Roland White remembered – his life in music

Roland and Clarence White/Roland White and Diane Bouska – photo by Nicole Christianson

Pioneer, multi-instrumentalist and singer Roland White, primarily a mandolin player with a career spanning over six decades, passed away on April 1, 2022, at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee following complications of a heart attack. He was 83 years old.

Of Acadian-French-Canadian ancestry, Roland Joseph LeBlanc (“the White” translated into English) was born in Madawaska, Maine, on April 23, 1938, growing up in a musical family. His father, Eric, Sr., played the guitar, tenor banjo, fiddle, and harmonica, while several uncles played guitar and piano. 

At family gatherings, young Roland, the eldest sibling, and sister Joanne would join in the music making by singing. At the age of eight his father showed Roland his first chords on guitar, and two years he later got his first mandolin.

Along with his father, sister (bass), and brothers Eric (tenor banjo) and Clarence (guitar), they played in a country music ensemble simply called The White Family. One of White’s first public performances was at a local Grange Hall entertainment show in Chinalake, Maine. They did standard country numbers like Ragtime Annie, Golden Slippers, Rubber Dolly and Under The Double Eagle. 

Shortly after he turned 16 In 1954, the White family relocated to Burbank, California, and the brothers formed a trio, the Three Little Country Boys. 

Prompted by a comment made by his uncle Armand in the middle of 1955, Roland White began to investigate the music of Bill Monroe and bought a Monroe 45, A Mighty Pretty Waltz / Pike County Breakdown (Decca 9-28356). White recalls seeing Monroe sometime later on the TV show, Town Hall Party. 

As he began to learn more about the music of Monroe, Flatt & Scruggs, Reno & Smiley, the Stanley Brothers, and Jimmy Martin, their act became more bluegrass orientated. White even learned to play Scruggs-style banjo. 

Shortly thereafter (in October 1955), they learned of a talent contest called the Country Show, hosted by Carl “Squeakin’ Deacon” Moore, that took place every Sunday on radio station KXLA in Pasadena. In one show they won first place, leading to regular appearances on local radio – The Old Riverside Rancho Show included – and regional TV programs, such as Cal’s Corral, The County Barndance Jubilee, Hometown Jubilee, and Town Hall Party. 

At the age of 19 Roland White went to Nashville where he met banjo player Billy Ray Lathum, who then moved to California from Cave City, Arkansas. In addition to Lathum they recruited southern Californian LeRoy ‘Mack’ McNees (dobro) to form a quintet that made its first recordings as The Country Boys; a 45-rpm single on the Sundown label pairing a cover version of Flatt & Scruggs’s I’m Head Over Heels in Love With You with a song, credited to a fellow Sundown artist Bill Lowe, called Kentucky Hills (SD 45-131).

Regularly, two nights every week, they appeared at the Frontier Club in Pomona, California. 

Roland White, Eric White, Clarence White in a home video at a family picnic in Griffith Park, Los Angeles, California, April 1958

 

The Country Boys at ages 20 (Roland), 18 (Eric) and 14 (Clarence).

Until about 1959, they had little contact with any live bluegrass or acoustic music except through occasional concerts on Town Hall Party. The Ash Grove, a trendy Hollywood coffee house owned by Ed Pearl, was to be the scene of their introduction to many folk acts. Through the New Lost City Ramblers, they met Ed Pearl, manager of the club, who subsequently booked The Country Boys. At the time, Clarence and Eric were still in school and the others had day jobs.  

A CBS cameraman saw a performance of the Country Boys at the Ash Grove and, impressed with what he heard and saw, forwarded his feedback to producers at the Andy Griffith Show (on NBC-TV). Shortly afterwards, the group received a call from Steve Stebbins of Americana Corporation (Woodland Hills, California), asking if they would be interested in appearing on the program.

As a result, in February 1961, The Country Boys appeared on the famous TV show. They featured in two episodes, Mayberry On Record (#19) and Quiet Sam (#29), although Roland was absent from the second due to army commitments. 

Andy Griffith – Whoa Mule

February 13, 1961

The four songs they played on the show appeared later on an omnibus album with the title Songs, Themes & Laughs From The Andy Griffith Show, which was released on the Capitol label (Capitol ST-1611, 1962). 

Around that same month The Country Boys recorded their second single, On The Mountain (Stands My Love) / The Valley Below, which was released by Republic (2013, April 1961). 

In the summer of 1961 Eric White left the band to get married, whereupon the group invited Roger Bush to be the new bass player. This new combination teamed up with singer and guitarist Hal Poindexter for a single – Ain’t Gonna Worry ‘Bout Tomorrow / Carolina Sweetheart – for Hi-Lee Records (1804). 

The Country Boys’ first real road work was a tour to Missouri, where a friend had found a job for them. However, it was cut short when Roland White was drafted to serve in the army, for which he did about two years in West Germany beginning about April 1961, and ending in in September 1963. In his absence The Country Boys cut a single and album, The New Sound Of Bluegrass America, for Paul Cohen’s Briar Records (M-109), released in the name of The Kentucky Colonels. White returned in time to participate in the making Appalachian Swing, the groundbreaking 12-tune instrumental LP that one reviewer proclaimed it to be, “one of the most influential albums in the whole of bluegrass music.”

Roland White & Jan Johansson – I am a Pilgrim (a workshop) 

Marge Seeger and Ed Pearl booked an eastern tour for the band, starting in late 1963, during which they played such places as The Exodus in Denver; The Retort in Detroit; and Club 47 and The Broadside in Cambridge; The Ontario Place in Washington, DC; The Second Fret in Philadelphia; and the Unicorn Coffeehouse in Boston.

The Kentucky Colonels also appeared at Gerde’s Folk City in New York City for a week in November 1963. 

In 1964 they made appearances at the Newport Folk Festival and clubs and coffeehouses across the country. On March 25, they appeared at the 2nd Annual UCLA Folk Festival in Los Angeles, and that same month Roland and Clarence White helped Tut Taylor cut an album of dobro instrumentals. 

From July 23 to 26, 1964 the Kentucky Colonels appeared at the Newport Folk Festival in Rhode Island. Recordings from their performances there found there way onto a Vanguard album.  

This is typical of their recording catalogue as, other than Appalachian Swing, they never did any studio sessions. 

Their subsequent albums feature recordings from the Comedian Theater (on November 15, 1964); at the Ash Grove between March 27 and April 3, 1965; a Vancouver concert recorded January 15, 1965; again, at the Ash Grove (on March 27, 1965); at the Cobblestone Club in North Hollywood (in August 1965). These last two sets included the mercurial fiddler Scotty Stoneman. 

Other locations where the Kentucky Colonels played during the two-year period 1964-1965 included clubs and coffeehouses across the country, including Gerde’s Folk City in New York and Club 47 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, as well as a return appearance at the Newport Folk Festival and frequent runs at the Ash Grove. 

The Kentucky Colonels appeared as musicians in the movie The Farmer’s Other Daughter (1965), a bawdy comedy that included the song The Ballad Of Farmer Brown, sung by country music entertainer Ernest Ashworth and The Kentucky Colonels. A single featuring the song coupled with For Lovin’ Me was released in May 1965 (World Pacific 427). The band members were Roland White (mandolin), Clarence White (guitar), Billy Ray Lathum (banjo), and Roger Bush (bass). Richard Greene sat in on rhythm guitar along with an unidentified drummer. 

Ernest Ashworth & Kentucky Colonels, The Farmer’s Other Daughter, etc. 

As public taste turned toward rock ‘n’ Roll, The Kentucky Colonels disbanding briefly due to lack of work, doing their last performance on October 31, 1965. 

