T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2558.1 | I second the motion ... | DEMING::CLARK | Wheels of Confusion | Wed Jul 29 1992 09:03 | 9 |
| Tony is my favorite acoustic guitar player. Check out the first and
second Blake/Rice collaborations with Norman Blake (called Blake/Rice
and Blake/Rice 2). I saw him live last year at the Old Vienna Coffehaus
in Westboro MA and it seemed like the whole Tony Rice Unit wsa just
plain tired; everything was very tight but there wasn't a lot of
energy. However, I also have a PHENOMENAL soundboard tape of the
same band last year at the Winterhawk festival; tons of energy.
- Dave
|
2558.2 | | RICKS::ROST | Evil twin of Billy Ray Cyrus | Wed Jul 29 1992 09:08 | 7 |
| As far as new Rice Unit recordings, Tony seems to have been spending
most of his time in collaborations like the aforementioned Blake/Rice
albums and one with his brothers. The band live mixes it up more now
than in the past, that is there are a lot of vocal tunes and bluegrass
as opposed to when I saw him in 1982 and it was all jazz instrumentals.
Brian
|
2558.3 | Blake/Rice - label ? | FLYWAY::CHAOT::WIEDLER | they could never be blue | Wed Jul 29 1992 09:57 | 5 |
| Thanks for the infos. Norman Blake and Tony Rice... sounds
interesting! Do you know which label produced the Blake/Rice
albums?
FeliX
|
2558.4 | | RICKS::ROST | Evil twin of Billy Ray Cyrus | Wed Jul 29 1992 10:06 | 2 |
| Blake/Rice albums are both on Rounder. The second one has a guest shot
form Doc Watson as well.
|
2558.5 | Dawg music | ESCROW::RUDNICK | | Wed Jul 29 1992 11:31 | 10 |
| To hear more Tony Rice, also check out the David Grismann Quartet. The
one I know of most is ACOUSTICITY on uh... maybe Rounder, I can check.
This is a continuation of Grismann's work with Muleskinner (Opus 57,
ie: Dawg music) and has Tony Rice playing the guitar. Tony plays on many
of Grismann's albums.
There is a book of Tony Rice transcriptions. It includes, I think, the
first three Tony Rice solo/unit albums.
Ben.
|
2558.6 | Bluegrass Albums | FROST::SIMON | Birds can't row boats | Wed Jul 29 1992 11:55 | 22 |
|
There's also lots of good Tony Rice stuff on the five Bluegrass
Band Albums also on rounder. The Bluegrass Band is an allstar
band comprised of Rice, Jerry Douglas, Dowyle Lawson and others.
The latest one (V5) "Sweet Sunny South" came out almost two
years ago, around the same time as the Rice Brothers album.
Actually I think the last thing he put out was the last Blake/
Rice album which was over a year ago. His last solo record was
"Native American" which is real good. I think that was put out
in 1989 or so.
Tony played at Winterhawk again this year and put on a fantastic
show as usual. His voice didn't sound quite as worn as it did
last year, but I sure wish he'd give up smoking...
Other good Tony Rice recordings can be found with J.D. Crowe and
the New South (including Ricky Skaggs and a 17 year old Jerry
Douglas).
_gary
|
2558.7 | Tony Rice book - publisher / ISBN ? | FLYWAY::CHAOT::WIEDLER | they could never be blue | Thu Jul 30 1992 02:56 | 15 |
| I have got the two David Grisman Quintet albums with Tony, the second one is
called "Hot Dawg" - the Jazzers Steff Grappelli (violin) and Eddie Gomez
(Bass) do Django Reinhardt's famous "Minor Swing" with them. I have also got
the David Grisman Rounder album where Tony appears.
Another album from the early times I've got is "California Autumn" - the
first one published under Tony's name I think. He plays with J.D Crowe, Jerry
Douglas, Mike Auldridge and others on this album.
I didn't know that there is a Tony Rice transcription book out... is it in
the same series as the Clarence White one ? Does anybody know publisher /
ISBN number?
