Tag Archives: bluegrass

Remembering “Tuck” Tucker

Dobro master “Tuck” Tucker has passed away

Editor’s Note: So sad to learn of the death of my friend and musician “Tuck” Tucker.  He was a dobro player extraordinaire.  His talent graced the recordings and stages of many musicians, not only in Florida, but around the country.  I bought a baby Taylor guitar from him a few years back. I think of him every time I play it. Nine years ago while I was working as the Features Unit Executive Producer at WUFT I invited him to the studio to talk about his latest CD at the time. I pulled it up today and thought you all would enjoy listening to his love for songwriting and music.  RIP “Tuck” you will always be remembered.

Aired on WUFT on January 27, 2012

 New CD from dobro master James "Tuck" Tucker
CD from dobro master James “Tuck” Tucker

Donna Green-Townsend sat down with Tucker who talks about his latest CD “Smugglers Notch” and his love for the dobro.

Legendary Guitarist Doc Watson

Doc Watson & grandson
Doc Watson & grandson performing at the Suwannee Springfest in Florida (photo by Donna Green-Townsend)

Doc Watson, the Grammy award-winning guitarist who has influenced and been revered by virtually every great bluegrass flatpicker in the country died on May 29, 2012. The 89-year-old musician, who was blind from age 1, had undergone abdominal surgery at a hospital in Winston Salem, N.C., but died a few days later. Donna Green-Townsend had the opportunity to interview Watson on a couple of occasions at various festivals across the country and prepared this feature.

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(from left to right) David Sylvester, T. Michael Coleman and Doc Watson at the 1982 Walnut Valley Festival in Winfield, KS (photo by Donna Green-Townsend)

The interview segments in the feature above came from Donna Green-Townsend’s first meeting with Doc Watson in September, 1982 at the Walnut Valley Festival in Winfield, KS.  The station she was working for at the time, KHCC-FM at Hutchinson Community College in Kansas, was in its second year of recording the stages and performers at the festival.  The material eventually became, “The Walnut Valley Festival Series,” broadcast on public radio stations all across the country.  There were 26 one-hour programs in all.  Below is the 35:50 segment that included the set performed by Doc Watson, T. Michael Coleman and David Sylvester and the full interviews from that series.  (Merle Watson had taken a few days off from touring).

Production assistance on the above recording in 1982 was provided by Dan Skinner and Steve Brown of KHCC-FM and KANZ-FM.

CD cover of Riding The Midnight Train
CD cover of Riding The Midnight Train
Doc Watson's autograph
Doc Watson’s autograph on the CD he dedicated to his son, the late Merle Watson

On March 25th of 2008, Clawgrass banjo player Mark Johnson and Donna Green-Townsend had the opportunity to sit backstage with Doc Watson and folk icon Norman Blake at the Suwannee Springfest near Live Oak. It was one of those rare opportunities to swap stories and share some tunes. When the special hour began you can hear Peter Rowan and company in the distance performing on the main stage. Meanwhile backstage Green-Townsend began chatting with Johnson as he played Ashokan Farewell and demonstrated his style of picking called clawgrass, a combination of bluegrass and clawhammer styles. (Editor’s note: In 2012 Johnson was named the recipient of the third annual Steve Martin Prize for Excellence in Banjo and Bluegrass.)

Ashokan Farewell was used throughout the popular PBS Series, “The Civil War.”  Before long folk icon Norman Blake jumped into the Civil War discussion and shared an acapella version of an old song, “Faded Coat of Blue.” When Doc Watson heard Johnson’s banjo, he asked if he could play it. In the three recorded segments below you’ll hear the spontaneous conversation and music from that afternoon that can only be described as “magical.”

 

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Mark Johnson talking “banjos” with the legendary Doc Watson backstage at the Suwannee Springfest

In Part 1 (running time 4:35) Green-Townsend talks backstage with Clawgrass player Mark Johnson:

 

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                  Clawgrass Banjo player Mark Johnson and Doc Watson

In Part 2 (running time 5:16) Green-Townsend and Johnson begin an interesting music dialogue with folk icon Norman Blake and share an acapella version of “Faded Coat of Blue.”

