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Earl Scruggs

Earl Eugene Scruggs (January 6, 1924 – March 28, 2012) was an American musician noted for popularizing a three-finger banjo picking style, now called "Scruggs style", which is a defining characteristic of bluegrass music. His three-finger style of playing was radically different from the traditional way the five-string banjo had previously been played. This new style of playing became popular and elevated the banjo from its previous role as a background rhythm instrument to featured solo status. He popularized the instrument across several genres of music.

Earl Scruggs
Scruggs in 2005
Background information
Birth nameEarl Eugene Scruggs
Born(1924-01-06)January 6, 1924
Cleveland County, North Carolina, U.S.
DiedMarch 28, 2012(2012-03-28) (aged 88)
Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)Musician
Instrument(s)
Years active1945–2012
Labels
Websiteearlscruggs.com

Scruggs' career began at age 21 when he was hired to play in Bill Monroe's band, the Blue Grass Boys. "Bluegrass" eventually became the name for an entire genre of country music. Despite considerable success with Monroe, performing on the Grand Ole Opry and recording classic hits such as "Blue Moon of Kentucky", Scruggs resigned from the group in 1946 because of their exhausting touring schedule. Fellow band member Lester Flatt resigned as well, and he and Scruggs later paired up in the duo Flatt and Scruggs. Scruggs' banjo instrumental "Foggy Mountain Breakdown" was released in 1949 and became an enduring hit. The song experienced a rebirth of popularity to a younger generation when it was featured in the 1967 film Bonnie and Clyde. The song won two Grammy Awards and, in 2005, was selected for the Library of Congress' National Recording Registry of works of unusual merit.

Flatt and Scruggs brought bluegrass music into mainstream popularity in the early 1960s with their country hit "The Ballad of Jed Clampett", the theme music for the television sitcom The Beverly Hillbillies—the first Scruggs recording to reach number one on the Billboard charts. Over their 20-year association, Flatt and Scruggs recorded over 50 albums and 75 singles. The duo broke up in 1969, chiefly because, while Scruggs wanted to switch styles to fit a more modern sound, Flatt was a traditionalist who opposed the change and believed doing so would alienate a fan base of bluegrass purists. Although each of them formed a new band to match their visions, neither of them ever regained the success they had achieved as a team.

Scruggs received four Grammy awards, a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award and a National Medal of Arts. He became a member of the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame and was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. In 1985, Flatt and Scruggs were inducted together into the Country Music Hall of Fame and named, as a duo, number 24 on CMT's "40 Greatest Men of Country Music". Scruggs was awarded a National Heritage Fellowship by the National Endowment for the Arts, the highest honor in the folk and traditional arts in the United States. Four works by Scruggs have been placed in the Grammy Hall of Fame. After Scruggs' death in 2012 at age 88, the Earl Scruggs Center was founded in Shelby, North Carolina, near his birthplace with the aid of a federal grant and corporate donors. The center is a $5.5 million facility that features the musical contributions of Scruggs and serves as an educational center providing classes and field trips for students.

Early life edit

External audio
  Bluegrass Musician Earl Scruggs, interviewed by Terry Gross on Fresh Air, 34:58, January 9, 2004.[2]

Earl Scruggs was born January 6, 1924, in the Flint Hill community of Cleveland County, North Carolina, a small community just outside of Boiling Springs, about 10 miles west of Shelby.[3] His father, George Elam Scruggs, was a farmer and a bookkeeper who died of a protracted illness when Earl was four years old.[4] Upon his father's death, Scruggs' mother, Georgia Lula Ruppe (called Lula), was left to take care of the farm and five children, of which Earl was the youngest.[5]

The family members all played music. The father played an open back banjo using the frailing technique, though as an adult Earl had no recollection of his father's playing.[6][4] Mrs. Scruggs played the pump organ.[4] Earl's siblings, older brothers Junie and Horace and older sisters Eula Mae and Ruby, all played banjo and guitar. Scruggs recalled a visit to his uncle's home at age six to hear a blind banjo player named Mack Woolbright, who played a finger-picking style and had recorded for Columbia Records.[7][8] It made an impression on Scruggs, who said, "He'd sit in the rocking chair, and he'd pick some and it was just amazing. I couldn't imagine—he was the first, what I call a good banjo player."[8] Scruggs then took up the instrument—he was too small to hold it at first and improvised by setting his brother Junie's banjo beside him on the floor. He moved it around depending on what part of the neck he was playing.[9] After his father's death, Scruggs seemed to take solace in playing music, and when not in school or doing farm chores, spent nearly every spare moment he had practicing.[10] His first radio performance was at age 11 on a talent scout show.[11]

Development edit

 
Finger picks on thumb, index and middle finger

Scruggs is noted for popularizing a three-finger banjo-picking style now called "Scruggs style" that has become a defining characteristic of bluegrass music.[12] Prior to Scruggs, most banjo players used the frailing or clawhammer technique, which consists of holding the fingers bent like a claw and moving the entire hand in a downward motion so that the strings are struck with the back of the middle fingernail. This motion is followed by striking the thumb on a single string.[13] The three-finger style of playing is radically different from frailing; the hand remains stationary and only the fingers and thumb move, somewhat similar to classical guitar technique.[8] Scruggs style also involves using picks on three digits (see photo), each plucking individual strings—downward with the thumb, then upward with the index and middle finger in sequence. When done skillfully and in rapid sequence, the style allows any digit (though usually the thumb) to play a melody, while the other two digits play arpeggios of the melody line. The use of picks gives each note a louder percussive attack, creating an exciting effect, described by The New York Times as "like thumbtacks plinking rhythmically on a tin roof".[14] This departure from traditional playing elevated the banjo to become more of a solo instrument—a promotion from its former role of providing background rhythm or serving as a comedian's prop—and popularized the instrument in several genres of music.[11][15][16]

Earl Scruggs did not invent three-finger banjo playing; in fact, he said the three-finger style was the most common way to play the five-string banjo in his hometown in western North Carolina.[8] An early influence was a local banjoist, DeWitt "Snuffy" Jenkins, who plucked in a finger style. According to banjoist and historian Tony Trischka, "Jenkins came about as close as one could to Scruggs style without actually playing it".[12] At age ten, when Scruggs first learned the technique, he recalled that he was at home in his room after a quarrel with his brother. He was idly playing a song called "Reuben" and suddenly realized that he was playing with three fingers, not two. "That excited me to no end", he later recalled, and said he ran through the house repeatedly yelling "I've got it".[8][9] From there he devoted all his free time to perfecting his timing and to adding syncopation and variations to it. Controversy exists as to the actual origin of three-finger picking style.[17] Don Reno, an eminent banjo player who also played this style and who knew Scruggs at that young age, described Scruggs' early playing as similar to that of Snuffy Jenkins.[6] Scruggs, however, consistently referred to it as his own, saying that he adapted to it "a syncopated roll that was quite different."[6][18] On the subject, John Hartford said, "Here's the way I feel about it. Everybody's all worried about who invented the style and it's obvious that three finger banjo pickers have been around a long time—maybe since 1840. But it's my feeling that if it wasn't for Earl Scruggs, you wouldn't be worried about who invented it."[6]

With Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys edit

At age 15, Scruggs played in a group called The Morris Brothers for a few months, but quit to work in a factory making sewing thread in the Lily Textile Mill near his home in North Carolina.[19] He worked there about two years, earning 40 cents an hour, until the draft restriction for World War II was lifted in 1945, at which time he returned to music, performing with "Lost John Miller and his Allied Kentuckians" on WNOX in Knoxville.[6] About this time an opening to play with Bill Monroe became available.

 
Bill and Charlie Monroe, c. 1936

Bill Monroe, 13 years older than Scruggs, was prominent in country music at the time. His career started with the "Monroe Brothers", a duo with his brother Charlie. Bill sang the high tenor harmony parts, a sound called "high lonesome", for which he became noted.[20][21] The brothers split up in 1938 and Bill, a native of "the Bluegrass State" of Kentucky, formed a new group called Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys. They first played on the Opry in 1939 and soon became a popular touring band featuring a vocalist named Lester Flatt.[21] The name "bluegrass" stuck and eventually became the eponym for this entire genre of country music and Monroe became known as "the father of bluegrass".[22]

When Scruggs was 21, Monroe was looking for a banjo player for his group, because David "Stringbean" Akeman was quitting. At the time, banjo players often functioned in the band as comedians, and the instrument was often held as a prop—their clawhammer playing was almost inaudible.[23] Monroe, along with band member Lester Flatt, auditioned several banjo players who had the same traditional playing style as Akeman. When Scruggs auditioned for them at the Tulane Hotel in Nashville, Flatt said, "I was thrilled. It was so different! I had never heard that kind of banjo picking."[6][24] Scruggs joined Monroe in late 1945, earning $50 a week.[14] After they accepted Scruggs as one of the Blue Grass Boys, the roster consisted of Bill Monroe (vocals/mandolin), Lester Flatt (guitar/vocals), Earl Scruggs (banjo), Chubby Wise (fiddle), and Howard Watts (stage name Cedric Rainwater) on bass. This group of men became the prototype of what a bluegrass band would become.[25]

With Monroe and Lester Flatt, Scruggs performed on the Grand Ole Opry and in September 1946 recorded the classic hit "Blue Moon of Kentucky"; a song that was designated by the Library of Congress to be added to the National Recording Registry, and later added to the Grammy Hall of Fame. The work schedule was heavy in Monroe's band. They were playing a lot of jobs in movie theaters all over the south, riding in a 1941 Chevrolet from town to town, doing up to six shows a day and not finishing up until about eleven at night. Lester Flatt said, "It wasn't anything to ride two or three days in a car. We didn't have buses like we do now, and we never had our shoes off".[6] The self-imposed rule was to always get back in time to play the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville each Saturday night.[26] Scruggs said of Monroe that "Bill would never let the music go down no matter how tired we were. If a man would slack off, he would move over and get that mandolin up close on him and get him back up there".[6] Despite the group's success, Scruggs decided the demands were too great. He was single at the time, and the brief few hours on Saturdays that he made it home, it was just to pack his suitcase at the Tulane Hotel where he lived alone, then repeat the cycle—he had done this for two years.[26] He turned in his resignation, planning to go take care of his mother in North Carolina. Flatt had also made up his mind to leave, but he had not told anyone. He later gave his two-week notice, but, before the notice was up, the bass player Howard Watts announced that he was leaving too. Despite Monroe's pleading, they left the band. Monroe thought Flatt and Scruggs had a secret understanding, but both men denied it. Monroe did not speak to either one for 20 years thereafter, a feud well known in country music circles.[14]

Flatt and Scruggs edit

In 1948 Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs formed the duo Flatt and Scruggs and chose the name "the Foggy Mountain Boys" for their backing band. The name came from a song by the Carter Family called "Foggy Mountain Top" that the band used as a theme song at the time.[14][27] Flatt later acknowledged that they consciously tried to make their sound different from Monroe's group. In the mid 1950s they dropped the mandolin and added a Dobro, played by Buck "Uncle Josh" Graves. In the spring of 1949, their second Mercury recording session yielded the classic "Foggy Mountain Breakdown", released on 78 RPM phonograph records that were in use at the time.[28]

