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Man Of Constant Sorrow

My Life and Times

Ralph Stanley Eddie Dean

$49.99

Paperback

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English
Gotham Books
02 November 2010
A legend looks back on his six decades in music.

Ralph Stanley was born in 1927 in a corner of Virginia known as Big Spraddle Creek,

a place where music echoed from the ridge tops, was belted out by workers in the fields, and resonated in the one-room country church where Ralph first found his voice. For his eleventh birthday, Ralph was given five dollars, and had to chose between buying a sow or a banjo. He chose the banjo, which his mother taught him to play in the clawhammer style. In 1946, he combined his banjo with his brother Carter's guitar, and the two blended their voices into one as the Stanley Brothers. For twenty years the Stanleys chased the dream through good times and hard times, until the hard times caught up to Carter and he succumbed to liver disease at age 41. In the four decades since his brother's passing, Ralph has brought his music from the hills and hollows of southwest Virginia to the wide world.

Now in his eighties and still touring, Ralph has at last grown into his voice and is ready to tell his story. In Man of Constant Sorrow, Ralph looks back on his career in what most call bluegrass but what he prefers to call ""old time mountain music."" He recounts the creation of hundreds of classic tracks, including ""White Dove,"" ""Rank Stranger,"" and his signature song, ""Man of Constant Sorrow."" He tells tales from a life spent on road with his band the Clinch Mountain Boys, explains his distinctive ""Stanley style"" of banjo-playing, crosses paths with everyone from Bill Monroe to Bob Dylan, and reflects on his late-career resurgence sparked by an unlikely Grammy win in 2002 for his song ""O Death."" He also raises a dirge for Appalachia, his mountain home that is quickly disappearing.

Harmonized with equal measures of tragedy and triumph, Man of Constant Sorrow is the stirring testament of a giant of American music.
By:   ,
Imprint:   Gotham Books
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 28mm
Weight:   454g
ISBN:   9781592405848
ISBN 10:   1592405843
Pages:   464
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Ralph Stanley was a Grammy Award-winning American bluegrass artist, and an inductee into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Honor and the Grand Ole Opry. He was part of the first generation of bluegrass musicians, his prolific career beginning in 1946. He died in 2016. Eddie Dean is a freelance journalist based in the Washington, DC, metro area. He is the coauthor with Ralph Stanley of Stanley's autobiography, Man of Constant Sorrow.

Reviews for Man Of Constant Sorrow: My Life and Times

""The life chronicled in this autobiography is right out of Southern Gothic lit... The level of detail renders Stanley's tales as captivating as his music."" -""Rolling Stone"" ""A delightful, outspoken surprise... An often tart yet affecting music memoir."" -""Kirkus"" (starred review) ""After all these years [Stanley's] tongue is still sharp."" -""Wall Street Journal"" ""[""Man of Constant Sorrow""] is a lot like the man himself: warm, folksy, down to earth, plainspoken, a little blunt and prickly at times."" -""New York Times"" ""No less than the oral history of a quintessentially American music scene."" -""Mother Jones"" ""This late-in-life memoir is a classic- remarkably frank, detailed, revealing, and from time to time it rises to the level of plainspoken poetry. The master of old time singing and clawhammer banjo pulls no punches as he recalls his rural Virginia mountain boyhood, the Stanleys' slow rise to success, his career restart after his alcoholic brother's death in 1966, and musicians he played with, from Bill Monroe to Keith Whitley and even Bob Dylan. He settles a few scores, shares his inner thoughts on matters social, political and spiritual, and tells his tale in a flowing, engaging style that's no doubt also a credit to Virginia journalist Dean."" -""American Songwriter"" (five stars) ""In the prologue to ""Man of Constant Sorrow"" Ralph Stanley writes: 'I've always done my best to honor what God gave me. I've never tried to put any airs on it. I sing it the way I feel it, just the way it comes out.' With music writer Eddie Dean, he relates his life in the same speaking voice - honestly and with extraordinary detail."" -""Austin Chronicle"" ""As fascinating as Stanley's personal revelations are, this book's greatest value lies in his documentary-like descriptions of the hardships rural musicians faced in the 1940s and '50s-crowded cars, band rivalries, long and dangerous roads and hand-to-mouth l


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