Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

The Country Gentlemen

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Years active
  
1957–2004

Name
  
The Gentlemen

Role
  
Band


The Country Gentlemen httpsiytimgcomviubvgO01ju7kmaxresdefaultjpg

Labels
  
Folkways, Smithsonian Folkways, Starday, Vanguard, Rebel, Sugar Hill, Design, Mercury, Copper Creek, Freeland, Pinecastle, Seven Seas

Associated acts
  
Bill Monroe, Seldom Scene, Bluegrass Album Band, The Stanley Brothers, Doc Watson, Osborne Brothers, Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver

Past members
  
1st classic lineup Charlie Waller John Duffey Eddie Adcock Tom Gray 2nd classic lineup Charlie Waller Bill Emerson Doyle Lawson Bill Yates Greg Corbett list of all past members

Origin
  
Washington, D.C., United States (1957)

Members
  
Charlie Waller, John Duffey, Doyle Lawson

Genres
  
Bluegrass, Country, Progressive bluegrass

Albums
  
The Award Winning Country, Country Songs - Old and New, Live in Japan, Bringing Mary Home, On the Road

The country gentlemen waiting for the boys to come home


The Country Gentlemen were a bluegrass band that originated during the 1950s in the area of Washington, D.C., United States, and recorded and toured with various members until the death in 2004 of Charlie Waller, one of the group's founders who in its later years served as the group's leader.

Contents

The Country Gentlemen The Country Gentlemen Wikipedia

The classic line-up from 1960–64 consisted of co-founders Charlie Waller on guitar and John Duffey on mandolin, with Eddie Adcock on banjo and Tom Gray on bass. They were inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Honor in 1996.

The Country Gentlemen The Country Gentlemen Tribute Band Official Website

The country gentlemen fox on the run


Early history

The Country Gentlemen The Country GentlemenFox On The Run YouTube

The band started on July 4, 1957 as a replacement group for Buzz Busby and the Bayou Boys when several members of that band were injured in a car accident. The band’s original members were Charlie Waller on guitar and lead vocals, John Duffey on mandolin and tenor vocals, Bill Emerson on banjo and baritone vocals, and Larry Lahey on bass. After a few early changes, the band settled into a somewhat permanent lineup consisting of Waller, Duffey, Eddie Adcock on banjo, and Tom Gray on bass.

First classic lineup breakup

The Country Gentlemen Country Gentlemen Reunion Band CD Bluegrass Today

They toured both the bluegrass and folk circuits during the 1950s and 1960s. In 1964, Tom Gray left the group to pursue on his career as National Geographic cartographer. Until end of sixties, Ed Ferris, Ed McGlothlin and Bill Yates were the bass players for the group. In 1969, just as the band was scheduled to tour Japan, John Duffey quit, citing his fear of flying. Jimmy Gaudreau was brought in on mandolin. Doyle Lawson went to Japan and played the mandolin and sang on the live recorded album for the groups' first trip to Japan. Eddie Adcock left the band in 1970 and moved to California to create a band Clinton Special.

Second generation

The Country Gentlemen Bill Yates passes Bluegrass Today

Charlie Waller assembled the "second classic lineup" of the Country Gentlemen soon after, with Bill Emerson returning on banjo, Doyle Lawson on mandolin, Bill Yates on bass and Ricky Skaggs on fiddle. The band also switched labels from Rebel to Vanguard. Emerson left again to join the Navy after one album, and was replaced by James Bailey. Jerry Douglas joined the band during the summer of 1973 and in 1974, after graduating from high school in May 1974, stayed with the band playing the Dobro at that time. He continued with the band until June 1975. He rejoined the band in May 1978 and was with the band until December 1978. Lawson left in 1979 to form his own band.

Death of Charlie Waller

The Country Gentlemen Country Gentlemen 50 Years Old Today Bluegrass Today

In the band's later years Charlie Waller served as the group's "focal point and leader" until his death in August 2004. His son Randy Waller, whose voice is very similar to his father's, continues to play as "Randy Waller & The Country Gentlemen".

Material

The Country Gentlemen play music ranging from traditional bluegrass to pop, sometimes adapting music from other genres to their bluegrass style. They also borrowed from the folk genre with songs such as Gordon Lightfoot's "Redwood Hill" and Steve Goodman's "City of New Orleans."

Several of the band’s songs ("Two Little Boys," "Bringing Mary Home," "New Freedom Bell," "Matterhorn," "Fox on the Run," "Legend of the Rebel Soldier," and many others) have become bluegrass standards.

Offshoots

Some of the immediate offshoots of the band were Emerson & Waldron, the Seldom Scene, II Generation, and Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver.

In 2008, Adcock and Gray, two members of the "Classic" Country Gentlemen Hall of Honor lineup, together with former member Gaudreau and Waller's son Randy, combined in 2008 to record as the Country Gentlemen Reunion Band.

References

The Country Gentlemen Wikipedia


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