By 1966, Clarence White, who had begun playing more electric guitar, left to do studio work, which eventually led to his joining the Byrds. Hence following the consequential dissolution of the Kentucky Colonels, Roland White played electric bass in several country music lounge bands in southern California to help make ends meet. 

While on a California tour in May of 1967, Bill Monroe invited Clarence White to join the Blue Grass Boys, but he suggested that Monroe hire Roland to play guitar instead. The brothers were filling in at the Ash Grove as Monroe’s bus had broken down in Texas, leaving band members stranded there for a while. Roland joined the tour as a guest, and at the end of it was hired as the replacement for Doug Green, who was returning to college. 

Roland White, speaking at the 2011 International Folk Festival in Nashville, Tennessee, relates how he went to work for Bill Monroe.

And during this period, he participated in three recording sessions with Monroe, cutting a total of nine tracks. Among the more memorable performances are The Gold Rush, Kentucky Mandolin, I Want To Go With You, on which White sings baritone, and the first recording of a haunting duet called The Walls of Time, with White singing lead. For this duet, in order to be level with Monroe, the diminutive White had to stand on a soft-drink box. 

Five numbers were released on singles, although The Walls of Time remained unavailable until 1994. All recordings are included on the Bear Family 4-CD set Bill Monroe – Bluegrass 1959-1969.

Also, White was involved in the recording of Train 45 Heading South for a live radio / TV syndicated broadcast for National Life Grand Ole Opry, a performance subsequently made commercially available on a compilation by Opryland Home Video (JB 1914).

Bill Monroe (vocals and mandolin); Kenny Baker (fiddle); Vic Jordan (banjo); Roland White (guitar); and James Monroe (bass) – December 20, 1968 

Life working for Monroe was far from being all-glamourous with regular appearances on the Grand Ole Opry and other big stages; White had to do a lot off-stage also. White once recalled how life was living off the bus, he was plunged into working at the somewhat chaotic environment of the Monroe’s first Bean Blossom festival – the Big Bluegrass Celebration in June 1967 – where he was still selling tickets and taking attendance money five minutes before he was due on stage, and he wasn’t properly dressed for the occasion. He helped to build the new 30-foot-wide stage and associated seating area out in the woods. 

Bill Monroe & The Blue Grass Boys – Live – Bean Blossom, Indiana – 1967. 1st Annual Bean Blossom Bluegrass Festival, billed as a Big Bluegrass Celebration 

Bill Monroe, James Monroe, Roland White, Butch Robins and Byron Berline. 

In the 1968 festival, although playing guitar for Monroe, White participated in the mandolin workshop alongside Monroe and Jesse McReynolds. 

In September  of that year White played mandolin on Kenny Baker’s second album. 

White worked for Monroe for a little under two years, appearing around the country with performances at Carlton Haney’s third Labor Day weekend festival, Watermelon Park; across to Bill Grant’s festival in Oklahoma; in California; in Fort Worth, Texas; and at the DJ Convention in Nashville in the very early months, being indicative of the hectic life on the road with the Father of Bluegrass Music. 

Starting in 1997 White organized the Bill Monroe Appreciation Nights which ran for about 20 years or so paying tribute to Bill Monroe’s music. They attracted appreciative audiences who enjoyed being entertained by the incredible talent that White was able to call upon. 

Before White left the Blue Grass Boys they made a trip overseas to play at US military bases in Italy and Germany.  

Shocked by the dissolution of Flatt’s partnership with Earl Scruggs, White became an original member of Lester Flatt’s Nashville Grass, allowing him to return to his more accustomed role as a mandolin picker. 

After some rehearsals, the new band taped a variety of radio and TV shows, including programs for Martha White. They then hit the road with bookings in New Jersey, Ohio, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, West Virginia, Virginia, and Pennsylvania. The Nashville Grass even played up in Ontario, Canada, while out east. 

In September 1969 White participated in the first of about 20 different recording sessions that produced a little less than 100 songs and tunes altogether. 

These were distributed among several albums including Flatt Out, The One And Only Lester Flatt, Flatt on Victor, Kentucky Ridgerunner, On The South Bound, Foggy Mountain Breakdown, and Lester Flatt – Country Boy. 

Additionally, White contributed to three memorable albums, namely Lester ‘n’ Mac, On the South Bound, and Over the Hills to the Poorhouse, that Lester Flatt did with his old singing partner Mac Wiseman. 

Lester Flatt: Little Cabin Home

Live 1971 Renfro Valley, Kentucky; Lester Flatt and the Nashville Grass

Roland White solo I’m Just A Used To Be

 

Live 1973 Renfro Valley; Lester Flatt and the Nashville Grass

White left the Nashville Grass towards the end of January 1973, after doing his last recordings with Flatt. 

He reunited with his brothers, Clarence and Eric, but the grouping, known as the New Kentucky Colonels (with Herb Pedersen and Alan Munde), was tragically cut short when Clarence was killed by a drunk driver. However, replacing The Dillards at short notice, they did make one overseas tour in the spring, and returned to the States for appearances on the east and west coasts.

There are two LPs documenting their time in Europe; The New Kentucky Colonels Live in Holland and The White Brothers: Live in Sweden, recorded at the Mosebacke club, Stockholm, Sweden on May 28 and 29.

One of their gigs – on May 11, 1973 – in Breda, The Netherlands was broadcast live on VPRO’s Friday-evening radio show

That same year, Roland joined Country Gazette, the popular Los Angeles-based band that also included former Blue Grass Boy, Byron Berline. White joined the band as a guitarist but later reverted to mandolin. Other members at the time included banjoist Alan Munde, and bass player Roger Bush. 

The group’s blending of bluegrass and country-rock did much to foster the progressive movement in bluegrass in the United States and secured a loyal following for the group in Europe.

In the fall of 1978 the new Country Gazette line-up recorded their first album All This And Money Too? (Ridge Runner 0017) 

He played mandolin on the recordings for eight albums with Country Gazette before leaving in 1988. These include Country Gazette Live, Out to Lunch, What a Way to Make a Living, All This and Money Too?, American And Clean, America’s Bluegrass Band, Bluegrass Tonight!, and Strictly Instrumental.

While working with Country Gazette, White released his first solo record, I Wasn’t Born to Rock ‘n’ Roll. With backing by members of the band, the album featured a mixture of traditional and contemporary material. Included were two songs by former employers Bill Monroe (Can’t You Hear Me Calling) and Lester Flatt (If I Should Wander Back Tonight). 

When in the summer of 1979 singer-songwriter Jim Lauderdale made a pilgrimage to Nashville from North Carolina he had two goals; to work with and befriend Roland White and George Jones. White became a mentor to the 22-year-old Lauderdale, and realizing that he had talent, he arranged to cut an album with Lauderdale. The recordings took place in Earl Scruggs’ basement studio with a band that included Marty Stuart on guitar, Gene Wooten on dobro, and Johnny Warren on fiddle. Lauderdale couldn’t find a label to release the Roland White-produced album, and until 2017 the tapes were thought to have been lost. Jim Lauderdale and Roland White finally saw the light of day on August 3, 2018. 

Country Gazette – Saro Jane [on the TV program New Country]

White moved a little closer to traditional bluegrass music when in early 1982 he teamed up with luminaries Béla Fleck, Blaine Sprouse, Pat Enright, Mark Hembree, and Jerry Douglas to form a fun band known as the Dreadful Snakes. Taking their name from the title of the early 1950s Bill Monroe song The Little Girl and the Dreadful Snake, their inaugural gig was at J.T. Gray’s Station Inn.

After Fleck sent a tape of the show to Ken Irwin (Rounder Records) the group cut their only album, Snakes Alive, at the Studio By The Pond, Hendersonville, Tennessee. It was regarded as one of the highpoints of recorded bluegrass during the 1980s. 

During all this period White remained an active member of Country Gazette. 

