Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 258
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-1-4422-6865-4 • Hardback • March 2017 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
978-1-5381-1454-4 • Paperback • September 2018 • $35.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-4422-6866-1 • eBook • March 2017 • $33.00 • (£25.00)
Gordon Castelnero is a freelance documentary writer/producer and author. His local productions have been recognized by the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences—Michigan Chapter with an Emmy Award and several nominations.
David L. Russell is a writer, musician, and banjo teacher, and has toured with a number of bluegrass bands in Michigan and Georgia. He has an MA in philosophy from the University of Detroit (Mercy) and a PhD in history and religion from Michigan State University.
Foreword by Béla Fleck
Authors’ Note
Introduction
Chapter 1 Humble Beginnings
Chapter 2 From Blue Grass to Foggy Mountain
Chapter 3 Flatt and Scruggs
Chapter 4 The Beverly Hillbillies
Chapter 5 Changin’ Times
Chapter 6 New Beginnings
Chapter 7 Earl, Earl, Earl
Chapter 8 The Influence of Earl Scruggs
Bibliographical Notes
Select Bibliography
Every serious bluegrass-music aficionado is well acquainted with both the three-fingered banjo-picking style that gives the genre its pizzazz and the banjo-playing genius who popularized it, Earl Scruggs. Even those who grew up watching the TV sitcom The Beverly Hillbillies are familiar with one of Scruggs’ most famous compositions, 'The Ballad of Jedd Clampett,' the show’s theme song. In this laudatory, blessedly scandal-free biography, television writer Castelnero and banjo instructor Russell follow the complete arc of Scruggs’ rags-to-riches story, from his impoverished childhood in Flint Hill, North Carolina, to his early livelihood as a traveling musician and later fame as an American music icon. According to the authors, Scruggs’ greatest career highlight came on December 8, 1945 at Nashville’s Grand Ole Opry, where the banjo player was performing with Bill Monroe’s Blue Grass Boys. The consummate skill and revolutionary picking style Scruggs displayed that night have been influencing banjo players ever since. Must reading for bluegrass fans and an essential acquisition for every library’s performing arts collection.
— Booklist
Earl Scruggs: Banjo Icon by Gordon Castelnero and David L. Russell uses an oral history approach to produce a volume both scholarly and readable. With the full cooperation of the Scruggs family, they conducted 72 interviews with family members, musicians, recording industry people, and Earl Scruggs' many friends and admirers to create a well-rounded account filled with lots of previously unpublished information while never losing the human touch, always keeping the subject matter interesting and real.
— No Depression
[Earl Scruggs: Banjo Icon] should be enjoyable for musicians and non-musicians alike.
— GateHouse Media, Inc.
This is an insightful tribute to the man who put the banjo in bluegrass. Taken from many oral histories or first-hand accounts of folks who knew Scruggs, we get a rather detailed look into his life from the time he was a child right up to the time of his death. With a foreword by Bela Fleck setting the stage, we hear from a who’s who of modern banjo players of all ages. The authors have even extrapolated the influence that Scruggs had upon succeeding generations by including interviews with so many young players who felt his influence first-hand and through his many recordings and appearances.... This book is essential for all fans of bluegrass banjo, Flatt & Scruggs, and the Earl Scruggs Revue or even The Beverly Hillbillies.... [It presents] a solid representation of the man behind the music.
— Bluegrass Unlimited
Earl Scruggs: Banjo Icon gives the most comprehensive and complete history of a man who changed the world of music forever. Earl was an innovator, perfectionist, risk taker and a global inspiration to countless musicians... A must-read for any music fan!
— Travis Tritt, singer and songwriter
Earl Scruggs was a leader whose unassuming nature meant he was always excited to meet a new fan, even though he was a music legend. This book gives us essential insights into Earl’s life. His life’s work will influence and inspire forever, as rare few have over the years. Earl made it a better world, and he’s the reason I have a life in music. Without him there would not have been a Will the Circle Be Unbroken record.
— John McEuen, a founding member of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
In time, America, beyond the Bluegrass world, and the rest of the planet will recognize Earl Scruggs as an innovative genius. Earl Scruggs: Banjo Icon by Gordon Castelnero and David Russell will be an important light guiding the way to that next step. Brilliantly written, researched, and sourced, Earl Scruggs: Banjo Icon further elevates the subject. There are written words about Earl Scruggs. He even co-wrote a book about his style, but Russell and Castelnero have brought new depth and analysis. Every Earl Scruggs fan will add this work to their library. The legend will grow, as it should.
— Steve Martin, Unreal Bluegrass