We played mostly in the bars in Southern Maryland because that’s where Danny lived, and he could book them and they liked traditional bluegrass, and they still do down there. That went on for a while. Just playing bars and no forward movement. I mean it was fun and sometimes the music was good. It was just something we did on weekends.
KD: How would you characterize Patuxent Partners’ music?
TM: Then?
KD: Now.
TM: It was a lot different with Danny because we did a whole lot of Stanley Brothers’ songs, and that was our main thing. Jim Barnett liked Clarence White and the Kentucky Colonels so we did some of their songs. That’s sort of what the music was. When Bryan Deere came aboard, he was into the DC thing. He was into Buzz and the Stonemans, and so was I. I could never get anybody interested in doing that stuff. Danny would do a couple because he played with Buzz for a while. We started doing that pre-Country Gentlemen, DC-style of bluegrass: Buzz, the Stonemans, Benny & Vallie Cain, stuff we heard on the local radio growing up. That was our hometown music.
KD: So how would you characterize pre-Country Gentlemen DC sound? Because I would include John Duffey, also.
TM: Yeah! The Country Gentlemen’s early stuff had that sound, then they got more sophisticated. They did some pop tunes bluegrass style and changed it up. It was still great but it wasn’t the same. Now in the Carolinas and Virginia, the songs are about mother, home, cabin and all that. And they’re great. And down south the music is played in auditoriums and schoolhouses. Places like that. Here, it’s played in bars so it’s drinking songs, country honky-tonk songs done bluegrass style. And songs written to emulate those kind of songs. And that’s the difference. And Baltimore had that, too. Their music was even a little bit more hardcore than DC. We had the white-collar stuff here. Those people discovered bluegrass here, and it was for them. Baltimore didn’t have that and it was very hardcore honky-tonk bluegrass.
KD: Who was playing up in Baltimore then?
TM: Some of it’s before my time but Earl Taylor, Walt Hensley, and guys like that.
KD: Del McCoury…
TM: Del, yeah. He pioneered it. And, of course, Del was still around here playing a lot of places up there. I’d go to see him at places like the Sandpiper. And there was the Sea Gull Inn and Club Ranchero or something like that. Ray Davis would put those shows on and have three or four bands on Sundays and they were all good.
KD: And Hazel Dickens was there?
TM: She was there sometimes. I think, and you know this, I think there was some kind of a bias against women in bluegrass..
KD: What?!?! No.
TM: So she didn’t get the opportunities that she should have. She was just as good as all those men. I didn’t see her at any of Ray’s shows. But she was playing in the bars.
At some point in the ‘80s, Buzz retired officially from music. He had a big retirement gig at the Birchmere. He had some of his brothers and some of the guys who played with him over the years. He wanted to go on SSI, which is a form of Social Security that you can go on early if you’re disabled. o he had to convince the government that he was disabled, so he couldn’t be out playing music. He retired and he sat around the house miserable.
He decided to risk his status as a disabled person and start the band up again. So he gave me a call. This was in ’89 or ’90. The earliest tape I have of this band is ’90 but it may have started in ’89. He called me up and said, “I need a guitar player. I’m going to start the band up again, and I already have every Sunday booked.” He said, “Look, if you’re not good enough I’m just going to tell you because this is business. Can you handle that?” And then he says, “Oh by the way, bring a banjo player.”(chuckle) I took Mark Delaney and we went to Buzz’s apartment and we played for a couple hours, and he said, “I reckon you’ll do so just be there on Sunday and here’s the songs we’re going to do.” This is before cellphones and email. When I got home, the phone was ringing. It was Buzz and he asked if I could play bass. I said no. He asked if I had a bass. I said no. He said “Get you a bass. I want you to play bass because Lucky Saylor gave me a TV set so I have to give him the job on guitar.” I said, “Buzz! I thought you were going to be professional and this was business!” He said, “I know, but a TV is a TV.” (laughter) This was on a Tuesday and we were going to play on Sunday. I had a challenge ahead of me. Wednesday I took off work and I went to Chris Warner’s store in Hanover, Pennsylvania and I bought a bass. Sunday I went and played the gig.
KD: How’d you do?
TM: I did great and we played every Sunday. That gig ended, but we got Friday nights in Manassas and we played the Washington Folk Festival. OK, this is easy. I’m a bass player. People saw me playing with Buzz Busby. A guy asked if I could play with him at Tiffany Tavern and I said, “Right-o! I’ll be there.” I found out I couldn’t play the damn bass because what I was doing was following Buzz and Lucky. Their time was good, so all I had to do was follow them. When I was expected to set the time, I was all over the place so they could hardly play with me. That was the end of that. I never did that again. I just kept playing with Buzz until he had to quit playing. I haven’t played much since. I’ve been forced to a couple of times. I found out I wasn’t much of a bass player. That experience gave me a lot more respect for bass players.
