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Bluegrass Music

The Earl Brothers

Back in the early 2000s when I still had satellite radio, it was always tuned in to for or five stations. One of them was Bluegrass Junction (of course). During that time, a band in heavy rotation was the Earl Brothers. Led by banjoist/vocalist Robert Earl Davis, the San Francisco-based bluegrass project had heavy gothic overtones to its sound. Instrumentally, it sounded like early Stanley Brothers, but Davis’ vocals gave it an alt-country grit. While many bluegrass bands at the time were starting to lean toward the progressive side, the Earl Brothers stayed traditional, with minimal solos and doing songs about death, drinking, and the Gospel. Chris Hillman of the Byrds fame (who started out playing mandolin in the bluegrass band the Hillmen) is quoted as saying “The Earl Brothers have got the soul and the songs and the attitude that brought us all into bluegrass music in the first place.”

They put out a few albums from 2004 to 2012, all with that lo-fi bluegrass sound that felt more like jamming on the back porch than in a studio. They had a cult following with the bluegrass and Americana fan base, but did not do much touring after 2013. I figured that Davis had pretty much wrapped up his work and moved on. Every so often, however, there would be a YouTube video of some new single from the band posted. About two weeks ago, Bluegrass Today posted a new video from the band. This one, entitled “Chicken Biscuit,” strays from the minimalist bluegrass and adds some electronic instrumentation. The overall sound still has what Davis calls “hillbilly trance.”

In the early days of the Americana Music Association, I hung out with a female bass player from SF that worked in an earlier project with Davis. She had told me that he was always more into bluegrass than Americana/alt-country, and forming this band was what he intended. I can totally understand, as when I became immersed in bluegrass in the late 1990s, I was getting into the early stuff by Bill Monroe and the Stanley Brothers. My personal favorite bluegrass band is still Reno & Smiley. While I love listening to any bluegrass, be it traditional or progressive, it’s that old-time sound just hits me the right way. That is why the Earl Brothers CDs will always be in the front, and as I go back to learning the banjo, that is the sound that I want to get.

Chew on it and comment.

Matt Merta/Mitch Matthews's avatar

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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