Clarence White

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Bury Me Beneath the Willow 00:00 Tools
Old Joe Clark 00:00 Tools
Billy in the Low Ground 00:00 Tools
Nine Pound Hammer 00:00 Tools
Hong Kong Hillbilly aka Nashville West 00:00 Tools
Buckin' Mule 00:00 Tools
Country Boy Rock & Roll 00:00 Tools
Grandma Funderbunk's Music Box 00:00 Tools
In The Pines 00:00 Tools
Shady Grove 00:00 Tools
Wildwood Flower 00:00 Tools
Farewell Blues 00:00 Tools
Master's Bouquet 00:00 Tools
Under the Double Eagle 00:00 Tools
Cripple Creek 00:00 Tools
I Am A Pilgrim 00:00 Tools
Sugarfoot Rag 00:00 Tools
Black Mountain Rag 00:00 Tools
Banks Of The Ohio 00:00 Tools
Buckaroo 00:00 Tools
I'm So Happy 00:00 Tools
Tuff & Stringy 00:00 Tools
He Will Set Your Fields on Fire 00:00 Tools
Willdwood Flower 00:00 Tools
Footprints in the Snow 00:00 Tools
Sally Goodin 00:00 Tools
Randy Lynn Rag 00:00 Tools
Arkansas Traveller 00:00 Tools
Black Jack Davy 00:00 Tools
Weeping Willow 00:00 Tools
False Hearted Lover 00:00 Tools
Forsaken Love 00:00 Tools
Jimmy Brown The Newsboy 00:00 Tools
Pretty Polly 00:00 Tools
Cotton Eyed Joe 00:00 Tools
John Henry Blues 00:00 Tools
Pike Country Breakdown 00:00 Tools
Riff-Raff 00:00 Tools
Clinch Mountain Backstep 00:00 Tools
Mandolin Medley 00:00 Tools
Journey's End 00:00 Tools
Tango For A Sad Mood 00:00 Tools
Silver Bells 00:00 Tools
Last Date 00:00 Tools
Columbus Stockade Blues 00:00 Tools
Black Mtn Blues & Soldier's Joy 00:00 Tools
Salt Creek 00:00 Tools
Reno Ride 00:00 Tools
Big Sandy River 00:00 Tools
Sheik of Araby 00:00 Tools
San Antonio Rose 00:00 Tools
Adam & Eve 00:00 Tools
Texas Gales 00:00 Tools
Kickin' Mule 00:00 Tools
When You're Smiling 00:00 Tools
Ragtime Annie 00:00 Tools
Durham's Reel 00:00 Tools
Barefoot Nellie 00:00 Tools
Nine Pund Gammer 00:00 Tools
Black Mountain Blues(Rag) & Soldier's Joy 00:00 Tools
Laughing Guitar 00:00 Tools
Listen To The Mocking Bird 00:00 Tools
Texas Gales & Blackberry Rag 00:00 Tools
Bury Me Beneath The Willow Tree 00:00 Tools
Alabama Jubilee 00:00 Tools
Black Mountain Blues (Rag) 00:00 Tools
Ragtme Annie 00:00 Tools
Alabama Jubilee 1973 00:00 Tools
Barfoot Nellie 00:00 Tools
Why You Been Gone So Long 00:00 Tools
Never Ending Love 00:00 Tools
Vaccination For The Blues 00:00 Tools
Blackberry Rag 00:00 Tools
Tuff and Stringy [Stereo] 00:00 Tools
Last Thing on my Mind 00:00 Tools
Hong Kong Hillbilly (Nashville West) 00:00 Tools
Alabama Jubliee - 1973 00:00 Tools
Guitar Pickin' Man 00:00 Tools
Julius Finkbine's Rag - True Stereo 00:00 Tools
Nashville West 00:00 Tools
Last Date [Stereo] 00:00 Tools
Mother-In-Law 00:00 Tools
Everybody Has One But You 00:00 Tools
Hong Kong Hillbilly 00:00 Tools
Lost Highway - 1973 Studio Recording 00:00 Tools
Way Downtown - True Stereo 00:00 Tools
Billy in the Lowground - True Stereo 00:00 Tools
Fire On the Mountain - True Stereo 00:00 Tools
Make Up Your Mind 00:00 Tools
Soldier's Joy and Black Mountain Blues (Rag) - True Stereo 00:00 Tools
I'm Tied Down To You 00:00 Tools
Nature's Child 00:00 Tools
Hey Juliana 00:00 Tools
Kickin' Mule - True Stereo 00:00 Tools
New River Train - True Stereo 00:00 Tools
She's Gone 00:00 Tools
Don't Pity Me 00:00 Tools
Riff-Raff [Stereo] 00:00 Tools
If We Could Read 00:00 Tools
Made Of Stone 00:00 Tools
Moonlight Waltz - Live 1973 00:00 Tools
Hong Kong Hillbilly (Nashville West) [Stereo] 00:00 Tools
Sheik of Araby - True Stereo 00:00 Tools
The Crawdad Song - True Stereo 00:00 Tools
Lost Highway 00:00 Tools
Mother-In-Law [Stereo] 00:00 Tools
Gotta Go See The World 00:00 Tools
Old Joe Clark - Live 1973 00:00 Tools
Sally Goodin' - Instructional Version 00:00 Tools
Why Can't We Be 00:00 Tools
Adam & Eve (Backing Track For Legarde Twins) 00:00 Tools
Not Enough Of Me To Go Round 00:00 Tools
Hey Juliana [Stereo] 00:00 Tools
Julius Finkbine's Rag 00:00 Tools
Tuff and Stringy 00:00 Tools
Farewell Blues - Instructional Version 00:00 Tools
Rocks In My Head 00:00 Tools
Don't Pity Me [Mono Version] 00:00 Tools
Black Mountain Blues & Soldier's Joy 00:00 Tools
Make Up Your Mind [Stereo] 00:00 Tools
Listen to the Mockingbird 00:00 Tools
Byrds - Nashville West 00:00 Tools
Slat Creek 00:00 Tools
New River Train 00:00 Tools
I'll Live Today 00:00 Tools
Mental Revenge 00:00 Tools
I'm Tied Down to You [Mono Version] 00:00 Tools
Black Mountain Blues (Rag) - Instructional Version 00:00 Tools
Beaumont Rag 00:00 Tools
Freeborn Man 00:00 Tools
Fire On The Mountain 00:00 Tools
Way Downtown 00:00 Tools
Dear Landlord 00:00 Tools
Gotta Go See the World [Mono Version] 00:00 Tools
She's Gone [#] [Stereo][#] 00:00 Tools
