Sharing bluegrass records cover art, labels, inserts and liner notes. Click on any image for a large, easy-to-read (sometimes even printable!) version of that image. Enjoy.


NOTE: Blogspot has recently changed the default when you click on blogspot-hosted images so that they open in a viewer that doesn't easily allow for zooming in on oversized images, at least on my machine/browser. This kind of defeats the purpose of these posts. The easy way around that is to right click (control click on a mac) and choose open link in new browser or new tab in the drop down menu that appears.

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Friday, January 27, 2012

Buzz Busby and Leon Morris

Honkytonk Bluegrass released on Rounder Records (031) in 1974

Can anybody out there tell me how to decipher originals from reissues on Rounder?

"…he responded to the line peddled by an FBI recruiter who visited his local high school. WHile working in Washington, D.C. for the FBI for a year, Buzz also attempted to attend classes at George Washington University in addition to the FBI training courses. When the schedule finally proved too much, Buzz dropped out into a more-or-less full-time commitment to bluegrass, probably the only really continuous part of his life."

Info Page @ Bluegrass Dicography




Thursday, January 26, 2012

Larry Richardson & Red Barker and The Blue Ridge Boys

"Blue Ridge Bluegrass" released on County Records (702) in 1965.

I'm assuming this is a reissue and the cover with "County 702" on a transparent background, as seen at Bluegrass Discography, is the original... can anyone out there confirm that for me? And, does that (black vs. transparent) rule apply to all County Records releases?

"For every expert singer, virtuoso banjo-picker, or accomplished mandolinist who has captured the public's fancy, there are likely to be several others heard fleetingly at fiddle contests or not at all, who play the music just as well, if not better… … authentic mountain music is today saturated with modern pseudo-country music. Old-time music is receding even further into the hills, while Bluegrass struggles to maintain an oasis in the electrified desert of country-pop music even as its most prominent performers suffer loss of energy and conviction."

Info Page @ Bluegrass Discography





Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Joe Pancerzewski

The Fiddling Engineer released by Voyager Recordings (VRLP 306S) in 1972

"...got my first fiddle February 1915. About fourteen fiddlers in a 50-mile square area, six of them very good. I had heard them from babyhood up, so old time fiddling was all I knew." -Joe Pancerzewski

Info Page @ Bluegrass Discography




Tuesday, January 17, 2012