Previously, Scruggs had performed something similar, called "Bluegrass Breakdown" with Bill Monroe, but Monroe had denied him songwriting credit for it. Later, Scruggs changed the song, adding a minor chord, thus creating "Foggy Mountain Breakdown"[29] The song contains a musical oddity—Flatt plays an E major chord against Scruggs's E minor. When asked about the dissonance years later, Scruggs said he had tried to get Flatt to consistently play a minor there to no avail; he said he eventually became used to the sound and even fond of it.[30] The song won a Grammy and became an anthem for many banjo players to attempt to master.[8] The band routinely tuned its instruments a half-step higher than standard tuning in those days to get more brightness or pop to the sound, returning to standard pitch in the 1960s.[31] The popularity of Foggy Mountain Breakdown resurged years later when it was featured in the 1967 film Bonnie and Clyde, which introduced the song to a younger generation of fans.[25] Scruggs received a phone call from the show's producer and star, Warren Beatty, first asking Scruggs to write a song for the movie. Soon Beatty called back saying that he wanted to use the existing vintage Mercury recording of Foggy Mountain Breakdown, and rejected the argument that it was recorded 18 years prior at a radio station with no modern enhancements.[26] The film was a hit, called by the Los Angeles Times "a landmark film that helped usher in a new era in American filmmaking."[32] In 2005, the song was selected for the Library of Congress's National Recording Registry of works of unusual merit.[33][34]

 
Earl Scruggs on left

In October 1951, the band recorded "Earl's Breakdown" which featured a technique where Scruggs would manually de-tune the second and third strings[35] of the banjo during a song using a cam device he had made to attach to the instrument, giving the surprise effect of a downward string bend. He and his brother Horace had experimented with it when they were growing up.[6] Scruggs had drilled some holes in the peghead of his banjo to install the device and chipped the pearl inlay. He covered the holes with a piece of metal, which can be seen on the album cover of Foggy Mountain Jamboree. The technique became popular and led to improvement of the design (without drilling holes) by Bill Keith who then manufactured Scruggs-Keith Tuners.[36][37] The original tuners Scruggs made and used are now in a museum display at the Earl Scruggs Center in Shelby, North Carolina.[38]

In 1953, Martha White Foods sponsored the band's regular early morning radio shows on WSM in Nashville, where the duo sang the company's catchy bluegrass jingle written by Pat Twitty.[39] About this time, country music television shows, on which Flatt and Scruggs appeared regularly, went into syndication, vastly increasing the group's exposure.[40] Despite the group's increasing popularity and fan mail, WSM did not allow Flatt and Scruggs to become members of the Grand Ole Opry at first. According to Tennessean writer Peter Cooper, Bill Monroe was in opposition and worked behind the scenes to keep Flatt and Scruggs off the Opry to the extent of having petitions made against their membership.[25][41] In 1955 Martha White Foods' CEO Cohen E. Williams intervened by threatening to pull all of his advertising from WSM unless the band appeared on the Opry in the segment sponsored by his company.[6][25][42] As years went by, the band became synonymous with Martha White to the extent that the advertising jingle became a hit, and the band rarely played a concert without it.[42] Fans shouted requests for them to play it, even at Carnegie Hall.[43]

On September 24, 1962, the duo recorded "The Ballad of Jed Clampett" for the TV show The Beverly Hillbillies. Sung by Jerry Scoggins, the theme song became an immediate country music hit and was played at the beginning and end of each episode of the series. The song went to #1 on the Billboard country chart, a first for any bluegrass recording.[44] The song spent 20 weeks on that chart; it also reached #44 on Billboard's pop chart.[45] The television show was also a huge hit, broadcast in 76 countries around the world.[26] In Queens, New York a five-year-old boy named Béla Fleck heard the Jed Clampett theme on television.[46] Fleck said, "I couldn't breathe or think; I was completely mesmerized." He said it awakened a deeply embedded predisposition that "was just in there" to learn how to play the banjo.[41] Flatt and Scruggs appeared in several episodes as family friends of the fictional Clampetts. In their first appearance (season 1, episode 20), they portray themselves in the show and perform both the theme song and "Pearl, Pearl, Pearl". That song went to #8 on the country chart in 1963.[6] Scruggs published an instruction book entitled "Earl Scruggs and the Five String Banjo" in 1968. It received a Gold Book Award by the publisher, Peer-Southern Corporation when it sold over a million copies.[6] Over their 20-year association, Flatt and Scruggs recorded over 50 albums and 75 single records and featured over 20 different musicians as "Foggy Mountain Boys"—side men backing the duo.[47][48]

By the end of the 1960s, Scruggs was getting bored with repetition of the classic bluegrass fare.[47] By now, his sons were professional musicians, and he was caught up in their enthusiasm for more contemporary music. He said, "I love bluegrass music, and still like to play it, but I do like to mix in some other music for my own personal satisfaction, because if I don't, I can get a little bogged down and a little depressed".[11] Scruggs also wanted to play concerts in venues that normally featured rock and roll acts.[44] Columbia Records executives told Flatt and Scruggs that they intended to try a new producer, Bob Johnston, instead of their long-time producer Don Law.[47] Johnston had produced Bob Dylan's records. This new association produced Changin' Times, Nashville Airplane, and The Story of Bonnie and Clyde albums.[47] Flatt was not happy with some of this material—he didn't like singing Bob Dylan songs and refused to perform them, saying "I can't sing Bob Dylan stuff, I mean. Columbia has got Bob Dylan, why did they want me?".[47][49] Even the success of the Bonnie and Clyde album was not enough to prevent their breakup in 1969. After the split, Flatt formed a traditional bluegrass group with Curly Seckler and Marty Stuart called The Nashville Grass, and Scruggs formed the Earl Scruggs Revue with his sons.[40][50]

Neither Flatt nor Scruggs spoke to each other for the next ten years—until 1979 when Flatt was in the hospital. Scruggs made an unannounced visit to his bedside. The two men talked for more than an hour. Even though Flatt's voice was barely above a whisper, he spoke of a reunion. Scruggs answered yes, but told Flatt they would talk when he was better. Flatt said, "It came as quite a surprise and made me feel good."[51] However, Lester Flatt never recovered, and died May 11, 1979. Historian Barry Willis, speaking of the meeting, said "Earl gave Lester his flowers while he was still living."[6] (He was referring to a 1957 Flatt and Scruggs recording of "Give Me My Flowers While I'm Still Living".)[52]

Earl Scruggs Revue edit

In early 1969, Scruggs formed the Earl Scruggs Revue, consisting of two of his sons, Randy (guitar) and Gary (bass) and later Vassar Clements (fiddle), Josh Graves (Dobro) and Scruggs' youngest son, Steve (drums).[42] On November 15, 1969, Scruggs performed live with the newly formed group on an open-air stage in Washington, D.C. at the Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam. Scruggs was one of the few bluegrass or country artists to give support to the anti-war movement.[29][53] The Earl Scruggs Revue gained popularity on college campuses, live shows and festivals and appeared on the bill with acts like Steppenwolf, The Byrds and James Taylor.[11] They recorded for Columbia Records and made frequent network television appearances though the 1970s. Their album I Saw the Light with a Little Help from my Friends featured Linda Ronstadt, Arlo Guthrie, Tracy Nelson, and the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band.[54] This collaboration sparked enthusiasm by the latter to make the album Will the Circle be Unbroken. Earl and Louise Scruggs made phone calls to eminent country stars like Roy Acuff and "Mother" Maybelle Carter to get them to participate in this project to bring a unique combination of older players with young ones.[25] Bill Monroe refused to participate saying he had to remain true to the style he pioneered, and this "is not bluegrass"[55] The album became a classic, and was selected for the Library of Congress' National Recording Registry of works of unusual merit.[11]

Scruggs had to retire from the road in 1980 because of back problems, but the Earl Scruggs Revue did not part ways until 1982.[5] Despite the group's commercial success, they were never embraced by bluegrass or country music purists.[42] Scruggs remained active musically and released The Storyteller and the Banjoman with Tom T. Hall in 1982, and a compilation album Top of the World in 1983. In 1994, Scruggs teamed up with Randy Scruggs and Doc Watson to contribute the song "Keep on the Sunny Side" to the AIDS benefit album Red Hot + Country. In 2001, Scruggs broke a 17-year personal album hiatus with the album Earl Scruggs and Friends, featuring Elton John, Sting, Don Henley, Johnny Cash, Dwight Yoakam, Billy Bob Thornton, and Steve Martin.[56] It includes the song "Passin' Thru", written by Johnny Cash and Randy Scruggs. He also released a live album The Three Pickers with Doc Watson and Ricky Skaggs, recorded in Winston-Salem in December 2002.[57]

Awards and honors edit

Banjos edit

In the late 1950s Scruggs met with Bill Nelson, one of the owners of the Vega Musical Instrument Company in Boston, to sign a contract to design and endorse a new banjo to be called "The Earl Scruggs Model".[41] The company had made banjos since before 1912 and already had a Pete Seeger model.[71] There would be four Scruggs models in the top-of-the-line banjos they produced. It was the first time a prominent bluegrass banjo player had played any brand other than a Gibson.[47] Scruggs participated in Vega's marketing campaign that claimed that the banjo was constructed to Scruggs's design specifications, which was true, but the finished product fell short of his expectations.[41] According to Scruggs's friend and fellow banjoist, Curtis McPeake, Scruggs never cared for it. McPeake stated, "They were good banjos, they just wasn't [sic] what Earl wanted to play."[41] Scruggs continued to perform and record using his Gibson Granada. The Vega company was sold to the C.F. Martin company in 1970, and the contract was dissolved.[41]

In 1984, Gibson produced what Scruggs had wanted—the Gibson "Earl Scruggs Standard", a replica of his personal 1934 Gibson Granada RB Mastertone banjo, number 9584-3.[72] This banjo had been changed over its long existence and the only remaining original parts were the rim, the tone ring and the resonator (the wooden back of the instrument).[72] The banjo was originally gold-plated, but the gold had long-since worn off and had been replaced with nickel hardware. Gibson elected to make the replica model nickel-plated as well, to look like Scruggs' own.[73] Scruggs' actual 1934 model was previously owned by a series of influential players beginning with Snuffy Jenkins, who bought it for $37.50 at a pawn shop in South Carolina.[4] Jenkins sold it to Don Reno, who sold it to Scruggs.[4][74] When Scruggs acquired it, the instrument was in poor condition and he sent it to the Gibson Company for refurbishing, including a new fingerboard, pearl inlays, and a more slender neck. During this time Scruggs used his Gibson RB-3 for some of the Mercury recording sessions. Banjo enthusiasts have located the shipping records from Gibson to determine the exact dates the Granada Mastertone was missing on certain recordings.[74]

On May 22, 2023, Scruggs' personal Gibson Granada Mastertone, heard on "Foggy Mountain Breakdown", was donated by the family to the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum to become part of the permanent collection.[75] A ceremony to celebrate the gift was attended by a host of bluegrass, Americana, and country music stars.[75]

