The Father of Blue Grass Music
The Father of Blue Grass Music is the second compilation album by American bluegrass musician Bill Monroe and his band, the [List of List of Blue Grass Boys members|Blue Grass Boys members|Blue Grass Boys]. Released by RCA Camden on August 4, 1962, it features 12 of the 16 songs the band recorded at their first sessions in October 1940 and October 1941, all of which were originally released as singles or B-sides by Bluebird Records. The album was later reissued by BMG Heritage Records in 2002 as part of its RCA Country Legends series.
Background
Bill Monroe and his Blue Grass Boys completed two recording sessions for their first label, Bluebird Records : on October 7, 1940, and October 2, 1941. They recorded eight songs at each session, which made up two runs of four singles released between November 1940 and May 1942. Shortly thereafter, the 1942–1944 musicians' strike begun and the band were unable to record, during which time Monroe signed a new deal with Columbia Records, thus ending his association with RCA Victor/Bluebird. The 1940 session featured a Blue Grass Boys lineup of guitarist and vocalist Clyde Moody, fiddler Tommy Magness, and bassist Bill "Cousin Wilbur" Wesbrooks; by the time of the 1941 session, Moody and Magness had been replaced by Pete Pyle and Art Wooten, respectively.Release
The Father of Blue Grass Music was originally released by RCA Camden on August 4, 1962. The title was inspired by the emergence of "The Father of Bluegrass" as an honorific nickname for Monroe, which was credited by future Blue Grass Boys member Tom Ewing in his 2018 biography of Monroe as having been first coined by Mike Seeger in the liner notes for the 1959 Folkways Records compilation Mountain Music Bluegrass Style, and later repeated in the 1961 book A History and Encyclopedia of Country, Western, and Gospel Music, written by Linnell Gentry. The album contains 12 of the 16 songs recorded at the first two Blue Grass Boys sessions. The compilation was reissued several times in later years, including in 1977 by Pickwick Records, and in 1987 by RCA International. On June 11, 2002, the album was repackaged with the remaining four songs from the 1940 and 1941 sessions, and re-released as part of the RCA Country Legends series by BMG Heritage Records.Reception
The Father of Blue Grass Music received positive reviews from music critics. In a piece for Country Music mentioning the 1987 reissue of the album, Rich Kienzle claimed that "Anyone with even the slightest interest in bluegrass music needs this one, for it is truly where the Monroe dynasty begins." In a four-star review of the 2002 RCA Country Legends release, AllMusic writer Tim Sendra claimed that the album "does a nice job showing the roots of bluegrass", but suggested that "This set is a not an essential purchase; a collection of Monroe's Columbia years would fit that bill. However, it is a good set for those who wish to dig a little deeper." Robert Christgau gave the reissue an A− rating, reflecting that "these 1940-41 recordings share a sense of innocent fun with the mountain music Monroe was just then jazzing up".Personnel
Tracks 1–4 and 7–9- Bill Monroe — mandolin, guitar, vocals
- Clyde Moody — guitar, mandolin, lead vocals
- Tommy Magness — fiddle
- Bill "Cousin Wilbur" Wesbrooks — string bass
- Bill Monroe — mandolin, vocals
- Pete Pyle — guitar
- Art Wooten — fiddle
- Bill "Cousin Wilbur" Wesbrooks — string bass, lead vocals