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About Arthur Smith
During most of the 50’s and 60’s, Smith had both a daily and a weekly show on WBTV, with the weekly program being syndicated on numerous other stations. The Arthur Smith Show on television started in the 50s and became so popular that by the mid-70s, it was still networked to most of the USA; artists from all fields were eager guests. In the 70’s, Smith recorded for Monument Records and also for CMH, in which he had a financial interest for a time.

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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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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.



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Music of Missouri
Music of Missouri This article is a supplemental part of the Music of the United States series. Roots music: before 1940 1940s and 50s 1960s and 70s 1980s to the present African-American music Native American music Latin, Tejano, Hawaiian, Cajun, Puerto Rican and other immigrants St. Louis, Missouri was an important center of jazz and blues, as well as country and bluegrass. Punk rock St. Louis had a vibrant New Wave scene, including Trained Animals, The Ooze Kicks, The Strikers and Zany Misfits. Nearby Belleville, Missouri spawned influential hardcore punk band Blind Idiot. The most famous hardcore band though was St. Louis' White Pride, a notorious White Power band. The University of Missouri at Columbia had an influential annual Thrash Bash, inaguarated in 1983 with Causes

Music of Kansas
Music of Kansas This article is a supplemental part of the Music of the United States series. Roots music: before 1940 1940s and 50s 1960s and 70s 1980s to the present African-American music Native American music Latin, Tejano, Hawaiian, Cajun, Puerto Rican and other immigrants For many years, Kansas has had a vibrant country and bluegrass scene. Punk rock Topeka, Lawrence, Kansas and Kansas City, Missouri were, together, an influential hardcore punk scene. The Embarrassment, Mortal Micronotz, Exploding Rodents, The Slabs, Near Death Experience, Orange Doughnuts (The OD's) and Tunnel Dogs were among the most popular, most centered at Lawrence's University of Kansas campus. The Mortal Micronotz were probably the most famous outside of the area. Reference Blush, Steven. American Hardcore: A Tribal History. 2001. Feral

Double bass
of the violin family of string instruments, which includes the violin, viola, and cello. It resembles the other members of the family, but is much larger and has slight differences in shape. Other names for the instrument (especially when used in folk, bluegrass, and jazz music) include string bass, acoustic bass, bass violin, doghouse bass, dog-house, bull fiddle, contrabass, and upright bass. A person who plays this instrument is called a double-bassist or contrabassist. The double bass, unlike the rest of the violin family, is derived from the viol family of instruments, in particular the Violone, a bass viol. Because of this, and also to avoid too long fingerstretch, it is tuned in fourths whereas the violin, viola and cello are tuned in fifths. Other differences with the violin, viola and

Jerry Garcia
aborted career in the US army, he became involved in the psychedelic revolution and subsequent musical movement brewing in the San Francisco Bay area in the mid 1960s. Jerry Garcia's outlet was music, and his subsequent involvement with the Grateful Dead was to see his fame burgeon. From 1965-1995 the band toured almost constantly, developing a fan base, known as Deadheads, renowned for its intensity and devotion. In addition to the Grateful Dead, he had numerous side projects. The most notable being the Jerry Garcia Band which had a variety of several different groupings of musicians, often described as Jerry Garcia Band, Legion of Mary, Reconstruction, and finally The Jerry Garcia Band, he also was involved with various acoustic vehicles such as Old and In the Way, and other Bluegrass bands,


Improvisation
up as you go along. This term is usually used in the context of music or theater. In music, jazz and Bluegrass are well-known for using improvisation. It features in many kinds of traditional music, including flamenco, Carnatic music, Pygmy and other African music, and was once an important element in classical music (see cadenza and figured bass). Improvisation can be structured, with certain rules constraining the improvisation (for example, "make up a song about bicycles", "use these chord changes", and so on), or can have no such constraints (free improvisation). A growing number of contemporary composers are requiring a greater degree of improvisation in their music, including Pauline Oliveros, Terry Riley, and Christian Wolff. Most aspiring actors do a lot of improv. It is a staple of drama and theater

Dobro
guitar. Dobro is a trade name, originally used by the Dopyera brothers and now owned by Gibson Musical Instruments. The instrument is sometimes referred to as a resonator guitar, resophonic guitar, or Hawaiian guitar. However, dobro remains the most common name in use. The dobro was introduced to bluegrass music by Josh Graves, who played with Flatt and Scruggs, in the mid-1950s. Other notable bluegrass players include Mike Auldridge, Jerry Douglas, and Rob Ickes. It was used in older country music, notably by "Brother Oswald" of Roy Acuff's band, but has been largely supplanted by the pedal steel guitar.

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

Paul Kelly (musician)
memorable songs stretching back more than 20 years. His music has ranged from bluegrass to studio-oriented dub reggae, but his core output comfortably straddles folk, rock, and even some country influences. His lyrics, simply and laconically voiced, have managed to speak to Australian experiences and history perhaps more broadly and directly than any other artist, from "Bradman", about the Australian cricketer Sir Donald Bradman, through "To Her Door", a tale of a struggling couple's breakup and attempts at reconciliation, to his most recent popular success "Every Fuckin' City", a darkly comic story of a backpacker chasing a former girlfriend through a Europe stripped of distinctive national character. Despite his acclaim, it took 20 years until his 1997 greatest hits collection Songs From The South gave him the sales figures matching his

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