That High Lonesome Sound

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That High Lonesome Sound album cover
Album Information
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Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 47:31

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Wow! What a great sound!!

fchapman

I wish I had found this group years ago. I LOVE the songs, the lyrics, and the talent on the instruments is awesome. Wish they had stayed together.

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One Of The Best

Spiral_Axis

It's fitting that this group was together for nine months. They gave birth to some of the finest bluegrass music ever recorded. In a genre brimming with talent past and present, Old & In The Way stands as one of the greatest bluegrass bands to ever pick a tune. High praise......Yes but well deserved

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Bluegrass Supergroup

jimbo55

Peter Rowan, Jerry Garcia (on banjo!), Vassar Clements, and David Grisman. This is an essential cd for bluegrass fans.

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They Say All Music Guide

Twenty-one years after the first album Old & In the Way came the second, an amazing development for a group that existed for only nine months and about 30 gigs in 1973. That High Lonesome Sound, like its predecessor, Old & In the Way, was drawn from the group’s stand at the Boarding House in San Francisco in October 1973. And like that release, it combined traditional bluegrass material, in this case standards like “Orange Blossom Special” and “Uncle Pen,” with interpolations from the world of rock & roll (“The Great Pretender”) and new originals that touched on contemporary issues (Peter Rowan’s “Lonesome L.A. Cowboy,” a comment on the Southern California country-rock scene of the time). Old & In The Way was a great crossover album, largely because the bandmembers had enjoyed careers in rock, especially banjo player and singer Jerry Garcia, moonlighting from his day job in the Grateful Dead. What was less-well-known was that the group had real roots in the music, as Neil V. Rosenberg pointed out in the second album’s liner notes. Four of the five members had experience in bluegrass, and two had been members of Bill Monroe’s Blue Grass Boys. Old And In The Way was a hybrid, but it was far more bluegrass than rock. – William Ruhlmann

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