White made his debut with The Nashville Bluegrass Band, a group that had been in existence since 1984, when he joined them on stage at Nashville’s Station Inn on February 3, 1989. His first official gig was at the SPBGMA Convention later that month. During his tenure with them, he appeared on five albums. All received Grammy nominations and two – Waitin’ for the Hard Times to Go and Unleashed – earned awards in the Best Bluegrass Album category. While with The Nashville Bluegrass Band, White recorded his second solo album, Trying To Get To You. 

They appeared regularly on The Nashville Network, were frequent guests on the Grand Ole Opry, performed at the prestigious Carnegie Hall, and toured as far afield as Europe, Brazil, and China. 

Rooted in tradition, The Nashville Bluegrass Band still had an eye on then-current trends.

Never one to allow misfortune to trouble him unduly, when White broke a leg in mid-December 1994, he returned for the New Year’s Eve show and for over two months he played sitting down. 

Long Time Gone / New Born Soul (The Blind Boys of Alabama) – The Nashville Bluegrass Band on the Grand Ole Opry ….

In 1994 he released another solo project, Trying To Get To You (Sugar Hill), recorded at Rich Adler’s Suite 2000, Belleview, Nashville. Instrumentally, it included Stuart Duncan and Gene Libbea of The Nashville Bluegrass Band; David Grier, Richard Bailey (who worked with White later), and Gene Wooten. Roland’s wife Diane Bouska, Alan O’Bryant, and Pat Enright all contributed vocally. 

Nashville Bluegrass Band, Graves Mountain, 1995 

Trying To Get To You foretold the transition to his own group, which happened after about ten years with the Nashville Bluegrass Band. As another example of this forthcoming change, Roland White and Diane Bouska were international guest artists at the Harrietville National Bluegrass and Traditional Country Music Convention in Victoria, Australia, in 1997. 

The newly formed Roland White Band consisted of Bouska (vocal and guitar), Richard Bailey (banjo) and Todd Cook (bass). Jon Weisberger (vocal and bass] and Brian Christianson [vocal and fiddle) joined later. 

The band’s debut recording, Jelly On My Tofu, in 2002, received a Grammy nomination for Best Bluegrass Album. 

New River Train – Roland White Band live at McCabe’s Guitar Shop in Santa Monica, California; May-11, 2013  

Roland White (mandolin); Diane Bouska (guitar); Herb Pedersen (banjo); Bill Bryson (bass) and Blaine Sprouse (fiddle)

Straight-Ahead Bluegrass is simply that, giving White the opportunity to share some of his “traditional bluegrass favorites” with his regular Roland White Band members. As Weisberger relates in his liner notes, “whether new or old, each [song] is filled with the lifetime of experience—and the vitality and the good humor—that Roland White brings every time he puts pick to strings and steps before a microphone to sing.”

In 2018 White recruited several of bluegrass music’s most exciting young musicians alongside some with more experience; Brooke and Darin Aldridge, Kristin Scott Benson (The Grascals), Aaron Bibelhauser, Russ Carson (Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder), Jeremy Darrow, Nick Dauphinais, Gina Furtado, Jeremy Garrett (The Infamous Stringdusters), David Grier, Brittany Haas (Hawktail), Josh Haddix, Justin Hiltner, Lindsay Lou, Kimber Ludiker (Della Mae), Drew Matulich, Patrick McAvinue, Darren Nicholson, Lyndsay Pruett, Jon Stickley, Billy Strings, Molly Tuttle, and Jon Weisberger, to record Roland White and Friends, A Tribute to the Kentucky Colonels. 

The CD, which includes updated versions of twelve songs and tunes that were recorded or performed by the Kentucky Colonels in the 1960s and 1970s, recaptured “the spirit of the past and brings it to the present, transforming the music into modern-day classics,” according to one commentator.

As one would expect, White’s mandolin playing, and singing are solid and entertaining throughout. 

He was ubiquitous at the Station Inn, either watching other people’s shows or putting on events of his own. When the Roland White Band played there, he would invariably spot younger musicians in the audience and get them up to play with the band.

A musician’s musician, White had his own unique highly rhythmic lead and back up mandolin styles, with a fluid, delicate touch to his playing, incorporating some of the musical intensity that he picked up from being around the likes of brother Clarence and fiddlers Scotty Stoneman and Paul Warren. He adapted his style to suit the sound of the band with which he was playing.

He admitted to playing things that he heard from other instruments, “I always liked Ralph Mooney’s pedal steel when he played with Wynn Stewart. I liked dobro and listened a lot to Josh Graves.”    

White had a rich, clear baritone voice. Others have described his singing as “a bit laid-back” and “warm and poignant.” 

He was a devoted and in-demand teacher and taught at a host of mandolin camps and workshops, and gave many private lessons. With Diane Bouska he has co-authored a number of instruction books including Roland White’s Approach to Bluegrass Mandolin, The Essential Clarence White – Bluegrass Guitar Leads, Roland White’s Mandolin Christmas and Roland White’s Christmas Chord Book. CDs accompany three of these. 

It Came Upon A Midnight Clear – Roland White mandolin Christmas music

He can be heard on the soundtrack to the film, Dead Man Walking (1995), for which he, playing mandolin and adding a vocal part, and other members of The Nashville Bluegrass Band, backed Johnny Cash on the song, In Your Mind.

As well as the glittering array of bluegrass musicians who were his fellow band members, he shared the stage with other top names, including Sonny and Bobby Osborne; the Fairfield Four; Doc Watson; Tony Trischka; Darol Anger; Jesse McReynolds; The Del McCoury Band; Carl Jackson; Kathy Chiavola; and Missy Raines. 

Tony Trischka Band with Roland White July 28, 2006

Planet Bluegrass, RockyGrass, Lyons, Colorado 

Nevertheless, White yearned to play with his brothers most of all.   

As well being a mentor to Lauderdale and Marty Stuart, White encouraged the likes of Casey Campbell, Tyler Andal, Luke Munday, Merideth Goins, Justin Hiltner, and Vickie Vaughn.

Stuart told Penny Parson in an interview about striking up a conversation with White (when with the Nashville Grass), “he was really kind to me, let me play his mandolin, took time to show me some things.” At the end of the following summer [Roland] “gave me his phone number” and [said], “If you ever want to come up, hang out, ride the bus, let me know. I’ll ask Lester, and you ask your mum and dad.” On his return to school which Stuart hated, he was one day dismissed … he called White, “He invited me up, Labor Day weekend, 1972. We went up to Delaware.”  

(From Foggy Mountain Troubadour, The Life and Music of Curly Seckler, by Penny Parsons (University of Illinois Press, 2016). Used by permission.)

White was a humble, reserved man. There are many stories of his overwhelming generosity (to which I can personally attest), inviting Nashville visitors and newcomers to his house where his home-made salsa was a speciality. 

Claire Lynch shared her memories of Roland’s kindness to her.

“Roland and Diane contacted me to ask if I could use some furniture for my new empty apartment. I thought I was destined to sleep on the floor, honestly. But they opened their storage unit to me and gave me a queen mattress, box springs and frame. I was SO GRATEFUL! And I felt so cared for. 

Kindness and generosity marked Roland’s life.”

British banjo player Kenny Baker, of the Radio Cowboys and the New Essex Bluegrass Band), after attending the IBMA WoB convention at Owensboro in September 1994, visited Nashville. He reflects ….  

“…..so many people are mourning the loss of Roland White. He was a friend to all he met – a sweet man. 

The night before we flew back to England after three amazing weeks in the USA, during which I saw Roland a lot – he invited us to have dinner at his home. I and my friends, John Holder and Gaye Lockwood, along with Jim Rooney were there, and Ben Surratt and Missy Raines were too. It was a wonderful evening of lovely food and music. 

