The Steep Canyon Rangers


I just saw and heard on The Tonight Show a great group I was unaware of, The Steep Canyon Rangers, and they are great! Drumset, upright bass, acoustic guitar, harmonica, mandolin, and fiddle, and excellent 3-part harmony, doing a real good song. I gotta get a record!
128x128bdp24
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I removed the spam. Please use the "Report button" at the bottom right hand corner of the post if you see anymore Spam. 
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Appears to be a whole lot of spam on this here thread. Moderators, could you zap the spam, pretty please?
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If you ever get a chance, check out my neighbors, Balsam Range. Their music is right there with the Steep Canyon Boys, and Buddy Melton is as good a tenor as you'll hear anywhere. Great recordings, too.

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Steep Canyon Rangers is an American bluegrass band from Brevard, North Carolina. Though formed in 2000, the band has become widely known since 2009 for collaborating with actor/banjoist Steve Martin.
Showbox for iOS
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Hey, I have an iphone 8 and I installed ios 12 beta version to show to my audience then i downgraded it to ios 11.4 again after that xos launcher was not working on my phone. RRB Group D
Martin likewise revealed his record's lead single. "Caroline" is a banjo-slathered number that figures out how to be unfailingly sprightly even as it dismembers a fierce separation. The melody opens not long after the title character has unceremoniously dumped Martin's storyteller, he's still hung up on her: "Would you be able to reveal to me why you cleared out me remaining in the stopping structure/Caroline, I was the nearly culminate sweetheart ever for you/And you even said that to me one time at the Olive Garden." http://showboxappdownload.co/showbox-for-pc/
@soundermn,

That's the one I've been referring to. Actually, I believe they've done at least two lps together.?


Why people don't read through threads before responding, I don't know. Especially when they are so short, such as this one.
If you like Steep Canyon Rangers, check out the album they did with Steve Martin. Outstanding!

Fun to ask your friends if they can tell who's playing the smoking banjo!

@ramseurrecords,

Is your moniker self explanatory? Are you located in Ramseur, N.C.?
"Out In The Open" was produced by Joe Henry. It was recorded at the Fidelitorium in North Carolina (Mitch Easter's studio). It was recorded live with no overdubs. QRP pressed the vinyl. 
@bdp24,

Check out this one.... "Jubilation Day" off of Steve Martin & the Steep Canyon Rangers. (lp/of coarse).
Proud to say there are from N.C. I own "Rare Bird Alert", it won a Grammy. It’s a fun record.
The album’s twelve all-original bluegrass/ Americana tracks were written by Sharp, Humphrey, Platt and Guggino in varying degrees, including a few co-writes with fellow musicians such as Phil Barker of the Carolina bluegrass band Town Mountain.
see: ShowBox Lucky Patcher

Thanks a million Walter and Bill. Walter, unfortunately I’m on the West Coast (Vancouver, WA), so the only Bluegrass Festival in my neighborhood is the annual Hardly Strictly Festival in San Francisco, which all my old San Jose (hometown) friends go to. I haven’t made it to one yet, but intend to.

Bill, I get email notices of your blogs/reviews, but hadn’t yet seen your review of the Joe Henry-produced SCR album. Excellent review, touching on everything, both musically and sonically. The music is my priority, good sound being a welcome bonus. I appreciated your mention of The Band, whom I was reminded of (in a modest way) while watching and listening to SCR on the TV. I love that SCR recorded a number of songs playing and singing live in the studio, as The Band did on their 2nd ("Brown") album. Gotta get the SCR LP!

@bdp24 

Yes, you are spot on. If you ever get a chance to go to Merlefest--Steep Canyon plays it about every year--you will see a bunch of kids who are already unbelievable musicians because they had guitars, banjos, or fiddles put in their hands as soon as they were old enough to hold them. Where I live (in Appalachia, and you better know how to pronounce it :)), there are scores of bluegrass family bands. Some make it big, while others go no further than playing summer barbecues, church socials, and county fairs, though they may be just as talented. It is most definitely part of the culture, just as you say. A lot of kids here grow up hearing it and playing it. Not all of them become Alison Krauss or Steep Canyon Rangers, but some do.

If you ever get a chance, check out my neighbors, Balsam Range. Their music is right there with the Steep Canyon Boys, and Buddy Melton is as good a tenor as you'll hear anywhere. Great recordings, too.

Walter, I thought the name sounded familiar! What most surprised me was that although they look relatively young, they play the music with a sense of authority, like they’ve been doing it forever. A lot of the Americana bands sound like they were raised on Rock, only discovering bluegrass/hillbilly/etc. fairly recently. "Real" Bluegrass musician’s start playing at a young age (in some "rural" families, everybody plays and sings), and by the time they are in their teens are real good players and singers. Marty Stuart was hired by Lester Flatt when he was 14 years old!
See them if you can. They are lots of fun live. Sometimes, Steve Martin (yeah, THAT Steve Martin) plays with them. We were at Merlefest this past weekend, and they closed down the festival.