 

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Mark Johnson sharing some banjo tunes with Doc Watson backstage at the Suwannee Springfest

In Part 3 (running time 32:24) Doc Watson hears Mark Johnson’s banjo and asks if he could hold it and then begins sharing his inside knowledge of some of his favorite banjo tunes, banjo styles and personal stories):

(Gallery Photos are used with permission from T. Michael Coleman)

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Getting To Know Musician Lee Townsend

Lee performing on banjo at the 2018 Blueberry Festival in Island Grove, FL with band members Jessie (Townsend) Armstrong on vocals (far left), David McBrady on bass and Andy Garfield (far right) on guitar
Lee doing a solo during a performance with the Tumblin Creek Bluegrass Band at P.K. Yonge High School in Gainesville
Lee Townsend

(For bookings or to contact Lee send an email to dltownsend3@gmail.com or call  352-672-7574)

The following YouTube Videos are from some of Lee Townsend’s various bluegrass performances around North Central Florida.   (Read about Lee’s musical story and see pictures of Lee below the You Tube videos)

 

Jessie and Lee Townsend

Jessie and Lee Townsend

Lee and Jessie Townsend’s CD Sampler is ready.  Click here to listen to highlights.

On Friday, April 29th, 2016 Red and Chris Henry along with David McBrady joined Jessie and Lee at Gatorbone Studios to begin recording six additional songs for their new CD called, “Tribute.”  Here’s a sample of one of the recordings, “Oh Kissimmee River,” written by environmental troubadour Dale Crider from Windsor, FL.  The song points out the folly of the government’s effort to straighten Florida’s Kissimmee River.

Lee and Jessie recently performed at the 27th Annual Will McLean Music Festival.  Here’s one example of the songs they performed, the late Jim Ballew’s “When I Die”

Here’s Lee and Andy Garfield performing “Up 18 North” on the Azalea Stage.

To see more highlights from Jessie and Lee’s performances at the Will McLean Festival click here:

To see highlights from Jessie and Lee’s performances at the Florida Folk Festival click here:

 

Homecoming Service at the New Cross Creek Baptist Church

On April 26, 2015 Jessie and Lee Townsend performed “What Wondrous Love Is This” at the Homecoming Services of the New Cross Creek Baptist Church on April 26, 2015

 

2015 Will McLean Festival

On March 15th, 2015 Lee and his sister Jessie performed Will McLean’s “Macclenny Farewell” during the Hour of Power on the Main Stage accompanied by David McBrady on bass.

 

Lee and Jessie also made great harmony on the Azalea Stage at the 2015 Will McLean Festival performing Townes Van Zandt’s, “If I Needed You” with help on the bass and harmony by David McBrady.

 

The trio even got in some bluegrass with “Drivin’ Nails In My Coffin.”

 

Lee playing banjo on Wild Hog by Will McLean performed by Whitey Markle and the Swamprooters at the Will McLean Festival 2015

 

 

Blue Linewalkers at the 2013 Florida Folk Festival

“Cold Sheets of Rain” with Erik Alvar on bass, Andy Garfield on acoustic guitar and vocals, Lee Townsend on banjo, Amanda Anderson on fiddle and vocals and Christian Ward on fiddle

“The Lucky One”

“Little Boy of Mine in Tennessee”

“Ookpik Waltz”

“Bury Me Beneath the Willow”

 

Lee Townsend and Amanda Anderson

“Down In The River To Pray” and “A Living Prayer” presented at the New Cross Creek Baptist Church, January, 2012

 

Orange and Bluegrass Band Performing in Waldo, 2013

“Little Boy of Mine in Tennessee”

“I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry”

 

“Nine Pound Hammer”

 

“Soldier’s Joy”

 

 

Jamming at Lis and Lon Williamson’s Porch in 2013

 “Groundspeed”

 

Tumblin’ Creek Bluegrass Band On The Main Stage At Florida Folk Festival, 2013

 

Performing “Landslide” at the P.K. Yonge High School Graduation in 2011

 

“Foggy Mountain Breakdown”– Jamming at the Hippodrome

 

 

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Lee at around three years old

Lee Townsend loves to play music, especially bluegrass. Even at the young age of 3 he wanted to play the guitar.

 

 

 

Pat & Dorsey Lee Townsend, Sr.

His love for music isn’t a total surprise.  His grandpa Dorsey Lee Townsend was a great guitar player who played with his brother Jesse Townsend around the Cross Creek area in the 1930s through the 1970s.  His other grandpa, Sterling Green from Missouri, also played the guitar and had a family band.

 

 

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Lee’s mom and her siblings singing in a talent show accompanied by members of Lee Mace’s Ozark Opry

  Lee learned his first music chords from his mom (Donna Green-Townsend) and dad (Dorsey Lee Townsend, Jr.)

 

 

 

 

Lee jamming with his dad in Cross Creek, FL

 

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Lee with his mom Donna Green-Townsend

 

 

 

 

 

Lee and his first guitar teacher David Cook
Lee and his first guitar teacher David Cook

 

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Singer-Songwriter Jon Semmes from Dunnellon

 

 

 

 

 

David Cook gave Lee his first professional guitar lessons.  His parents along with musician and singer songwriter Jon Semmes from Dunnellon helped purchase his first “real” guitar. It wasn’t long before he decided he also wanted to try out playing the banjo. His Aunt Linda and Uncle Jim Johnson provided his first one.