Louise Scruggs edit

On December 14, 1946, 19-year-old Anne Louise Certain attended the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville. She went backstage after the performance to meet some of the performers, including Scruggs, who had been with Bill Monroe's band about a year at that time. Scruggs and Certain began dating and fell in love. They were married about a year and a half later in April, 1948.[25] When Flatt and Scruggs formed the new group, Scruggs had done most of the bookings for the band, but being on the road for hours in a car and stopping at a phone booth to communicate with venues, often at odd hours, was difficult. Louise had a business aptitude and began helping by doing the phone work.[41] She eventually became the booking agent and ultimately the group's manager, Nashville's first woman to become prominent in that role.[25] Her acumen and skills in the job were prescient. She turned the band into TV personalities and helped propel them into what today would be called rock stars, touring with Joan Baez and performing at the prestigious Newport Folk Festival.[76] She recruited noted artist Thomas B. Allen, who had done covers for The New Yorker and Sports Illustrated to create cover illustrations for 17 of the group's albums.[77] She helped market the group to younger audiences at college campuses and arranged a live album to be recorded at Carnegie Hall. Earl Scruggs said, "What talent I had never would have peaked without her. She helped shape music up as a business, instead of just people out picking and grinning."[25] Louise died from complications of respiratory disease[78] on February 2, 2006, at age 78, predeceasing her husband by six years.[76] In 2007, The Country Music Hall of Fame created The Louise Scruggs Memorial Forum, an annual event to honor a music industry business leader.[79]

Personal life edit

In 1955, Scruggs received word that his mother, Lula, had suffered a stroke and heart attack in North Carolina. The only flight available from Nashville involved such a series of connecting cities that it was not feasible to fly. Scruggs and his wife, with sons Gary and Randy, decided to drive all night from Nashville to see her when they were involved in an automobile accident just east of Knoxville about 3 a.m. October 2.[80] Their car was hit by a drunk driver, a Fort Campbell soldier who had pulled out from a side road into their path, then fled the scene after the collision.[81] The children were not hurt, but Earl suffered a fractured pelvis and dislocations of both hips, which would plague him for years, and Louise had been thrown into the windshield, receiving multiple lacerations.[6] They were flown to a Nashville hospital where Scruggs remained hospitalized for about two months. He received thousands of letters from well-wishers.[6][82] He returned to music in January 1956, about four months after the injury, but after working a week or so, one of the hips collapsed, and he returned to the hospital for a metal hip to be implanted.[41] Seven years later, the other hip required similar surgery.[83] The first metal hip lasted for some 40 years, but eventually failed, requiring a total hip replacement in October 1996, when he was age 72. While still in the recovery room after this hip operation, Scruggs suffered a heart attack; he was returned to the operating room later the same day for quintuple coronary bypass surgery.[84] Despite the dire circumstances, he recovered and returned to his musical career.

Scruggs was involved in a solo plane crash in October 1975. He was flying his 1974 Cessna Skyhawk II aircraft home to Nashville around midnight from a performance of the Earl Scruggs Revue in Murray, Kentucky. On his landing approach he was enveloped in dense fog and overshot the runway at Cornelia Fort Airpark in Nashville and the plane flipped over. The automatic crash alert system in the plane did not function, and Scruggs remained without help for five hours. He crawled about 150 feet from the wreckage with a broken ankle, broken nose, and facial lacerations, afraid that the plane might catch fire. His family was driving home from the same concert and was unaware of the crash, but his niece became worried when he did not arrive. She called police at about 4 a.m., and they went to the airport, where they heard Scruggs' cries for help from a field near the runway.[66] He recovered, but was in a wheelchair for a few weeks, including for the premiere of the Scruggs documentary Banjoman at the Kennedy Center.[66]

 
Scruggs performing with his sons Randy and Gary at Hardly Strictly Bluegrass, 2009

Steve Scruggs, Earl's youngest son, was the drummer for the Earl Scruggs Revue at one point. He died in September 1992 of a self-inflicted gun shot after killing his wife, according to prosecutor Dent Moriss.[85] Middle son Randy Scruggs, guitarist and music producer, died after a short illness on April 17, 2018, at the age of 64.[86][87]

Every January for many years, Scruggs' birthday was celebrated by a party at his home on Franklin Road in Nashville. After a buffet dinner, guests would gather in the living room for an informal "pickin' party" where some of country music's best known stars would sing and play with no one around but family and close friends.[25] The attendees over the years included Tom T. Hall, Béla Fleck, Travis Tritt, Vince Gill, Tim O'Brien, Emmylou Harris, Mac Wiseman, Marty Stuart, Porter Wagoner, Bill Anderson, Jerry Douglas, Josh Graves and many others. At Scruggs' 80th birthday party in 2004, country singer Porter Wagoner said, "Earl is to the five-string banjo what Babe Ruth was to baseball. He is the best there ever was and the best there ever will be."[14]

At age 88, Earl Scruggs died from natural causes on the morning of March 28, 2012, in a Nashville hospital.[11] His funeral was held on Sunday, April 1, 2012, at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee, and was open to the public. He was buried at Spring Hill Cemetery in a private service.

The Earl Scruggs Center edit

 
Earl Scruggs Center

The Earl Scruggs Center opened January 11, 2014—a $5.5 million, 100,000 square foot facility located in the court square of Shelby, North Carolina, at the renovated county courthouse.[88] It showcases the musical contributions of Scruggs, the most eminent ambassador of the music of that region, and features a museum and a life-sized statue of Scruggs at a young age.[38] The center received a $1.5 million economic development grant from the U.S. Department of Commerce and also funds from corporate donors.[89] It serves as an educational center providing classes and field trips for students.[90] The opening was celebrated by a sold-out concert by Vince Gill, Travis Tritt, Sam Bush, and others.[88]

On January 6, 2024, on what would have been Scruggs' 100th birthday, a memorial concert was held at Nashville's Ryman Auditorium to benefit the Scruggs Center.[91] At the concert, three dozen noted bluegrass artists, including Jerry Douglas, Béla Fleck, Sam Bush, The Earls of Leicester, Del McCoury, Sierra Hull and Jeff Hanna performed until nearly midnight.[91]

Selected discography edit

Early singles edit

Mercury Records Singles
  • 1949: God Loves His Children / I'm Going to Make Heaven My Home
  • 1949: We'll Meet Again Sweetheart / My Cabin in Caroline
  • 1949: Baby Blue Eyes / Bouquet in Heaven
  • 1949: Down the Road / Why Don't You Tell Me So
  • 1950: I'll Never Shed Another Tear / I'm Going to Be in Heaven Sometime
  • 1950: No Mother or Dad / Foggy Mountain Breakdown
  • 1950: Is It Too Late Now / So Happy I'll Be
  • 1950: My Little Girl in Tennessee / I'll Never Love Another
  • 1951: Cora Is Gone / That Little Old Country Church House
  • 1951: Pain in My Heart / Take Me in a Lifeboat
  • 1951: Doin' My Time / Farewell Blues
  • 1951: Rollin' in My Sweet Baby's Arms / I'll Just Pretend
Columbia Records Singles
  • 1951: Come Back Darling / I'm Waiting to Hear You Call Me Darling
  • 1951: I'm Head over Heels in Love / We Can't Be Darlings Anymore
  • 1951: Jimmie Brown the Newsboy / Somehow Tonight
  • 1951: Don't Get Above Your Raising / I've Lost You
  • 1951: 'Tis Sweet to Be Remembered / Earl's Breakdown
  • 1952: Get in Line Brother / Brother I'm Getting Ready to Go
  • 1952: Old Home Town / I'll Stay Around
  • 1952: Over the Hills to the Poorhouse
  • 1952: I'm Gonna Settle Down / I'm Lonesome and Blue
Mercury Records Singles
  • 1952: Pike County Breakdown / Old Salty Dog Blues
  • 1952: Preachin' Prayin' Singin' / Will the Roses Bloom
  • 1953: Back to the Cross / God Loves His Children
Okeh Records Singles
  • 1953: Reunion in Heaven / Pray for the Boys
Columbia Records Singles
  • 1953: Why Did You Wander / Thinking about You
  • 1953: If I Should Wander Back Tonight / Dear Old Dixie
  • 1953: I'm Working on a Road / He Took Your Place
  • 1953: I'll Go Stepping Too / Foggy Mountain Chimes
  • 1954: Mother Prays Loud in Her Sleep / Be Ready for Tomorrow May Never Come
  • 1954: I'd Rather Be Alone / Someone Took My Place with You
  • 1954: You're Not a Drop in the Bucket / Foggy Mountain Special
  • 1954: 'Till the End of the World Rolls 'Round / Don't This Road Look Rough and Rocky
  • 1955: You Can Feel It in Your Soul / Old Fashioned Preacher
  • 1955: Before I Met You / I'm Gonna Sleep with One Eye Open
  • 1955: Gone Home / Bubbling in My Soul
  • 1956: Randy Lynn Rag / On My Mind
  • 1956: Joy Bells / Give Mother My Crown
  • 1956: What's Good for You / No Doubt about It
  • 1957: Six White Horses / Shucking' the Corn
  • 1957: Give Me the Flowers While I'm Living / Is There Room for Me
  • 1957: Don't Let Your Deal Go Down / Let Those Brown Eyes Smile at Me
  • 1957: I Won't Care / I Won't Be Hangin' Around
  • 1958: Big Black Train / Crying Alone
  • 1958: Heaven / Building on Sand
  • 1958: I Don't Care Anymore / Mama's and Daddy's Little Girl
  • 1959: A Million Years in Glory / Jesus Savior Pilot Me
  • 1959: Cabin on the Hill / Someone You Have Forgotten
  • 1959: Crying My Heart Out over You / Foggy Mountain Rock
  • 1960: The Great Historical Bum / All I Want Is You
  • 1960: Polka on a Banjo / Shucking the Corn (Remake)
  • 1960: I Ain't Gonna Work Tomorrow / If I Should Wander Back Tonight
  • 1961: Where Will I Shelter My Sheep / Go Home
  • 1961: Jimmie Brown the Newsboy / Mother Prays Loud in My Sleep?
  • 1962: Cold Cold Lovin' / Just Ain't
  • 1962: Hear the Whistle Blow a Hundred Miles / The Legend of the Johnson
  • 1962: The Ballad of Jed Clampett / Coal Loadin' Johnny
  • 1963: Pearl Pearl Pearl / Hard Travelin'
  • 1964: My Saro Jane / You Are My Flower
  • 1964: Petticoat Junction / Have You Seen My Dear Companion
  • 1964: Workin' It Out / Fireball
  • 1964: Little Birdie / Sally Don't You Grieve
  • 1965: Father's Table Grace / I Still Miss Someone
  • 1965: Go Home / Ballad of Jed Clampett
  • 1965: Gonna Have Myself a Ball / Rock Salt and Nails
  • 1965: Memphis / Foggy Mountain Breakdown
  • 1966: Green Acres / I Had a Dream (With June Carter)
  • 1966: Colours / For Lovin' Me
  • 1966: The Last Thing on My Mind / Mama You Been on My Mind
  • 1967: It Was Only the Wind / Why Can't I Find Myself with You
  • 1967: Roust-A-Bout / Nashville Cats
  • 1967: The Last Train to Clarksville / California up Tight Band
  • 1967: Theme from Bonnie and Clyde (Foggy Mountain Breakdown) / My Cabin in Caroline
  • 1967: Down in the Flood / Foggy Mountain Breakdown (Remake)
  • 1968: Like a Rolling Stone / I'd Like to Say a Word for Texas
  • 1968: I'll Be Your Baby Tonight / Universal Soldier
  • 1969: Foggy Mountain Breakdown / Like a Rolling Stone
  • 1969: Universal Soldier / Down in the Flood
  • 1969: Maggie's Farm / Tonight Will Be Fine

