antique,” and hugging my boss’ neck. He asked Audie about his band, and was the consummate gentleman to me. I photographed his guitar and tried not to appear awkward and intimidated by our interaction, all while trying not to pee down my leg. At least that last part was a success.

To be sure, I am a nobody; but in that sense, I am everybody. Everyone who ever interacted with Tony became immediately aware of his singularity. His singing, his playing, his obsessive attention to detail, the way he dressed, how he carried himself, his song selection, his tone, his arrangement and interpretation, the very idea of him…it changed the acoustic guitar, it changed music, and it changed me.

If you’re reading this, there’s a good chance it changed you, too. And so while there are many that can share more personal remembrances and tributes, people that knew him well, that shared the studio or stage with him and called him friend, the mark of his greatness is found in the profundity of his impact on people that didn’t know him in that way; although his music would indicate otherwise. This is why the loss feels so great to so many. His gifts became like the furniture in our homes. It decorated the walls of our lives, it gave us comfort and rest, support and beauty…but we often neglect to take constant note of its presence. We become used to it, and now it’s gone.

Indeed, Tony punctuated our music, its history and our lives, but not all punctuation has the same purpose or impact. Commas are not as strong as semi-colons, yet even their potency has its limits. The colon has a certain resoluteness, but it’s often a signal to what comes next, and in doing so lacks a definitive resolution. As does the exclamation point, which invariably leaves you wanting more; while a question mark always begs an answer or further contemplation. A period, though, is so coldly final and settled, and that’s what has me so deeply unsettled with the passing of Tony Rice.

For the last several years, Tony has been out of the spotlight. He has been unable to perform, yet the fact that he was still with us was of some comfort. It was like an ellipsis…to be continued. There was comfort in that, there was hope. Tony’s passing on Christmas day placed a decidedly pointed period on a mesmerizingly-bright career. Yet that period sturdily secures and solidifies what we already knew, but didn’t always recognize while he was with us: that Tony Rice has taken his place alongside the storied body of work he created. He has transcended this earthly life in the same way that his mastery and music continues to help us transcend its sorrows; and so to that end, the period, while real and painful, does not have the final say.

Tony Rice will continue to be my, and countless others’, greatest musical influence, and will continue to change worlds…period.

The Gate Called Beautiful video from Audie Blaylock

The newest single from Audie Blaylock & Redline, the second from their current project, Originalist, offers an interesting take on Acts, chapter 3.

This is the familiar story of St. Peter curing the lame man at the Temple in Jerusalem following the ascension of Jesus into Heaven. The people of Israel in the time had become somewhat accustomed to Jesus performing miracles, but seeing it done by one of his disciples in Jesus’ name was a startling image to the people at the Temple gate – the gate called Beautiful.

This new single carries that title, The Gate Called Beautiful, and was written by Reed Jones, bassist with Redline. Reed shared with us how it emerged and evolved over the past 7 years into the form in which it now exists on the new record.

“I am inherently drawn to words.  I love their various connotations and applications, I love toying with them, I love their power and scope…I just love the turn of a phrase. So while sitting in a weekly bible study in 2012, studying Acts 3, I was struck by the poetry of the miraculous healing of a disabled, nameless beggar at the gate called Beautiful. The obvious connection between the nature of that event and its location was striking to me for the first time, even though I had read the account numerous times before. I just felt that I had to write a song that captured, to the best of my limited abilities, the message of that story.

Musically at that time, I was reflecting a lot on Audie’s philosophy of singing and harmony, namely that you should hold your words out as long as possible and make the harmonies soar. Those two things collided after I chose to write the story from the perspective of the beggar. It was such a powerful exercise to see myself as broken and in need of healing.  It really taught me a lot about myself, and reminded me of our common humanity; I kind of feel like we’re all in that same boat at various points. But at the same time it made me wonder how can I embody that message of hope and restoration to others that feel broken at that moment? I think if we’re honest with ourselves, we’ve all been in both of those places to varying degrees at different points in our life, and you don’t have to be particularly religious to recognize that. I really think that story wraps up a pretty potent part of the human experience.

I sat on the song for years, not really doing anything with it, but for some reason in the last year or so, it felt right to record it. I just love singing with Audie and Evan, and I feel like they captured the vibe so well.

About that time we also started a partnership with Hemisphere Coffee Roasters, creating Redline Roast, and the song really resonated with Paul Kurtz, Hemisphere’s “Coffee Apostle,” whose business model seeks to impart that healing to the farmers they work with. The pieces of the puzzle really came together, and when my dear friend and visual artist, Todd Buschur, came on board with a desire to draw that story, things really took off.

