1970s In 1975, Kathy Kallick,
Laurie Lewis, Barbara Mendelsohn, Dorothy Baxter, and Sue Shelasky performed three songs at an open mic. This marked the beginning of the Good Ol’ Persons, one of the first all-women bluegrass bands. They released an album in 1977 (by which time Sue was replaced by brother Paul Shelasky) and enjoyed a twenty-year run, releasing five albums and touring throughout the U.S., including two appearances at
Bill Monroe's Beanblossom Festival, as well as performances in
Canada and
Europe.
1980s By 1980, the Good Ol' Persons lineup consisted of Kathy Kallick (guitar), John Reischman (
mandolin), Sally Van Meter (
dobro),
fiddler Paul Shelasky (later Kevin Wimmer), and
bassist Bethany Raine (later Beth Weil, then
Todd Phillips). They were one of the first
bluegrass bands to incorporate
Latin,
swing,
folk,
Cajun, and other musical genres into their music, as well as featuring the songwriting, lead playing, and vocal harmonies of women.
1996-Present After the Good Ol' Persons disbanded, Kallick released three albums under her own name for Sugar Hill Records. In 1996, she formed the Kathy Kallick Band. Personnel for their first ten years and two albums included Tom Bekeny on mandolin, Amy Stenberg on bass, Avram Siegel on banjo, and, for the second, fiddler Brian Wicklund. The current iteration consists of Kallick, Bekeny, Annie Staninec on fiddle, Greg Booth on dobro and
banjo, and Cary Black (previously Dan Booth) on bass; they have released three albums:
Between the Hollow and the Highrise (2010),
Time (2012), and
Foxhounds (2015), and the band continues to tour widely across
North America and
Europe. ==Other musical collaborations==