Thanks,
FeliX.
|
2558.8 | the Tony book. | ESCROW::RUDNICK | | Thu Jul 30 1992 15:34 | 10 |
| re: -1, Tony Rice Transcription Book
No, the Tony Rice book is not in the same series as the Clarence book.
The Tony book has that "hand-written" look and came as a CBC binder
type book. No pictures, no stories, just the notes and guitar
transcription. I will check the book tonight for publisher
information and post it tomorrow. Now to write myself a note...
Ben.
|
2558.9 | More Tony.. | TREES::SIMON | Birds can't row boats | Fri Jul 31 1992 08:00 | 8 |
|
I was just listening to the newest Mike Auldridge album "Treasures
Untold" and there are a couple of good tunes with Tony on 'em.
The old Ernest Tubb song "Walking the Floor Over You" and a Bob
Wills type tune "Driving Nails In My Coffin". Great Stuff..
_gary
|
2558.10 | Tony's book details. | ESCROW::RUDNICK | | Fri Jul 31 1992 08:31 | 32 |
| The book Tony Rice Guitar/Tony Rice Tablature has no library number of
any kind. The most outstanding features are a copyright notice from
1984 by Tony Rice, and an ALL RIGHTS RESERVED note. The INTRODUCTION
talks about Tony being the "leading acoustic guitar player now living"
and his impact on both "bluegrass guitar and the new acoustic music
that started the Dawg era". It goes on to say that Tony's playing is
precise and highly syncopated and that transcriptions have been "far
and few between".
Uh... the book contains "accurate" transcriptions of each of the breaks
on the albums:
- Tony Rice Guitar - Rebel Records SLP 1582
- Tony Rice - Rounder 0085
- Manzanita - Rounder 0092
Other then that the book recommends getting these records from the
following places which leads me to believe the book would be
available from the following places as well:
- Country Record Sales
Box 191
Floyd, VA 24091
- Elderly Instruments
P.O. Box 14210
Lansing, MI 48901
Good luck tracking this book down. If it helps, I got my copy from7
The Fiddler's Choice music store in Jaffrey, NH. There phone number is
(603) 532-8440.
Ben.
|
2558.11 | My 3 favs | VMSDEV::CLABORN | Banjo is to music as Spam is to food | Fri Aug 07 1992 12:27 | 14 |
| Gee... no one's mentioned my top 3 favorite Tony Rice albums... in order of
release:
Tony Rice - Guitar
Manzanita
Cold on the Shoulder
Although I think the 5 Bluegrass Album Band albums are terrific (I switched
from guitar to banjo ;^), they are all done in a traditional bluegrass
format; ie, 99% of the time, the guitar provides rhythm only; very few lead
breaks. The above 3 releases definitely highlight the guitar, primarily in the
bluegrass genre.
- George
|
2558.12 | tony rice unit - the definitive bluegrass band of the '80's | TINCUP::MADDUX | no title yet blues | Fri Aug 07 1992 15:25 | 37 |
| I've got most of the albums that Rice has recorded - and he's on a lot! In the
TRU (Tony Rice Unit) vein, my favorite is still: Manzanita - this is a MUST have
for anyone really interested in the acoustic guitar in bluegrass. Also, he recorded
this one WITHOUT A BANJO. Sorry, J.D., no offense.
In the jazz grass (spacegrass) vein, my favorites are: Acoustics and Backwaters, which
represent the beginning and culmination of his jazzgrass exploration period. Acoustics
was recorded when he first formed the TRU, in about 78, after 3 years with J.D. Crowe,
and David Grisman respectively.
Rice has two audio and two video series available on Homespun tapes. They take you
through different styles from fiddle tunes (red haired boy, cattle in the cane,
jerusalem ridge), to spacegrass (Backwaters, Devlin, Swing 51). I've also got the
previously mentioned transcriptions of three albums - and they are highly recommended.
Tony will be in Lyons, Colorado at the 20th Rocky Mountain Bluegrass Festival -
THIS WEEKEND - along with Norman Blake and Alison Krause - and closing the show
Sunday night is Rice and Blake. I'm drooling... slightly.
