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About Arthur Smith
They successfully contested the case and received back royalties. Ironically, his conversion to Country music became a success largely because of the Jazz influences he incorporated into his guitar style. Ironically, his conversion to Country music became a success largely because of the Jazz influences he incorporated into his guitar style.

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Arthur Smith: Duelling Banjos

Arthur Smith: Duelling Banjos  Composed by Arthur Smith. For guitar and 5-string banjo. From the motion picture "Deliverance". Format: guitar/banjo single. With standard notation, guitar tablature, banjo tablature, chord names and strum and pick patterns. Bluegrass. G Major. 11 pages. 9x12 inches. Published by Warner Brothers.



Arthur Smith: Duelling Banjos - Piano Solo - From "Deliverance"

Arthur Smith: Duelling Banjos - Piano Solo - From "Deliverance"  Composed by Arthur Smith. For piano. From the motion picture "Deliverance". Format: piano solo single. Bluegrass and Movies. A Major. 6 pages. 9x12 inches. Published by Warner Brothers.
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Updated Bluegrass News and Resources

American roots music
American roots music American roots music is a broad category of music including country music, bluegrass, gospel, ragtime, jug bands, Appalachian folk, blues, Tejano and zydeco, and Native American music. The music is considered "American" because it is either native to the United States or here varied enough from its origins that it struck musicologists as something distinctly new; it is considered "roots music" because it served as the basis of music later developed in the United States, including rock and roll, rhythm and blues, and jazz. This article is the first in the Music of the United States series. '''American roots music: Native American, European and African melting pot''' 1940s and 50s 1960s and 70s 1980s to the present African-American music Native American music Latin, Tejano, Hawaiian,

O Brother, Where Art Thou? (soundtrack)
Thou? (soundtrack) The O Brother, Where Art Thou soundtrack was the soundtrack of music from the movie O Brother, Where Art Thou a United States film starring George Clooney. Set in the rural US South in the years of the Great Depression, three friends escape from a prison chain gang and search for fortune and love. The adventure is loosely based on Homer's Odyssey. The soundtrack uses US music from the era when the film is set (American roots music): music appropriate to that time and place, a marked break from the current Hollywood practice. The score, produced by T-Bone Burnett, prominently features bluegrass, gospel, blues and country music. With the exception of one vintage track, most tracks are recent recordings by musicians who play in the vintage style. The tracks

Be Good Tanyas
Frazey Ford The Be Good Tanyas are a Canadian traditional music group, with influences in folk, country and bluegrass. The group, which comprises Frazey Ford (guitar, vocals), Samantha Parton (guitar, mandolin, banjo, vocals) and Trish Klein (guitar, banjo, vocals), was formed in British Columbia and played their first concerts in Vancouver in the late 1990s. In 2000 they embarked on a North American tour that ran from Vancouver to New Orleans, before returning to BC to record their first album Blue Horse, supposedly in a shack. The record, which combined old-time music standards such as "Oh Susannah" and "The Lakes Of Pontchartrain" with self-penned songs like "The Littlest Birds (sing the prettiest songs)", was well received in the folk-roots movement and highly praised for the quality of the harmony vocals and

Mark Atkins
Plant and Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin, Hothouse Flowers, and the London Philharmonic Orchestra, among others. Discography Didgeridoo Concerto 1994. Plays Didgeridoo 1995. Didgeridoo Dreamtime Arc Music, 1999. The Sound of Gondwana: 176,000 Years in the Making (compilation), Black Sun Music/Celestial Harmonies 1997. The Rough Guide to Australian Aboriginal Music (compilation), World Music Network. See also List of Australian Aboriginal musicians Music of Australia Mark Atkins is also the name of a bluegrass musician.


Musical band
composed of practically any combination of musicians. However, which instruments are found in a band is often determined by the style of music being played and, to an even greater degree, the specific piece being played. Types of bands big band bluegrass band boy band girl band girl group concert band (aka wind band, symphonic band) jazz band jug band marching band military band composite group pop group punk band rock band salsa band

Béla Fleck
the band Béla Fleck and the Flecktones, which he has described as "a mixture of acoustic and electronic music with a lot of roots in folk and bluegrass as well as funk and jazz." [1] Fleck was drawn to the banjo when he first heard Earl Scruggs play the theme song for the television show Beverly Hillbillies. He received his first banjo at age fifteen, and within a few years began performing with travelling bands.[1],[2] Before the Flecktones, Fleck played with Newgrass Revival and several other bluegrass bands. After a 1998 phone call with bassist Victor Wooten, Fleck and Wooten formed Béla Fleck & the Flecktones, rounded out with harmonica player Howard Levy and Wooten's percussionist brother Roy "Future Man" Wooten, who plays synthesizer-based percussion. With the Flecktones, Fleck has been

Banjo
be on the tuning head with the others, and the string pass through a tube. Some banjos have a resonator on the back of the drum or a wristpiece on the edge of the drumhead. The drumhead was traditionally made of vellum, although plastic is now a very commonly used substitute. The banjo neck is usually fretted, although fretless versions do also exist. The strings are most commonly metal, but nylon is often used and in the past gut was common. The banjo can be played in several styles and is used in various forms of music. In bluegrass music, which uses the five-string banjo extensively, it is often played in Scruggs style. American old-time music also typically uses the 5-string banjo, but it is played in different styles, notably claw-hammer

American roots music
American roots music American roots music is a broad category of music including country music, bluegrass, gospel, ragtime, jug bands, Appalachian folk, blues, Tejano and zydeco, and Native American music. The music is considered "American" because it is either native to the United States or here varied enough from its origins that it struck musicologists as something distinctly new; it is considered "roots music" because it served as the basis of music later developed in the United States, including rock and roll, rhythm and blues, and jazz. This article is the first in the Music of the United States series. '''American roots music: Native American, European and African melting pot''' 1940s and 50s 1960s and 70s 1980s to the present African-American music Native American music Latin, Tejano, Hawaiian,

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