Thank you, Diane and Roland, for your great kindness.”

Fiddler Blaine Sprouse was also close with White.

“Roland was a dear, dear friend. A gentle and generous man who made all of the people he met feel comfortable and like they belonged. He was one of my oldest and dearest friends and one of the first friends I met when I moved to Nashville in 1974. I feel honored and privileged to have played music with him and to call him friend. His impact on bluegrass music is immeasurable. 

My heart goes out to his wife, Diane Bouska, and all of his family, friends, and fans.”

White was recognized for his considerable contributions to bluegrass music by the Society for the Preservation of Bluegrass Music (SPBGMA) which added his name to the Preservation Hall of Greats in 2010; and by the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) with a Distinguished Achievement Award (2011), and induction into the Hall of Fame in 2017.

R.I.P. Roland White 

Footnote:

Bob Black’s book, Mandolin Man: The Bluegrass Life of Roland White is scheduled for publication on June 7, 2022. 

A Discography 

Roland White / Roland White Band –

  • I Wasn’t Born To Rock ‘N’ Roll (Ridge Runner RRR0005, 1976) [reissued in 2010 on Tomkins Square TSQ 2400 with bonus track; She Is Her Own Special Baby]
  • Trying To Get To You (Sugar Hill SH-CD 3826, August 15, 1994)
  • Jelly On My Tofu (Copper Creek CCCD-0211, 2002) – Roland White Band
  • Straight-Ahead Bluegrass (Roland White Music RW 002, May 8, 2014) – Roland White Band
  • A Tribute to the Kentucky Colonels: Roland White And Friends (Mountain Home MH 17242, October 26, 2018)

Kentucky Colonels

  • Appalachian Swing! (World Pacific WP 1821, April 4, 1964) [reissued on United Artists [UK] UAS 29514 – Kentucky Colonels, featuring Roland and Clarence White, 1973; with bonus single tracks That’s What You Get For Loving Me and The Ballad Of Farmer Brown.][Kentucky Colonels (United Artists Records Bluegrass Best Collection [Japan] GXC 2013, 1978) contains the same recordings as UAS 29514.] [Liberty LN 10185 Appalachian Swing (contains 10 tracks only), 1982] [remastered and re-issued as Kentucky Colonels Featuring Roland & Clarence White, with Billy Ray Latham Roger Bush, Bobby Slone and Leroy Mack (BGO Records BGOCD357 (UK), 1997)] [also re-issued as Appalachian Swing! on EMI Music Special Markets / S&P Records SPR-717, 2005; with three recordings, Pickin’ Flat, A Fool Such As I and Black Ridge Ramble from Tut Taylor – Dobro Country.]
  • Livin’ In The Past – Legendary Live Recordings [1961-1965] Briar SBR-4202, 1975 (also on Takoma/Briar BT 7202, in Japan on Trio PA 8107) [re-issued as Livin’ In The Past – Legendary Live Recordings (Rural Rhythm RHY 1020, September 23, 2003)]
  • The Kentucky Colonels 1965-1967, Featuring Roland and Clarence White (Rounder 0070, 1976) [reissued in Spain on Guimbarda GS 11070 in 1979] [compiled from privately recorded live sessions]
  • The Kentucky Colonels With Scotty Stoneman: Live in LA, (Sierra Briar SBR 4206, 1965 :– 78 Scotty 
  • The Kentucky Colonels 1966 (Shiloh SLP 4084, 1978)
  • Kentucky Colonels, Featuring Clarence White (Rounder 0098, 1980)
  • On Stage:  Long Journey Home: Vanguard VCD-77004, November 1991) Hollywood 167003 Livin’ In The Past – Legendary Live Recordings, 1993 [re-issued on Sierra SXCD 6017 in 1996, see also Rural Rhythm RHY 1020, January 2003]
  • Billy Ray Lathum Presents The Kentucky ColonelsLive In Stereo (Double Barrel Records DBL/BRL 1001, 1999) [re-issued by (FGM) May 27, 2003] – this contains material from a Vancouver concert recorded January 15, 1965. 

The New Kentucky Colonels

  • The White Brothers: Live in Sweden, 1973 (Rounder Records 0073, 1976) [re-issued as Live in Sweden, 1973 (Roland White Music, November 18, 2016)
  • Live in Holland, 1973 (Roland White Music CD 1, 2013)

Lester Flatt / Lester Flatt and Mac Wiseman

  • Flatt Out (Columbia CS-1006, April 1970)
  • The One And Only Lester Flatt (Nugget NRLP-104, 1970 [Reissued on Power Pak PO-293 Rollin‘ in 1976 and on Hollywood HCD-291 Rollin’ At His Best, King 0508-2 in 2003]
  • Flatt On Victor (RCA Victor LSP-4495, April 1971)
  • Lester ‘N’ Mac (RCA Victor LSP-4547, June 1971) w. Mac Wiseman
  • Kentucky Ridgerunner (RCA Victor LSP-4633 January 1972)
  • On The South Bound (RCA Victor LSP-4688, June 1972) w. Mac Wiseman
  • Foggy Mountain Breakdown (RCA Victor LSP-4789, October 1972)
  • Lester Flatt – Country Boy Featuring Feudin’ Banjos (RCA Victor RCA APL1-0131, 1973)
  • Lester Flatt and Mac Wiseman – Over the Hills to the Poorhouse (RCA RCA APL1-0309, 1973) w. Mac Wiseman
  • Lester Flatt (RCA Country Legends series / BMG Heritage BG2 65142, 2003) (sampler)
  • Flatt On Victor Plus More (Bear Family Records (Germany) BCD 15975 FI, 2015) [6-CD set]

Country Gazette

  • Country Gazette Live (Antilles AN-7014, 1975) – recorded at McCabe’s Guitar Shop
  • Out To Lunch (Flying Fish FF-027, November 25, 1976)
  • What A Way To Make A Living (Ridge Runner RRR-0008, June 1977)
  • All This, And Money, Too! (Ridge Runner RRR-0017, January 1979)
  • American And Clean (Flying Fish FF-253, January 6, 1981)
  • America’s Bluegrass Band Flying Fish FF-295, December 1, 1982)
  • Recorded Live On The Road (no label CGT 1, 1984); this includes material from the band’s June 1977 tour of Japan. 
  • Bluegrass Tonight! (Flying Fish FF-383, September 1986) – Alan Munde/Roland White and Country Gazette
  • Strictly Instrumental (Flying Fish FF-446, 1987) – Alan Munde/Roland White and Country Gazette
  • Hello, Operator. . . . This Is Country Gazette (Flying Fish FFCD-70112, April 3, 1991) (sampler)

Alan Munde

  • Alan Munde’s Banjo Sandwich (Ridge Runner RRR 0001, 1975)
  • The Banjo Kid Picks Again (Ridge Runner RRR0022, 1980)
  • Festival Favorites, Volume I (Ridge Runner RRR-0026, 1980)
  • Festival Favorites, Volume II (Ridge Runner RRR0027, 1980
  • Festival Favorites: Nashville Sessions (Ridge Runner RRR0031, 1982) 
  • Festival Favorites: Southwest Sessions (Ridge Runner RRR-0032, 1983)

The Nashville Bluegrass Band

  • The Boys Are Back in Town (Sugar Hill SH-CD-3778, April 5, 1990)
  • Home Of the Blues (Sugar Hill SH-CD-3793 (live with Fairfield Four), October 22, 1991)
  • Waitin’ For The Hard Times To Go (Sugar Hill SH-CD-380, May 1, 1993)
  • Unleashed (Sugar Hill SH-CD-3843, September 19, 1995)
  • American Beauty (Sugar Hill SH-CD-3882, July 21, 1998)