Later singles edit

Year Single Chart Positions Album
US Country CAN Country
1970 "Nashville Skyline Rag" 74 Earl Scruggs: His Family and Friends
1979 "I Sure Could Use the Feeling" 30 41 Today & Forever
"Play Me No Sad Songs" 82 66
1980 "Blue Moon of Kentucky" 46
1982 "There Ain't No Country Music on This Jukebox"
(with Tom T. Hall)
77 Storyteller and the Banjo Man
"Song of the South" (with Tom T. Hall) 72

Guest singles edit

Year Single Artist Chart Positions Album
US Country
1998 "Same Old Train" Various Artists 59 Tribute to Tradition

Music videos edit

Year Video Director
1992 "The Dirt Road" (with Sawyer Brown) Michael Salomon
1998 "Same Old Train" (Various) Steve Boyle
2001 "Foggy Mountain Breakdown" (Earl Scruggs and Friends) Gerry Wenner

Albums edit

Year Title Chart Positions
US Country US US Heat US Bluegrass
1957 Foggy Mountain Jamboree
1959 Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs with the Foggy Mountain Boys
1961 Foggy Mountain Banjo
1963 I Saw the Light with Some Help from My Friends
The Ballad of Jed Clampett
Flatt and Scruggs at Carnegie Hall
1964 Flatt and Scruggs Live at Vanderbilt University
The Fabulous Sound of Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs
1965 Town and Country
1966 Flatt and Scruggs Greatest Hits
1967 Strictly Instrumental (with Lester Flatt and Doc Watson)
1967 5 String Banjo Instruction Album
1968 The Story of Bonnie and Clyde (with Lester Flatt and the Foggy Mountain Boys)[92]
1969 Changin' Times
1970 Nashville Airplane
20 All-Time Great Recordings
1972 I Saw the Light with Some Help from My Friends
Earl Scruggs: His Family and Friends
Live at Kansas State 20 204
1973 Rockin' 'Cross the Country 46
Dueling Banjos 202
The Earl Scruggs Revue 169
1975 Anniversary Special 104
1976 The Earl Scruggs Revue 2 161
Family Portrait 49
1977 Live from Austin City Limits 49
Strike Anywhere
1978 Bold & New 50
1979 Today & Forever
1982 Storyteller and the Banjo Man (with Tom T. Hall)
Flatt & Scruggs
1983 Top of the World
1984 The Mercury Sessions 1
The Mercury Sessions 2
Superjammin'
1987 The Golden Hits
1992 The Complete Mercury Sessions
1998 Artist's Choice: The Best Tracks (1970–1980)
2001 Earl Scruggs and Friends 39 33 14
2002 Classic Bluegrass Live: 1959–1966
2003 Three Pickers (with Doc Watson and Ricky Skaggs) 24 179 2
2004 The Essential Earl Scruggs
2005 Live with Donnie Allen and Friends
2007 Lifetimes: Lewis, Scruggs, and Long

DVDs edit

Earl Scruggs edit

  • Earl Scruggs—His Family and Friends (2005)
    (Recorded 1969. Bob Dylan, The Byrds, Bill Monroe, Joan Baez et al.)
  • Private Sessions (2005)
  • The Bluegrass Legend (2006)

Earl Scruggs, Doc Watson and Ricky Skaggs edit

  • The Three Pickers (2003)

Flatt and Scruggs edit

  • The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol. 1 (2007)
  • The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol. 2 (2007)
  • The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol. 3 (2007)
  • The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol. 4 (2007)
  • The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol. 5 (2008)
  • The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol. 6 (2008)
  • The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol. 7 (2009)
  • The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol. 8 (2009)
  • The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol. 9 (2010)
  • The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol. 10 (2010)

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Goldsmith, Thomas. Earl Scruggs and Foggy Mountain Breakdown: The Making of an American Classic. University of Illinois Press, 2019.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Flatt and Scruggs Preservation Society
  • Earl Scruggs Interview NAMM Oral History Library (2004)

