James Dee Crowe (August 27, 1937 – December 24, 2021) was an American banjo player and bluegrass band leader. He first became known during his four-year stint with Jimmy Martin in the 1950s. Crowe led the bluegrass group New South from 1971 until his death in 2021.
James Dee Crowe was born on August 27, 1937, in Lexington, Kentucky.[1] He began playing the banjo early on and was offered a job with Jimmy Martin's Sunny Mountain Boys, a backup group in 1954.[2][3] Before starting in Martin's band, Crowe played with Pee Wee Lambert and Curly Parker.[4]
Crowe recorded with Martin between 1956 and 1960.[5] In 1961, he formed the Kentucky Mountain Boys, principally performing in the Lexington region.[6]
Crowe stopped releasing new records between the late 1980s and 1992, when he founded a new band.[9]
Kentucky Educational Television in 2008 aired a biography of James Dee Crowe, A Kentucky Treasure: The James Dee Crowe Story, produced by H. Russell Farmer.[10]
Crowe received the Bluegrass Star Award, presented by the Bluegrass Heritage Foundation of Dallas, Texas, on October 15, 2011. The award is bestowed upon bluegrass artists who do an exemplary job of advancing traditional bluegrass music and bringing it to new audiences while preserving its character and heritage.[11]
At first: J.D. Crowe with Jimmy Martin & the Sunny Mountain Boys
edit
J.D. Crowe has recorded 42 studio tracks with Jimmy Martin from late 1956 to August 1960, then in September 1963 and November 1966. A part of these corresponding works has been released in the following LPs (among others):[13]
1960: Good 'N Country (Decca DL7-4016 : tracks: A1-B1, B3-B6, with Paul William: Mandolin, except A5)[14]
1966: Big and Country Instrumentals, (Decca DL7-4891, tracks: A1-A4 and B2, with Vernon Derrick: mandolin, Buddy Spicher: fiddle, Bill Yates (bass) - B5: recorded in 1963, with Bill Torbert: mandolin, Tater Tate: fiddle]))[16]
J.D. Crowe recorded 42 studio tracks with Jimmy Martin, all of which appear in chronological order on the 5CD box-set : Jimmy Martin And Sunny Mountain Boys 1954-1974 (Bear Family BCD-15705); tracks 11–43, 73–76, 107–111)[13][17]
1984 Big Jam Session Recorded Live in 1959 at Johnny Sanders house, Lubbock, TX], with Paul Williams: mandolin and Terry Smith: bass (Old Homestead OH-159).[13]
J.D. Crowe and the Kentucky Mountain Boys
edit
1968: Bluegrass Holiday (with Red Allen (guitar), Doyle Lawson (mandolin), Bobby Slone (bass) (Lemco LP-609, reissued in 1981 on Rebel REB-1598.[13][18][19][20][21]
1970: Ramblin' Boy (Lemco LP-610 – reissued as Blackjack in 1978: Rebel SLP-1583)(Doyle Lawson (guitar, vocal), Larry Rice (mandolin), Bobby Slone (bass)).[13][19]
1971: The Model Church (Lemco LP-reissued in 1978: Rebel SLP-1585)(Doyle Lawson (guitar, vocal), Larry Rice (mandolin), Bobby Slone (bass))[13][19]
1973: Bluegrass Evolution(with Tony Rice: (guitar Lead Vocals) & Larry Rice: (Mandolin)) (recorded by Starday, April 1973; released in 1978 by Gusto GT-0010)[22][13]
1978: You Can Share My Blanket (Rounder 0096) (with Glenn Lawson (guitar, lead Vocals), Jimmy Gaudreau (mandolin), Bobby Slone (fiddle), Randy Best (e-bass); guests: Jim Murphy (Steel Guitar, Dobro), Charlie McCoy (Harmonica)), Karl Himmel (drums)).[19]
1980: My Home Ain't in the Hall of Fame (Rounder 0103) (with Keith Whitley, (guitar, lead vocals), Jimmy Gaudreau, (mandolin), Bobby Slone (fiddle), Steve Bryant, (e-bass) guests: Doug Jernigan (steel guitar, dobro), Jimmy Ashby (drums)).[19]
1982: Somewhere Between (Rounder 0153 (with Keith Whitley, (guitar, lead vocals), Wendy Miller, (mandolin), Bobby Slone (fiddle), Steve Bryant (e-bass), guests: Doug Jernigan (steel guitar, dobro), Kenny Malone (drums), Pete Wade (e-guitar), The Jordanaires (Harmony Vocals))[21]
1982: Live in Japan (Rounder 0159) recorded in Tokyo, 11-1979 (with Keith Whitley, (guitar, lead vocals), Jimmy Gaudreau, (mandolin), Bobby Slone (fiddle), Steve Bryant, (e-bass))[21]
1986: Straight Ahead (Rounder 0202) (with Tony King, (guitar, lead vocals), Wendy Miller, Sam Bush (mandolin), Bobby Slone (fiddle), Jerry Douglas (Resonator Guitar), Randy Hayes (bass, drums)[19]