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Randy Hollinger and bluegrass band members playing for runners in a Gainesville marathon

At P.K. Yonge High School Lee had the opportunity to take Mr. Randy Hollinger’s instrumental ensemble class. The class included not only a bluegrass band, but a rock band, blues band and a girl’s punk rock band.

 

 

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Finale of one of the P.K. Yonge Instrumental Ensemble concerts.

The bands put on a big show every May on the school’s performing arts center stage. But the bluegrass band had a life of its own and soon the Tumblin’ Creek Bluegrass Band began performing at a variety of venues, including the Will McLean Folk Festival, the Florida Folk Festival, United Downtown in Gainesville, the Micanopy Fall Festival, and the Alachua Downtown Festival among others.

 

 

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Members of the Tumblin’ Creek Bluegrass Band

 

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The Tumblin’ Creek Bluegrass Band performing in 2013 at the Will McLean Folk Festival

 

 

 

 

 

 

Not surprisingly, when Lee went on to college he joined a bluegrass club and a band soon formed called Orange and Bluegrass.

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First gathering of the Gator Bluegrass Club

 

 

 

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Orange and Bluegrass Band performing at a Waldo bluegrass festival

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As with many acoustic bands, there’s always a mix and match of performers at various festivals. On Memorial Weekend of 2013 one of those mix and match groups became the Blue Linewalkers who performed on the Main Stage of the Florida Folk Festival.  Performers included Erik Alvar on bass, Andy Garfield on vocals and guitar, Lee Townsend on banjo, Amanda Anderson on Fiddle and vocals and Christian Ward on fiddle.

From my audio archives: Peter Rowan performed before sellout crowds in Gainesville and Melrose, FL in 2012 and 2013

Folk and Bluegrass legend Peter Rowan
Peter Rowan music feature produced by Donna Green-Townsend in May, 2012

 

Folk and bluegrass icon Peter Rowan and his Bluegrass band made a tour stop in Gainesville at the historic Thomas Center on Tuesday, November 12th, 2013.

In May of 2012 Grammy Award Winner and 5-time Grammy nominee Rowan gave his only Florida performance that year as part of the Shakerag Concert Series in Melrose.  It was a sellout.  

Peter Rowan performing in May, 2012 in Melrose, FL. He was introduced by the late Joe Saccocci.

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Here is a video of Peter performing a tribute to the late Doc Watson

Chris and Red Henry

 

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Red and Chris Henry

Red Henry and his family are no strangers to the bluegrass and folk festival scene in Florida. The Henrys often play at the Gamble Rogers Folk Festival, which is held in the St. Augustine area to honor the late guitar finger-picking balladeer who graced stages across the country with his musical ability and legendary story-telling. Rogers was inducted into the Florida Artists Hall of Fame in the late 1990s, not many years after he died trying to save a drowning man off Flagler Beach. Red Henry was one of Gamble’s close friends. Henry, a former Floridian, now lives in Winchester, Virginia.

 

Chris Henry and the Hardcore Grass Band
Chris Henry and the Hardcore Grass Band (photo by Ryan Long)

All the members of the Henry family are part of the country’s “bluegrass scene” and are all accomplished musicians. Red plays a variety of instruments including mandolin and fiddle. His wife Murphy plays guitar and banjo and is well-known for her “Murphy Method” for teaching how to play many bluegrass instruments. Daughter Casey plays banjo and son Chris plays guitar and mandolin and has been touring across the country with his own band called Chris Henry and the Hardcore Grass.

Red and Chris like to come to Florida festivals to play, especially the Will McLean Folk Festival and the Florida Folk Festival because of their close ties to not only Gamble Rogers, but also the “Father of Florida Folk,” Will McLean and environmental troubadour Dale Crider.  Donna Green-Townsend has this profile: Aired on WUFT on April 30, 2010 

Here is Red and Chris Henry and their All Star Band performing Stay Out Of Your Way at the 2017 Will McLean Music Festival
 

 

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The cover of Chris Henry’s latest CD/DVD project

During the 2015 Florida Folk Festival in White Springs, Chris and Red Henry and their Allstar Band performed one of Chris’ new songs, “I’m Gonna Wait On Jesus” on the Mainstage.

 

 

Here’s a recording of a typical jam at a Henry campsite…this one recorded in 2012 at the Will McLean Festival:

 

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