Mountain Times Home Updated Every Thursday Evening

April 23, 2009 EDITION
spacer
newscommunityentertainmentcalendarmarketplacevisitors guidesabout usclassifieds
spacer



corneround
spacer textsizeplusminusPrint Friendly 

Show & Del
Del McCoury Band performs Friday

 

Del McCoury Band

Delano Floyd McCoury was born in Bakersville, N.C. on Feb. 1, 1939.

At an early age, the McCoury family relocated north, just above the Mason-Dixon Line in York County, Penn. It was his older brother, G.C., who introduced the young Del to bluegrass through the music of Flatt and Scruggs.

“I learned to play music from my older brother, and we always listened to the Grand Ole Opry,” McCoury said. “In 1950, he bought some 78 RPMs, and one of them was Flatt and Scruggs. When I heard them playing ‘Rolling in My Sweet Baby’s Arms,’ I just couldn’t leave that record alone…I wore it out!”McCoury was so impressed by bluegrass music that he decided to take up the banjo. Although members of the extended McCoury family were versed in old-time music and clawhammer style, finding pickers familiar with the then-new Scruggs style proved more difficult. “Not many people played banjo like Scruggs. I didn’t know anyone who played three-finger style, so I had to learn from records.” One of McCoury’s early musical partners was Keith Daniels, a native North Carolinian living in Maryland at the time. The pair appeared on local radio with the Stevens Brothers, then founded Keith Daniels and the Blue Ridge Partners in 1958.

During the 1950s and ’60s, the Baltimore area was a breeding ground for bluegrass talent. Receiving a medical discharge after a stint in the military, McCoury and younger brother Jerry worked in the Baltimore honky-tonks with the Franklin County Boys and then Jack Cooke’s Virginia Playboys. Cooke had recently quit Bill Monroe’s band. It was the gig with Cooke that brought McCoury to Monroe’s attention.

“I was playing banjo with him one night when Bill Monroe just walked right in and sat down in front of us…scared me to death,” he said.

Both McCoury and Cooke filled in for a brief tour with Monroe, but McCoury was soon invited to become a full-time Blue Grass Boy in early 1963. Under the impression he was trying out for the banjo job, a surprised McCoury was offered the guitar slot instead. Upon arriving in Nashville he contacted Monroe from his room at the Clarkston Hotel, right next door to the National Life and Accident Insurance Building, sponsors of the Grand Ole Opry.

“I called Bill when I got to my room and he said to meet him in the restaurant,” McCoury said. “I went down carrying my banjo and saw this other guy in the lobby with his banjo. The other banjo player was Bill Keith, or ‘Brad’ as Monroe called him. You see, there was only one Bill in the band so he called him Brad, which was his middle name.

“Bill bought both of us breakfast and then we went up to the National Life and Accident Building. Bill said to me, ‘I want you to audition on guitar.’ I thought it was strange…I had never even told him I could play one, even though that was the first thing I had learned as a kid. I took out Bill’s guitar and played it. He then told me he needed a lead singer. So he hired Bill Keith right then because he needed him for a new recording. He told me he’d try me out for two weeks and then get me into the union, which he did.”

McCoury was a Blue Grass Boy from February 1963 until early 1964, when he and his new bride Jean moved to California.

After a disappointing stint with the Golden State Boys, McCoury decided to return to York County. He spent time as a construction worker at a local nuclear power plant, and then was employed in the logging industry. Bluegrass gigs were much more plentiful back east, and McCoury would spend the next two decades as a part of the bluegrass scene in the Maryland, Pennsylvania and Virginia area.

Fiddler and Blue Grass Boy alumnus Billy Baker made the trip to California with McCoury, and upon their return they formed the Shady Valley Boys. It wasn’t long before he soon had his own band, Del McCoury and the Dixie Pals, established in 1967.

In 1981, McCoury’s son, Ronnie, began playing with the band on a part-time basis at age thirteen. Among those who encouraged the young Ronnie was Bill Monroe himself.

The year 1987 saw the debut of Robbie McCoury with the band, first on bass then moving to banjo the following year. As the sound of the group evolved, McCoury was persuaded to change the name of the Dixie Pals to the Del McCoury Band. Albums such as “Don’t Stop the Music,” “Blue Side of Town” and “The Cold Hard Facts” helped propel the band to the forefront of the bluegrass world, along with relocation to Nashville in 1992.

With Mike Bub and Jason Carter on bass and fiddle respectively, the group has developed into one of the finest units to ever grace a bluegrass stage. The list of International Bluegrass Music Association awards garnered by the band over the next decade is too numerous to mention.

Throughout the nineties, the Del McCoury Band has embodied the best qualities of bluegrass. They have received exposure in the mainstream media for collaboration with the popular jam band Phish. Another big fan of the Del McCoury Band is Steve Earle, with whom the band recorded 1999’s “The Mountain.”

After a highly successful relationship with Rounder Records, the Del McCoury Band recently signed with Ricky Skaggs’ Ceili Records. The first project to test the new relationship, “The Family,” was also released in 1999 to wide acclaim from fans and critics alike.

He is revitalized, re-energized and making the best music of his illustrious career. Today, the Del McCoury Band enjoys the praise of traditional bluegrass lovers and tie-dyed clad ‘Del-Heads’ alike. Del has proven not to be a relic of bluegrass music’s past, but an architect of its future.

The Del McCoury Band plays MerleFest’s Watson Stage Friday, April 24, at 7:45 p.m.





To the top of this page

HOME - NEWS - EVENTS - MARKETPLACE - CLASSIFIEDS - VISITOR INFO - CONTACT - PRIVACY POLICY   Get FirefoxGet Firefox



©2009 The Mountain Times. All rights reserved. Reproduction of advertising and design work strictly prohibited.
474 Industrial Park Drive / PO Box 1815 • Boone, North Carolina  28607 • Telephone 828.264.6397 • Fax 828.262.0282 • Classifieds 828.264.1881