One other thing... Pick up EmmyLou Harris... there's Tony. On Bela Flecks DRIVE,
there he is... on Bill Emersons 'Home of the Red Fox'- he's there again, and
on Eric Thompson 'Flatpicking Guitar' he's playing rhythm (this last one from about
72.)
P.S. Here's some Ricecake trivia - everyone knows that Tony has Clarance's guitar -
and that he used to carry it around when he was a kid and hanging out with the
White brothers... but who got him his first full time professional gig?
Twas none other than.... (drum roll please)...
Sam Bush. That's right friends, Sam hired him to replace
Dan Crary in the Bluegrass Alliance - (of course prior to the formation
of New Grass Revival). And now you know the 'rest of the story'.
|
2558.13 | who carries Tony's Guitars around...? | FLYWAY::CHAOT::WIEDLER | they could never be blue | Mon Aug 10 1992 04:41 | 12 |
| Re: .-1
"Manzanita" is good! Very good dobro playing by Jerry Douglas as well!
So, if the TRU is the bluegrass band of the 80ies, who is the bluegrass band
of the 90ies...? Is there a new young guitar genius around ? Talking about
others who worked with Tony: what is David Grisman doing these days? And Mark
O'Connor? Haven't seen any D. Grisman record for ages (I remember that I was
not very impressed by the David Grisman Quintett albums which were released
after Tony left).
FeliX.
|
2558.14 | Grisman with Garcia/O'Connor | RICKS::ROST | I'm getting cement all over you | Mon Aug 10 1992 09:03 | 11 |
| Grisman just released an album with Jerry Garcia. After he lost his
Warners contract he recorded a couple of straight bluegrass albums as
well as a jazz album with drummer Hal Blaine.
O'Connor has released some new-age-ish albums for Warner Bros. where he
overdubbed everything. More recently he recorded an album with a bunch
of Nashville session hot shots showcasing some incredible picking all
the way around. Of course, he's also the #1 session fiddler in
Nashville, which eats up some of his time 8^)
Brian
|
2558.15 | more Tony Rice... | FLYWAY::CHAOT::WIEDLER | they could never be blue | Thu Oct 01 1992 03:31 | 11 |
| I picked up Tony's CD "Me and my guitar" from 1987 and listened to it quite
often the last two weeks - I really like it. Very "compact" sound by Tony,
Jerry Douglas, Sam Bush, Vassar Clements, Jimmy Gaudreau and others - and
really nice versions of songs by Lightfoot and Dylan (!). Now I am looking
for more... are "Native American" and "Cold on the Shoulder" on Rounder, too?
Thanks,
FeliX.
P.S. Re: .12: How was Tony Rice at the Rocky Mountain Bluegrass Festival ?
|
2558.16 | | PICKIN::HALL | Have less, Be more. | Thu Oct 01 1992 11:40 | 33 |
| Felix,
I know that Cold on the Shoulder is on Rounder... It's got a red-hot
version of "John Hardy" - great playing, not just by Tony, but
incredible mandolin and banjo as well.
At Rocky Mountain, Tony did his usual angry-at-the-sound-people act.
Funny how the sound was great for the other acts, but he brings his own
mics/wireless stuff, cranks it to 11, and then complains about the
sound. His voice was the worst I'd ever heard it; sounds like it's
time to get out the old knife and fix the vocal cords again.
As far as the band's sound, they didn't have the "compact" or clean
sound of "Me and My Guitar". It could have been just the sound
equipment, but Tony was consistently too loud, and sometimes his
brother (White Rice) was too loud as well.
Of course, his playing made up for everything... He did two TR Unit
sets, and one with just him and Norman Blake. The last was, IMHO, his
best of the festival. I'd heard some folks saying that the "new
generation" of flatpickers (i.e., those higher-faster-louder folks who
believe that morenotes=moremusic) is kinda leaving Tony behind. Well,
he threw in enough freaking incredible licks to put that to rest, and
still made plenty of music as well.
