J.D. Crowe

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
A Hundred Years From Now 00:00 Tools
Runaround 02:55 Tools
Talk it All Over With Him 02:55 Tools
Belleville, Georgie 02:17 Tools
Model Church 04:14 Tools
Ride the Train 03:18 Tools
God`s Own Singer 02:51 Tools
I'll Never Shed Another Tear 04:14 Tools
Miner`s Lady 02:47 Tools
Old Home Place 02:48 Tools
Suger Coated Love 02:48 Tools
Train 45 02:26 Tools
I Believe in You Darling 02:34 Tools
Blackjack 00:00 Tools
Chalk Up Another One 03:10 Tools
Mr. Engineer 00:00 Tools
Ocean Of Diamonds 00:00 Tools
Rovin' Gambler 03:00 Tools
Born To Be With You 02:02 Tools
Mississippi River Raft 02:18 Tools
Black Jack 02:07 Tools
Head Over Heels 02:18 Tools
Down Where the River Bends 00:00 Tools
Bear Tracks 00:00 Tools
One Tear 02:18 Tools
Helplessly Hoping 02:30 Tools
Stony Moutain Twist 02:30 Tools
Devil in Disguise 02:18 Tools
Cheyenne 02:30 Tools
Cora Is Gone 00:00 Tools
On My Way Back To The Old Home 02:33 Tools
Sin City 00:00 Tools
Ramblin' Boy 00:00 Tools
Helen 02:17 Tools
Dark Hollow 02:33 Tools
So Afraid Of Losing You Again 00:00 Tools
Please Search Your Heart 00:00 Tools
Bouquet In Heaven 00:00 Tools
It's Me Again Lord 00:00 Tools
Sitting Alone in the Moonlight 00:00 Tools
The Model Church 00:00 Tools
Will You Be Satisfied That Way 04:15 Tools
Come on Down to My World 04:15 Tools
I'll Stay Around 00:00 Tools
Nashville Skyline Rag 02:16 Tools
Blue Bonnet Lane 02:33 Tools
SayYou Lied 02:39 Tools
Somehow Tonight 02:18 Tools
Nashville Blues 02:35 Tools
She's Gone, Gone, Gone 02:35 Tools
Back to the Barrooms 02:33 Tools
Belleville, Georgia 02:18 Tools
Blue Ridge Cabin Home 03:12 Tools
Is It Too Late Now 03:12 Tools
I'm Walkin' 02:20 Tools
There'll Be No Blind Ones There 02:27 Tools
My Window Faces the South 00:00 Tools
You Are What I Am 02:25 Tools
Some Old Day 02:33 Tools
Take Me in the Lifeboat 02:35 Tools
Portrait Of The Blues 02:25 Tools
Age 02:35 Tools
Railroad Lady 00:00 Tools
It's Me Again, Lord 00:00 Tools
Little Bessie 02:27 Tools
You Go To Your Church 02:25 Tools
You`re No Longer Mine 02:38 Tools
the Old Home Town 02:38 Tools
Summer Wages 05:39 Tools
Cryin' Holy 02:18 Tools
Goin' Up 00:00 Tools
Journey's End 00:00 Tools
Lefty's Old Guitar 02:18 Tools
I Shall Be At Home With Jesus 00:00 Tools
Tennessee Blues 04:10 Tools
You can have her 02:18 Tools
Showboat Gambler 00:00 Tools
The Old Home Place 02:18 Tools
Look For Me 00:00 Tools
She's Just A Little Cute Thing 03:42 Tools
Are You Lost In Sin 00:00 Tools
No Mother Or Dad 00:00 Tools
The Leaves That Are Green 01:38 Tools
God's Own Singer 00:00 Tools
Little Girl in Tennessee 02:13 Tools
Rock, Salt And Nails 02:25 Tools
Let The Spirit Descend 00:00 Tools
Pike County Breakdown 00:00 Tools
Orange Blossum Special 02:36 Tools
Philadelphia Lawyer 00:00 Tools
(I'll Be Your) Stepping Stone 00:00 Tools
Will You Be Lonesome Too? 00:00 Tools
Oh Heaven 00:00 Tools
Unfaithful One 02:27 Tools
Sally Goodin' 03:21 Tools
Sally Goodin 00:00 Tools
Home Sweet Home Revisited 03:26 Tools
We'll Meet Again Sweetheart 02:38 Tools
You Can Be A Millionaire With Me 02:53 Tools
Ten degrees and getting colder 02:27 Tools
I'll Talk It All Over With Him 00:00 Tools
I'll Talk It Over With Him 02:38 Tools
In My Next Life 02:27 Tools
Ten Degrees (Getting Colder) 02:21 Tools
My Home Ain't In the Hall of Fame 03:14 Tools
Orange Blossom Special 02:38 Tools
Rock Salt & Nails 00:00 Tools
Before I Met You 02:38 Tools
Grandpa's Shoes 02:38 Tools
You're Not Easy To Forget 03:26 Tools
Miner's Lady 02:48 Tools
Lady 03:14 Tools
She Knows When You're On My Mind Again 00:00 Tools
Ten Degrees 00:00 Tools
Too Often Left Alone 00:00 Tools
Why Don't You Tell Me So? 00:00 Tools
Sugar Coated Love 03:26 Tools
Just Loving You 03:26 Tools
I'm A Hobo 02:18 Tools
I'm Thinkin' Tonight of My Blues Eyes 03:14 Tools
Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain 02:18 Tools
Loneliness 00:00 Tools
My Blue Eyes You Left In Tennessee 03:26 Tools
Home Sweet Home (Revisited) 02:18 Tools
Don't Give Your Heart To A Rambler 02:48 Tools
I'm Walking 03:26 Tools
J's Tune 03:26 Tools
White Freightliner 03:14 Tools
Come Back Sweetheart 00:00 Tools
Steppin' Stone, (I'll Be Your) 03:26 Tools
Long Journey Home 03:26 Tools
Waiting For You 03:26 Tools
Home Run Man 03:14 Tools
Same Old Day 00:00 Tools
White Freight Liner Blues 00:00 Tools
  • 24,457
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  • 5,821
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  • 24457