Others 

  • 1964: Tut Taylor – Tut Taylor, Roland & Clarence White: Dobro Country (World Pacific 1829) 
  • 1968: Kenny Baker – Portrait Of A Bluegrass Fiddler (County 719)
  • 1969: Joe Greene – Joe Greene’s Fiddle Album (County 722)
  • 1976: Dave Ferguson and his Friends – Somewhere Over the Rainbow and Other Fiddle Tunes (Ridge Runner RRR0003)
  • 1976: Dan Huckabee – Why Is This Man Smiling (Ridge Runner RRR0004)
  • 1977: Charlie Hardiman – On The Well-Beaten Path To Bluegrass (Hillside)
  • 1977: Butch Robins – Forty Years Late (Rounder 0086)
  • 1977: Buck White and the Down Home Folks – That Down Home Feeling (Ridge Runner RRR0006)
  • 1977: Sam (Bush) And Alan (Munde) – Together Again For The First Time (Ridge Runner RRR0007)
  • 1978: Bobby Hicks – Texas Crapshooter (County 772)
  • 1979: Paul Warren with Lester Flatt and The Nashville Grass – America’s Greatest Breakdown Fiddle Player (CMH Records CMH-6237)
  • 1980: Joe Carr – Otter Nonsense (Ridge Runner RRR-0024)
  • 1981: Blaine Sprouse – Summertime (Rounder 0155)
  • 1983: Lost City Mad Dogs – The Lost City Mad Dogs (Music Mountain Records [Japan] MMR-002)
  • 1983: The Dreadful Snakes – Snakes Alive! (Rounder 0177)
  • 1988: Glen Duncan – Sweetwater (Turquoise TR -5061)
  • 1988: David Grier – Freewheeling (Rounder 0250)
  • 1990: Doc Watson – On Praying Ground (Sugar Hill SH-3779)
  • 1991: Bill Monroe – Bluegrass 1959-1969 (Bear Family Records (Germany) BCD 15529 DH) [4-CD set]
  • 1992: Stuart Duncan – Stuart Duncan (Rounder CD 0263)
  • 1992: Marty Stuart – Let There Be Country (ColumbiaCK 40829)
  • 1994: Gene Wooten – Sings & Plays Dobro (Pinecastle 1024)
  • 1994: Bill Monroe – The Music of Bill Monroe (From 1936 to 1994) (MCAD 4-11048) [4-CD set] 
  • 1995: Clint Black – Looking for Christmas (RCA 07863-66593-2)
  • 1995: Joe Carr and Alan Munde – Windy Days and Dusty Skies (Flying Fish FF 70644)
  • 1996: Leroy Mack – Leroy Mack & Friends (Rebel REB-CD-1729)
  • 1996: Bernadette Peters – I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight (Angel 0777 7 54699 2 9) 
  • 1997: Valerie Smith – Patchwork Heart (Rebel REB CD-0601)
  • 1999: Kazuhiro Inaba – Dixie Dream (Copper Creek CCCD 0166)
  • 2000: Valerie Smith – Turtle Wings (Rebel REB-CD-0602)
  • 2002: Ricky Skaggs and Friends – Sing The Songs Of Bill Monroe (Lyric Street 2061-65030-2)
  • 2004: Clint Black – Christmas with You (Equity Music Group EMG-3004)
  • 2007: Ry Cooder – My Name Is Buddy (Nonesuch 7559-79961-2)
  • 2010: Skip Battin – Topanga Skyline (Sierra SXCD 6031) 
  • 2014: Becky Buller – ‘Tween Earth And Sky (Dark Shadow Recordings)
  • 2018: Jim Lauderdale and Roland White – Jim Lauderdale and Roland White (Yep Roc!  CDYEP 2597)
  • 1996: Various Artists – True Life Blues – The Songs Of Bill Monroe (Sugar Hill Records SHCD-2209)

Services on Wednesday for Roland White

Funeral arrangements for Roland White, who passed away last week, have been finalized.

There will be a visitation from 3:00-7:00 p.m. on Wednesday, April 6, 2022, at Spring Hill Funeral Home and Cemetery in Madison, Tennessee. 

A Celebration of Life will be organized at a future date.

In lieu of flowers the family encourages making a donation to the IBMA Foundation

Roland White passes

One of the most cherished and beloved members of the bluegrass community is gone. Roland White, multi-instrumentalist and singer, has died today after having suffered a severe heart attack a week ago. He was 83 years of age.

Growing up in Maine, alongside his two brothers, Eric, and fellow bluegrass legend, Clarence, Roland first played music with his family, including his sister, Joanne. While in his teens, the family moved to southern California, and the White Brothers launched The Country Boys, which became The Kentucky Colonels when Roland returned from military service. Their 1964 recording, Appalachian Swing, turned heads all over the world, based largely on Clarence’s innovative guitar playing and Roland’s mandolin .

Roland did a stint with Bill Monroe on guitar, followed by four years on mandolin with Lester Flatt, and his entire world was turned upside down in 1973 when a reunion tour with The White Brothers was cut short when Clarence was struck by a moving vehicle and killed while loading equipment into a car.

The next stage of his career saw more than twelve years with his great friend Alan Munde in Country Gazette, followed by another dozen with The Nashville Bluegrass Band. Then in 2000, White launched the Roland White Band, performing with his wife, Diane Bouska, on guitar. There were many solo projects along the way, none more influential then his 1976 release, I Wasn’t Born To Rock’n Roll… But I Love To Cook.

Most of his later years were spent living in Nashville, where he was the friend of everyone in bluegrass music. Always in good spirits and ready for a laugh, he would be found at shows in town, often at Station Inn, and any room would light up when he walked in. With his distinctive full beard and a twinkle in his eye, everyone knew that a good time was about to be had by all. And he kept playing his mandolin and teaching, releasing a number of instructional books and a must-have set of guitar transcriptions from his brother, Clarence, called The Essential Clarence White – Bluegrass Guitar Leads.

Those closest to him know that Clarence’s tragic death was a life long sadness for Roland. Well known DC radio host Katy Daley once asked him, out of all the luminaries he had performed with, who was his favorite. Roland paused as a tear came into his eye, and said, “My brothers.” Eric had passed in 2012, on Clarence’s birthday.

It is too soon to have any information about funeral arrangements, but we will prepare a more comprehensive overview of this important life in bluegrass next week, when we hope to have those details.

R.I.P., Roland White.

Mandolin Man – The Bluegrass Life of Roland White

Roland White’s illustrious bluegrass music career spans 65 years, and during that time he has been associated with progressive styles as well as the traditional forms. 

He has played with The Country Boys (later the internationally acclaimed Kentucky Colonels), Bill Monroe and The Blue Grass Boys, Lester Flatt and the Nashville Grass, Country Gazette, the Dreadful Snakes, and the Nashville Bluegrass Band before forming his own band about 20 years ago. 

White’s journey from playing bowling alleys in California to the Ryman Auditorium, is detailed in a forthcoming book, Mandolin Man, by fellow Blue Grass Boy, banjoist Bob Black, who had this to say about what led him to write about the bluegrass life of Roland White ….. 

“I was inspired to write it after Roland called me up one evening in 2015 and told me he was enjoying reading my first book, Come Hither to Go Yonder: Playing Bluegrass with Bill Monroe. I told him, ‘Someone needs to write a book about you.’ Later in the conversation, I told him maybe I would write the book. I was very inspired by Roland’s phone call. I’ve loved Roland ever since I first met him in 1974. I’ve played with him many times over the years. I always thought that Roland had never received the amount of public acclaim he should have. After all, his career spanned the entire spectrum of bluegrass—from traditional to progressive. I also felt a kinship with him since we both had played with Bill Monroe as Blue Grass Boys.

