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About Nickel Creek
"Musically, this band never stays the same," says Thile. It's so comfortable, and yet we're all focused on bettering ourselves on a solo level. Each brush paints color in a different way.

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Nickel Creek Music Sheet


Nickel Creek: Why Should The Fire Die?

Nickel Creek: Why Should The Fire Die?  Performed by Nickel Creek. Songbook. Note-for-note transcriptions for all the parts from this bluegrass band's 2005 release. Features all 14 tracks, including: Doubting Thomas, Eveline, Why Should the Fire Die, and more. Series: Hal Leonard Transcribed Scores. 144 pages. Published by Hal Leonard.


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Nickel Creek: Nickel Creek

Nickel Creek: Nickel Creek  (Transcribed Scores) Performed by Nickel Creek. Guitar tablature songbook for guitar, voice, banjo, mandolin, fiddle, string bass and bouzouki. Series: Hal Leonard Transcribed Scores. 127 pages. Published by Hal Leonard.
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Nickel Creek: This Side

Nickel Creek: This Side  Performed by Nickel Creek. Guitar tablature songbook for guitar, voice, fiddle, mandolin, bouzouki and string bass. Series: Hal Leonard Transcribed Scores. 151 pages. Published by Hal Leonard.



Updated Frequently - Bluegrass News and Content

Open Range at Pine Creek Cafe (Bozeman Daily Chronicle)
The Livingston based western swing band, Open Range and the Swing Stampede will be performing at the Pine Creek Cafe Saturday, May 14, starting at 7 p.m.

Open Range at Pine Creek Cafe (Bozeman Daily Chronicle)
The Livingston based western swing band, Open Range and the Swing Stampede will be performing at the Pine Creek Cafe Saturday, May 14, starting at 7 p.m.

The Whites to appear on Pennington stage (Princeton Times Leader)
In years past, the Pennington Festival has attracted superstars like Nickel Creek and Grand Ole Opry legends the Osborne Brothers. That tradition continues this year when Opry stars The Whites take the stage at 7 p.m. Saturday for the eighth annual Pennington Festival on the Butler lawn.

Tone poets (The Boston Phoenix)
First there’s the quick thud thwack of a trap kit. Then a plectrum scrapes across nickel-plated steel strings, a low piano key is plunked, and a few craggy guitar strings strike a chord that’s at once muted.


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,

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

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.

American Beauty (album)
by the Grateful Dead, released in November of 1970 (see 1970 in music). The cover can also read American Reality. The mostly-acoustic album is beloved by fans as perhaps the highest-quality studio recording by the band (along with Workingman's Dead), who are known primarily for their live shows. "Truckin'"/"Ripple" was released as a single. American Beauty peaked at #30 on Billboard's Pop Albums chart (North America), while the single, "Truckin'" peaked at #64 on the Pop Singles chart. American Beauty was the second album released in 1970, after Workingman's Dead. Both albums were extremely innovative at the time for their fusion of bluegrass, rock and roll, folk music and, especially, country music. Like Workingman's Dead, the album did not include any guitar solos from Jerry Garcia. The band's influences can be

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Lighthouse Tale
from: Wea International (02 July, 2002)




Little Cowpoke
from: Choo Choo Records (08 September, 1998)




KTCZ Cities Sampler Volume 15 - 15th Anniversary
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Why Should the Fire Die?
from: Sugarhill (09 August, 2005)




Nickel Creek
from: Phantom (06 January, 2004)




Get Rolling! An Ultra-Easy, No Fail Introduction to Bluegrass Banjo
from: Hal Leonard Publishi (08 February, 2005)




Gather at the River - A Bluegrass Celebration
from: Bmg Special Products (01 May, 2001)




All Star Bluegrass Celebration
from: Welk Music Group (09 November, 2004)




Tony Trischka's Essential Practice Techniques for Bluegrass Banjo
from: Hal Leonard Publishi (01 July, 2002)




Bill Monroe - The Father of Bluegrass Music
from: Winstar Home Entertainment (08 May, 2001)





 


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