Kickin' Mules 00:00 Tools
I'll Live Today [Stereo] 00:00 Tools
Adam and Eve [Backing Track] [#] [Backing Track][#][Version] 00:00 Tools
Nature's Child [#] [Stereo][#] 00:00 Tools
Crawdad Song 00:00 Tools
If We Could Read(Backing Track) 00:00 Tools
Everybody Has One But You [Mono Version][#] 00:00 Tools
Guitar Pickin' Man [#] [Stereo][#] 00:00 Tools
Moonlight Waltz 00:00 Tools
If We Could Read [Mono Version] 00:00 Tools
Why Have You Been Gone So Long? 00:00 Tools
The last thing on my mind 00:00 Tools
No Title Yet Blues 00:00 Tools
Why You Been Gone So Long? 00:00 Tools
Sally Goodin Meets The Byrds 00:00 Tools
He Will Set Your Fields On Fir 00:00 Tools
Soldier's Joy 00:00 Tools
Flop-Eared Mule 00:00 Tools
Ode To Billie Joe 00:00 Tools
Cuckoo Bird 00:00 Tools
Yesterday's Train 00:00 Tools
Adam Eve 00:00 Tools
Tuff & Stringy - Session 00:00 Tools
Ode To Billie Joe (instrumental) 00:00 Tools
Not Enough of Me to Go Round [Stereo] 00:00 Tools
Why Can't We Be [Alternate Version] [Alternate Version] 00:00 Tools
Made of Stone [Mono Version][#] 00:00 Tools
Soldier's Joy & Black Mountain Rag 00:00 Tools
If We Could Read [Backing Track][#][Version] 00:00 Tools
Birmingham 00:00 Tools
Buckaroo [#] [Stereo][#] 00:00 Tools
Buckaroo [Stereo][#] 00:00 Tools
Rocks in My Head [Mono Version] 00:00 Tools
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Clarence White (born Clarence LeBlanc) (June 7, 1944 – July 14, 1973) was a guitar player for Nashville West, The Byrds and the Kentucky Colonels. His parents were French-Canadians from New Brunswick, Canada. The father, Eric White, Sr., played fiddle, guitar, banjo and harmonica, and his children, Roland, Eric Jr., Joanne and Clarence took up music at a young age. The Kentucky Colonels Born in Madawaska, Maine, the family followed relatives in 1954 to Burbank, California, and the White children eventually formed a band called the Three Little Country Boys, and soon secured a regular spot on a local radio program, and had attracted the interest of country star, Joe Maphis. In 1958 the band cut their first single, and had become well enough known to land several appearances on the Andy Griffith Show. In late 1962, the Country Boys became the Kentucky Colonels. Despite their successes, the Colonels were having a harder time making a living playing bluegrass. The folk boom had been staggered by the British Invasion in 1964, but the death blow, ironically, was dealt in mid-1965 with the release of Mr. Tambourine Man by the Byrds and Subterranean Homesick Blues by Bob Dylan. While they did attempt to experiment with electric instrumentation, this was only met with indifference from rock audiences and consternation from their folk and country fan base. By October of '65, the Colonels dissolved as an ongoing unit after playing their final show on Halloween night. The Byrds After the dissolusion of the Kentucky Colonels, White found employ as a session guitarist in Los Angeles, playing on early records of The Monkees, and performed at night with future Byrd Gene Parsons in the group Nashville West. Along with the International Submarine Band and the Ian Dunlop-led Flying Burrito Brothers, the band was one of the first to play a seamless blend of country and rock in modern pop music. White's association with the Byrds began in earnest in 1966, when he contributed his distinctive playing to former member Gene Clark's solo album With the Gosdin Brothers; he and Gene Parsons briefly joined Clark's touring band shortly thereafter. Striking up an acquaintence with Byrds bassist Chris Hillman (who played mandolin in bluegrass combo the Hillmen before electing to join the rock wave) during the Clark sessions, White contributed twangy lead guitar to two of his songs from the album Younger Than Yesterday: Time Between and The Girl With No Name. Both of the country flavored songs were a bit of a stylistic departure for the group, who until that point had rarely strayed from folk or psychedelic rock. White was invited back to record a lead guitar solo for Change is Now on The Notorious Byrd Brothers. With its utilization of echo and delay and emphasis upon texture rather than melody, the piece has been favorably compared to the later work of Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois. He would also contribute to Sweetheart of the Rodeo, the group's Gram Parsons-led foray into traditional honky-tonk, but much of his work on the album is obscured by Nashville pedal steel. After the abrupt departure of Parsons in 1968, with Hillman following not long after, White was finally invited to join