I went to Nashville with my wife, Kristie, later that same year to do some interviews with Roland, and also to talk to some other individuals who helped play a large part in Roland’s career, including Vic Jordan and Alan O’Bryant. As time progressed, I ended up doing numerous phone interviews with additional musical figures such as Marty Stuart, LeRoy McNees, Byron Berline, Alan Munde, Roger Bush, and many others. I got some great perspectives from these people.

One of the many enlightening aspects of the project for me was the realization that Country Gazette, who Roland played with for many years, was actually a reincarnation of the Kentucky Colonels, Roland’s first band with his brothers Clarence and Eric. The Gazette even included two of the original Kentucky Colonels: Roger Bush and Roland. Byron Berline even agreed strongly with me that the Gazette was a natural spin-off of the Kentucky Colonels. The Colonels came along at an earlier time, when west coast bluegrass was still in its early stages, and it dissolved because of lack of musical opportunities. You can’t make a living playing in bowling alleys (which they tried to do). The Gazette enjoyed the advantage of a much more popular bluegrass scene.

Another thing I learned from doing the book was something Marty Stuart told me: the Kentucky Colonels were like the bluegrass version of the Bakersfield Sound, a style of country music which developed around Bakersfield, California in the ’50s and still exists today as an alternative to the more predictable, commercial Nashville sound. The Kentucky Colonels personified west coast bluegrass, which has always been characterized by openness to change and a greater willingness to embrace the best aspects of alternative musical genres than the more tradition-bound eastern and southern bluegrass.   

The book has been a very rewarding experience for me. Doing the research was a bit painstaking and time-consuming, but I was able to get in some creative perspective too. My point of view (from the standpoint of being a bluegrass musician) is a strong feature of the work—perhaps more than in other books of this type. Roland is a unique and creative individual. Cold, academic descriptions of names, places, and dates are just not sufficient to do justice to the man and his story.

It is my hope that Mandolin Man will open the minds of many people who are interested in the historical as well as personal aspects of the bluegrass world, as well as offering a revealing glimpse of a man who has contributed immeasurably to the development of bluegrass into what it is today.”

Publisher, the University of Illinois Press, summarizes ….

[A] master of the mandolin and acclaimed multi-instrumentalist, White has mentored a host of bluegrass musicians and inspired countless others.

Bob Black draws on extensive interviews with White and his peers and friends to provide the first in-depth biography of the pioneering bluegrass figure. Born into a musical family, White found early success with the Kentucky Colonels during the 1960s folk revival. The many stops and collaborations that marked White’s subsequent musical journey trace the history of modern bluegrass. But Black also delves into the seldom-told tale of White’s life as a working musician, one who endured professional and music industry ups-and-downs to become a legendary artist and beloved teacher.

An entertaining merger of memories and music history, Mandolin Man tells the overdue story of a bluegrass icon and his times.

Details

Mandolin Man – The Bluegrass Life of Roland White
Publication Date: May 17, 2022
Pages: 280 pages
Dimensions: 6 x 9 in
Illustrations: 27 black & white photographs
Cloth – $110.00 ISBN 978-0-252-04433-5
Paper – $19.95 978-0-252-08640-3
eBook – $14.95 978-0-252-05332-0

Publication of this book was supported in part by a grant from the Judith McCulloh Endowment for American Music.

Roland White releases Kentucky Colonels tribute CD

Today, with the release of the album A Tribute to the Kentucky Colonels, living legend, mandolin player and singer Roland White celebrates a trailblazing period of his storied career with new recordings of songs and tunes that, as a member of the Kentucky Colonels, he helped make classic a half century ago. 

The iconic Kentucky Colonels were much revered, particularly on the west coast where they were based, their influence far exceeding their short tenure as an active band (1957 to 1966). 

The White Brothers—Roland (mandolin), Eric Jr. (double bass and banjo) and Clarence (acoustic guitar) – first got together playing music professionally in 1954, having formed a country trio called Three Little Country Boys. Occasionally they were augmented by their sister Joanne (playing bass). 

Early on in their career, they won a talent contest on radio station KXLA in Pasadena, California, and, in September 1954, Carl “Squeakin’ Deacon” Moore brought the boys to the attention of the TV producers of the County Barn Dance Jubilee. Roland White says, “they appeared for 2 1/2 to 3 months, weekly, but they quit because the traffic was often bad, making the commute take a couple of hours.”

The Country Boys had a couple of singles released, one by Sundown and one on the Republic label. 

During that same year banjo player Billy Ray Lathum joined the band and, prompted by Merle Travis, they changed the group name to The Kentucky Colonels.

In 1959 they began playing regularly at the Ash Grove, one of the most prestigious folk clubs in Los Angeles. Fiddler Scott Stoneman was added, and Eric White was replaced by Roger Bush on bass. LeRoy Mack (McNees) also joined the group, playing Dobro.

Among their several exceptional albums are the essential Appalachian Swing! (originally 12 superb instrumentals on an LP released in May 1964 on the World Pacific label); Kentucky Colonels, featuring Roland and Clarence White (United Artists); Long Journey Home (notable for its exceptional flat-picking guitar playing by the phenomenal Clarence White; recordings from July 1964 at Newport Folk Festival, Newport, Rhode Island, with Doc Watson (Vanguard VCD 77004, released in 1991).  

Any of their live albums are worth consideration. 

In 1973 they reunited for a European tour, with Herb Pedersen, initially, and then Alan Munde playing banjo. The reunion of was brought to an untimely end due to Clarence White’s tragic death on July 15, 1973. He was just 29 years old. 

The New Kentucky Colonels, as they were dubbed for the reunion tour, have excellent live albums with Live in Sweden 1973 (released by Roland White Music in 2016) contains all 26 songs/tunes, performed over two days by Roland, Clarence and Eric, with Munde at the Mosebacke Club, Stockholm, Sweden in May 1973. The brothers were in that natural groove that stemmed from growing up playing and singing together; for Roland it was the best music that he and Clarence ever played.

Famed guitar stylist Clarence White was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame in 2016 and brother Roland was inducted in 2017. 

A Tribute to the Kentucky Colonels is a collection of hand-picked favorites, 12 in all, that comprise an ultimate tribute to a ground-breaking era in the bluegrass music genre. 

For one of the co-producers, Ty Gilpin, responsible for artist relations at Mountain Home Music Company, the project was one of very significant personal importance. 

“I met Roland at the Chris Jones CD release party at the Station Inn 2017. He asked if I wanted to help him put out an album via Mountain Home. He didn’t know who I was but, I knew that if I had a chance to work with one of my all-time heroes, I would. I thought of the idea of doing something that would be a tribute to his musical legacy a couple weeks later, as I was thinking of how I can best promote the new album. Then I asked Jon Weisberger to get involved and help me find some of the best young players that understood Roland’s legacy, and the legacy of the Colonels. It was an idea that I thought would bring wider attention to his important career.”

Weisberger takes up the story …. 

“Ty approached me about co-producing a special project with Roland in the spring of 2017, before his induction into the IBMA Hall of Fame was announced. He and I had already worked together quite a bit in connection with Chris Jones & the Night Drivers, and he knew that I’d been a member of the Roland White Band for a long time. We talked back and forth about it over the summer, then brought Roland and his wife, business partner and Roland White Band guitarist Diane Bouska – she’s been an integral part of every project he’s been involved in for at least as long as I’ve been playing with them – into the picture. We started to really bear down on it after the IBMA’s World of Bluegrass, and moved into high gear at the beginning of this year.

Ty took the lead in gathering musicians for the sessions we did at Mountain Home’s studio in Arden, North Carolina, and I focused on recruitment for the sessions we did in Nashville, including for what was the very first, in April; we thought it would be good to start off with some familiar musicians and in a familiar venue—Ben Surratt’s Rec Room studio, where the last Roland White Band album had been recorded.  

