Alison Krauss had signed to
Rounder Records, and at age 16 released her 1987 debut solo album
Too Late to Cry. Soon after, she joined Union Station, with guitarist Jeff White, bassist John Pennell, and banjo player Mike Harman as her backing band. Their debut album in 1989 was
Two Highways. Pennell wrote three of the album's 12 songs. It also included the traditional tunes "Wild Bill Jones" and "Beaumont Rag", along with a cover of
The Allman Brothers' "
Midnight Rider". Krauss' contract with Rounder Records required her to alternate between releasing a solo album and an album with Union Station. Her second solo album, ''
I've Got That Old Feeling'' was released in 1990, with Pennell writing three of the album's twelve tracks. By 1992, White, Pennell, and Harman departed from the group, leaving Krauss as its sole original member. Her next Union Station album,
Every Time You Say Goodbye, was released that February. The album went on to win her a second Grammy for Best Bluegrass Album of the year. This was the first to feature guitarist
Tim Stafford, banjo player
Ron Block, mandolinist
Adam Steffey, and bassist
Barry Bales. Besides Block, who wrote three of the album's 14 tracks, Pennell contributed to its title track. After Stafford left the band later that year, he was replaced by mandolin and guitar player Dan Tyminski of the
Lonesome River Band, who wrote "Another Day, Another Dollar" for
Every Time You Say Goodbye. During 1993, Tyminski briefly rejoined the Lonesome River Band and was briefly replaced by John R. Bowman who toured with Union Station until 1994, when Tyminski returned as a permanent member.
So Long So Wrong, Union Station's next album, was released in 1997 and won the
Grammy Award for Best Bluegrass Album. George Graham said its sound was "rather untraditional" and "likely [to] change quite a few ... minds about bluegrass". Included on the album is the track "It Doesn't Matter", which was featured in the second season premiere episode of
Buffy the Vampire Slayer and was included on the
Buffy soundtrack in 1999. Adam Steffey left Union Station in 1998, and was replaced by renowned
Dobro player Jerry Douglas, who had been playing on the solo and band albums from
Too Late To Cry onwards. Their next album,
New Favorite, was released on August 14, 2001. The album went on to win the Grammy for Best Bluegrass Album, with the single "The Lucky One" winning a Grammy as well.
Lonely Runs Both Ways was released in 2004, and eventually became another Alison Krauss & Union Station gold certified album. Ron Block described
Lonely Runs Both Ways as "pretty much... what we've always done" in terms of song selection and the style, in which those songs were recorded. Krauss believes the group "was probably the most unprepared we've ever been" for the album and that songs were chosen as needed rather than planned. Returning with Union Station, Krauss released a new album called
Paper Airplane on April 12, 2011, the follow-up album to
Lonely Runs Both Ways (2004).
Mike Shipley (the engineering mixer) said that it took a lot of time to do the album because of Krauss' non-stop
migraines. In 2014, she and her band Union Station toured with
Willie Nelson and Family, with special guests
Kacey Musgraves, and
The Devil Makes Three. During an interview on the podcast
Toy Heart with Tom Power, Krauss announced a new album with Union Station to be released in 2025. The album,
Arcadia, was officially announced on January 29, and was released on March 28, 2025 via Down the Road records. Tyminski left the band around this time, during which Russell Moore of the
IIIrd Tyme Out band took over as its fifth guitarist.
Willie Watson was announced "as support" on all dates of the five-month 2025 North American tour, kicking off April 25 in Atlanta and continuing through September. Also by this point,
Stuart Duncan joined their touring band as their fiddle player. ==Members==