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Jim Mills RIP

Jim Mills, one of the best banjo players I have ever seen, passed away May 3rd of a heart attack at his home in North Carolina. He was 57 years old, a way too young age to pass away for a man who showed us so much on the five-string as well as being an expert on the history of the banjo, especially pre-war Gibson models.

Both his father and grandfather were also banjo players. His hearing of Flatt& Scruggs’ “Foggy Mountain Breakdown” cemented his interest in the instrument as well. As a youngster, he was so infatuated with Earl Scruggs that he would put a toothpick between his two front teeth to create a gap like what Scruggs had.

After performing with some regional bluegrass bands, Mills spent much of the 1980s and 1990s performing with Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver, recording four albums with the band. He then joined Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder around 1998, and stayed with the band until 2010. Afterwards, he spent most of his time collecting and detailing history of banjos, especially early Gibson models. Huber Banjo issued a Jim Mills signature model, which was a replica of his prized Gibson Mastertone RB-75 “Mack Crow” model.

During the 2000s, he was a studio stalwart, recording with Dolly Parton, Dan Tyminski, and Alan Bibey, as well as with Skaggs and two banjo-centric albums for Huber. In 2012, he served as banjo player for Vince Gill on a brief bluegrass tour. He also found time to record three solo albums.

His research with banjos produced a book on Gibson pre-war models in 2009 entitled Gibson Mastertone: Flathead 5-String Banjos of the 1930s and 1940s. He built a museum of sorts in his basement of vintage banjos, including a Gibson RB-4 model that was originally owned by Snuffy Jenkins. He welcomed anyone from collectors to just browsers to his home to check out the collection. He would eventually expand his collection to include vintage guitars, including pre-CBS Gibson Les Paul models.

As far as accolades, he won six IBMA Banjo Player of the Year awards, and was on six Grammy-winning albums. There wasn’t a vintage musical instrument shop in the country that he didn’t stay in contact with, and his knowledge was always called upon when a unique banjo appeared at a shop.

I was fortunate enough to get to see him play with Kentucky Thunder at The Ark in Ann Arbor back in the mid-2000s. As fast as Skaggs like to play the songs, Mills could easily keep up and well as keep his cool. Although his biggest influence admittedly was Scruggs, his picking style and speed was much more akin to J.D. Crowe. No matter how fast the fingers were going, there were never any slip-ups or wrong notes. Everything was perfect.

I recommend checking out Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky live recording Live at the Charleston Music Hall to really hear how great Mills’ picking was and how well he fit into the band situation.

Jim, you are now able to do some jamming with Earl. Rest in Peace, sir.

Chew on it and comment.

By Matt Merta/Mitch Matthews

Musician and writer (both song and print) for over 30 years. Primarily interested in roots music (Americana, bluegrass, blues, folk). Current contributing writer for Fiddler Magazine, previous work with Metro Times (Detroit), Ann Arbor Paper and Real Detroit Weekly, as well as other various music and military publications. As songwriter, won the 2015 Chris Austin Songwriting Contest (Bluegrass Category, "Something About A Train," co-written with Dawn Kenney and David Morris) as well as having work performed on NPR and nominated for numerous Detroit Music Awards.

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