1994: Flashback (Rounder CD 0322 ) (Richard Bennett (guitar, lead vocals), Don Rigsby (mandolin), Phil Leadbetter (Resonator Guitar), Randy Howard (Fiddle), Curt Chapman (bass)).[24]
1999: Come On Down to My World (Rounder 0422) (Greg Luc (Guitar, Lead Vocals), Buddy Spicher, Glen Duncan (Fiddle), Dwight McCall (mandolin), Phil Leadbetter (Resonator Guitar, Rickey Wasson (guitar), Curt Chapman (bass))[25]
2006: Lefty's Old Guitar (Rounder 0512) (Rickey Wasson (Guitar, Lead Vocals), Dwight McCall (mandolin), Ron Stewart (fiddle), Harold Nixon (bass))[26]
1983: The Bluegrass Album, Vol.3: California Connection (Rounder 0180)
1984: The Bluegrass Album, Vol.4 (Rounder 0210)
1989: The Bluegrass Album, Vol.5: Sweet Sunny South (Rounder 0240)
1996: The Bluegrass Album, Vol.6: Bluegrass Instrumentals (Rounder 0330)
Crowe, Lawson & Williams
edit
2010: Old Friends Get Together (Mountain Home MH 1292)[28]
2014: Standing Tall And Tough Mountain Home MH 1502)[29]
J.D. Crowe, Rickey Wasson
edit
2018: Hats Off To Haggard (Truegrass Entertainment CDTGE90444)
2021: Crowe & Wasson (Truegrass Entertainment TG-9584-1)
As session musician
edit
1963: Charlie Monroe – Bluegrass Sound (REM LP-1003, reissued in 1982 as: Songs He Made Famous by Old Homestead OHCS 304) (feat. J.D. Crowe (banjo), B. Joslin (fiddle), E. Stacy (bass)[15][30]
1965: Charlie Monroe – Lord build me a cabin (REM RL 1010) (feat. J.D. Crowe (banjo), B. Lucas, Paul Mullins (fiddle), K. Whalen, B. Wassumm K. O. Durham, (guitar, T. Sharp (bass)).[15][31]
1969: Joe Green – Joe Greene's Fiddle Album (County 722) (feat. J.D. Crowe (banjo), Roland White (mandolin), Chubby Wise (guitar), Benny Williams (bass))[32]
1970: Dan & Louise Brock – Kentucky Songbag (Donerail 201) feat. J.D. Crowe (banjo), Doyle Lawson (guitar), Bobby Slone (fiddle)).[33][34]
1974: Tony Rice – Freeborn Man (King Bluegrass KB 529) (J.D. Crowe, Larry Rice, Bobby Slone)
1975: Larry Rice – Mr. Poverty (King Bluegrass KB-543) (feat. J.D. Crowe (banjo), Tony Rice (guitar), Ricky Skaggs (fiddle), Jerry Douglas (Resonator Guitar), Bobby Slone (bass), producer : Tony Rice)
1977: Doyle Lawson – Tennessee Dream (County 766, reed.2002, Rebel CD-1778) (feat. J.D. Crowe (banjo), James Bailey (guitar, banjo), Kenny Baker (fiddle), Jerry Douglas (Resonator Guitar), Bobby Slone (bass))
1977: Tony Rice – Tony Rice (Rounder 0085)
1988: David Grisman – Home Is Where The Heart Is (Rounder CD0251/0252) (5 tracks, feat. J.D. Crowe (banjo), Tony Rice (guitar))
2000: Keith WhitleySad Songs and Waltzes (Rounder CD 0399 included 6-tracks from – New South album: Somewhere Between, Rounder 0153) Produced by J.D. Crowe and Don Gant
^ abFriskics-Warren, Bill (December 28, 2021). "J.D. Crowe, Banjo Virtuoso and Bluegrass Innovator, Dies at 84". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 28, 2021.
^Pen, Ron. "Crowe, James Dee". In Kleber, John E. (ed.). The Kentucky Encyclopedia. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 243–244. ISBN 978-0-8131-2883-2.
^Garrett, Charles Hiroshi, ed. (2013). The Grove Dictionary of American Music (2d ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 121. ISBN 978-0-19-531428-1. OCLC 774021205.
^ abGodbey, Frank; Godbey, Marty (1998). Kingsbury, Paul (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Country Music. Oxford University Press. pp. 119–120. ISBN 978-0-19-977055-7. OCLC 707922721.
^"A Kentucky Treasure: The James Dee Crowe Story". KET-Kentucky Educational Television.
^"Bluegrass Heritage Foundation official website". Bluegrassheritage.com. 2010. Retrieved December 28, 2015.
^Kast, Monica. "'A grand gentleman.' Legendary Bluegrass musician J.D. Crowe has died, reports say". Lexington Herald-Leader. Retrieved December 24, 2021.
^ abcdefgChris McGlone discography on Carnegie Mellon’s School of Computer Science
^http://countrydiscoghraphy2.blogspot.com/2017/08/j-d-crowe.html Praguefrank's country discography
^ abcJohnson, Anna Janette (1991). "J. D. Crowe". In LaBlanc, Michael L. (ed.). Contemporary Musicians. Vol. 5. Gale. pp. 34–35. ISBN 0-8103-2211-0. ISSN 1044-2197. OCLC 20156945.
^Erlewine, Michael (1997). All Music Guide to Country: The Experts' Guide to the Best Recordings in Country Music. Hal Leonard LLC. pp. 108–109. ISBN 978-0-87930-475-1.