Skaggs, Ricky
Ricky Skaggs
Singer, songwriter, instrumentalist, producer
No single artist has done more since 1980 to shape the course of country music than Ricky Skaggs, the dynamic tenor from Kentucky. Skaggs’s virtuoso musicianship and firm belief in the power of traditional mountain music brought Nashville’s slide into country-pop to a screeching halt, paving the way to stardom for a new wave of young traditionalists in a score of styles. Today Skaggs rests comfortably at the pinnacle of country stardom and is revered in some circles as the Savior of the es.
“Without the pioneering work of Ricky Skaggs, there probably wouldn’t be any new country or new traditionalist music,” wrote Andrew Vaughan in Who’s Who in New Country. “Before George Strait was popular, before Reba McEntire was a superstar, before The Judds captured hearts with their mountain harmonies, Skaggs was breaking through country music’s lowest ebb. The late seventies and early eighties had seen country go pop…. But Skaggs re-introduced the backwoods sound and with an impeccably tight band and clear, snappy bluegrass-influenced productions, his records and live shows came like a breath of fresh air through a stagnant Nashville smog.”
Skaggs was certainly the ideal candidate to rescue country from the brink of blandness. He was—and is—enormously talented and ambitious, with a youthful determination to make a name for himself without sacrificing his artistic ideals. “I’m as country as corn bread,” he told People magazine. “I don’t think I could go pop if I had a mouthful of firecrackers.”
Ricky Skaggs was playing professionally at a time when most youngsters are learning to read. He was born and raised in Lawrence County, Kentucky, the son of amateur country and gospel musicians. By the time Skaggs was three he was singing with his parents at social gatherings in his home county, and by the tender age of five he could play mandolin well enough to do it onstage. Remembering those years, Skaggs told The Big Book ofBluegrass: “Me and my mom would do a lot of duets, and my dad would sing baritone or bass, so we would have lead and tenor and bass, and it would sound real haunting and neat. We used to work a lot of churches, and we played in high schools and at pie suppers and theaters and stuff.”
Skaggs’s heroes in the music business were the Stanley Brothers—Ralph and Carter—who were prominent bluegrass musicians. While still in his early teens, Skaggs perfected his singing and picking until it mirrored Carter Stanley’s to an astonishing degree. He also learned to play other instruments, including the fiddle and guitar. The constant round of local engagements led to a friendship with another young would-be bluegrass musician, Keith Whitley. The two pickers formed their
For the Record…
Born July 18, 1954, in Cordell, Ky.; son of Hobert (a welder and musician) Skaggs; married second wife, Sharon (a singer), 1981; children: (first marriage) Mandy, Andrew, (second marriage) Molly Kate, Lucas.
Country and bluegrass singer, songwriter, guitarist, mandolin player, and fiddler, 1961—. Had professional debut at age seven on the Flatt & Scruggs television show in Tennessee; at age fifteen joined Ralph Stanley and the Clinch Mountain Boys, playing mandolin and singing tenor vocals; joined the Country Gentlemen, 1972, and J. D. Crowe and the New South, 1974. With Wes Golding (guitar) and Terry Baucom (banjo), formed group Boone Creek, 1976; group disbanded, 1978. Singer, backup musician, and producer with Emmylou Harris and her Hot Band, 1978-79.
Solo artist, 1974—, recording albums with Rebel Records, Sugar Hill Records, Warner Brothers, Rounder Records, and Epic Records. Has had numerous top ten country hits, including “I Don’t Care” and “Crying My Heart Out Over You.”
Awards: Named top new male vocalist by Academy of Country Music and male vocalist oftheyearbyCountryMusic Association, both 1982; inducted into the Grand Ole Opry, 1982; band of the year award from Academy of Country Music, best bluegrass act from Music City News, and Star of Tomorrow Award from Academy of Country Music, all 1983.
Addresses: Record company —Epic Records, 51 West 52nd St., New York, NY 10019.
own trio (with Whitley’s brother on banjo) and were soon playing radio shows on WLKS in West Liberty, Kentucky.
