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Don Reno

 
Artist: Don Reno
  • Born: 1924, Buffalo, SC
  • Died: October 16, 1984
  • Active: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Country
  • Instrument: Banjo, Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "The Golden Guitar of Don Reno," "Fastest Five Strings Alive," "Founding Father of the Bluegrass Banjo"
  • Representative Songs: "I Know You're Married (But I," "Limehouse Blues," "Twelfth Street Rag"

Biography

Virtually unrivalled among his contemporaries for his mastery of the five-string banjo, Don Reno teamed with Red Smiley to create some of the finest bluegrass recordings of the postwar era -- a superb tenor vocalist and songwriter, Reno also proved crucial to the emergence of the guitar as one of bluegrass' lead instruments, and ranks alongside the likes of Bill Monroe among the genre's true pioneers. Reno was born in Spartanburg, SC, on February 21, 1926, and raised primarily in rural North Carolina; at age five he built his first banjo, and as a teen backed the Morris Brothers and Arthur "Guitar Boogie" Smith. He also recorded with Woody Guthrie and was asked to join Monroe's Blue Grass Boys before serving in the military from 1944 to 1946. Upon returning from duty Reno fronted a local South Carolina band before replacing Earl Scruggs in the Blue Grass Boys, where like his predecessor he was key in popularizing the three-finger roll technique of banjo playing.

Reno left Monroe in 1949 to join Tommy Magness and His Tennessee Buddies; among his bandmates was guitarist Smiley, and while cutting a 1951 session with Magness for King Records subsidiary Federal, label owner Syd Nathan was so impressed by Reno and Smiley's interplay that he soon arranged for the duo to record under their own names. A marathon 16-song studio date the following January launched their career as headliners, with the Reno-penned hit "I'm Using My Bible for a Road Map" proving so successful it reportedly pulled King Records back from the brink of bankruptcy. Despite the popularity of their records, the duo proved unable to keep together their touring band, the Tennessee Cut-Ups, so in between sessions for King they worked independently, which allowed Reno to reunite with Smith; together they recorded the classic 1955 instrumental "Feuding Banjos," which was later retitled "Dueling Banjos" for its unauthorized use in the 1972 film Deliverance.

In May of 1955 Reno and Smiley organized the definitive lineup of the Tennessee Cut-Ups, including fiddler Mack Magaha and bassist John Palmer; a regular gig at Richmond, VA, station WRVA's Old Dominion Barn Dance finally afforded the group the opportunity to continue full-time, and over the next nine years they recorded a series of influential sides for King including "I Know You're Married," "Don't Let Your Sweet Love Die," and "Please Remember That I Love You." At the peak of their popularity, the duo also hosted Top of the Morning, a hit daily television show which ran for some seven years. However, in 1964 diabetes forced Smiley to retire from the road, and in late 1966 Reno began a new partnership with singer/multi-instrumentalist Bill Harrell which continued for a decade, a period which coincided with a resurgence in public interest in bluegrass as a result of a growing festival circuit. A much briefer liaison with fiddler Benny Martin also launched the country chart hit "A Soldier's Prayer in Vietnam."

During the early '70s Reno and Harrell recorded a series of LPs for labels including Monument, Dot, and CMH; on occasion Smiley returned to the fold as well, making his final live appearance just months before his death on January 2, 1972. After Reno and Harrell went their separate ways in autumn 1976, the former settled in Lynchburg, VA, where he began performing alongside sons Don, Wayne, Dale, and Ronnie; in 1979, he also again re-teamed with Smith for the album Arthur Smith and Don Reno Feudin' Again. Reno died October 16, 1984; his sons later recorded as the Reno Brothers. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Don Reno
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Don Reno
Birth name Donald Wesley Reno
Born February 21, 1927(1927-02-21)
Spartanburg, South Carolina, US
Origin Haywood County, North Carolina, US
Died October 16, 1984 (aged 57)
Genres Bluegrass music
Occupations Musician
Instruments 5-string banjo
Years active 1939-1984
Labels King, Starday, Jalyn, CMH
Associated acts The Morris Brothers, Arthur Smith, Bill Monroe, Red Smiley, Reno and Smiley, Bill Harrell, Reno & Harrell, Frank Wakefield, Don Wayne Reno
Website www.donreno.com
Notable instruments
"Nellie," a 1935/36 Gibson RB-3/RB-75 flathead previously owned by Earl Scruggs,[1] 1933/34 Gibson RB-Granada banjo


Don Wesley Reno (February 21, 1927 - October 16, 1984) was a bluegrass and country musician best known as a banjo player in partnership with Red Smiley and later Bill Harrell.

Contents

Biography

Born in in Spartanburg, South Carolina, Don Reno grew up on a farm in Haywood County, North Carolina. He began playing the banjo at the age of five. His father gave him a guitar four years later; and in 1939 12-year-old Reno joined the Morris Brothers in performing at a local radio station.[2] He left one year later to join Arthur Smith, with whom he would years later recorded "Feudin' Banjos." In 1943 he received an offer from Bill Monroe to become a member of the Bluegrass Boys, but chose instead to enlist in the United States Army. Trained as a horse soldier at Fort Riley, Kansas, he was sent to the Pacific Theater to fight on foot. He eventually served in Merrill's Marauders and was wounded in action.[3]

Influenced by old-time banjo player Snuffy Jenkins and others, Reno developed his own three finger "single-string" style that allowed him to play scales and complicated fiddle tunes note-for-note. According to his son, Don Wayne Reno, "My dad told me more than once that the reason he started his own style of banjo picking was this: When he came out of the service, many people said 'You sound just like Earl Scruggs.' He said that really bothered him considering he never played a banjo while he was in the service and when he returned to the U.S., he continued to play in the style he had always played before."[4][5]

In 1948 Reno became a member of the Bluegrass Boys. Two years later, with Red Smiley, he formed Reno and Smiley and the Tennessee Cutups, a partnership that lasted fourteen years. Among their hits were "I'm Using My Bible For A Road Map," "I Wouldn't Change You If I Could" and "Don't Let Your Sweet Love Die." In 1964, after the retirement of Red Smiley, Reno and guitarist Bill Harrell formed Reno & Harrell. Red Smiley joined Reno & Harrell in 1969, remaining with them until his death in 1972. From 1964 until 1971 Reno also performed with Benny Martin. In the 1970s he played with The Good Ol' Boys, composed of Frank Wakefield on mandolin, David Nelson on guitar, Chubby Wise on fiddle, and Pat Campbell on bass. Reno began performing with his sons Don Wayne and Dale in later years.

Don Reno died in 1984 at the age of 57. He is buried in Spring Hill Cemetery, Lynchburg, Virginia. He was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Honor in 1992.

See also

References

  1. ^ Cushman, Charlie (2009-03-13). "Scruggs/Reno 1935 RB-3". http://www.charliecushman.com/ScruggsReno.htm. Retrieved 2009-07-14. 
  2. ^ Wernick, Peter (2004), "Interview with Don Reno", in Goldsmith, Thomas, The Bluegrass Reader, Champaign, IL: University of Illinois Press, pp. 54–58, ISBN 0252029143 
  3. ^ http://bluegrassbanjo.org/donreno.html
  4. ^ http://bluegrassbanjo.org/donreno.html
  5. ^ "Biography". King Records. 2000. http://www.donreno.com/bio.htm. Retrieved 2008-12-09. 

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