Early Dawg
Early Dawg is the debut solo studio album by American mandolinist David Grisman. With Del McCoury on guitar and vocals, Jerry McCoury on bass, Bill Keith on banjo plus other well-known musicians, Grisman offers a mix of traditional songs, compositions by Bill Monroe and his own contributions, mainly of bluegrass and progressive bluegrass style. [2]
Early Dawg | ||||
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Live album by | ||||
Released | 1964 | |||
Recorded | 1964 | |||
Genre | Progressive bluegrass, jazz | |||
Label | Sugar Hill | |||
Producer | David Grisman | |||
David Grisman chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Track listing
All tracks composed by David Grisman except where indicated
- "Fanny Hill"
- "Sugar Hill Ramble"
- "Little Maggie" (Traditional)
- "Blue Grass Twist" (Bill Monroe)
- "Shenandoah Breakdown" (Bill Monroe)
- "Opus 57"
- "The Prisoner's Song" (Guy Massey)
- "John Henry" (Traditional)
- "Rawhide" (Bill Monroe)
- "Little Sadie" (Traditional)
- "Dark Hollow" (Bill Browning)
- "Dear Old Dixie" (Lester Flatt, Earl Scruggs)
- "Opus 38"
- "I Wonder Where You Are Tonight" (Johnny Bond)
- "Caravan" (Duke Ellington)
- "Black Mountain Rag" (Traditional)
Personnel
- David Grisman – mandolin, baritone vocal (14)
- Del McCoury – guitar, vocals
- Artie Rose – guitar (2, 6, 10, 13, 15)
- Bill Keith – banjo (2, 6, 10, 15)
- Winnie Winston – banjo
- Frank Wakefield – mandolin (16)
- Jerry McCoury – bass
References
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