One night Skaggs and Whitley traveled to West Virginia to hear Ralph Stanley give a concert. Stanley was late for the engagement, so the owner of the club asked the two to perform until Stanley arrived. Skaggs remembered: “So we got up and entertained the crowd, and they were liking it—and in walks Ralph Stanley, my hero. We were singing ‘Little Glass of Wine’ or something like that. He set his banjo case down on the barstool and I glanced over at him out of the corner of my eye. He wasn’t really smiling, he was looking off somewhere like he was reminiscing, in a way. It turned out that he was. Afterward he said, ‘Boys, the first time I saw y’all it just brought back so many memories of me and Carter.’”
Stanley was so impressed with Skaggs and Whitley that he asked them to join his band, the Clinch Mountain Boys. Skaggs was fifteen at the time, so he had to restrict his work to holidays and summers, but he became a phenomenon nonetheless. Ralph Stanley recruited Skaggs initially because the youngster could play and sing so much like the late Carter Stanley, but as Skaggs learned the ropes of bluegrass musicianship, his own formidable talents began to surface. Skaggs played with the Clinch Mountain Boys for two years, from 1970 until 1972. “It was a good training ground,” he said, “and I learned a lot of things about feel and music—I learned what not to play…. Those were really great days.”
Unfortunately, the earnings for bluegrass musicians were meager, and in 1972 Skaggs “retired” and took a job as a boiler repairman for a Washington, D.C.-area power company. He hated the work, so he was only too glad to return to music as a member of the Country Gentlemen in 1973. In that bluegrass band he played fiddle and sang high tenor. By the time he quit the Country Gentlemen some two years later (around the time he turned twenty), Skaggs had a considerable reputation and was sought after by a number of groups. He cut a solo album for Rebel Records, That’s It, and then joined another band, J. D. Crowe and the New roups.
The New South was a progressive bluegrass band in which pickers were encouraged to experiment with any manner of jazz, rock, and country influences. If Skaggs needed any final polish on his talents—a debatable point—he found it in this eclectic group. After touring with the New South for a year, Skaggs formed his own group, Boone Creek. The band—which for a time included Vince Gill on bass—cut two albums before breaking up in 1978.
Skaggs had become friends with Emmylou Harris while he was still working with the Country Gentlemen and she was singing in bars in Washington, D.C. In 1978 Harris asked Skaggs to join her band and help her with her first album. Even though he was yearning to break through as a solo artist at the time, Skaggs offered his vocal and instrumental services to Harris and steered her toward the old-time sound that so suited her voice. Skaggs sang and played on several of Harris’s early albums, most notably the Grammy-winning Roses in the Snow.
The network of friendships Skaggs had forged finally proved to be the catalyst for his successful solo career. In 1980 he released an acoustic album, Sweet Temptation, that earned favorable reviews, and in 1982 he earned his first major label contract with Epic Records. Skaggs’s first album with Epic, Waitin’ for the Sun To Shine, was a breakthrough both for him and for blue-grass-influenced country music in general. The album yielded two number-one hits, “Crying My Heart Out Over You” and “I Don’t Care,” and on its strength, Skaggs was named best male vocalist of 1982 by the Country Music Association.
Skaggs’s success was accomplished without stylistic compromise. His albums featured acoustic instruments and tight bluegrass harmonies, and he recorded such bluegrass classics as “Children Go Where I Send Thee” and “Uncle Pen.” In his book Country Music U.S.A., Bill C. Malone analyzed the many reasons for Skaggs’s popularity. “Skaggs is blessed with the clearest and most expressive tenor voice that has been heard in country music since Ira Louvin, and his instrumental virtuosity is breathtaking,” Malone observed. “Skaggs has been hailed as a traditionalist, and he still refers to his music as ‘bluegrass’ and openly speaks of building a repertory that will appeal to hard-core country fans…. But, of course, he is not purely a traditionalist, even though he does traditional material beautifully. His music is informed by the wide range of music that he and other young people have heard and played in today’s world—and by the experiences of living in a society vastly different from that of their parents.”