Usually, when people discuss a musical genre, no matter how narrow,
there are always at least two or three people (if not ten) who can
reasonably be called the best. However, when you discuss flatpicking,
it seems there are very few who name anyone but Tony Rice as the best.
So what if he's a jerk?
Charlie
|
2558.17 | | TINCUP::MADDUX | no title yet blues | Fri Oct 02 1992 12:57 | 63 |
|
Well Charlie, I have to disagree with a couple of your comments. ;^)
>> At Rocky Mountain, Tony did his usual angry-at-the-sound-people act.
>> Funny how the sound was great for the other acts, but he brings his own
>> mics/wireless stuff, cranks it to 11, and then complains about the
>> sound. His voice was the worst I'd ever heard it; sounds like it's
>> time to get out the old knife and fix the vocal cords again.
Rice bashing seems to be as popular these days as bad banjo jokes. After the
incident you mentioned Saturday night, all I heard around the campfire was
similar statements, and I'll agree they weren't entirely unfounded, as it's
true that Tony comes off as a jerk sometimes. It's also true that the sound
manager can really wreck an acoustic band sound. The cats running the
sound on stage had last worked for Guns and Roses - or the equivalent - and
had the notion that the monitors should be loud enough to make your ears
bleed. This causes the feedback problems. Tony does bring his own mikes,
and that's normal - most guitarists have a high quality mike that they use
to ensure they're going to get a good sound. Let's get this right though,
he's not cranking anything to 11 - he's acoustic - and doesn't have a
knob to fiddle. All he hears is the sound coming out of the monitors,
and he plays lightly. If you ever get the chance to hear him
acoustically it's not loud at all - very controlled and beautiful tone.
That's the warm sound that he wants out front.
My band played the set just prior to Tony's Sunday afternoon set. Four
times I asked the sound guy to fix the sound in the stage monitors,
without success. This was really frustrating. Everytime I leaned into
the microphone to take a break the damn monitors would start feeding back
- so I finally just let the banjo take the break. Not a good situation -
and even worse when the band is a lead guitar band, like Rice. We're not.
We use the banjo primarily as the lead instrument, so the crowd probably
didn't even notice.
After the set I was listening to the first couple of tunes that Rice did
and it was painful. Squeal, roar, and garbage. Who can compete with that?
I realized finally that it was the sheer volume of the monitors on stage
that was causing the problem - had nothing to do with what was out front.
I told the guy running the mains - and in 20 seconds they had dropped
the monitor volume and cleaned up the sound.
Rice smiled, gave a thumbs up to the sound guy, the band smiled and relaxed,
and I've never seen a better show. They were red hot. Peter Warnick came
on stage and played some straight ahead bluegrass - and it was one of the
best shows I've ever had the privilege to see.
BTW, Tony's voice has improved. It's pretty easy to sit back in the
audience and throw stones - looks to me like he's trying to hang in there.
I hope he pulls it out, because the recordings that he made when his voice
was strong (from 75-85) were as good as anything ever done.
>> As far as the band's sound, they didn't have the "compact" or clean
>> sound of "Me and My Guitar". It could have been just the sound
>> equipment, but Tony was consistently too loud, and sometimes his
>> brother (White Rice) was too loud as well.
BTW, they band plays to what they hear coming out of the monitors.
The mix out front is completely seperate - and so they could be mixing it
perfectly on stage and still have it screwed up out front. That's why
Hot Rize paid Frank to travel with them, and is why they always sounded
perfect out front. It seems to me that a lot of these acts, including
Rice, Alison Krause, and Seldom Scene should get that message. Maybe they
think the margin on their shows is too slim to afford it.
|
2558.18 | | RICKS::ROST | Baba Ram Bolinski | Fri Oct 02 1992 13:45 | 18 |
| >The mix out front is completely seperate - and so they could be mixing it
>perfectly on stage and still have it screwed up out front. That's why
>Hot Rize paid Frank to travel with them, and is why they always sounded
>perfect out front.