earl, scruggs, earl, eugene, scruggs, january, 1924, march, 2012, american, musician, noted, popularizing, three, finger, banjo, picking, style, called, scruggs, style, which, defining, characteristic, bluegrass, music, three, finger, style, playing, radically. Earl Eugene Scruggs January 6 1924 March 28 2012 was an American musician noted for popularizing a three finger banjo picking style now called Scruggs style which is a defining characteristic of bluegrass music His three finger style of playing was radically different from the traditional way the five string banjo had previously been played This new style of playing became popular and elevated the banjo from its previous role as a background rhythm instrument to featured solo status He popularized the instrument across several genres of music Earl ScruggsScruggs in 2005Background informationBirth nameEarl Eugene ScruggsBorn 1924 01 06 January 6 1924Cleveland County North Carolina U S DiedMarch 28 2012 2012 03 28 aged 88 Nashville Tennessee U S GenresBluegrassprogressive country 1 gospelOccupation s MusicianInstrument s 5 string banjoguitarYears active1945 2012LabelsMercuryColumbiaOKehMCA NashvilleWebsiteearlscruggs wbr com Scruggs career began at age 21 when he was hired to play in Bill Monroe s band the Blue Grass Boys Bluegrass eventually became the name for an entire genre of country music Despite considerable success with Monroe performing on the Grand Ole Opry and recording classic hits such as Blue Moon of Kentucky Scruggs resigned from the group in 1946 because of their exhausting touring schedule Fellow band member Lester Flatt resigned as well and he and Scruggs later paired up in the duo Flatt and Scruggs Scruggs banjo instrumental Foggy Mountain Breakdown was released in 1949 and became an enduring hit The song experienced a rebirth of popularity to a younger generation when it was featured in the 1967 film Bonnie and Clyde The song won two Grammy Awards and in 2005 was selected for the Library of Congress National Recording Registry of works of unusual merit Flatt and Scruggs brought bluegrass music into mainstream popularity in the early 1960s with their country hit The Ballad of Jed Clampett the theme music for the television sitcom The Beverly Hillbillies the first Scruggs recording to reach number one on the Billboard charts Over their 20 year association Flatt and Scruggs recorded over 50 albums and 75 singles The duo broke up in 1969 chiefly because while Scruggs wanted to switch styles to fit a more modern sound Flatt was a traditionalist who opposed the change and believed doing so would alienate a fan base of bluegrass purists Although each of them formed a new band to match their visions neither of them ever regained the success they had achieved as a team Scruggs received four Grammy awards a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award and a National Medal of Arts He became a member of the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame and was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame In 1985 Flatt and Scruggs were inducted together into the Country Music Hall of Fame and named as a duo number 24 on CMT s 40 Greatest Men of Country Music Scruggs was awarded a National Heritage Fellowship by the National Endowment for the Arts the highest honor in the folk and traditional arts in the United States Four works by Scruggs have been placed in the Grammy Hall of Fame After Scruggs death in 2012 at age 88 the Earl Scruggs Center was founded in Shelby North Carolina near his birthplace with the aid of a federal grant and corporate donors The center is a 5 5 million facility that features the musical contributions of Scruggs and serves as an educational center providing classes and field trips for students Contents 1 Early life 2 Development 3 With Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys 4 Flatt and Scruggs 5 Earl Scruggs Revue 6 Awards and honors 7 Banjos 8 Louise Scruggs 9 Personal life 10 The Earl Scruggs Center 11 Selected discography 11 1 Early singles 11 2 Later singles 11 3 Guest singles 11 4 Music videos 11 5 Albums 12 DVDs 12 1 Earl Scruggs 12 2 Earl Scruggs Doc Watson and Ricky Skaggs 12 3 Flatt and Scruggs 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly life editExternal audio nbsp Bluegrass Musician Earl Scruggs interviewed by Terry Gross on Fresh Air 34 58 January 9 2004 2 Earl Scruggs was born January 6 1924 in the Flint Hill community of Cleveland County North Carolina a small community just outside of Boiling Springs about 10 miles west of Shelby 3 His father George Elam Scruggs was a farmer and a bookkeeper who died of a protracted illness when Earl was four years old 4 Upon his father s death Scruggs mother Georgia Lula Ruppe called Lula was left to take care of the farm and five children of which Earl was the youngest 5 The family members all played music The father played an open back banjo using the frailing technique though as an adult Earl had no recollection of his father s playing 6 4 Mrs Scruggs played the pump organ 4 Earl s siblings older brothers Junie and Horace and older sisters Eula Mae and Ruby all played banjo and guitar Scruggs recalled a visit to his uncle s home at age six to hear a blind banjo player named Mack Woolbright who played a finger picking style and had recorded for Columbia Records 7 8 It made an impression on Scruggs who said He d sit in the rocking chair and he d pick some and it was just amazing I couldn t imagine he was the first what I call a good banjo player 8 Scruggs then took up the instrument he was too small to hold it at first and improvised by setting his brother Junie s banjo beside him on the floor He moved it around depending on what part of the neck he was playing 9 After his father s death Scruggs seemed to take solace in playing music and when not in school or doing farm chores spent nearly every spare moment he had practicing 10 His first radio performance was at age 11 on a talent scout show 11 Development edit nbsp Finger picks on thumb index and middle fingerScruggs is noted for popularizing a three finger banjo picking style now called Scruggs style that has become a defining characteristic of bluegrass music 12 Prior to Scruggs most banjo players used the frailing or clawhammer technique which consists of holding the fingers bent like a claw and moving the entire hand in a downward motion so that the strings are struck with the back of the middle fingernail This motion is followed by striking the thumb on a single string 13 The three finger style of playing is radically different from frailing the hand remains stationary and only the fingers and thumb move somewhat similar to classical guitar technique 8 Scruggs style also involves using picks on three digits see photo each plucking individual strings downward with the thumb then upward with the index and middle finger in sequence When done skillfully and in rapid sequence the style allows any digit though usually the thumb to play a melody while the other two digits play arpeggios of the melody line The use of picks gives each note a louder percussive attack creating an exciting effect described by The New York Times as like thumbtacks plinking rhythmically on a tin roof 14 This departure from traditional playing elevated the banjo to become more of a solo instrument a promotion from its former role of providing background rhythm or serving as a comedian s prop and popularized the instrument in several genres of music 11 15 16 Earl Scruggs did not invent three finger banjo playing in fact he said the three finger style was the most common way to play the five string banjo in his hometown in western North Carolina 8 An early influence was a local banjoist DeWitt Snuffy Jenkins who plucked in a finger style According to banjoist and historian Tony Trischka Jenkins came about as close as one could to Scruggs style without actually playing it 12 At age ten when Scruggs first learned the technique he recalled that he was at home in his room after a quarrel with his brother He was idly playing a song called Reuben and suddenly realized that he was playing with three fingers not two That excited me to no end he later recalled and said he ran through the house repeatedly yelling I ve got it 8 9 From there he devoted all his free time to perfecting his timing and to adding syncopation and variations to it Controversy exists as to the actual origin of three finger picking style 17 Don Reno an eminent banjo player who also played this style and who knew Scruggs at that young age described Scruggs early playing as similar to that of Snuffy Jenkins 6 Scruggs however consistently referred to it as his own saying that he adapted to it a syncopated roll that was quite different 6 18 On the subject John Hartford said Here s the way I feel about it Everybody s all worried about who invented the style and it s obvious that three finger banjo pickers have been around a long time maybe since 1840 But it s my feeling that if it wasn t for Earl Scruggs you wouldn t be worried about who invented it 6 With Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys editAt age 15 Scruggs played in a group called The Morris Brothers for a few months but quit to work in a factory making sewing thread in the Lily Textile Mill near his home in North Carolina 19 He worked there about two years earning 40 cents an hour until the draft restriction for World War II was lifted in 1945 at which time he returned to music performing with Lost John Miller and his Allied Kentuckians on WNOX in Knoxville 6 About this time an opening to play with Bill Monroe became available nbsp Bill and Charlie Monroe c 1936Bill Monroe 13 years older than Scruggs was prominent in country music at the time His career started with the Monroe Brothers a duo with his brother Charlie Bill sang the high tenor harmony parts a sound called high lonesome for which he became noted 20 21 The brothers split up in 1938 and Bill a native of the Bluegrass State of Kentucky formed a new group called Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys They first played on the Opry in 1939 and soon became a popular touring band featuring a vocalist named Lester Flatt 21 The name bluegrass stuck and eventually became the eponym for this entire genre of country music and Monroe became known as the father of bluegrass 22 When Scruggs was 21 Monroe was looking for a banjo player for his group because David Stringbean Akeman was quitting At the time banjo players often functioned in the band as comedians and the instrument was often held as a prop their clawhammer playing was almost inaudible 23 Monroe along with band member Lester Flatt auditioned several banjo players who had the same traditional playing style as Akeman When Scruggs auditioned for them at the Tulane Hotel in Nashville Flatt said I was thrilled It was so different I had never heard that kind of banjo picking 6 24 Scruggs joined Monroe in late 1945 earning 50 a week 14 After they accepted Scruggs as one of the Blue Grass Boys the roster consisted of Bill Monroe vocals mandolin Lester Flatt guitar vocals Earl Scruggs banjo Chubby Wise fiddle and Howard Watts stage name Cedric Rainwater on bass This group of men became the prototype of what a bluegrass band would become 25 With Monroe and Lester Flatt Scruggs performed on the Grand Ole Opry and in September 1946 recorded the classic hit Blue Moon of Kentucky a song that was designated by the Library of Congress to be added to the National Recording Registry and later added to the Grammy Hall of Fame The work schedule was heavy in Monroe s band They were playing a lot of jobs in movie theaters all over the south riding in a 1941 Chevrolet from town to town doing up to six shows a day and not finishing up until about eleven at night Lester Flatt said It wasn t anything to ride two or three days in a car We didn t have buses like we do now and we never had our shoes off 6 The self imposed rule was to always get back in time to play the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville each Saturday night 26 Scruggs said of Monroe that Bill would never let the music go down no matter how tired we were If a man would slack off he would move over and get that mandolin up close on him and get him back up there 6 Despite the group s success Scruggs decided the demands were too great He was single at the time and the brief few hours on Saturdays that he made it home it was just to pack his suitcase at the Tulane Hotel where he lived alone then repeat the cycle he had done this for two years 26 He turned in his resignation planning to go take care of his mother in North Carolina Flatt had also made up his mind to leave but he had not told anyone He later gave his two week notice but before the notice was up the bass player Howard Watts announced that he was leaving too Despite Monroe s pleading they left the band Monroe thought Flatt and Scruggs had a secret understanding but both men denied it Monroe did not speak to either one for 20 years thereafter a feud well known in country music circles 14 Flatt and Scruggs editIn 1948 Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs formed the duo Flatt and Scruggs and chose the name the Foggy Mountain Boys for their backing band The name came from a song by the Carter Family called Foggy Mountain Top that the band used as a theme song at the time 14 27 Flatt later acknowledged that they consciously tried to make their sound different from Monroe s group In the mid 1950s they dropped the mandolin and added a Dobro played by Buck Uncle Josh Graves In the spring of 1949 their second Mercury recording session yielded the classic Foggy Mountain Breakdown released on 78 RPM phonograph records that were in use at the time 28 nbsp Foggy Mountain Breakdown source source Problems playing this file See media help Previously Scruggs had