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The word “legend” gets used too often these days, but when it comes to James Dee “J. D.”Crowe, no other will do. His pioneering work with Jimmy Martin’s Sunny Mountain Boys, begun while he was still a teenager in the mid–1950s, contributed to scores of bluegrass classics and set a standard to which legions of banjo players and harmony singers still aspire. The Rounder Records debut he recorded in 1975 with his trailblazing band, The New South, is widely recognized as one of the genre’s most important recordings and continues to inspire new generations more than a quarter of a century after its release. He has been sited as an influence on Terry Baucom and Sammy Shelor's banjo styles. While subsequent albums have explored both hard–driving bluegrass and creative country blends. With the Bluegrass Album Band, he reintroduced audiences to the songs of the first generation’s masters in a series of influential albums that spanned more than a decade and a half. He’s earned Grammy and IBMA awards, been honored by his native state and acclaimed around the world. Today, his name is synonymous with unsurpassed mastery of bluegrass tradition, bold innovation, the nurturing of fresh talent and an uncompromising devotion to musical excellence. Yet even as he continues to earn recognition for a lifetime of accomplishment, J. D. also continues to lead a hard-working bluegrass band that has earned comparison with the greatest of the New South’s earlier lineups. Dwight McCall, Harold Nixon and Rickey Wasson all grew up musically within a hundred miles of Crowe’s long time home ground of Lexington, Kentucky. Inspired not only by the New Southˆs classic albums but by personal appearances, the Crowe repertoire and approach to bluegrass are as familiar to them as bluegrass itself. Supplemented at times on personal appearances by outstanding instrumentalists like fiddle players Ronnie Stewart, Aubrey Haynie and Michael Cleveland, they’re equally at home with the bluegrass classics, the wealth of the New South repertoire and their own additions to it. Dwight McCall was born in Maryland, moving to Cincinnati shortly before he began playing mandolin and singing in earnest as a teenager. The son of bluegrass great Jim McCall, he first drew attention as a member of Union Springs, releasing three well-received CDs and touring regionally between 1992 and 1995. He stopped onto the national stage as a member of Charlie Waller’s Country Gentlemen before joining the New South in 1996. He appeared on J. D. Crowe & The New South’s Come On Down To My World (1999), taking the lead on the title track as well as several other songs, including his own “I Don't Know.” His powerful tenor has been paired with the Lost & Found’s Scottie Sparks on his self–titled debut of 1999, and with two time IBMA Male Vocalist of the Year Dan Tyminski, both on the latter’s solo album and the award–winning Stanley Gospel Tradition. Rickey Wasson is a lifelong Kentuckian who began playing guitar when he was five. After playing in area groups, he joined Southern Blend in 1985, recording three albums with the band and earning a reputation throughout the region as a gifted lead and rhythm guitarist and New South-influenced singer. He recorded his own solo gospel album, Songs From The Old Country Church (1989), with a guest list that included Alison Krauss, for whom he returned the favor in 1993 by filling in on tour dates as a member of Union Station. Rickey joined the New South in 1998, taking part on several of Come On Down To My World's tracks as guitarist. He also appeared with J. D. Crowe & The New South on the live album, At Bean Blossom: Uncle Pen Days (2000). Like Dwight, Rickey took a hiatus from playing with the New South before returning to the group at the beginning of 2002. Harold Nixon is the least well–known of the New South’s members, but it’s no exaggeration to say that’s a consequence of his youth than his talent. He first came to the New South’s attention playing with John Cosby and the Bluegrass Drifters, a durable central Kentucky outfit, and served a stint with Unlimited Tradition before joining Crowe’s band in early 2002. Harold’s steady, tasteful but energetic bass is an indispensable part of the New South. With a compelling blend of youth and experience, tradition and bold creativity, this is a band as close to the heart of bluegrass today as it — or anyone else — has ever been. When it comes to J. D. Crowe & The New South, no other word but “legend” will do. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.