Instrumentalist, singer, songwriter, performer, and producer—Skaggs has filled all of these shoes for himself and other Nashville superstars. The extent of his success is doubly amazing in view of his age—he was born in 1954. The 1990s are likely to see further accomplishments from the affable Skaggs, who spends some 125 days a year touring in his custom-designed bus. In Stereo Review, Alanna Nash called Skaggs’s resuscitation of the old-time style “a noble and striking effort, a tour de force of indomitable American musical spirit.”
Ricky Skaggs was inducted into the Grand Ole Opry in 1982, the youngest performer ever to become a regular on the Opry.
Selected discography
Solo LPs
That’s It, Rebel.
Sweet Temptation, Sugar Hill, 1980.
Waitin’ for the Sun To Shine, Epic, 1982.
Highways and Heartaches, Epic, 1982.
Don’t Cheat in Our Hometown, Epic, 1983.
Country Boy, Epic, 1984.
Ricky Skaggs Live in London, Epic, 1985.
Love’s Gonna Get Ya, Epic, 1986.
Comin’ Home To Stay, Epic, 1988.
Kentucky Thunder, Epic, 1990.
Family and Friends, Rounder.
Ricky Skaggs’s Favorite Country Songs, Epic.
With Boone Creek
Boone Creek, Rounder.
One Way Track, Sugar Hill.
Other
(With Tony Rice) Skaggs and Rice, Sugar Hill.
Has also appeared as featured guest performer on recordings by other artists, including Boone Creek’s Boone Creek and One Way Track; J. D. Crowe and the New South’s The New South; and Emmylou Harris’s Pieces of the Sky, Blue Kentucky Girl, and Roses in the Snow.
Sources
Books
Kochman, Marilyn, editor, The Big Book of Bluegrass, Morrow, 1984.
Malone, Bill C. Country Music U.S.A., revised edition, University of Texas Press, 1985.
Vaughan, Andrew, Who’s Who in New Country Music, St. Martin’s, 1989.
Periodicals
Bluegrass Unlimited, January 1977.
Country America, May 1990.
People, October 25, 1982.
Pickin’, February 1979.
Rolling Stone, November 22, 1984; March 13, 1986.
Stereo Review, February 1984.
Vogue, March 1984.
—Anne Janette Johnson
Skaggs, Ricky
Ricky Skaggs
Singer, songwriter, instrumentalist, producer
Albums Played Role in Reviving Bluegrass
No single artist has done more since 1980 to shape the course of country and bluegrass music than Ricky Skaggs, the dynamic tenor from Kentucky. Sk-aggs’s virtuoso musicianship and firm belief in the power of traditional mountain music brought Nashville’s slide into country-pop to a screeching halt, paving the way to stardom for a new wave of young traditionalists in a score of styles. With numerous awards, 12 number-one singles, and a platinum record under his belt, Skaggs rests comfortably at the pinnacle of country and bluegrass stardom.
“Without the pioneering work of Ricky Skaggs, there probably wouldn’t be any new country or new traditionalist music,” wrote Andrew Vaughan in Who’s Who in New Country. “Before George Strait was popular, before Reba McEntire was a superstar, before The Judds captured hearts with their mountain harmonies, Skaggs was breaking through country music’s lowest ebb. The late seventies and early eighties had seen country go pop…. But Skaggs re-introduced the backwoods sound and with an impeccably tight band and clear, snappy bluegrass-influenced productions, his records and live shows came like a breath of fresh air through a stagnant Nashville smog.”
Skaggs was certainly the ideal candidate to rescue country from the brink of blandness. He was—and is—enormously talented and ambitious, with a youthful determination to make a name for himself without sacrificing his artistic ideals. “I’m as country as corn bread,” he told People magazine. “I don’t think I could go pop if I had a mouthful of firecrackers.”