performed something similar called Bluegrass Breakdown with Bill Monroe but Monroe had denied him songwriting credit for it Later Scruggs changed the song adding a minor chord thus creating Foggy Mountain Breakdown 29 The song contains a musical oddity Flatt plays an E major chord against Scruggs s E minor When asked about the dissonance years later Scruggs said he had tried to get Flatt to consistently play a minor there to no avail he said he eventually became used to the sound and even fond of it 30 The song won a Grammy and became an anthem for many banjo players to attempt to master 8 The band routinely tuned its instruments a half step higher than standard tuning in those days to get more brightness or pop to the sound returning to standard pitch in the 1960s 31 The popularity of Foggy Mountain Breakdown resurged years later when it was featured in the 1967 film Bonnie and Clyde which introduced the song to a younger generation of fans 25 Scruggs received a phone call from the show s producer and star Warren Beatty first asking Scruggs to write a song for the movie Soon Beatty called back saying that he wanted to use the existing vintage Mercury recording of Foggy Mountain Breakdown and rejected the argument that it was recorded 18 years prior at a radio station with no modern enhancements 26 The film was a hit called by the Los Angeles Times a landmark film that helped usher in a new era in American filmmaking 32 In 2005 the song was selected for the Library of Congress s National Recording Registry of works of unusual merit 33 34 nbsp Earl Scruggs on leftIn October 1951 the band recorded Earl s Breakdown which featured a technique where Scruggs would manually de tune the second and third strings 35 of the banjo during a song using a cam device he had made to attach to the instrument giving the surprise effect of a downward string bend He and his brother Horace had experimented with it when they were growing up 6 Scruggs had drilled some holes in the peghead of his banjo to install the device and chipped the pearl inlay He covered the holes with a piece of metal which can be seen on the album cover of Foggy Mountain Jamboree The technique became popular and led to improvement of the design without drilling holes by Bill Keith who then manufactured Scruggs Keith Tuners 36 37 The original tuners Scruggs made and used are now in a museum display at the Earl Scruggs Center in Shelby North Carolina 38 In 1953 Martha White Foods sponsored the band s regular early morning radio shows on WSM in Nashville where the duo sang the company s catchy bluegrass jingle written by Pat Twitty 39 About this time country music television shows on which Flatt and Scruggs appeared regularly went into syndication vastly increasing the group s exposure 40 Despite the group s increasing popularity and fan mail WSM did not allow Flatt and Scruggs to become members of the Grand Ole Opry at first According to Tennessean writer Peter Cooper Bill Monroe was in opposition and worked behind the scenes to keep Flatt and Scruggs off the Opry to the extent of having petitions made against their membership 25 41 In 1955 Martha White Foods CEO Cohen E Williams intervened by threatening to pull all of his advertising from WSM unless the band appeared on the Opry in the segment sponsored by his company 6 25 42 As years went by the band became synonymous with Martha White to the extent that the advertising jingle became a hit and the band rarely played a concert without it 42 Fans shouted requests for them to play it even at Carnegie Hall 43 On September 24 1962 the duo recorded The Ballad of Jed Clampett for the TV show The Beverly Hillbillies Sung by Jerry Scoggins the theme song became an immediate country music hit and was played at the beginning and end of each episode of the series The song went to 1 on the Billboard country chart a first for any bluegrass recording 44 The song spent 20 weeks on that chart it also reached 44 on Billboard s pop chart 45 The television show was also a huge hit broadcast in 76 countries around the world 26 In Queens New York a five year old boy named Bela Fleck heard the Jed Clampett theme on television 46 Fleck said I couldn t breathe or think I was completely mesmerized He said it awakened a deeply embedded predisposition that was just in there to learn how to play the banjo 41 Flatt and Scruggs appeared in several episodes as family friends of the fictional Clampetts In their first appearance season 1 episode 20 they portray themselves in the show and perform both the theme song and Pearl Pearl Pearl That song went to 8 on the country chart in 1963 6 Scruggs published an instruction book entitled Earl Scruggs and the Five String Banjo in 1968 It received a Gold Book Award by the publisher Peer Southern Corporation when it sold over a million copies 6 Over their 20 year association Flatt and Scruggs recorded over 50 albums and 75 single records and featured over 20 different musicians as Foggy Mountain Boys side men backing the duo 47 48 By the end of the 1960s Scruggs was getting bored with repetition of the classic bluegrass fare 47 By now his sons were professional musicians and he was caught up in their enthusiasm for more contemporary music He said I love bluegrass music and still like to play it but I do like to mix in some other music for my own personal satisfaction because if I don t I can get a little bogged down and a little depressed 11 Scruggs also wanted to play concerts in venues that normally featured rock and roll acts 44 Columbia Records executives told Flatt and Scruggs that they intended to try a new producer Bob Johnston instead of their long time producer Don Law 47 Johnston had produced Bob Dylan s records This new association produced Changin Times Nashville Airplane and The Story of Bonnie and Clyde albums 47 Flatt was not happy with some of this material he didn t like singing Bob Dylan songs and refused to perform them saying I can t sing Bob Dylan stuff I mean Columbia has got Bob Dylan why did they want me 47 49 Even the success of the Bonnie and Clyde album was not enough to prevent their breakup in 1969 After the split Flatt formed a traditional bluegrass group with Curly Seckler and Marty Stuart called The Nashville Grass and Scruggs formed the Earl Scruggs Revue with his sons 40 50 Neither Flatt nor Scruggs spoke to each other for the next ten years until 1979 when Flatt was in the hospital Scruggs made an unannounced visit to his bedside The two men talked for more than an hour Even though Flatt s voice was barely above a whisper he spoke of a reunion Scruggs answered yes but told Flatt they would talk when he was better Flatt said It came as quite a surprise and made me feel good 51 However Lester Flatt never recovered and died May 11 1979 Historian Barry Willis speaking of the meeting said Earl gave Lester his flowers while he was still living 6 He was referring to a 1957 Flatt and Scruggs recording of Give Me My Flowers While I m Still Living 52 Earl Scruggs Revue editIn early 1969 Scruggs formed the Earl Scruggs Revue consisting of two of his sons Randy guitar and Gary bass and later Vassar Clements fiddle Josh Graves Dobro and Scruggs youngest son Steve drums 42 On November 15 1969 Scruggs performed live with the newly formed group on an open air stage in Washington D C at the Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam Scruggs was one of the few bluegrass or country artists to give support to the anti war movement 29 53 The Earl Scruggs Revue gained popularity on college campuses live shows and festivals and appeared on the bill with acts like Steppenwolf The Byrds and James Taylor 11 They recorded for Columbia Records and made frequent network television appearances though the 1970s Their album I Saw the Light with a Little Help from my Friends featured Linda Ronstadt Arlo Guthrie Tracy Nelson and the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band 54 This collaboration sparked enthusiasm by the latter to make the album Will the Circle be Unbroken Earl and Louise Scruggs made phone calls to eminent country stars like Roy Acuff and Mother Maybelle Carter to get them to participate in this project to bring a unique combination of older players with young ones 25 Bill Monroe refused to participate saying he had to remain true to the style he pioneered and this is not bluegrass 55 The album became a classic and was selected for the Library of Congress National Recording Registry of works of unusual merit 11 Scruggs had to retire from the road in 1980 because of back problems but the Earl Scruggs Revue did not part ways until 1982 5 Despite the group s commercial success they were never embraced by bluegrass or country music purists 42 Scruggs remained active musically and released The Storyteller and the Banjoman with Tom T Hall in 1982 and a compilation album Top of the World in 1983 In 1994 Scruggs teamed up with Randy Scruggs and Doc Watson to contribute the song Keep on the Sunny Side to the AIDS benefit album Red Hot Country In 2001 Scruggs broke a 17 year personal album hiatus with the album Earl Scruggs and Friends featuring Elton John Sting Don Henley Johnny Cash Dwight Yoakam Billy Bob Thornton and Steve Martin 56 It includes the song Passin Thru written by Johnny Cash and Randy Scruggs He also released a live album The Three Pickers with Doc Watson and Ricky Skaggs recorded in Winston Salem in December 2002 57 Awards and honors editIn 1989 Scruggs was awarded a National Heritage Fellowship given by the National Endowment for the Arts the highest honor in the folk and traditional arts in the United States 27 Flatt and Scruggs were inducted together into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1985 Scruggs was an inaugural inductee into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame in 1991 and into the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame in 2009 58 In 1992 he was one of 13 recipients to be awarded the National Medal of Arts The award is authorized by Congress for outstanding contributions to the arts in the United States and presented by the President of the United States Flatt and Scruggs won a Grammy Award in 1968 for Scruggs instrumental Foggy Mountain Breakdown 59 Scruggs won a second Grammy in 2001 for the same song featuring artists Steve Martin Vince Gill Albert Lee Paul Shaffer Leon Russell Marty Stuart Jerry Douglas Glen Duncan and Scruggs two oldest sons Randy and Gary 59 He totaled four Grammy awards over his career and in 2008 received the Lifetime Achievement Award at the 50th Annual Grammy Awards On February 13 2003 Scruggs received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame 60 That same year he and Flatt were ranked No 24 on CMT s 40 Greatest Men of Country Music 61 62 In 2005 Scruggs was awarded an honorary doctorate from Boston s Berklee College of Music 63 In January 1973 a tribute concert honoring Scruggs was held in Manhattan Kansas featuring artists Joan Baez David Bromberg The Byrds Ramblin Jack Elliott Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and Doc and Merle Watson The concert was filmed and turned into the 1975 documentary film called Banjoman 64 It premiered at the John F Kennedy Center attended by Tennessee senators Bill Brock and Howard Baker Ethel Kennedy and Maria Shriver 65 Scruggs attended the event in a wheelchair recuperating from a crash of his private plane 66 The Coen brothers made a reference to The Foggy Mountain Boys in the 2000 film O Brother Where Art Thou by naming the movie band The Soggy Bottom Boys 67 On September 13 2006 Scruggs was honored at Turner Field in Atlanta as part of the pre game show for an Atlanta Braves home game Organizers won a listing in The Guinness Book of World Records for the most banjo players 239 playing one tune together Scruggs s Foggy Mountain Breakdown The pickers formed two groups one on each side of home plate and a video tribute to Scruggs s life was shown 68 Four works by Scruggs have been placed in the Grammy Hall of Fame Foggy Mountain Breakdown single inducted 1999 Foggy Mountain Jamboree album inducted 2012 Foggy Mountain Banjo album inducted 2013 and Bill Monroe s Blue Moon of Kentucky single inducted 1998 on which Scruggs performed The award was established by The Recording Academy in 1973 to honor works at least 25 years old that have lasting qualitative or historical significance 69 The Google Doodle of January 11 2019 paid homage to Scruggs by featuring a close up animated demonstration of the Scruggs style 70 Banjos editIn the late 1950s Scruggs met with Bill Nelson one of the owners of the Vega Musical Instrument Company in Boston to sign a contract to design and endorse a new banjo to be called The Earl Scruggs Model 41 The company had made banjos since before 1912 and already had a Pete Seeger model 71 There would be four Scruggs models in the top of the line banjos they produced It was the first time a prominent bluegrass banjo player had played any brand other than a Gibson 47 Scruggs participated in Vega s marketing campaign that claimed that the banjo was constructed to Scruggs s design specifications which was true but the finished product fell short of his expectations 41 According to Scruggs s friend and fellow banjoist Curtis McPeake Scruggs never cared for it McPeake stated They were good banjos they just wasn t sic what Earl wanted to play 41 Scruggs continued to perform and record using his Gibson Granada The Vega company was sold to the C F Martin company in 1970 and the contract was dissolved 41 In 1984 Gibson produced what Scruggs had wanted the Gibson Earl Scruggs Standard a replica of his personal 1934 Gibson Granada RB Mastertone banjo number 9584 3 72 This banjo had been changed over its long existence and the only remaining original parts were the rim the tone ring and the resonator the wooden back of the instrument 