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Red Allen

 
Artist: Red Allen
  • Born: February 12, 1930, Perry County, KY
  • Died: April 03, 1993
  • Active: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Country
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "The Folkways Years: 1964-1983," "Lonesome and Blue: The Complete County Recordings," "Keep on Going: The Rebel & Melodeon Recordings"
  • Representative Songs: "I'm Just Here to Get My Baby," "Ruby (Are You Mad)," "Nine Pound Hammer"

Biography

With a high lonesome sound heavily influenced by Bill and Charlie Monroe, Red Allen quietly took his place as one of the most talented and underrated bluegrass artists of the post-World War II era. Born in Perry County, KY, he later made his mark not far from there, first landing in Dayton, OH, at the age of 19 in 1949 after a two-year stint in the Marines. In Ohio, he became acquainted with several other musicians whom he would later collaborate with, including Frank Wakefield, the Osborne Brothers and Noah Crase. In 1954, he made his recording debut on an independent Kentucky label. In March 1956, he began an incredibly fruitful partnership with the Osborne Brothers, shortly after they had signed on with the Wheeling Jamboree, a popular radio show broadcast from the Virginia Theater in Wheeling, WV. Four months after he joined the group, they made their first recording with MGM Records, and built their audience over the next year by a steady program of touring and recording. In the spring of 1958, their song, "Once More," hit number 13 on the country charts and helped earn the band a steady following. Allen left the Osborne Brothers at the end of 1958 and took a brief break from recording before moving to Washington, D.C., in 1959 and forming the Kentuckians with Wakefield. Their relationship was extremely fruitful creatively, but ultimately too tumultuous to sustain for long, and after producing a classic album in 1964 for Smithsonian Folkways simply titled Bluegrass, they parted ways.

In 1967, Allen moved to Nashville to relieve a temporarily ailing Lester Flatt in Flatt & Scruggs. The next year he and J.D. Crowe founded the Kentucky Mountain Boys. In 1969, Allen went back to Dayton and formed a band with his sons known as Red Allen & the Allen Brothers. With his boys, he found himself again on the Wheeling Jamboree, also recording for King Bluegrass and Lemco. The '70s brought international touring for Allen but little recording. In 1979, he issued another album for Smithsonian Folkways with the Kentuckians entitled Live and Let Live. In 1980, he issued a tribute to Lester Flatt titled In Memory of the Man, and followed that album with two more recordings for Folkways, 1981's Red Allen Family & Friends and 1983's The Red Allen Tradition. Throughout the rest of the '80s and early '90s, Allen typically stayed a little closer to home, playing clubs and festivals near Dayton until his death from cancer in 1993. In 2001, Folkways issued The Folkways Years: 1964-1983, which was essentially a reissue of the 1964 Bluegrass album, plus six previously unreleased songs and a number of tracks from Allen's four other Folkways albums. The collection helped highlight some of the high points in Allen's long career, and showcased his remarkable talent as a bluegrass vocalist and guitarist. ~ Stacia Proefrock, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Red Allen (bluegrass)
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Red Allen
Birth name Harley Allen
Also known as Red
Born February 12, 1930
Origin Pigeon Roost Hollow, Kentucky, USA
Died April 15, 1993 (aged 63)
Genre(s) Bluegrass
Occupation(s) Bluegrass artist
Instrument(s) Guitar
Years active 1950s – 1980s

Harley "Red" Allen (born February 12, 1930 Pigeon Roost Hollow, near Hazard, Kentucky - died April 15, 1993) was a bluegrass singer and guitarist known for his powerful tenor voice.

Contents

Biography

Allen grew up in the music-rich hills of eastern Kentucky, and in the early 1950s began performing in and around Dayton, Ohio. He first came to broad public attention in 1956, when he signed on with the Osborne Brothers to fill out one of the most influential vocal trios in the history of country music. Allen made his first recordings with the Osborne Brothers on July 1, 1956 when they recorded four songs.

Allen left the Osborne Brothers in 1958 and resettled in the Washington, D.C. area, which had a thriving bluegrass scene including the Country Gentlemen. There, with the innovative mandolin player Frank Wakefield, he formed the Kentuckians. During this period he and Wakefield made a much-admired record for Folkways, entitled simply "Bluegrass," which showed a larger public that he was a true disciple of "the high lonesome sound" associated with Bill Monroe. At his best, Allen drenched his material in emotion, each song propelled by his surging rhythm guitar playing. As he later said, "Bluegrass is sad music. It's always been sad and the people that's never lived it, it'll take them a long time to know what it is."

He later recorded for County Records and King Bluegrass, with noted banjo player J.D. Crowe. Among his proteges was mandolinist David Grisman, the inventor of "dawg music," who said that by hiring him for the Kentuckians, Allen gave the younger man "a college education in bluegrass music."

Allen's sons, Ronnie, Greg, Neal, and Harley, performed and recorded (with and without their father) as the Allen Brothers in the 1970s and 1980s.

Afterwords

Until the Osbornes' 1958 hit "Once More," the typical arrangement called for a "lead" singer to provide the melody with a "tenor" singing a higher part, and a "baritone" below. "Once More," which reached number 13 on the charts, had the lead sung by the band's highest voice, mandolinist Bobby Osborne. Allen sang the "baritone" just below the melody and banjo player Sonny Osborne provided the "tenor" a full octave below its place in a traditional arrangement. The result, as the Osbornes themselves observed, allowed singers to mimic the sliding tonal effects of the pedal-steel guitar. Contemporary singers using this device include Rhonda Vincent.

Selected Discography

  • 1964: Red Allen, Frank Wakefield and the Kentuckians (Folkways Records)
  • 1979: Live and Let Live (Folkways)
  • 1980: In Memory of the Man: Dedicated to Lester Flatt (Folkways)
  • 1981: Red Allen and Friends (Folwkays)
  • 1983: The Red Allen Tradition (Folkways)
  • 2001: The Folkways Years, 1964-1983 (Smithsonian Folkways)

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Red Allen (bluegrass)" Read more

 

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