Early Musical Start
Skaggs was playing professionally at a time when most youngsters are learning to read. He was born on July 18,1954, in Cordell, Kentucky, and raised in Lawrence County, Kentucky, the son of amateur country and gospel musicians. By the time Skaggs was three he was singing with his parents at social gatherings in his home county, and by the tender age of five he could play mandolin well enough to do it onstage. Remembering those years, Skaggs told The Big Book of Blue-grass: “Me and my mom would do a lot of duets, and my dad would sing baritone or bass, so we would have lead and tenor and bass, and it would sound real haunting and neat. We used to work a lot of churches, and we played in high schools and at pie suppers and theaters and stuff.”
Skaggs’s heroes in the music business were the Stanley Brothers—Ralph and Carter—who were prominent bluegrass musicians. While still in his early teens, Skaggs perfected his singing and picking until it mirrored Carter Stanley’s to an astonishing degree. He also learned to play other instruments, including the fiddle and guitar. The constant round of local
For the Record…
Born on July 18, 1954, in Cordell, KY; son of Hobert (a welder and musician) Skaggs; married second wife, Sharon White (a singer), 1981; children: (first marriage) Mandy, Andrew, (second marriage) Molly Kate, Lucas.
Country and bluegrass singer, songwriter, guitarist, mandolin player, and fiddler, 1961-; made professional debut at age seven on the Flatt & Scruggs television show in Tennessee; at age 15 joined Ralph Stanley and the Clinch Mountain Boys, playing mandolin and singing tenor vocals; joined the Country Gentlemen, 1972, and J. D. Crowe and the New South, 1974; with Wes Golding (guitar) and Terry Baucom (banjo), formed group Boone Creek, 1976; group disbanded, 1978; singer, backup musician, and producer with Emmylou Harris and her Hot Band, 1978-79; solo artist, 1974-, recording albums with Rebel Records, Sugar Hill Records, Warner Bros. Records, Rounder Records, Epic Records, Atlantic Records, and own Skaggs Family Records; launched Ceili Records, a sister label to Skaggs Family Records, 1998.
Awards: Academy of Country Music Awards, New Male Vocalist, 1981, Best Specialty Instrument (mandolin), 1984, 1987; Country Music Association Awards, Male Vocalist of the Year, 1982, Horizon Award, 1982, Entertainer of the Year, 1985, Vocal Duo of the Year (with Sharon White Skaggs), 1987, Vocal Event of the Year (with Mark O’Conner & New Nashville Cats), 1991; Grammy Awards, Best Country Vocal Performance, 1983-84, 1986, Best Country Vocal Collaboration, 1991, 1998, Best Bluegrass Album, 1998-99, Best Southern, Country, or Bluegrass Gospel Album of the Year, 2000; Gospel Music Association Dove Award, Bluegrass Recorded Song of the Year, 2001; International Bluegrass Music Association Award, Album of the Year, 1998; also inducted into the Grand Ole Opry, 1982.
Addresses: Record company—Skaggs Family Records, P.O. Box 2478, Hendersonville, TN 37077, phone and fax: (615) 264-8877. Website—Skaggs Family Records: http://www.rickyskaggs.com.
engagements led to a friendship with another young would-be bluegrass musician, Keith Whitley. The two pickers formed their own trio (with Whitley’s brother on banjo) and were soon playing radio shows on WLKS in West Liberty, Kentucky.
One night Skaggs and Whitley traveled to West Virginia to hear Ralph Stanley give a concert. Stanley was late for the engagement, so the owner of the club asked the two to perform until Stanley arrived. Skaggs remembered: “So we got up and entertained the crowd, and they were liking it—and in walks Ralph Stanley, my hero. We were singing ‘Little Glass of Wine’ or something like that. He set his banjo case down on the barstool and I glanced over at him out of the corner of my eye. He wasn’t really smiling, he was looking off somewhere like he was reminiscing, in a way. It turned out that he was. Afterward he said, ‘Boys, the first time I saw y’all it just brought back so many memories of me and Carter.’”