In thinking about who to invite, the general premise was to reflect Roland’s strong interest in young musicians; he has always been very encouraging, and excited to hear new folks and their individual voices as players and singers. I also thought it was important to draw from different corners of the industry—to include folks who work in more traditional settings, and those who were bringing bluegrass and related sounds to less traditional audiences.  And I thought it would be most interesting—both for Roland and for listeners—to bring together new and perhaps unexpected combinations of musicians.  One of the results of that, by the way, was that some of these great players, like Russ Carson (Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder) and Billy Strings, or Kristin Scott Benson and Jon Stickley, met for literally the first time in the studio. There was a lot of mutual admiration and appreciation going on at these sessions!

I’m fortunate to know a lot of musicians, so reaching out with invitations was easy. Scheduling, on the other hand, was hard—between studio and engineer availability; these artists’ busy schedules; and Roland’s own commitments, it took a lot of work to get done, and there were a number of fine musicians who wanted very much to be a part of the project, but whom we just weren’t able to line up calendars with. This was certainly true from my end, and I know it was from Ty’s end, too; western North Carolina—and, of course, the Mountain Home roster—are full of great musicians.”

In addition to Weisberger (who played bass on the Nashville tracks and provided harmony vocals to two songs) and Roland White (mandolin and vocals) more stellar musicians – Darin and Brooke Aldridge; Kristin Scott Benson; Aaron Bibelhauser; Russ Carson; Gina Clowes; Jeremy Darrow; Nick Dauphinais; Jeremy Garrett; David Grier; Brittany Haas; Josh Haddix; Justin Hiltner; Lindsay Lou; Kimber Ludiker; Patrick McAvinue; Drew Matulich; Darren Nicholson; Lyndsay Pruett; Jon Stickley; Billy Strings and Molly Tuttle –  are featured on this loving tribute to White himself and the legacy of the Kentucky Colonels. 

Weisberger continues .. 

“As co-producer, I worked with Ty, Roland, and Diane to select material that reflected the heritage of the Kentucky Colonels, and then Ty and I matched the selections to the different ensembles.  

I also took on the typical producer’s role in the studio, working with our great engineers during the recording and mixing sessions—and got in a little playing time, too—while Ty focused more on the less visible, but indispensable ‘back office’ jobs of wrangling paperwork, documenting the recording with photos and video, and then shepherding the project through all the work needed to turn recorded tracks into a complete album. It was truly a team effort.”

Roland White and Friends: A Tribute to the Kentucky Colonels is released today, October 26, 2018, on the Mountain Home Music label (MH 17242).

Full track listing … 

If You’re Ever Gonna Love Me; Nine Pound Hammer; I Am a Pilgrim; Little White Washed Chimney; Listen to the Mockingbird; Clinch Mountain Backstep; Roll in my Sweet Baby’s Arms; Soldier’s Joy/Ragtime Annie; Why You Been Gone So Long; Alabama Jubilee; I Might Take You Back and Farewell Blues. 

Recording took place at Crossroads Studios, Arden, North Carolina, with Scott Barnett at the controls, at TJ Tunes, Nashville, Tennessee, with Thomm Jutz – on two tracks he was assisted by Andy Kern – and at The Rec Room, Nashville, with Ben Surratt. 

Mixing and mastering was by Van Atkins at Crossroads Studios.  

Yesterday (October 25, 2018) there was a release party at Nashville’s famous Station Inn, where Roland White, Diane Bouska and Jon Weisberger were joined by a few of the many fine musicians who are on the album, including David Grier, Justin Hiltner, and Nick Dauphinais. 

Track Premiere: Roll In My Sweet Baby’s Arms from Roland White

Roland White is among our most senior members of the bluegrass community, having been involved in the music professionally for more than 60 of his 80 years. During that time he performed with some of the most influential acts in the business, including Bill Monroe, Lester Flatt, Country Gazette, and Nashville Bluegrass Band.

But he’ll always be most fondly remembered as a founder of The Kentucky Colonels with his brother Clarence. The band toured all over the world, and appeared on television during the folk revival of the 1960s, and collectors hold on to their various recordings as prized possessions.

This Friday Mountain Home Music Company will release a new album called A Tribute To The Kentucky Colonels by Roland White and Friends. It features Roland with a rotating cast of musical pals, taken from the best that bluegrass has to offer.

Today we have a preview of one of the tracks, the evergreen Roll In My Sweet Baby’s Arms, which he tells us he has been doing for quite some time.

“The Flatt & Scruggs band was one of our greatest inspirations and this is one of their classics. After singing this song for many years with The Kentucky Colonels I landed the mandolin job in Lester Flatt’s band and got to sing and play it with Lester. That was a dream come true, singing with Lester! (Another dream come true was that he actually paid a salary!) He did the song very fast, and I could play really fast back then. I still do it, a little slower now, but it’s still a ‘good ‘un’!”

Roland is assisted on this track by Billy Strings on guitar, Russ Carson on banjo, Brittany Haas on fiddle, and Jon Weisberger on bass. Roland sings and plays the mandolin, with Billy Strings taking the harmony vocals.

The album is available for pre-order and streaming from all the popular online sites, and to radio programmers at AirPlay Direct.

On Friday, Nashvillians can hear music from the album at Roland’s release party at The Station Inn. White will perform songs from the record with many of the artists who assisted in the studio, starting at 9:00 p.m.

Track Premiere: Roland White with Darin & Brooke

Mountain Home Music is set to release a first single from their upcoming Roland White collaboration project with a who’s who of Nashville pickers and singers, Roland White and Friends, A Tribute to the Kentucky Colonels.

Even casual bluegrass historians know that Roland and his brother, Clarence, formed the basis of The Kentucky Colonels, a very popular bluegrass group in California during the early 1960s. They toured throughout the US, and in Europe and Japan, before Clarence took a hiatus during which time he performed with rising country rock group, The Byrds. It was during a reunion tour in 1973 with the Colonels that Clarence lost his life when a drunk driver struck him as the band was loading out after a performance in Palmdale, CA.

Though Clarence’s promising musical career was cut short, Roland has continued on to become an elder statesman in the bluegrass world, still recording and performing at 80 years of age. Mountain Home envisions this new project as chance for him to revisit some of the great music made with his brother more than 50 years ago, assisted by some of the music’s most celebrated artists.

Today, we premiere the first single, which will be released for sale on Friday. The Kentucky Colonels recorded If You’re Ever Gonna Love Me in 1963, with Roland’s distinctive, slightly nasal-sounding voice out front, and it was an instant hit with fans of bluegrass and country music, which were not clearly delineated at that time. The song has been cut many more times since then, and Roland sang it again when he was a member of Country Gazette in the 1980s.

Here, he is joined by Darin and Brooke Aldridge, two of the sweetest-singing grassers of all time. For those of us who have been following Roland White for decades, it is remarkable to note the depth and maturity he has developed over the time he has been a part of our music.

And Roland says that he feels privileged to have so many fine young artists assisting him on the track.

“I want to say what an honor it is to play with the young and great musicians on this album. They made it all happen so nicely. Thanks everyone.”

In addition to Darin and Brooke singing harmony with White, Gina Clowes is on banjo, Jeremy Garrett is on fiddle, Drew Matulich is on guitar, and Jeremy Darrow plays bass. Roland contributes his trademark stream-of-conscioisness mandolin as well.

Radio programmers can get the track now from AirPlay Direct, and consumers will find it wherever they download or stream their favorite music this Friday (August 17).

An Unearthed Gem from Lauderdale and White

Jim Lauderdale’s newest record is also his oldest. Like a treasure unearthed from a time capsule, it’s a perfectly preserved artifact from a particular point in time, in this case 1979.