I'll agree with the first statement, but the last two times I saw Hot
Rize, they sounded *awful* relative to the other acts on the festival
bill. Their sound man had them too loud in the mains and they were
pretty distorted. I was surprised, they would have been better off
letting the sound crew do their sound.
Actually, where they really need their own sound guy is on the
*monitor* board, not the main board.
My $0.02.
Marshall Stax
|
2558.19 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Arms raised in a V | Fri Oct 02 1992 14:56 | 4 |
| > The cats running the sound on stage had last worked for Guns and Roses
Maybe that's the problem. GnR haven't been happy with their monitor
mix this tour either...
|
2558.20 | | ZYDECO::MCABEE | Raised by humans | Fri Oct 02 1992 18:45 | 4 |
| I haven't been following Tony's work for several years. Did I miss something
about his voice? Has he had a problem?
Bob
|
2558.21 | | PICKIN::HALL | Have less, Be more. | Mon Oct 05 1992 14:03 | 7 |
|
<<Well Charlie, I have to disagree with a couple of your comments. ;^)
Gee, Mike, for a minute, I was wondering if you were going to speak
up... %-)
Charlie
|
2558.22 | | RICKS::ROST | Baba Ram Bolinski | Mon Oct 05 1992 14:17 | 10 |
| >I haven't been following Tony's work for several years. Did I miss something
>about his voice? Has he had a problem?
I don't know the particulars, but I've heard Tony has had throat
trouble due to heavy smoking and his voice certainly doesn't have the
high range it used to have. One story I heard was the real reason for
that period in the early eighties where he was doing all instruemtnals
was his doctor told him to stop singing for awhile.
Brian
|
2558.23 | Don't get me started.... | BSS::STPALY::MOLLER | Fix it before it breaks | Mon Oct 05 1992 15:46 | 12 |
| I've had a lot of problems with sound people also. Nothing more fun than
having the montors shut off in the middle of a song or pulling all of the
bass out of my MIDI mix. When I was at the state fair (Colorado) this
summer, I got a chance to talk to Lou Diamond Phillips (of the movie
LaBamba fame - he was touring with his oldies band), and I asked how
the sound was (he had just finished his sound check - he couldn't get the
drums miked right; I could hear that there was no Kick (Bass) drum), and
he had some choice things to say about the people working the sound. I
totally agree with him. I prefer to bring my own sound person, or run it
myself.
Jens
|
2558.24 | new Tony album soon ? | FLYWAY::CHAOT::WIEDLER | they could never be blue | Tue Nov 10 1992 02:41 | 12 |
| Listened a lot to Tony's albums recently - especially the relatively new "Me
and my guitar" and "Native American". I really like his more folky (less
trad. bluegrassy) style with sax and piano - goes very well with Tony's
guitar... and I anyway like Jerry Douglas' outstanding dobro work.
A great selection of songs, and IMHO: Tony's voice may go down, but somehow
I like his singing better than ever...
I wonder if he is doing a new album soon - I can't wait... anybody heard any
rumours?
FeliX.
|
2558.25 | | E::EVANS | | Tue Nov 10 1992 08:15 | 6 |
| I noticed that Tony Rice made at least one album with David Grisman. I have
liked what I have heard of David Grisman and would like to sample some Tony
Rice. Are there any Rice/Grisman albums that you could recommend?
Jim
|
2558.26 | Tony & David | FLYWAY::CHAOT::WIEDLER | they could never be blue | Tue Nov 10 1992 08:52 | 15 |
| Re: .-1
Tony Rice worked with the David Grisman Quintett for a couple of years and I
can highly recommend the albums "The David Grisman Quintett" and "Hot Dawg"
- both of them are classic examples of their "new acoustic" jazz music.
If you look for more bluegrass style albums there is "The David Grisman
Rounder Album" where Tony sings and plays guitar. Another excellent
bluegrass album where both Tony and David appear is banjoist Bill Keith's
"Something Auld...Something Bluegrass".
These albums are all from the late 1970ies I think. I wonder myself if there
are some more recent examples of a Rice/Grisman cooperation...
FeliX.
|