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The Seldom Scene

 
Artist: The Seldom Scene
The Seldom Scene

Group Members:

Dudley Connell, Ben Eldridge, Mike Auldridge, T. Michael Coleman, Fred Travers, Ronnie Simpkins, Phil Rosenthal, Moondi Klein, Lou Reid, John Starling, Tom Gray, John Duffey

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Phil Rosenthal, Paul Craft, John Duffey, T. Michael Coleman, Carl Jackson, Bill Monroe, Jim Rushing
See The Seldom Scene Lyrics
  • Formed: 1971, Washington D.C.
  • Genres: Country
  • Representative Albums: "Live at the Cellar Door", "15th Anniversary Celebration", "The Best of Seldom Scene, Vol. 1
  • Representative Songs: "Little Georgia Rose", "City of New Orleans", "Sweetest Gift

Biography

"We try to find material that's a little bit different, and approach the music in a little bit broader way than most bluegrass bands do," said the Seldom Scene's Dudley Connell to the Baltimore Sun in 1998. Since its inception in 1971, the Seldom Scene has thrived on playing bluegrass a little differently than everyone else. If other bands used a fiddler, the Seldom Scene used a Dobro; if others relied on old standards, the Seldom Scene played rock classics like J.J. Cale's "After Midnight." Through skilled musicianship and an urban approach to bluegrass, the Seldom Scene has become one of the most influential -- if not the most influential -- bluegrass band of their time.

In 1971, mandolinist John Duffey, banjo player Ben Eldridge, guitarist John Starling, bassist Tom Gray, and Dobro player Mike Auldridge formed the Seldom Scene. The band derived its name from its once a week performances, first at the Red Fox Inn in Bethesda, MD, and later at the Birchmere Restaurant in Alexandria, VA. Early albums like 1973's Act 1 and 1975's Live at the Cellar Door set the pace for progressive bluegrass while defining a unique sound that included Starling's smooth vocals, Duffey's versatile tenor, and Auldridge's ringing Dobro. The band's smooth harmonies, love of eclectic material, and Duffey's colorful stage antics further separated the band from its peers. In 1977, Starling left the group to return to his medical practice and was replaced by vocalist Phil Rosenthal.

The addition of Rosenthal and a change of labels to Sugar Hill did little to alter the Seldom Scene's basic sound. 1978's Act Four and 1981's After Midnight continued to draw material from traditional sources like Jimmie Rodgers and contemporary ones like Eric Clapton. The later album included both "Lay Down Sally" and concert favorite "After Midnight." When performing live, the group enjoyed stretching out songs like "After Midnight," allowing Duffey and Auldridge to take extended solos that sounded closer to jazz than bluegrass. In 1986, after making five albums with the Seldom Scene, Rosenthal departed and was replaced by Lou Reid. Original bass player Gray also left, making room for T. Michael Coleman.

With the addition of two new bandmembers, the Seldom Scene recorded the appropriately titled Change of Scenery in 1988. Some fans objected to Coleman's electric bass, but despite this "progressive" change, albums like 1990's Scenic Roots proved to be more traditional than earlier efforts. The band also had a talent for turning pop songs like the Beatles' "What Goes On" into standard bluegrass material. In 1993 Reid left the band and was replaced with ex-member John Starling. Although Starling remained with the band for only a year, his return proved a real treat to fans of early-'70s lineup as did the Seldom Scene's 1994 recording Like We Used to Be.

In 1995 and 1996 the Seldom Scene weathered more changes than several bands combined. In 1995, dissension came to surface within the Seldom Scene because of their light touring schedule and the feeling among certain members that the band had lost its progressive edge. Singer Mondi Klein, bassist Coleman, and original member Auldridge parted ways with the band to turn the progressive bluegrass band Chesapeake into a full-time project. The Seldom Scene's remaining members recruited Dobroist Fred Travers, bassist Ronnie Simpkins, and former Johnson Mountain Boys singer Dudley Connell. Together, the re-formed band recorded 1996's Dream Scene.

