Introduction and Thanks
Chapter One: Before Bluegrass (1920s-1946)
Chapter Two: Back Then It Was Called Hillbilly Music
(1946-1957)
Chapter Three: Country Gentlemen and The Folk Music Revival
(1957-1966)
Chapter Four: Bluegrass Unlimited (1966-1977)
Chapter Five: Not Seldom Heard or Scene (1977-1991)
Chapter Six: 'A Cold Wind A Blowin' (1991-2018)
Sources
Kip Lornell has taught courses in Ameircan music and ethnomusicology at George Washington University since 1992. Lornell won a 1997 Grammy for Best Liner Notes for Smithsonian Folkways "Anthology of American Folk Music," and Lornell and Charles Wolfe earned the ASCAP-Deems Taylor book award for The Life and Legend of Leadbelly (Harper Collins, 1993). He has been interviewed numerous times on NPR for his expertise on American folk music.
"Kip Lornell has written an outstanding book documenting the
history of bluegrass music in the Washington, D.C., area...Capital
Bluegrass focuses on bluegrass in a specific area, but the book's
implications are wide ranging. Throughout, Kip Lornell provides
information regarding the evolving relationships between the DMV
bluegrass community and the general American culture, and also
between the DMV bluegrass community and surroundings and country
and
folk music industries. Capital Bluegrass: Hillbilly Meets
Washington, DC will appeal to scholars of bluegrass music as well
as to bluegrass fans in search of a good read about an important
location for the
music." -- Philip Nusbaum, Journal of Folklore Research
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