Stanley was so impressed with Skaggs and Whitley that he asked them to join his band, the Clinch Mountain Boys. Skaggs was 15 at the time, so he had to restrict his work to holidays and summers, but he became a phenomenon nonetheless. Ralph Stanley recruited Skaggs initially because the youngster could play and sing so much like the late Carter Stanley, but as Skaggs learned the ropes of bluegrass musicianship, his own formidable talents began to surface. Skaggs played with the Clinch Mountain Boys for two years, from 1970 until 1972. “It was a good training ground,” he said, “and I learned a lot of things about feel and music—I learned what not to play…. Those were really great days.”
Built Considerable Reputation
Unfortunately, the earnings for bluegrass musicians were meager, and in 1972 Skaggs “retired” and took a job as a boiler repairman for a Washington, D.C.-area power company. He hated the work, so he was only too glad to return to music as a member of the Country Gentlemen in 1973. In that bluegrass band he played fiddle and sang high tenor. By the time he quit the Country Gentlemen some two years later (around the time he turned 20), Skaggs had a considerable reputation and was sought after by a number of groups. He cut a solo album for Rebel Records, That’s It, and then joined another band, J. D. Crowe and the New South.
The New South was a progressive bluegrass band in which pickers were encouraged to experiment with any manner of jazz, rock, and country influences. If Skaggs needed any final polish on his talents—a debatable point—he found it in this eclectic group. After touring with the New South for a year, Skaggs formed his own group, Boone Creek. The band—which for a time included Vince Gill on bass—cut two albums before breaking up in 1978.
Skaggs had become friends with Emmylou Harris while he was still working with the Country Gentlemen and she was singing in bars in Washington, D.C. In 1978 Harris asked Skaggs to join her band and help her with her first album. Even though he was yearning to break through as a solo artist at the time, Skaggs offered his vocal and instrumental services to Harris and steered her toward the old-time sound that so suited her voice. Skaggs sang and played on several of Harris’s early albums, most notably the Grammy Award-winning Roses in the Snow.
Began Solo Career
The network of friendships Skaggs had forged finally proved to be the catalyst for his successful solo career. In 1980 he released an acoustic album, Sweet Temptation, that earned favorable reviews, and in 1982 he earned his first major label contract with Epic Records. Skaggs’s first album with Epic, Waitin’ for the Sun To Shine, was a breakthrough both for him and for Bluegrass-influenced country music in general. The album yielded two number-one hits, “Crying My Heart Out Over You” and “I Don’t Care,” and gold record sales.
Skaggs’s success was accomplished without stylistic compromise. His albums featured acoustic instruments and tight bluegrass harmonies, and he recorded such bluegrass classics as “Children Go Where I Send Thee” and “Uncle Pen.” In his book Country Music U.S.A., Bill C. Malone analyzed the many reasons for Skaggs’s popularity. “Skaggs is blessed with the clearest and most expressive tenor voice that has been heard in country music since Ira Louvin, and his instrumental virtuosity is breathtaking,” Malone observed. “Skaggs has been hailed as a traditionalist, and he still refers to his music as ‘bluegrass’ and openly speaks of building a repertory that will appeal to hardcore country fans…. But, of course, he is not purely a traditionalist, even though he does traditional material beautifully. His music is informed by the wide range of music that he and other young people have heard and played in today’s world—and by the experiences of living in a society vastly different from that of their parents.”
Including Waiting for the Sun to Shine, Skaggs’s releases during the 1980s spurred a new popularity for traditional country music and earned him popular success. Highways & Heartaches, released in 1982, was a greater popular hit, landing at number one on the country charts and generating three numberone hits. According to Al Campbell of All Music Guide, Skaggs “developed his bluegrass roots with new traditionalist sensibilities and catchy pop tunes” on the album. Highways went platinum in 1992. Other 1980s releases included Don’t Cheat in Our Home Town, Country Boy, and Live In London, all of which earned gold sales certification.