72 The banjo was originally gold plated but the gold had long since worn off and had been replaced with nickel hardware Gibson elected to make the replica model nickel plated as well to look like Scruggs own 73 Scruggs actual 1934 model was previously owned by a series of influential players beginning with Snuffy Jenkins who bought it for 37 50 at a pawn shop in South Carolina 4 Jenkins sold it to Don Reno who sold it to Scruggs 4 74 When Scruggs acquired it the instrument was in poor condition and he sent it to the Gibson Company for refurbishing including a new fingerboard pearl inlays and a more slender neck During this time Scruggs used his Gibson RB 3 for some of the Mercury recording sessions Banjo enthusiasts have located the shipping records from Gibson to determine the exact dates the Granada Mastertone was missing on certain recordings 74 On May 22 2023 Scruggs personal Gibson Granada Mastertone heard on Foggy Mountain Breakdown was donated by the family to the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum to become part of the permanent collection 75 A ceremony to celebrate the gift was attended by a host of bluegrass Americana and country music stars 75 Louise Scruggs editMain article Louise Scruggs On December 14 1946 19 year old Anne Louise Certain attended the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville She went backstage after the performance to meet some of the performers including Scruggs who had been with Bill Monroe s band about a year at that time Scruggs and Certain began dating and fell in love They were married about a year and a half later in April 1948 25 When Flatt and Scruggs formed the new group Scruggs had done most of the bookings for the band but being on the road for hours in a car and stopping at a phone booth to communicate with venues often at odd hours was difficult Louise had a business aptitude and began helping by doing the phone work 41 She eventually became the booking agent and ultimately the group s manager Nashville s first woman to become prominent in that role 25 Her acumen and skills in the job were prescient She turned the band into TV personalities and helped propel them into what today would be called rock stars touring with Joan Baez and performing at the prestigious Newport Folk Festival 76 She recruited noted artist Thomas B Allen who had done covers for The New Yorker and Sports Illustrated to create cover illustrations for 17 of the group s albums 77 She helped market the group to younger audiences at college campuses and arranged a live album to be recorded at Carnegie Hall Earl Scruggs said What talent I had never would have peaked without her She helped shape music up as a business instead of just people out picking and grinning 25 Louise died from complications of respiratory disease 78 on February 2 2006 at age 78 predeceasing her husband by six years 76 In 2007 The Country Music Hall of Fame created The Louise Scruggs Memorial Forum an annual event to honor a music industry business leader 79 Personal life editIn 1955 Scruggs received word that his mother Lula had suffered a stroke and heart attack in North Carolina The only flight available from Nashville involved such a series of connecting cities that it was not feasible to fly Scruggs and his wife with sons Gary and Randy decided to drive all night from Nashville to see her when they were involved in an automobile accident just east of Knoxville about 3 a m October 2 80 Their car was hit by a drunk driver a Fort Campbell soldier who had pulled out from a side road into their path then fled the scene after the collision 81 The children were not hurt but Earl suffered a fractured pelvis and dislocations of both hips which would plague him for years and Louise had been thrown into the windshield receiving multiple lacerations 6 They were flown to a Nashville hospital where Scruggs remained hospitalized for about two months He received thousands of letters from well wishers 6 82 He returned to music in January 1956 about four months after the injury but after working a week or so one of the hips collapsed and he returned to the hospital for a metal hip to be implanted 41 Seven years later the other hip required similar surgery 83 The first metal hip lasted for some 40 years but eventually failed requiring a total hip replacement in October 1996 when he was age 72 While still in the recovery room after this hip operation Scruggs suffered a heart attack he was returned to the operating room later the same day for quintuple coronary bypass surgery 84 Despite the dire circumstances he recovered and returned to his musical career Scruggs was involved in a solo plane crash in October 1975 He was flying his 1974 Cessna Skyhawk II aircraft home to Nashville around midnight from a performance of the Earl Scruggs Revue in Murray Kentucky On his landing approach he was enveloped in dense fog and overshot the runway at Cornelia Fort Airpark in Nashville and the plane flipped over The automatic crash alert system in the plane did not function and Scruggs remained without help for five hours He crawled about 150 feet from the wreckage with a broken ankle broken nose and facial lacerations afraid that the plane might catch fire His family was driving home from the same concert and was unaware of the crash but his niece became worried when he did not arrive She called police at about 4 a m and they went to the airport where they heard Scruggs cries for help from a field near the runway 66 He recovered but was in a wheelchair for a few weeks including for the premiere of the Scruggs documentary Banjoman at the Kennedy Center 66 nbsp Scruggs performing with his sons Randy and Gary at Hardly Strictly Bluegrass 2009Steve Scruggs Earl s youngest son was the drummer for the Earl Scruggs Revue at one point He died in September 1992 of a self inflicted gun shot after killing his wife according to prosecutor Dent Moriss 85 Middle son Randy Scruggs guitarist and music producer died after a short illness on April 17 2018 at the age of 64 86 87 Every January for many years Scruggs birthday was celebrated by a party at his home on Franklin Road in Nashville After a buffet dinner guests would gather in the living room for an informal pickin party where some of country music s best known stars would sing and play with no one around but family and close friends 25 The attendees over the years included Tom T Hall Bela Fleck Travis Tritt Vince Gill Tim O Brien Emmylou Harris Mac Wiseman Marty Stuart Porter Wagoner Bill Anderson Jerry Douglas Josh Graves and many others At Scruggs 80th birthday party in 2004 country singer Porter Wagoner said Earl is to the five string banjo what Babe Ruth was to baseball He is the best there ever was and the best there ever will be 14 At age 88 Earl Scruggs died from natural causes on the morning of March 28 2012 in a Nashville hospital 11 His funeral was held on Sunday April 1 2012 at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville Tennessee and was open to the public He was buried at Spring Hill Cemetery in a private service The Earl Scruggs Center edit nbsp Earl Scruggs CenterThe Earl Scruggs Center opened January 11 2014 a 5 5 million 100 000 square foot facility located in the court square of Shelby North Carolina at the renovated county courthouse 88 It showcases the musical contributions of Scruggs the most eminent ambassador of the music of that region and features a museum and a life sized statue of Scruggs at a young age 38 The center received a 1 5 million economic development grant from the U S Department of Commerce and also funds from corporate donors 89 It serves as an educational center providing classes and field trips for students 90 The opening was celebrated by a sold out concert by Vince Gill Travis Tritt Sam Bush and others 88 On January 6 2024 on what would have been Scruggs 100th birthday a memorial concert was held at Nashville s Ryman Auditorium to benefit the Scruggs Center 91 At the concert three dozen noted bluegrass artists including Jerry Douglas Bela Fleck Sam Bush The Earls of Leicester Del McCoury Sierra Hull and Jeff Hanna performed until nearly midnight 91 Selected discography editEarly singles edit Mercury Records Singles1949 God Loves His Children I m Going to Make Heaven My Home 1949 We ll Meet Again Sweetheart My Cabin in Caroline 1949 Baby Blue Eyes Bouquet in Heaven 1949 Down the Road Why Don t You Tell Me So 1950 I ll Never Shed Another Tear I m Going to Be in Heaven Sometime 1950 No Mother or Dad Foggy Mountain Breakdown 1950 Is It Too Late Now So Happy I ll Be 1950 My Little Girl in Tennessee I ll Never Love Another 1951 Cora Is Gone That Little Old Country Church House 1951 Pain in My Heart Take Me in a Lifeboat 1951 Doin My Time Farewell Blues 1951 Rollin in My Sweet Baby s Arms I ll Just PretendColumbia Records Singles1951 Come Back Darling I m Waiting to Hear You Call Me Darling 1951 I m Head over Heels in Love We Can t Be Darlings Anymore 1951 Jimmie Brown the Newsboy Somehow Tonight 1951 Don t Get Above Your Raising I ve Lost You 1951 Tis Sweet to Be Remembered Earl s Breakdown 1952 Get in Line Brother Brother I m Getting Ready to Go 1952 Old Home Town I ll Stay Around 1952 Over the Hills to the Poorhouse 1952 I m Gonna Settle Down I m Lonesome and BlueMercury Records Singles1952 Pike County Breakdown Old Salty Dog Blues 1952 Preachin Prayin Singin Will the Roses Bloom 1953 Back to the Cross God Loves His ChildrenOkeh Records Singles1953 Reunion in Heaven Pray for the BoysColumbia Records Singles1953 Why Did You Wander Thinking about You 1953 If I Should Wander Back Tonight Dear Old Dixie 1953 I m Working on a Road He Took Your Place 1953 I ll Go Stepping Too Foggy Mountain Chimes 1954 Mother Prays Loud in Her Sleep Be Ready for Tomorrow May Never Come 1954 I d Rather Be Alone Someone Took My Place with You 1954 You re Not a Drop in the Bucket Foggy Mountain Special 1954 Till the End of the World Rolls Round Don t This Road Look Rough and Rocky 1955 You Can Feel It in Your Soul Old Fashioned Preacher 1955 Before I Met You I m Gonna Sleep with One Eye Open 1955 Gone Home Bubbling in My Soul 1956 Randy Lynn Rag On My Mind 1956 Joy Bells Give Mother My Crown 1956 What s Good for You No Doubt about It 1957 Six White Horses Shucking the Corn 1957 Give Me the Flowers While I m Living Is There Room for Me 1957 Don t Let Your Deal Go Down Let Those Brown Eyes Smile at Me 1957 I Won t Care I Won t Be Hangin Around 1958 Big Black Train Crying Alone 1958 Heaven Building on Sand 1958 I Don t Care Anymore Mama s and Daddy s Little Girl 1959 A Million Years in Glory Jesus Savior Pilot Me 1959 Cabin on the Hill Someone You Have Forgotten 1959 Crying My Heart Out over You Foggy Mountain Rock 1960 The Great Historical Bum All I Want Is You 1960 Polka on a Banjo Shucking the Corn Remake 1960 I Ain t Gonna Work Tomorrow If I Should Wander Back Tonight 1961 Where Will I Shelter My Sheep Go Home 1961 Jimmie Brown the Newsboy Mother Prays Loud in My Sleep 1962 Cold Cold Lovin Just Ain t 1962 Hear the Whistle Blow a Hundred Miles The Legend of the Johnson 1962 The Ballad of Jed Clampett Coal Loadin Johnny 1963 Pearl Pearl Pearl Hard Travelin 1964 My Saro Jane You Are My Flower 1964 Petticoat Junction Have You Seen My Dear Companion 1964 Workin It Out Fireball 1964 Little Birdie Sally Don t You Grieve 1965 Father s Table Grace I Still Miss Someone 1965 Go Home Ballad of Jed Clampett 1965 Gonna Have Myself a Ball Rock Salt and Nails 1965 Memphis Foggy Mountain Breakdown 1966 Green Acres I Had a Dream With June Carter 1966 Colours For Lovin Me 1966 The Last Thing on My Mind Mama You Been on My Mind 1967 It Was Only the Wind Why Can t I Find Myself with You 1967 Roust A Bout Nashville Cats 1967 The Last Train to Clarksville California up Tight Band 1967 Theme from Bonnie and Clyde Foggy Mountain Breakdown My Cabin in Caroline 1967 Down in the Flood Foggy Mountain Breakdown Remake 1968 Like a Rolling Stone I d Like to Say a Word for Texas 1968 I ll Be Your Baby Tonight Universal Soldier 1969 Foggy Mountain Breakdown Like a Rolling Stone 1969 Universal Soldier Down in the Flood 1969 Maggie s Farm Tonight Will Be Fine Later singles edit Year Single Chart Positions AlbumUS Country CAN Country1970 Nashville Skyline Rag 74 Earl Scruggs His Family and Friends1979 I Sure Could Use the Feeling 30 41 Today amp Forever Play Me No Sad Songs 82 661980 Blue Moon of Kentucky 46 1982 There Ain t No Country Music on This Jukebox with Tom T Hall 77 Storyteller and the Banjo Man Song of the South with Tom T Hall 72 Guest singles edit Year Single Artist Chart Positions AlbumUS Country1998 Same Old Train Various Artists 59 Tribute to TraditionMusic videos edit Year Video Director1992 The Dirt Road with Sawyer Brown Michael Salomon1998 Same Old Train Various Steve Boyle2001 Foggy Mountain Breakdown Earl Scruggs and Friends Gerry WennerAlbums edit Year Title Chart PositionsUS Country US US Heat US Bluegrass1957 Foggy Mountain Jamboree1959 Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs with the Foggy Mountain Boys1961 Foggy Mountain Banjo1963 I Saw the Light with Some Help from My FriendsThe Ballad of Jed ClampettFlatt and Scruggs at Carnegie Hall1964 Flatt and Scruggs Live at Vanderbilt UniversityThe Fabulous Sound of Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs1965 Town and Country1966 Flatt and Scruggs Greatest Hits1967 Strictly Instrumental with Lester Flatt and Doc Watson 1967 5 String Banjo Instruction Album1968 The Story of Bonnie and Clyde with Lester Flatt and the Foggy Mountain Boys 92 1969 Changin Times1970 Nashville Airplane20 All Time Great Recordings1972 I Saw the Light with Some Help from My FriendsEarl Scruggs His Family and FriendsLive at Kansas State 20 2041973 Rockin Cross the Country 46Dueling Banjos 202The Earl Scruggs Revue 1691975 Anniversary Special 1041976 The Earl Scruggs Revue 