Ralph Edmund Stanley (February 25, 1927 – June 23, 2016), also known as Dr.… Read Full Bio ↴Ralph Edmund Stanley (February 25, 1927 – June 23, 2016), also known as Dr. Ralph Stanley, was an American bluegrass artist, known for his distinctive singing and banjo playing. Stanley began playing music in 1946, originally with his brother Carter as part of "The Stanley Brothers", and most often as the leader of his band, "Ralph Stanley & the Clinch Mountain Boys". He was part of the first generation of bluegrass musicians and was inducted into both the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Honor and the Grand Ole Opry.
Ralph Edmond Stanley was born, grew up, and lived in rural Southwest Virginia—"in a little town called McClure at a place called Big Spraddle, just up the holler" from where he moved in 1936 and lived ever since in Dickenson County. The son of Lee and Lucy Stanley, Ralph did not grow up around a lot of music in his home. As he says, his "daddy didn't play an instrument, but sometimes he would sing church music. And I'd hear him sing songs like 'Man of Constant Sorrow,' 'Pretty Polly' and 'Omie Wise.'"
I got my first banjo when I was a teenager. I guess I was 15, 16 years old. My aunt had this old banjo, and Mother bought it for me ... paid $5 for it, which back then was probably like $5,000. My parents had a little store, and I remember my aunt took it out in groceries.
He learned to play the banjo, clawhammer style, from his mother:
She had 11 brothers and sisters, and all of them could play the five-string banjo. She played gatherings around the neighborhood, like bean stringin's. She tuned it up for me and played this tune, "Shout Little Luly," and I tried to play it like she did. But I think I developed my own style of the banjo.
He graduated from high school on May 2, 1945 and was inducted into the Army on May 16, serving "little more than a year." He immediately began performing when he got home:
... my daddy and Carter picked me up from the (station), and Carter was playing with another group, Roy Sykes and the Blue Ridge Mountain Boys, and they had a personal appearance that night. So I sung a song with Carter on the radio before I even got home.
After considering a course in "veterinary", he decided instead to throw in with his older guitar-playing brother Carter Stanley (1925–1966) to form the Clinch Mountain Boys in 1946. Drawing heavily on the musical traditions of the area, which included the unique minor-key singing style of the Primitive Baptist Universalist church and the sweet down-home family harmonies of the Carter Family, the two Stanley brothers began playing on local radio stations. They first performed at Norton, Virginia's WNVA, but did not stay long there, moving on instead to Bristol, Virginia, and WCYB to start the show Farm and Fun Time, where they stayed "off and on for 12 years".
At first they covered "a lot of Bill Monroe music" (one of the first groups to pick up the new "bluegrass" format). They soon "found out that didn't pay off—we needed something of our own. So we started writing songs in 1947, 1948. I guess I wrote 20 or so banjo tunes, but Carter was a better writer than me." When Columbia Records signed them as the Stanley Brothers, Bill Monroe left in protest and joined Decca. Later, Carter went back to sing for the "Father of Bluegrass", Bill Monroe.
Ralph Stanley gave his opinion on Bill Monroe's apparent change of heart: "He ,Bill Monroe, knew Carter would make him a good singer. . . Bill Monroe loved our music and loved our singing."
The Stanley Brothers joined King Records in the late '50s, a record company so eclectic that it included James Brown at the time. In fact, James Brown and his band were in the studio when the Stanley Brothers recorded "Finger Poppin' Time". "James and his band were poppin' their fingers on that" according to Ralph. At King Records, they "went to a more 'Stanley style', the sound that people most know today."
Ralph and Carter performed as The Stanley Brothers with their band, the Clinch Mountain Boys, from 1946 to 1966. Ralph kept the band name when he continued as a solo after Carter's death, from 1967 to the present.
After Carter died of complications of cirrhosis in 1966, after ailing for "a year or so", Ralph faced a hard decision on whether to continue performing on his own. "I was worried, I didn't know if I could do it by myself. But boy, I got letters, 3,000 of 'em, and phone calls . . . I went to Syd Nathan at King and asked him if he wanted me to go on, and he said, 'Hell yes! You might be better than both of them.'"