Albums Played Role in Reviving Bluegrass
With 1995’s Solid Ground, Skaggs moved from Epic to Atlantic Records. “The songs themselves are real fresh and different. I think they have some real truth to them. It’s a country album. For any country listener, I think they’ll enjoy this record…,” Skaggs told Deborah Evans Price in Billboard following the album’s release. Though signed to Atlantic Nashville for country album releases, Skaggs released his first record made on his own in 1997. Bluegrass Rules!, released on the Skaggs Family label, marked a pointed return to Skaggs’s bluegrass roots. “Even though these are old songs,” Skaggs told Chet Flippo in Billboard, “we tried to honor Mr. [Bill] Monroe, Flatt & Scruggs, and Ralph Stanley…. I just wanted to honor these pioneers and let people know what these architects of the music did.” To help further the exposure of bluegrass and roots music, in 1998 Skaggs formed a sister label to Skaggs Family Records called Ceili Records, which is committed to releasing the work of artists in those genres. Skaggs released Ancient Tones in 1999, an album Michael B. Smith of All Music Guide called “a collection of some of the finest classic bluegrass tracks ever compiled on a single disc.” Also released in 1999, Soldier of the Cross is a collection of gospel songs.
In 2001 Skaggs released History of the Future, which, like Bluegrass Rules! and Ancient Tones, “lovingly embrace[d] his musical history with only the subtlest hints of commercial country,” according to Scott Cooper in Sing Out! As Skaggs phrased it, according to Billboard, he had his “left foot in the past and the right in the future” on the album. Sings the Songs of Bill Monroe, a tribute album to bluegrass legend Bill Monroe, was released in 2002, and Skaggs’s second live album, Live at the Charleston Music Hall, was released in 2003 on the Skaggs Family label.
About the resurgent popularity of bluegrass and Skaggs’s own part in encouraging the renewed interest, he told Cooper: “I really think we have done a lot to legitimize the music. I wouldn’t want bluegrass fans to think that I think that we have saved it or anything. It didn’t need saving. I feel like we brought a lot of credibility to it.”
In addition to his own solo work, Skaggs has worked as a producer and songwriter, and has developed new bluegrass groups including Daybreak, Old School Freight Train, and Blue Moon Rising.
Selected discography
(With Boone Creek) Boons Creek, Rounder, 1977.
(With Boone Creek) One Way Track, Sugar Hill, 1978.
Sweet Temptation, Sugar Hill, 1980.
Family and Friends, Rounder, 1982.
Highways and Heartaches, Epic, 1982.
Waitin’ for the Sun To Shine, Epic, 1982.
Don’t Cheat in Our Hometown, Epic, 1983.
Country Boy, Epic, 1984.
Ricky Skaggs Live in London, Epic, 1985.
Ricky Skaggs’s Favorite Country Songs, Epic, 1985.
Love’s Gonna Get Ya, Epic, 1986.
Comin’ Home To Stay, Epic, 1988.
My Father’s Son, Epic, 1989.
Kentucky Thunder, Epic, 1990.
(With Tony Rice) Skaggs & Rice, Sugar Hill, 1990.
Solid Ground, Atlantic, 1995.
That’s It, Rebel, 1997.
Life Is a Journey, Atlantic, 1997.
(With Kentucky Thunder) Bluegrass Rules!, Rounder, 1997.
(With Kentucky Thunder) Ancient Tones, Skaggs Family, 1999.
Solider of the Cross, Skaggs Family, 1999.
Greatest Hits (compilation), Sony, 1999.
16 Biggest Hits (compilation), Epic, 2000.
(With Kentucky Thunder) History of the Future, Hollywood, 2001.
Sings the Songs of Bill Monroe, Skaggs Family, 2002.
Live at the Charleston Music Hall, Skaggs Family, 2003.
The Essential Ricky Skaggs, Epic/Legacy, 2003.
Sources
Books
Kochman, Marilyn, editor, The Big Book of Bluegrass, Morrow, 1984.
Malone, Bill C, Country Music U.S.A., revised edition, University of Texas Press, 1985.
Vaughan, Andrew, Who’s Who in New Country Music, St. Martin’s, 1989.
Periodicals
Billboard, September 30, 1995; December 7, 1997; December 5, 1998; September 1, 2001; March 20, 2003.
Bluegrass Unlimited, January 1977.
Country America, May 1990.
People, October 25, 1982.
Pickin’, February 1979.
Rolling Stone, November 22, 1984; March 13, 1986.
Sing Out!, Spring 2002; Winter 2002.
Stereo Review, February 1984.
Vogue, March 1984.
Online
“Ricky Skaggs,” All Music Guide, http://www.allmusic.com (June 30, 2003).
Skaggs Family Records, http://www.rickyskaggs.com (June 16, 2003).
—Anne Janette Johnson
SkaggS, Ricky
SkaggS, Ricky
SkaggS, Ricky, bluegrass multi-instrumentalist and bandleader, b. near Cordell, Ky., July 18, 1954. Hailing from a musical family, Ricky Skaggs is one of the few artists who has successfully crossed over from traditional bluegrass to mainstream country while still maintaining his basic sound and style intact. He was one of the first new country stars of the early 1980s who pointed the direction for a return to country’s roots in repertoire and style. Although he has not been as consistently popular as some of the more flashy acts who have followed his lead, Skaggs remains an important force in country music today.
A multi-instrumentalist, Skaggs began his career while still in high school with his friend Keith Whitley, performing mandolin-guitar duets in a traditional style derived from country’s brother acts. The duo were particularly enamored of the Stanley Brothers sound, and they soon found themselves performing as members of Ralph Stanley’s band. Poor pay and a grueling touring schedule led to Skaggs’s retirement and brief employment as an electric-company worker in a suburban Washington power plant. There, he began performing with a later version of the progressive bluegrass band, The Country Gentlemen.
In the early 1970s, he joined briefly with J.D. Crowe’s groundbreaking bluegrass ensemble, The New South, along with ace guitarist/vocalist Tony Rice. Determined to modernize and popularize the bluegrass sound, he formed his own progressive band, Boone Creek, with dobro player Jerry Douglas, who has appeared on many of Skaggs’s recordings, and singer/guitarist Terry Baucom. By the late 1970s, he was working as a backup musician for Emmylou Harris, helping mold her new traditional approach on landmark albums such as Roses in the Snow.
Blessed with a unique, high-tenor voice, Skaggs recorded his first solo album in a contemporary country vein for the bluegrass label, Sugar Hill, while at the same time he made a duet album with Rice featuring just their guitar and mandolin and vocal harmonies in an homage to the 1930s country sound. He was quickly signed to CBS, and had a string of hits in the early 1980s with his unique adaptations of bluegrass and country standards of the 1950s. In fact, his cover of Bill Monroe’s “Uncle Pen” in 1984 was the first bluegrass song to hit #1 on the country charts since 1949. He also was one of the first new country artists to tour Europe, scoring great success in England where he performed with diverse artists from Elvis Costello to Nick Lowe.
The mid-1980s found Skaggs teetering on the edge of a more pop-country sound, but basically he has stuck close to his country roots in choice of material and performance. He married country vocalist Sharon White of the Whites, and produced some of their successful recordings of the 1980s. While Skaggs’ more recent recordings have not been as successful on the country charts, he continues to be influential as an instrumentalist and producer. He returned to his bluegrass/country swing roots as a member of Mark O’Connor’s New Nashville Cats band, which featured another crossover artist from bluegrass, Vince Gill. Skaggs continues to represent bluegrass music on awards programs, often performing with such veterans as Bill Monroe and his old mentor, Ralph Stanley.
Dlscography
Sweet Temptation (1979); Waitin’for the Sun to Shine (1981); Highways and Heartaches (1982); Don’t Cheat on Our Hometown (1983); Love’s Gonna Get Ya! (1986); Comin’ Home to Stay (1987); Kentucky Thunder (1987); My Father’s Son (1991); Solid Ground (1995); Bluegrass Rules! (1997).
—Richard Carlin