We’ve got a video for the song that pulls all those things together. As a writer, I just really want the message of that song to reach as many people as possible, and the response has been powerful. I want people to ask themselves, “What does The Gate Called Beautiful mean to me?”

The Gate Called Beautiful and Originalist are widely available wherever you stream or download music online. Radio programmers can get both from AirPlay Direct.

Reed Jones speaks up for Genzler Amplification

Reed Jones, bass player with Audie Blaylock and Redline, shared a video he made recently about his experience using the Genzler Amplification Magellan 350 on the road with the band. The company specializes in compact amplification systems, and their products have been embraced by a large number of players who appreciate their dedication to tonal transparency.

Jones wanted to make sure that bluegrass and acoustic music bassists were aware of the company, and their products, as they are newly formed. Reminding us that many upright players use an small amp on stage, not to mention electric uprights, he said he was very happy to hook up again with Genzler, who he thought was gone from the market.

“For years, many bass players in our music (Terry Smith, Mike Anglin, Matt Wallace, and myself, to name a few I remember off-hand) played Genz Benz amplifiers because of their size, power, tone, and convenience. The company was eventually bought out by Fender and, to my understanding, production stopped. Fast forward a few years, and the Genz in Genz Benz, Jeff Genzler, started another amplification company called Genzler Amplification. I recently started working with them and have found their products to be incredible; remarkable design and quality.”

We spoke with Jeff Genzler earlier this week, and he was also eager to assure bluegrass artists of his commitment to pure tone in a small package. He told us a bit about how his earlier effort came to an end.

“I started Genz Benz in my garage in the ’80s, and built it up until we were distributed by KMC Music (Ovation). They eventually bought the company in 2003, and then Fender bought them. Then in 2011 Fender essentially dropped the brand. We had been at the forefront of lightweight bass amps and cabinets.

So I started Genzler in 2015 figuring I could do this again.”

The concept with the new company is what they call a bass array cabinet. We’ve all seen those large hanging cabinets at concerts that are suspended from cables above the stage, with the various speakers oriented in different angles. Genzler has reduced this concept in size, and uses one built into his cabinets to provide the punchy high end that many bass amps fail to reproduce in small combos.

Reed demonstrates this well in his video.

Jeff told us that he started making this sort of cabinet with a larger 12” speaker and 3” array components. Once he saw how well it worked, they set to finding out how small they could take it, ending up with the current configuration that Jones likes for bluegrass.

Here’s a video of Reed on stage with Audie at the Jenny Brook festival, showing the Magellan 350 in action.

Genzler Amplification products are distributed through an international network of dealers, and you can purchase them directly from the company. They also offer an Acoustic Array Pro designed for acoustic guitar which a good many banjo and fiddle players have come to rely on when they have to plug in on stage. There is even one in use on the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville.

Find more details on Genzler at their web site.

Audie Blaylock and Backroad Gold

Are you a fan of the Travel Channel… or the popular genre of antiquing and restoration on TV these days?

If so you are liable to hear some fine bluegrass when you tune in to Travel’s newest show, Backroad Gold with Corky Coker. The program will debut on February 5 at 9:30 p.m. (EST), and on Wednesday evenings for the next 8 weeks, with a theme song written and performed by Audie Blaylock and Redline.

The song is called The Road That Winds, written by Redline bassist, Reed Jones, and it will be the first single from Audie’s upcoming album. It will be played at the beginning and end of each episode of Backroad Gold, and all the guys are plenty stoked about it.

Here’s a taste…

 

Audie and Corky share a passion for vintage automobiles and muscle cars, and when they chanced to meet in Hershey, PA a few years ago, Blaylock discovered that Coker was a banjo player and a serious bluegrass fan. He helped Audie find a gig at a stop on the 2013 Hot Rod magazine Power Tour, and when early discussions about this new program started, Corky called Audie to get him to get started writing a theme song.

A big man in the auto world, Corky made his name in the tire business, with a speciality in manufacturing replica tires for auto enthusiasts. If you want rubber for vintage vehicles going back to the early days, or for project cars and motorcycles of every sort, Corker Tires will have what you need. Over the years he has also become recognized as a genuine expert in collecting and selling these vehicles, speaking at shows and appearing in auto-related television shows.

Now The Travel Channel will introduce him to their viewers, traveling the back roads of America, hunting down – and finding – rare and valuable vehicles of every sort. With bluegrass music.

In other Redline-related news… Audie has brought Josh Hymer onboard playing banjo. A solid Scruggs/Crowe man, Josh spent the last year touring with American Drive, the former members of J.D. Crowe & the New South, minus J.D.

He fills the spot recently vacated by Russ Carson, who had spent the past two and a half years in that role.

Audie also expects that Matt Wallace will be doing most of their shows this year on bass.

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