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The Carter Family, rural country-folk from Poor Valley, Virginia, known for hits like "Wildwood Flower", recorded the first commercially released country music records under producer Ralph Peer in Bristol, Tennessee. The Carter Family are regarded as the "First Family of Country Music", and founders of country music, along with Jimmie Rodgers.
United States country music group navigational boxes (112 P) Pages in category "American country music groups" The following 146 pages are in this category, out of 146 total.
Steve Gulley (September 20, 1962 [1] – August 18, 2020) was an American singer-songwriter of bluegrass music. [2] [3] He rose to prominence as a cast member at the Renfro Valley Barn Dance in Renfro Valley, Kentucky where he performed bluegrass, country and gospel music from the early 1980's through 1994.
Warmack, the bandleader (the band was initially known as "Paul Warmack and His Gully Jumpers"), was born in Whites Creek in 1889 and was working as an automobile mechanic in Goodlettesville when he formed the Gully Jumpers around 1927. [3] The band's name was suggested by Opry founder George D. Hay, who often gave the Opry's early string bands ...
Dear Life is the fifth studio album by Canadian country music duo High Valley and the group's debut major-label release. [1] It was released on November 18, 2016 through Atlantic Records and Warner Music Nashville. [2]
High Valley is a Canadian country and bluegrass band originally from Blumenort, Alberta, a small community near the hamlet of La Crete.The group is composed of Brad Rempel (lead vocals) and his supporting band, Dave Myers (bass guitar), Raymond Klassen (Dobro), Clint Milburn (guitar), and Andrew Hemmerling (drums).
Lightband Gully, sometimes also Lightbands or Lightband's Gully, is a valley in the hills behind the Golden Bay / Mohua township of Parapara in New Zealand. The valley is notable as the site of the first payable gold discovery—in October 1856—in the South Island , and this started the Golden Bay gold rush .
The Coon Creek Girls were one of the first all-female string bands. The band was created in the mid-1930s by John Lair for his Renfro Valley Barn Dance show. The group toured throughout the greater region of Cincinnati, and performed at the White House for President Franklin D. Roosevelt, his wife, Eleanor and the King and Queen of England, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth.