The Kentucky Mountain Boys J.D. Crowe formed the prototype for the New South, the Kentucky Mountain Boys, around 1964. Members of the line-up included
Red Allen, Larry Rice, Bobby Slone, and
Doyle Lawson. The group recorded three albums on Lemco Records:
Bluegrass Holiday, ''Ramblin' Boy
, and a gospel album, The Model Church''. Lawson left the group in 1971 to join the
Country Gentlemen, and was replaced by Larry Rice's younger brother,
Tony Rice, a guitar prodigy and student of
Clarence White.
Bluegrass Evolution The first album recorded as the "New South" was
Bluegrass Evolution. This album seems to have been influenced by the
Osborne Brothers and by more mainstream country music; it incorporates drums, pedal steel and electric instruments to a far greater degree than most bluegrass bands of the period.
J.D. Crowe & The New South ("Rounder 0044") After
Bluegrass Evolution, Larry Rice left the band. A young
Ricky Skaggs replaced him, and
Jerry Douglas also joined the group for this 1975 eponymously titled album, more commonly known by its
Rounder Records catalogue number ("Rounder 0044"). Stylistically, this album marked a sharp turn from
Bluegrass Evolution, while still experimenting with pedal steel, percussion and a piano on the tracks "You Are What I Am" and "Cryin' Holy", the majority of the album featured songs played with traditional bluegrass instrumentation (although on the slower numbers, Skaggs doubled his fiddle with a viola) by up-and-coming singer songwriters such as Gordon Lightfoot, Utah Phillips and Rodney Crowell, as well as incorporating more traditional songs such as "Old Home Place", "Some Old Day", and "Sally Goodin". This one album changed the nature and direction of bluegrass music to a large extent.
The Keith Whitley Years Not long after Rounder 0044's release, Tony Rice departed the band to join
David Grisman's band. Skaggs and Douglas soon followed suit, forming their own band,
Boone Creek. After experimenting with a few lineups, Crowe hired bassist Steve Bryant, mandolinist Jimmy Gadreau, as well as former Ralph Stanley guitarist
Keith Whitley. This band produced three albums: ''My Home Ain't In the Hall of Fame
, Live in Japan
, and Somewhere Between
. All three of these albums saw the band returning toward the sound of the Bluegrass Evolution'' album, incorporating more country elements, with Crowe even playing electric guitar more than banjo on "Somewhere Between". ==Discography==