2 161Family Portrait 491977 Live from Austin City Limits 49Strike Anywhere1978 Bold amp New 501979 Today amp Forever1982 Storyteller and the Banjo Man with Tom T Hall Flatt amp Scruggs1983 Top of the World1984 The Mercury Sessions 1The Mercury Sessions 2Superjammin 1987 The Golden Hits1992 The Complete Mercury Sessions1998 Artist s Choice The Best Tracks 1970 1980 2001 Earl Scruggs and Friends 39 33 142002 Classic Bluegrass Live 1959 19662003 Three Pickers with Doc Watson and Ricky Skaggs 24 179 22004 The Essential Earl Scruggs2005 Live with Donnie Allen and Friends2007 Lifetimes Lewis Scruggs and LongDVDs editEarl Scruggs edit Earl Scruggs His Family and Friends 2005 Recorded 1969 Bob Dylan The Byrds Bill Monroe Joan Baez et al Private Sessions 2005 The Bluegrass Legend 2006 Earl Scruggs Doc Watson and Ricky Skaggs edit The Three Pickers 2003 Flatt and Scruggs edit The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol 1 2007 The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol 2 2007 The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol 3 2007 The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol 4 2007 The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol 5 2008 The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol 6 2008 The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol 7 2009 The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol 8 2009 The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol 9 2010 The Best of Flatt and Scruggs TV Show Vol 10 2010 References edit Flippo Chet March 29 2012 Nashville Skyline Earl Scruggs A Quiet Bluegrass Giant is Gone CMT Retrieved July 22 2023 And he formed a progressive country band with his talented sons Gary and Randy As the Earl Scruggs Revue they toured far and wide and continued with musical experimentation Bluegrass Musician Earl Scruggs Fresh Air WHYY NPR January 9 2004 Retrieved September 15 2019 Reitwiesner William Addams Ancestry of Earl Scruggs William Addams Reitwiesner Genealogical Services Archived from the original on January 9 2009 Retrieved July 14 2009 a b c d e Earl Scruggs Biography Earlscruggs com Retrieved March 28 2012 a b Earl Scruggs Biography biography com A amp E Television Networks Archived from the original on February 22 2017 Retrieved February 20 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Willis Barry R 1998 Weissman Dick ed America s music Bluegrass Franktown Colorado Pine Valley Music ISBN 0 9652407 1 1 Retrieved February 18 2017 Lofgren Lyle November 2009 Remembering the Old Songs The Man Who Wrote the Home Sweet Home Inside Bluegrass Minnesota Bluegrass amp Old Time Music Association OCLC 14507837 a b c d e f Brown Paul April 1 2000 The Story Of Foggy Mountain Breakdown npr org NPR Retrieved February 21 2017 a b Earl Scruggs Biography Chapter 1 The Early Years earlscruggs com Earl Scruggs Retrieved February 9 2017 Glaser Emily Scruggs Style The Life and Times of Earl Scruggs PorterBriggs com Retrieved June 2 2018 a b c d e f Bluegrass banjo legend Earl Scruggs dies at 88 blog al com Alabama Media Group Associated Press March 28 2012 Retrieved March 1 2017 a b Trischka Tony 1977 Banjo song book New York Oak Publications ISBN 0825601975 Laird Brad February 13 2013 Basic Clawhammer Lick youtube com Free Banjo Videos com Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Retrieved March 2 2017 a b c d e Lehman Haupt Christopher March 29 2012 Earl Scruggs Dies at 88 Shaped Bluegrass Sound The New York Times p B17 Retrieved May 4 2013 Earl Scruggs Obituary telegraph co uk Telegraph Media Group Limited March 29 2012 Archived from the original on January 12 2022 Retrieved February 9 2017 Scruggs Earl 2005 Earl Scruggs and the 5 string banjo Foreword by Nat Winston Rev and enhanced ed CD included ed Milwaukee Wis Hal Leonard ISBN 0634060422 Jonassen Mikael The Impact of Earl Scruggs on the Five String Banjo PDF Duo uio no Retrieved June 2 2018 Bader Brian Foggy Mountain Breakdown Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs 1949 Added to the National Registry 2004 PDF loc gov Library of Congress Retrieved February 21 2017 Cooper Peter 2017 Johnny s Cash and Charley s Pride Nashville Spring House p 48 ISBN 978 1 940611 70 9 High Lonesome Sound jargondatabase com Retrieved February 21 2017 a b A Brief History of Bluegrass Music bluegrassheritage org Bluegrass Heritage Foundation Retrieved February 7 2017 Bill Monroe Biography biography com A amp E Television Networks Archived from the original on February 22 2017 Retrieved February 21 2017 McArdle Terence March 28 2012 Bluegrass musician Earl Scruggs 88 dies The Washington Post Retrieved February 1 2017 Hotel Tulane Nashville Tenn circa 1917 digital library nashville org Nashville Public Library Digital Collections Retrieved February 20 2017 a b c d e f g h i Cooper Peter March 29 2012 1924 2012 Earl Scruggs Tennessean Gannett pp A1 3 a b c d Gross Terry March 29 2012 Earl Scruggs The 2003 Fresh Air Interview npr org National Public Radio NPR Retrieved March 11 2017 a b Earl Scruggs Bluegrass Banjo Player arts gov National Endowment for the Arts n d Retrieved December 8 2020 The History of 78 RPM Recordings web library yale edu Yale University Library Irving S Gilmore Music Library 2001 Retrieved January 11 2024 a b Martin Steve January 13 2012 The Master From Flint Hill Earl Scruggs newyorker com Conde Nast Retrieved February 24 2017 Goldsmith Thomas Foggy Mountain Breakdown Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs 1949 PDF loc com US Government Library of Congress Retrieved March 6 2017 Trischka Tony Warwick Pete November 2000 Masters of the Five String Banjo Earl Scruggs Mel Bay ISBN 0786659394 Archived from the original on March 18 2017 Retrieved March 17 2017 McLellan Dennis September 30 2010 Arthur Penn dies at 88 director of landmark film Bonnie and Clyde Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 12 2017 Librarian of Congress Names 50 Recordings to the 2004 National Recording Registry loc com Library of Congress USA April 5 2005 Retrieved February 9 2017 Bluegrass banjo legend Earl Scruggs dies at 88 blog al com Alabama Media Group March 28 2012 Retrieved February 9 2017 What Are D Tuners On A Banjo Deering Banjo Company www deeringbanjos com March 30 2013 Retrieved September 27 2021 Ford Frank March 1 2001 Keith Banjo Tuners frets com Frank Ford Retrieved February 22 2017 Keith Bill July 19 2000 Beacon Banjo Company The Story beaconbanjo com Beacon Banjo Company Retrieved February 23 2017 a b Goad John C January 13 2014 Earl Scruggs Center opens in a deluge bluegrasstoday com Bluegrass Today Retrieved February 25 2017 Pat Twitty Writing and Arrangement Credits discogs com Discogs Retrieved February 22 2017 a b Erlwine Stephen T Vinopal David CMT Artists About Flatt and Scruggs cut com Viacom International Retrieved February 2 2017 a b c d e f g h Castelnero Gordon Russell David 2017 Earl Scruggs banjo icon Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9781442268654 a b c d Kingsbury Paul McCall Michael Rumble John W 2012 The Encyclopedia of Country Music the ultimate guide to the music Earl Scruggs amp the Earl Scruggs Revue 2nd ed New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 539563 1 Dale Linda Williams The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture Martha White Foods tennesseeencyclopedia net University of Tennessee Press Retrieved February 2 2017 a b Vinopal David Artists Earl Scruggs Biography billboard com Billboard Retrieved February 10 2017 Thompson Richard January 19 2013 On this Day Ballad of Jed Clampett bluegrasstoday com Bluegrass Today Retrieved February 10 2017 Tippett Krista November 24 2016 Bela Fleck amp Abigail Washburn Truth Beauty Banjo onbeing org Krista Tippett Public Productions Retrieved July 7 2017 a b c d e f Rosenberg Neil V 1993 Bluegrass a history rev paperback ed Urbana University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 06304 X Flatt and Scruggs Discography allmusic com AllMusic member of the RhythmOne group Retrieved March 3 2017 Rosenberg Neil V Liner notes for Flatt and Scruggs Time Life Records bobdylanroots Time Life Records TLCW 04 Retrieved February 1 2017 Parsons Penny Stubbs Eddie 2016 The Nashville Grass 1973 1994 Foggy Mountain Troubadour The Life and Music of Curly Seckler Chicago University of Illinois Press pp 157 184 JSTOR 10 5406 j ctt18j8xtz Taylor Barbara May 12 1979 Lester Flatt 64 Leader in Bluegrass Revival Dies The Washington Post Retrieved February 27 2017 Thanki Juli December 28 2017 Bluegrass great Curly Seckler dead at 98 Tennessean p 11 A Retrieved December 28 2017 Photo caption Banjo master Earl Scruggs mandolin magician Curly Seckler and guitarist Lester Flatt blend some sweet spiritual harmony on Give Me My Flowers While I m Livin on July 28 1957 Earl Scruggs Performs At Anti War Demonstration Youtube com July 13 2009 Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Retrieved August 26 2011 Monger James C I Saw the Light with Some Help from My Friends allmusic com Allmusic member of the RhythmOne group Retrieved February 2 2017 Hurst Jack 2000 Ewing Tom ed The Bill Monroe reader 1st pbk ed Urbana Univ of Illinois Press p 102 ISBN 0252025008 Retrieved February 22 2017 Rodgers Larry August 30 2001 Earl Scruggs and Friends The Arizona Republic No Music Section p 41 Retrieved February 3 2017 Johnson Zac The Three Pickers Review allmusic com Allmusic member of the RhythmOne group Retrieved February 20 2017 NCMHOF Inductee Gallery 2009 Inductees Earl Scruggs northcarolinahalloffame org North Carolina Music Hall of Fame Retrieved February 23 2017 a b Grammys Past winners search Foggy Mountain Breakdown grammy com The Recording Academy Retrieved February 21 2017 Appleford Steve February 22 2010 Hollywood Star Walk Earl Scruggs Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 22 2017 CMT Pays Tribute to the 40 Greatest Men of Country Music in a Tantalizing Three Hour CMT Original Special Prnewswire com Country Music Television March 27 2003 Retrieved February 8 2017 40 Greatest Men in Country Music start mobilebeat com Country Music Television Retrieved February 8 2017 Berklee Today Berklee College of Music Berklee edu IMDb Banjoman IMDb Retrieved March 29 2011 Harvey Lynn November 17 1975 Premiere Overwhelms Earl Scruggs The Tennessean No First Edition p 26 Retrieved February 3 2017 a b c Thompson Jerry September 30 1975 Earl Scruggs Suffers Multiple Injuries in Small Plane Crash The Tennessean Vol 70 no 176 p 1 Wallace Jeff October 17 2015 5 things you didn t know about Flatt amp Scruggs axs com AXS Retrieved February 10 2017 Lawless John September 14 2006 New Guinness Book record for banjo pickers bluegrasstoday com Bluegrass Today Retrieved February 22 2017 Grammy Hall Of Fame Past Recipients grammy org The Recording Academy Retrieved March 12 2017 Google Doodle celebrates Earl Scruggs banjo picking pioneer CNET 2019 Vintage Vega Catalogs in PDF Format musicamnsteve com Music Man Steve Retrieved February 25 2017 a b 1934 RB Granada banjophiles org Banjophiles Retrieved March 7 2017 Earl Scruggs Standard Banjo gibson com Gibson Guitar Company Retrieved March 11 2017 a b Earnest Greg Gibson RB Granada Mastertone 9584 3 the Earl Scruggs earnestbanjo com Greg Earnest Retrieved March 13 2017 a b Dowling Marcus May 25 2023 Earl Scruggs Gibson banjo donated to permanent collection of country hall Vol 119 no 124 The Tennessean pp 2 A 16 A a b Music Industry Pioneer Louise Scruggs Dies cmt com Viacom International Retrieved February 3 2017 Orr Jay June 23 2003 Illustrator Thomas B Allen Honored With Exhibit Concert Marty Stuart and Earl Scruggs Pay Tribute at the Ryman cmt com Viacom Retrieved March 14 2017 Han Sarah February 18 2006 Manager Louise Scruggs 78 Billboard Vol 118 no 7 p 74 Retrieved October 22 2018 Louise Scruggs Memorial Forum Honorees countrymusichalloffame org Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum Retrieved February 2 2017 Opry Star s Mother Dies in North Carolina The Tennessean October 24 1955 p 20 Patrolmen Seek GI s Indictment After 2 Injured The Tennessean October 4 1955 p 10 Reaney Eldred October 14 1955 Gee It s Wonderful to have Fans The Tennessean p 12 Sullivan Phil August 5 1962 The Nashville Sound Scruggs Recovering The Tennessean p 5F Goldsmith Thomas October 16 1996 Scruggs has surgery The Tennessean p 4B Murder Suicide by a Star s Son New York Times Company Associated Press September 25 1992 p A16 Retrieved February 1 2017 Oermann Robert 2018 Award Winning Randy Scruggs Passes MusicRow Retrieved April 18 2018 Betts Stephen L April 18 2018 Randy Scruggs Award Winning Musician and Songwriter Dead at 64 Rolling Stone ISSN 0035 791X Retrieved April 18 2018 a b McFadyen Duncan January 11 2014 Earl Scruggs Center Opens In Shelby Wfae org NPR Charlotte WFAE Retrieved February 24 2017 Rose Julie April 6 2010 Earl Scruggs Center in Shelby picked for 1 5M grant Wfae org NPR Charlotte WFAE Retrieved March 1 2017 Earl Scruggs Center About us earlscruggscenter org Earl Scruggs Center Retrieved February 24 2017 a b Dowling Marcus January 9 2024 Earl Scruggs 100th birthday celebrated Saturday at Ryman No 120 7 The Tennessean Nashville USA Today Network pp 2 A 12 A Nashville Scene Billboard Magazine Nielsen Business Media 80 22 43 June 1 1968 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved November 24 2009 Further reading editGoldsmith Thomas Earl Scruggs and Foggy Mountain Breakdown The Making of an American Classic University of Illinois Press 2019 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Earl Scruggs Official website Flatt and Scruggs Preservation Society Earl Scruggs Interview NAMM Oral History Library 2004 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Earl Scruggs amp oldid 1199877999, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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