He decided to go it alone, eventually reviving the Clinch Mountain Boys. Larry Sparks, Roy Lee Centers, and Charlie Sizemore were among those with whom he played in the revived band. He encountered Ricky Skaggs and Keith Whitley arriving late to his own show: "They were about 16 or 17, and they were holding the crowd 'til we got there. . . They sounded just exactly like (the Stanley Brothers)." Seeing their potential, he hired them "to give 'em a chance", though that meant a seven-member band. Eventually, his son, Ralph Stanley II, took over as lead singer and rhythm guitarist for the Clinch Mountain Boys.
Clinch Mountain Boys members:
1967 to 2016:
Ralph Stanley (Lead vocalist, banjo)
Jack Cooke (bass)
Curly Ray Cline (fiddle)
George Shuffler (guitar, bass)
Melvin Goins (bass, guitar)
Larry Sparks (Lead vocalist, guitar)
Roy Lee Centers (Lead vocalist, guitar)
Ricky Skaggs (mandolin, fiddle)
Keith Whitley (Lead vocalist, guitar)
Charlie Sizemore (Lead vocalist, guitar)
Ricky Lee (guitar)
Junior Blankenship (guitar)
Kenneth Davis (guitar)
Renfro Proffit (guitar)
Ron Thomason (mandolin)
Steve Sparkman (banjo)
James Alan Shelton (guitar)
Sammy Adkins (Lead vocalist, guitar)
Todd Meade (fiddle)
Ralph 'Hank' Smith (Lead guitar)
Ernie Thacker (Lead vocalist, guitar, mandolin)
John Rigsby (mandolin)
Dewey Brown (fiddle)
Audey Ratliff (bass)
Ralph Stanley II (Lead vocalist, guitar)
Nathan Stanley (mandolin, Lead vocalist, guitar)
James Price (fiddle)
Randall Joe Hibbitts (bass)
Mitchell Van Dyke (banjo)
Jarrod Church (banjo)
Alex Hibbitts (Mandolin)
Jimmy Vaughn (Rhythm Guitar, Vocals)
Political career
Around 1970, he ran for Clerk of Court and Commissioner of Revenue in Dickenson County only to state this:
What happened is, somebody traded me off—they used my popularity and money to elect somebody else. I was done dirty. And I'm so proud that I was done dirty, because if I had been elected ... I woulda had a job to do ... maybe woulda finally quit. So that's one time I was done dirty and I want to thank them for it now.
Stanley's work was featured in the 2000 film O Brother, Where Art Thou?, in which he sings the Appalachian dirge "O Death." The soundtrack's producer was T-Bone Burnett. Stanley said the following about working with Burnett:
T-Bone Burnett had several auditions for that song. He wanted it in the Dock Boggs style. So I got my banjo and learned it the way he did it. You see, I had recorded "O Death" three times, done it with Carter. So I went down with my banjo to Nashville and I said, "T-Bone, let me sing it the way I want to sing it," and I laid my banjo down and sung it a cappella. After two or three verses, he stopped me and said, "That's it."
With that song, Stanley won a 2002 Grammy Award in the category of Best Male Country Vocal Performance. "That put the icing on the cake for me," he said. "It put me in a different category."
Known in the world of bluegrass music by the popular title, "Dr. Ralph Stanley" (after being awarded an honorary Doctorate of Music from Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tennessee in 1976), Stanley was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Honor in 1992 and in 2000, and became the first person to be inducted into the Grand Ole Opry in the third millennium.
He joined producers Randall Franks and Alan Autry for the In the Heat of the Night cast CD Christmas Time’s A Comin’, performing "Christmas Time's A Comin'" with the cast on the CD released on Sonlite and MGM/UA; it was one of the most popular Christmas releases of 1991 and 1992 with Southern retailers.
He was featured in the Josh Turner hit song "Me and God" released in 2006.
In 2006, he was awarded the National Medal of Arts. On November 10, 2007, Stanley and the Clinch Mountain Boys performed at a rally for presidential candidate John Edwards in Des Moines, Iowa, just before the Democratic Party's annual Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner. Between renditions of "Man of Constant Sorrow" and "Orange Blossom Special", Stanley told the crowd that he had cast his first vote for Harry S. Truman in 1948 and would cast his next for John Edwards in 2008.
Country singer Dwight Yoakam has stated that Ralph Stanley is one of his "musical heroes."