KD: In the meantime, how’s Patuxent Partners faring during all this?
TM: Well, Buzz had every Friday night for a while so my Friday nights were booked with him. That lasted about two or three years. Patuxent Partners were getting a little better. We started playing Lucketts and we played a lot of things for the Tri-State Bluegrass Association, we played Gettysburg. That was a big deal.
KD: At what point does the band say: This is what our look is going to be, this is what our music will be.
TM: When Vicki (Victoria McMullen) started with the band in ’92. She’s the one and she’s perfectly correct, she’s the one who thought we should dress alike and look like a band. Buzz said, “As long as you’re dressed better than the audience, it doesn’t matter what you wear. If you’re dressed like the audience they’ll think that the band looks like them so why should they pay the band. There were always a lot of pickers in the audience. If you’re in a bar just wear good slacks and a shirt it doesn’t matter what color just so you’re a little better dressed than the audience. And don’t get to the gig drunk. I don’t care once you get there, you can have a drink.” Those were Buzz’s only two rules.
KD: Don’t get there drunk…
TM: Don’t get there drunk and dress better than the audience. (chuckle) Vicki straightened us out on the attire.
Anyway, the Buzz thing went on for three or four years and he got Parkinson’s and he couldn’t play anymore.
John Brunschwyler came back in the band in 2005, but before he did he told me about a festival in Ireland, and that I should go because it’s fun. I went in 2004 and I had Nate Leath with me. I ended up being responsible to raise him since he was 15. He was young and so I took him to Ireland. I got on the stage and all three of us — John, Nate and me — were in different bands then. We decided to make up a band with just the three of us and play the festival next year. They asked who our guitar player was and I said Dede Wyland. They said, OK you’re booked. I got on the phone in my hotel room and called Dede Wyland and said we’re booked to play in Ireland next year. Fortunately, she said OK. We went over the next year and played it. The next two years we took the Patuxent Partners, except Jack and Vicki couldn’t go, so we got subs.
We got to play a festival in Australia. Bryan Deere and I were camped at Galax and we were doing Buzz’s songs. These teenagers came over and said, “Oh Buzz Busby. He’s our favorite.” Turns out that their parents ran the festival down there and that’s how we booked that. Once you get a few really cool things like that people are more likely to book you for other things.
KD: You haven’t mentioned some of the people I listened to. Maybe because they were on the Virginia side. Cliff Waldron, Leon Morris… Were they on your horizon?
TM: Yeah! I used to see Cliff at the Red Fox. Their music was later. Like the Country Gentlemen. It’s great. I love it and I have all their records. What I was really drawn to was that early bar room stuff. Cliff is one of my favorites and he’s a friend, too. I like the music we do. We’re local and there are some fantastic things we get to do every once in a while, but we don’t have any desire to live the life on the road. We got to play last year at the University of Chicago Folk Festival. It’s run by the students and Buzz had played there years ago. For some reason they liked that old DC style, and they found us on YouTube playing the Washington Folk Festival. When I got his email I thought it was some kind of prank. Fortunately I answered it and it was true. They paid us more money than I ever made before and paid our plane tickets. That was great that we got to do that and were well received.
I don’t know if you want to talk about the jazz music that I play.
KD: I didn’t realize that you did.
TM: Having started with accordion, I was listening to some Big Band music a lot when I was a kid. Mom had those records. I had that music in my head, even though I really didn’t know how to play it that well. And I got into Bob Wills, too. Western Swing. Chance Shiver and I started the Buffalo Nickel Band in the ‘80s and we played mostly Western Swing. The bass player, Carolyn Kellock, left. Then we got a husband and wife team, Marv and Kathy Reitz. Marv is a real jazz musician who plays clarinet and he wanted to play old jazz tunes. I learned how to play them on the mandolin. Chance Shiver, the guitar player, left and we got Bob Rubin, who is a fantastic jazz player. So it went from being a Western Swing band to a real jazz band.
KD: Did the band use sheet music?
TM: I learned to read music when I was learning the accordion but I was never that good at it. When all this happened, I had to do it because Marv wrote out arrangements for the clarinet, guitar, mandolin, or accordion and we did them. I wasn’t that great at sight reading. He’d give me the part and I wouldn’t let him play it until the following rehearsal. I would take it home and learn it slow.
KD: So it’s not as improvisational as I think it is?
TM: There’ll be one section that’s written out and then everybody goes off and goes improv.
KD: So it’s like bluegrass in that the first time through it’s the melody and then you do what you want.