Before the band could consolidate its new lineup, founder and spiritual leader Duffey died of a heart attack. "John was 80 percent of the Seldom Scene," Eldridge told the Boston Herald, and no one, not even the band, could picture continuing without him. "The last year has been real tough for the band," Connell admitted to the Baltimore Sun in 1998. "Because [John] was not only a wonderful musician and singer, but also kind of the personality of the band." Still, many wanted the band to continue, and the year-old lineup wanted to carry on the work they had begun with Duffey, so they recruited ex-member Lou Reid to help out on vocals and play mandolin.

While Eldridge is the only remaining original member, the band continues to carry the spirit set forth by the Seldom Scene in 1971. Their 2000 recording Scene It All features both ringing Dobro and tight harmonies, as well as covers by Chuck Berry, Bruce Springsteen, and Bob Dylan, while 2007's Different Roads anthology and the all-new Scenechronized continue the group's love affair with melody and impeccable musicianship. The Seldom Scene continues to garner both critical acclaim and adoration from a legion of fans, emerging at the forefront of progressive as well as traditional bluegrass bands, continuing to amaze fans and influence future generations of musicians. ~ Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr., All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: The Seldom Scene
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The Seldom Scene

Original lineup of The Seldom Scene in 1973: John Duffey, Mike Auldridge, Tom Gray, Ben Eldridge, John Starling
Background information
Origin Bethesda, Maryland, United States
Genres Bluegrass, country, Progressive bluegrass
Years active 1971 - present
Labels Rebel Records, Sugar Hill Records
Associated acts Chesapeake, Country Gentlemen
Members
Ben Eldridge
Lou Reid
Fred Travers
Ronnie Simpkins
Dudley Connell
Former members
John Starling
John Duffey
Mike Auldridge
Tom Gray
Phil Rosenthal
T. Michael Coleman
Moondi Klein

The Seldom Scene is an American bluegrass band formed in 1971 in Bethesda, Maryland.

Contents

Early history

The band formed out of the weekly jam sessions in the basement of banjo player Ben Eldridge. These sessions included John Starling on guitar and lead vocals, Mike Auldridge on Dobro and baritone vocals, and Tom Gray on bass. Then came mandolinist John Duffey, who had quit the Country Gentlemen two years before due to disillusionnment with the music business. Duffey was invited to the jam sessions, hit it off with John Starling, and decided to give music another try at the time when Auldridge arranged for the group to play as a performing band.[1]

Members background

Duffey proposed some rules that the others agreed to, including playing only one night a week at local clubs, doing occasional concerts and festivals on weekends, making records, and keeping their day jobs. Duffey repaired musical instruments, Eldridge was a mathematician, Starling a physician, Auldridge a graphic artist, and Gray a cartographer with National Geographic. The Scene's first home was the Red Fox Inn in Bethesda, Maryland, where they spent six years before starting weekly performances at The Birchmere Music Hall in Alexandria, Virginia.

Rise to popularity

Bluegrass reached a second peak in popularity in the early 1970s, and the progressive bluegrass style played by The Seldom Scene was particularly popular. Duffey's stratospheric tenor anchored the group, but the vocal blend of Duffey/Starling/Auldridge set a new standard that attracted new audiences to what had been a niche music. Their weekly shows included bluegrass versions of country music, rock, and even classical pop. The band's popularity soon forced them to play more than once a week--but they continued to maintain their image as being seldom seen, and on several of their early album covers were photographed with the stage lights on only their feet, or with their backs to the camera.

Though the Scene remained a non-touring band, they were prolific recorders, producing seven albums in their first five years of existence, including two live albums (among the first live bluegrass albums). But the band's philosophy of not touring and maintaining their day jobs eventually caused some changes in membership.

The classic Seldom Scene lineup Starling-Duffey-Eldridge-Gray-Auldridge recorded probably the best material of the group - the first six studio albums.

Departure of John Starling

In 1978, John Starling left the group to focus on his medical career (he is a pediatrician), and was replaced by singer and songwriter Phil Rosenthal, whose song "Muddy Water" had been recorded by the Scene on two earlier albums. Starling and Rosenthal shared their lead vocals on the groups sixth studio album, Baptizing (recorded in 1978). Around the same time, the group switched record labels from Rebel Records to Sugar Hill.