the reconstituted Byrds in September 1968, remaining until the group was finally dissolved by Roger McGuinn in 1973. The White-era group (McGuinn, White, Gene Parsons, and bassists John York & Skip Battin), while never held in the same esteem as the original band and often dismissed as being little more than McGuinn and his backing band, would maintain a loyal following into the early 70s and record five albums to somewhat favorable reception. However, while the original group's ability to play live was often questioned, the latter-day Byrds--propelled by the intertwining lead/rhythm guitars of White and McGuinn--were considered to be one of the live powerhouses of the epoch. Never one to abandon his roots, White was infamous for downplaying his onstage virtuosity, maintaining the stern "poker face" composure common amongst bluegrass musicians. Despite being on the road for the majority of the year (poor business decisions had left the band in wallowing debt, forcing McGuinn to continue to use the Byrds moniker and interminable stretches of road work), White continued to play sessions during his Byrds tenure, alternating with Ry Cooder as guitarist on Randy Newman's 12 Songs and collaborating with the insurgent singer-songwriter Jackson Browne on his albums. Periodically fronting the group, White sang the Browne composition Jamaica Say You Will on Byrdmaniax and the bluegrass standard Farther Along, providing the title for the group's final album Farther Along. Post-Byrds and Death By 1972 the pace of the group had slowed down considerably; while they would mount two more tours with percussionist Joe Lala onboard, much of McGuinn's attentions had been diverted to a possible reunion of the original Byrds, contingient on his disbanding of the "other" Byrds. After fufilling their final obligations in early 1973, the Clarence White-era Byrds broke up. White remained busy throughout early 1973. In addition to more Browne sessions, he joined with Peter Rowan, David Grisman, fiddler Richard Greene and bassist Bill Keith to form the bluegrass supergroup Muleskinner. The group backed up Bill Monroe on a TV broadcast and made some preliminary recordings, all of which were in the vein of contemporary bluegrass or "newgrass". After the death of White, Rowan and Grisman would team up with fiddler Vassar Clements, Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead on his original instrument of banjo, and bassist John Kahn to mine similar territory with Old & In The Way. His final road jaunt was a three-date "country-rock" package tour with the likes of Gram Parsons, Emmylou Harris, Sneaky Pete Kleinow, and Chris Etheridge. Even though they had presumably been acquainted with one another in the past, Parsons and White would develop a fast friendship after what was by all acounts a very acrimonious reacquaintence. White was tragically killed on July 14, 1973 by a drunken driver while loading his equipment in his car following a spur-of-the moment reunion gig with the Colonels. Especially shaken by his death was Gram Parsons, who would lead a singalong of "Farther Along" at the funeral service and conceive his final song before his own death, "In My Hour of Darkness", as a partial tribute to White. The driver who hit him, Yoko Ito, received a one-year suspended sentence and lost her driver's license. Musical Influence Clarence White almost single-handedly legitimized the acoustic guitar as a lead instrument in bluegrass. With few exceptions, before Clarence, the guitar was strictly a rhythm instrument. Tony Rice, arguably the greatest living bluegrass guitarist, cites his friend Clarence as his primary musical influence. Rice owns and plays Clarence's highly-modified 1935 Martin D-28. David Grier and Russ Barenberg are two other highly acclaimed acoustic guitarists who were heavily influenced by White's innovative and highly sophisticated guitar work. On the electric side of the guitar spectrum, White was similarly influential. With fellow Byrd Gene Parsons, White invented the b-bender device. This device raises the b (second) string of the guitar a whole step by the use of pulleys and levers attached to the upper strap knob and the second string on the guitar. It is activated by pushing down on the neck, and produces a "pedal steel" type sound. Subsequently, his Telecaster sound became at least as revered as his bluegrass playing. Marty Stuart was one player highly influenced by White's playing; he owns and regularly plays White's now-legendary Fender Telecaster. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.