TM: Except what we do in bluegrass in our singing, they do on their instruments. The harmonies have to go together. That’s where the sheet music comes in. We had a gig at Jacques Café in Arlington. I think it was every other Saturday and when that ended the band kind of fizzled out. Then Marv and Kathy and Pete the fiddle player joined another band called Razz’m Jazz’m. They talked the leader of that band into hiring me and I played with them for 10 years. We played at Mason District Park (Fairfax Country, Virginia) and we played at JV on Route 50 in Arlington.
Then Don Rouse the clarinet player died. At the funeral his wife said to me: “Don wanted you to have his records.” I said, “Thank you. I’ll come over in a couple weeks and pick them up.” She said, “It’s a little more involved than that.” He had 4,000 78s, two or three thousand LPs, piano rolls and sheet music. It took three trips in a 15-passenger van with the seats out to get all of it. I got all those records but now there’s no band. We’ve started the Buffalo Nickle Band up again recently. We’re rehearsing with the new version. Our guitar player is Russian. He speaks very little English but he can play jazz. Our first gig is May 13 at a church but I don’t have the details on me now.
KD: Where did you store these records? In your house?
TM: I had to rent a storage locker.
KD: Climate controlled?
TM: They weren’t in there that long. I had recorded a young player who made the mistake of saying, “If there’s anything I can ever do for you, let me know.” I said, by golly, I need some shelves built. He came up here from Alabama and built me a whole lot of record shelves, upstairs (over Patuxent studio). I had a lot of records already and another 4,000 increased by collection by 15%. I needed that space. They’re all up there. I was afraid of the weight so some of them are down here. So that’s my jazz playing but I’ve gotten to record some jazz mandolin because I record a lot of jazz and sometimes they’ll let me play. That’s all the performance stuff. It’s just been a lot of fun and nothing that great. There’s a lot of people more accomplished than me and the band. It’s a hobby and it’s a very good hobby.
KD: When I came here this morning you were digitizing music from cassettes. You told me if you just digitized the cassettes that you own, you would not live long enough to do them all.
TM: If I did one a day they wouldn’t all be done by the time I reached average age expectancy of a male.
KD: Do you know how many albums, 78s, cassettes and all you have?
TM: Being an engineer, I am anal about that stuff. I can tell you exactly. I have 5,674 CDs, which come from record companies. Some of them come from Patuxent. I have 12,093 10-inch 78s. And I have 10,271 LPs .
KD: How would you characterize them? Are they pre-bluegrass? Mostly bluegrass?
TM: The early guys, the 1940’s guys were on 78s. 78s were ending. There’s some small label bluegrass on 78s but most of them are on 45s. A lot of these are country, jazz and stuff like that. There’s a lot of old bluegrass in there. I used to go around to record stores. Then when people switched over the CDs they’d call and say, “I have some records for you.” Usually, I’ll take them. I’m running out of room. I got Bill Offenbacher’s tapes when he died.
When somebody dies, I don’t like to call their surviving spouse and say, “Hey, got any records?” But Joe Buzzard has no qualms about that. He wanted Bill’s records. He didn’t want his tapes. He said they want such-and-such for the collection. If you split it with me, you can have all the tapes and I’ll take the records. I said, “OK but I get the records that are duplicates of what you already have.” That was the deal. Bill went all around in the ’50s and ’60s and recorded stuff. A lot of them have ended up on LPs and CDs. Gary Reid at Copper Creek has put out quite a few of my tapes from that collection.
KD: If somebody reading this had a collection that they wanted to….
TM: No. I don’t have any more space. have to turn people down now. Unless there’s one or two items that I’ve been looking for. I can’t do it anymore. I can’t afford to rent any more space.
KD: You mentioned once that many of the people who come in here look through your collection looking for material to record.
TM: Victor Furtado plays old time banjo in a way that no one’s played it before. He can play any song. We had a Christmas show at Lucketts, and we played those pop Christmas songs like Perry Como sang. He can play them on old time banjo. He had never heard classic banjo from the turn of the century. So he listened to a bunch of that stuff. He’ll probably get some ideas out of it. The mandolin player, Eli Wildman, listened to some Jethro Burns and some old classical mandolin players like Howard Frye and Dave Apollon.
You were talking earlier that there are some people who don’t think there are young people playing bluegrass. It depends on your definition of bluegrass. If your definition is Flatt & Scruggs, Bill Monroe and Stanley Brothers, there are still some playing it. The music the kids are playing now is based on bluegrass. I think it is bluegrass but it’s got other stuff that they’ve heard. They have the whole world in front of them. Thank God they’re not playing rap, hard rock. We’ve got that and we’ve got to nurture that.