Rosenthal as a lead signer

The band recorded several more albums in the 1980s and firmly established themselves as one of the most influential bluegrass bands. The line-up of Rosenthal-Duffey-Gray-Auldridge-Eldridge, might be called as "second classic", as they recorded five albums of a very comparable quality and popularity to the ones with the founding members, including John Starling. Rosenthal proved to be as good lead signer as Starling and his baryton voice contrasted well with Duffey's high tenor extravaganzas. He also wrote typically two to three songs on each of the album and also added acoustic guitar solos to the group. [2]

More changes in lineup

In 1986, Phil Rosenthal and Tom Gray both left the band to focus on other pursuits, and were replaced by Lou Reid and T. Michael Coleman, respectively. Coleman proved to be very controversial, as many purists objected to his use of an electric bass in what is an acoustic genre, but the albums produced by the band after Coleman's arrival maintained the traditional appeal of any of the Scene's earlier albums.

Reid left the band in 1993, and Duffey convinced former member John Starling to return to the band for the next year. During that year the Scene recorded the album "Like We Used To Be," but Starling did not wish to stay with the band long term. He was replaced in 1994 by lead singer Moondi Klein.

Throughout these changes, John Duffey remained the group's spiritual center and greatest influence, and his initial ideas about keeping a light touring schedule and staying close to home continued to prevail. Though there had been disagreements about this philosophy before, it wasn't until after Starling left for the second time that it cost the band a majority of its members at once. During 1995 and 1996, Klein and Coleman, along with original member Mike Auldridge, left the group to form a new band called Chesapeake. This new band became a full-time project for its members, and for a time the Scene stopped recording.

Duffey and Ben Eldridge, the two remaining original members, recruited resophonic guitar player Fred Travers, bassist Ronnie Simpkins, and guitarist and singer Dudley Connell to join the band, and the reconstituted group recorded an album in 1996 and continued live appearances.

John Duffey's death

For 25 years The Seldom Scene remained extremely popular in bluegrass circles even with the near-constant personnel changes. But the band was dealt what seemed a crushing blow in late 1996, when founder and leader John Duffey suffered a fatal heart attack. Duffey had been widely regarded as one of the most powerful and entertaining stage performers in bluegrass, and there was no one who could replace him.

Seldom Scene without Duffey

Nonetheless, the band was simply too popular to disappear for good. Banjoist Ben Eldridge, the sole remaining original member and a significant force in banjo music in his own right, assumed leadership of the band. Former guitarist Lou Reid rejoined the band on mandolin. Initially the new Scene concentrated on live performances, but in 2000 the group recorded a new album, "Scene it All." The Seldom Scene continues to tour, and remains on the Sugar Hill label for future recordings.

Seldom Scene today

Seldom Scene continues to excel in the bluegrass scene and recently received critical acclaim for their work. Their latest CD, "Scenechronized", recorded in 2007, has been nominated for a Grammy award.[3]

In July 2008 Seldom Scene performed at a White House dinner honoring the 2008 U.S. Olympic team as well as previous U.S. Olympians. Seldom Scene also played the National Folk Festival (USA) July 11-13, 2008 representing bluegrass music.

The band currently consists of Dudley Connell (guitar/lead vocals), Ben Eldridge (banjo), Lou Reid (mandolin/tenor vocals), Fred Travers (dobro/lead vocals), and Ronnie Simpkins (bass/baritone vocals). Ben Eldridge's son, Chris, also frequently performs with the group.

Discography

Recorded under Rebel Records

Recorded under Sugar Hill Records

Band lineups

The Seldom Scene lineups
1971 – 1977
1977 – 1978
1978 – 1986
1986 – 1993
1993 – 1994
1994 - 1995
1995 - 1996
  • Dudley Connell - guitar, vocals
  • Ronnie Simpkins - bass
  • John Duffey - mandolin, vocals
  • Fred Travers - Dobro, vocals
  • Ben Eldridge - banjo, guitar
1995 - 1996
  • Dudley Connell - guitar, vocals
  • Ronnie Simpkins - bass
  • Lou Reid - mandolin, guitar, vocals
  • Fred Travers - Dobro, vocals
  • Ben Eldridge - banjo, guitar

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Seldom Scene timeline

References

External links


Shopping: The Seldom Scene
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Learn More
John Starling (Country Artist, '80s-2000s)
At the Scene (1983 Album by The Seldom Scene)
Old Dog (1986 Album by Phil Rosenthal)

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