The short history of the Yep Roc CD, Jim Lauderdale and Roland White, is that the two recorded the tracks 39 years ago, but it was never released and then lost until recently. (The longer version of the story can be found here.)

There is a slightly dated feel to many of the 12 tracks here, but that’s part of the charm. Lauderdale, who has had widespread success as a bluegrass and Americana writer and performer, was in his formative years. And White, while already a big draw, was still somewhat in the shadow of his late brother, Clarence, who died tragically just six years earlier.

At the time, brother duos were still popular and widely copied in bluegrass and country – Bobby and Sonny Osborne, Charlie and Ira Louvin, the Delmore Brothers – and folk rock music wasn’t long removed from a turn toward country, fueled in large part by Clarence White, Gram Parsons, and the band they were both part of, The Byrds.

Those influences, diluted now but still key ingredients in many newer projects, are prominent here. From Lauderdale’s Forgive and Forget, which opens the CD, to Alton Delmore’s Gonna Lay Down My Old Guitar and his Nashville Blues, the final cuts, Lauderdale and White pay homage to what at the time was a more recent past, with close harmonies, call and response vocals, and clean picking that stays close to the contours of the melody.

Also here: A couple of nods to contemporary folk music that threatened to overtake bluegrass in the 1960s until, in part, it was embraced by the Country Gentlemen and a bit later, the Seldom Scene. Gordon Lightfoot’s That’s What You Get For Loving Me and Donovan Leitch’s Try and Catch the Wind grass up quite nicely in these arrangements.

From my subjective perch, the best songs on the CD are the opening trio – Forgive and Forget, Gold and Silver and Wall Around Your Heart, which is inexplicably listed here as (Stone Must Be The) Walls Built Around Your Heart. They echo Parsons’ vocals and Clarence White’s guitar stylings (by a then-young and unheralded Marty Stuart).

This is bluegrass at its unpolished and unpretentious best. That’s not a put down by any means. A diamond in the rough is still a gem. Indeed, this charming collection stands as a reminder of an era when music wasn’t polished within an inch of its life in the studio, and when breaks didn’t sound as though some of the pickers are being paid by the note.

No one can be happier than Lauderdale and White that the sessions from Earl Scruggs’ basement (engineered by his son, Steve Scruggs) turned up nearly four decades after they were recorded. But it should please many of the rest of us as well.

Call it serendipity. Call it a missed opportunity – who knows what might have happened if this record came out as planned 39 years ago?

Or you can call it what I do: Good music.

Track Premiere: A New Old Record from Lauderdale and White

(Editor’s Note: This article is drawn from an interview the author conducted for his radio show, Songwriter Showcase, which will debut next month at bluegrasscountry.org.)

Jim Lauderdale and Roland White have a pile of records between them. Lauderdale alone just passed 30 studio releases.

This is the story of one that almost got away. In fact, it did get away for a while – nearly 40 years, in fact.

The CD, officially dropping next month, is called, simply, Jim Lauderdale and Roland White.

The story begins, as many musical tales do, with someone making a musical pilgrimage to Nashville. Lauderdale’s goals were lofty: to meet and become friends with George Jones and White, and to make a name for himself in bluegrass and country music. He lasted five months before moving to New York City, with all but one of his goals unmet.

But the goal he attained was big: He not only met and became friends with White, they cut a three-song demo that was good enough for White to propose something bigger. “He said, ‘Hey, why don’t we do a record together,” Lauderdale recalled.

So in October 1979, they gathered some musicians in Earl Scruggs’ basement and, with Earl’s son Steve engineering, cut 12 songs. Today, most of the musicians on the session are household names: Gene Wooten on dobro, Johnny Warren on fiddle, Terry Smith on bass, Marty Stuart on lead guitar, and Stan Brown on banjo.

But fame was elusive. Lauderdale shopped the record, but label after label turned him down because he was an unknown and wasn’t touring.

“I just kind of put it away and thought it would never come out,” he recalled.

Several years later, record deal in hand, he approached White and suggested they finally put out the record. White was all for it. But there was one problem. One huge problem.

“You’ve got the masters, right?” Lauderdale remembers White asking him. “I was like, ‘No,’” drawing the word out to a four count. “’I thought you had them.’” Searches were fruitless, and for the second time, Lauderdale was convinced that the recording would never get out.

But a few months ago, as he left the Station Inn stage after sitting in with Lauderdale, White said, “Oh, by the way, my wife found a tape in the bottom of a box. It had our names on it.”

As he retold the story, Lauderdale sounded as if he still didn’t believe the session turned up decades later. “That was a mix of the record,” he said. I didn’t think I’d ever hear it again. I was stunned.”

The first single on the Yep Roc Records CD drops today.

I’ll have a review of the full CD next week. For now, suffice it to say, this one was worth waiting for.

Roland White honored in Nashville

Dave Pomeroy, Jeff Syracuse, Roland White, Paul Schiminger, and Diane Bouska at the Metropolitan Council

Roland White was honored this week by the Metropolitan Council, the governing authority of the greater metro region of Nashville and Davidson County, TN. He was recognized for his many achievements in bluegrass music with a special resolution, introduced by Council member Jeff Syracuse.

The Resolution was read in council and presented to Roland on Tuesday, May 15.

The text reads…

Resolution No. RS2018-1117

A resolution recognizing the renowned Roland White, a pioneer and legendary bluegrass mandolin player.

WHEREAS, at an early age, Roland White, along with his siblings Clarence, Eric, and Joanne formed a bluegrass band that performed locally in their native Maine. When the family moved to California the boys won a talent show on local radio, as The Country Boys, landing them regular work in clubs, radio and television around Los Angeles, including The Andy Griffith Show; and

WHEREAS after Roland’s two year US Army enlistment, the group was renamed The Kentucky Colonels and toured the United States, electrifying audiences with their virtuosic playing and singing. In 1964 they made a landmark instrumental album, Appalachian Swing. In 1967 Roland began a stint as guitar player with the Blue Grass Boys, the band of his mentor Bill Monroe. In 1969 he joined Lester Flatt’s Nashville Grass, staying until 1973, when he, Clarence and Eric reunited as The Kentucky Colonels. The reunion was short-lived, due to the tragic accidental death of his brother Clarence. Roland then began a thirteen-year tenure with progressive west coat group, Country Gazette, playing guitar and then mandolin. In 1989 Roland joined the Nashville Bluegrass Band, who distinguished themselves as the premiere bluegrass band of their generation, winning two Grammy Awards and Grammy nominations on all of their albums; and

WHEREAS, in 2000 Roland formed The Roland White Band, and learned a Grammy nomination for their first recording, Jelly On My Tofu. Roland has been honored for his unique style, achievements, and contributions to bluegrass music including being part of the Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum’s Oral History Collection in 1993, as an inductee into the Society for the Preservation of Bluegrass Music of America in 2010, and was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame in 2017. 2018 marks Roland’s 80th birthday and he has no plans to retire. Roland and his band continue to perform, record and teach around the world; and

WHEREAS, it is fitting and proper that the Metropolitan Council recognize Roland White a frontiersman of bluegrass, and commend him for his many successes in the area; as a musician and educator and wish him continued success as he keeps on picking.

NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT OF NASHVILLE AND DAVIDSON COUNTY:

Section 1. The Metropolitan Council hereby goes on record as recognizing and congratulating Roland White as he is inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Association Hall of Fame and for his tremendous contribution to the history of bluegrass music.

Section 2. The Metropolitan Council Office is directed to prepare a copy of this Resolution to be presented to Mr. Roland White.

Section 3. The Resolution will take effect from and after its adoption, the welfare of the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County requiring it.

Introduced by: Jeff Syracuse, Member of Council

Congratulations, and well done Roland White!

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