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The David Grisman Rounder Album

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Download links and information about The David Grisman Rounder Album by David Grisman. This album was released in 1993 and it belongs to Country, Songwriter/Lyricist, Acoustic genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 40:18 minutes.

Artist: David Grisman
Release date: 1993
Genre: Country, Songwriter/Lyricist, Acoustic
Tracks: 13
Duration: 40:18
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Hello 0:21
2. Sawing On the Strings 3:24
3. Waiting On Vassar 5:09
4. I Ain't Broke But I'm Badly Bent 2:01
5. Op. 38 3:24
6. Hold to God's Unchanging Hands 3:37
7. Boston Boy 2:27
8. Cheyenne 4:52
9. 'Till the End of the World Rolls 'Round 3:00
10. You'll Find Her Name Written There 2:56
11. On and On 3:48
12. Bob's Brewin' 4:59
13. So Long 0:20

Details

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David Grisman is primarily known as a (perhaps even the) pioneer integrator of jazz into the prog-bluegrass/newgrass/whatever-you-call-it ("Dawg Music" to Grisman) branch of the bluegrass family tree. And with a number of other suspect jazz dabblers (fiddler Vassar Clements, guitarist Tony Rice, and banjo picker Tony Trischka, for instance) on hand, one might expect The Rounder Compact Disc (originally released as The Rounder Record) to be a Grappelli-sounding crossbreed experiment in line with Grisman's longstanding quintet. Yet, despite some string-slingin', fancy-licked solos, The Rounder Compact Disc is really a true blue bluegrass record. Why, this record has enough gospel harmonies, Bill Monroe songs, stories of money lost on spend-thriftin' women, string sawin', and other neat-sounding contractions to keep even your most die-hard hillbilly warm as a mug of Grandpappy's moonshine on a cold Kentucky night. The tricky thing, the "how'd he do that?" part, is that in addition to (in spite of?) it's unabashed down-home country feel, this album is anything but traditional. Instrumentals like "Waiting on Vassar," "Op. 38," and "Boston Boy" integrate a complex network of orchestral voicings, solos, and interactive group play, and throughout the album solos by hotshots like Clements, Rice, Jerry Douglas, and Grisman himself betray more than a passing interest in other styles of improvisation. In the coming years, the experimental wings of bluegrass would begin to incorporate electric instruments and more overtly bear the influence of jazz and rock. But The Rounder Compact Disc is some of the earliest evidence that bluegrass can be progressive without sacrificing any of its institutional twang.