Stanley's autobiography, Man of Constant Sorrow, coauthored with the music journalist Eddie Dean, was released by Gotham Books on October 15, 2009. In 2012, Stanley was featured on several tracks of the soundtrack for Nick Cave's film Lawless, with music by Cave and Warren Ellis. His solo track "White Light/White Heat" is prominent in several scenes of the movie.
Stanley maintained an active touring schedule; appearances in recent years have included the 2012 Muddy Roots Music Festival in Cookeville, TN, and the 2013 FreshGrass Festival in North Adams, MA. In June 2013, he announced a farewell tour, scheduled to begin in Rocky Mount, NC, on October 18 and extending to December 2014. However, upon notification of being elected as a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (awarded October 11, 2014) a statement on his own website appeared, saying that he would not be retiring.
On June 23, 2016, Stanley died after battling skin cancer.
Ralph Stanley created a unique style of banjo playing, sometimes called "Stanley style". It evolved from Wade Mainer style two-finger technique, later influenced by Scruggs style, which is a three-finger technique. "Stanley style" is distinguished by incredibly fast "forward rolls", led by the index finger (instead of the thumb, as in Scruggs style), sometimes in the higher registers using a capo. In "Stanley style", the rolls of the banjo are continuous, while being picked fairly close to the bridge on the banjo, giving the tone of the instrument a very crisp, articulate snap to the strings as the player would strike them.
He's known in the world of bluegrass music by the popular title, "Dr. Ralph Stanley" after being awarded an honorary Doctorate of Music from Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tennessee, in 1976.
He was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Honor in 1992 and in 2000.
He became the first person to be inducted into the Grand Ole Opry in the third millennium.
His work was featured in the 2000 film O Brother, Where Art Thou?, in which he sings the Appalachian dirge "O Death."
That song won him a 2002 Grammy Award in the category of Best Male Country Vocal Performance.
The Virginia Press Association made him their Distinguished Virginian of the Year in 2004.
The Ralph Stanley Museum and Traditional Mountain Music Center opened in Clintwood, Virginia in 2004.
He was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 2006, the nation's highest honor for artistic excellence.
The Virginia legislature designated him the Outstanding Virginian of 2008.
He was awarded the Key to the City of Garner, North Carolina on November 15, 2008
He was named a Library of Congress Living Legend in April 2000
He received a second honorary Doctorate of Music degree from Yale University on May 19, 2014.
He became an elected fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences on October 11, 2014.
From the January 2, 2015 death of Little Jimmy Dickens until his own death, Stanley was the oldest living member of the Grand Ole Opry.
Ralph Edmond Stanley was born, grew up, and lived in rural Southwest Virginia—"in a little town called McClure at a place called Big Spraddle, just up the holler" from where he moved in 1936 and lived ever since in Dickenson County. The son of Lee and Lucy Stanley, Ralph did not grow up around a lot of music in his home. As he says, his "daddy didn't play an instrument, but sometimes he would sing church music. And I'd hear him sing songs like 'Man of Constant Sorrow,' 'Pretty Polly' and 'Omie Wise.'"
I got my first banjo when I was a teenager. I guess I was 15, 16 years old. My aunt had this old banjo, and Mother bought it for me ... paid $5 for it, which back then was probably like $5,000. My parents had a little store, and I remember my aunt took it out in groceries.
He learned to play the banjo, clawhammer style, from his mother:
She had 11 brothers and sisters, and all of them could play the five-string banjo. She played gatherings around the neighborhood, like bean stringin's. She tuned it up for me and played this tune, "Shout Little Luly," and I tried to play it like she did. But I think I developed my own style of the banjo.
He graduated from high school on May 2, 1945 and was inducted into the Army on May 16, serving "little more than a year." He immediately began performing when he got home:
... my daddy and Carter picked me up from the (station), and Carter was playing with another group, Roy Sykes and the Blue Ridge Mountain Boys, and they had a personal appearance that night. So I sung a song with Carter on the radio before I even got home.
After considering a course in "veterinary", he decided instead to throw in with his older guitar-playing brother Carter Stanley (1925–1966) to form the Clinch Mountain Boys in 1946. Drawing heavily on the musical traditions of the area, which included the unique minor-key singing style of the Primitive Baptist Universalist church and the sweet down-home family harmonies of the Carter Family, the two Stanley brothers began playing on local radio stations. They first performed at Norton, Virginia's WNVA, but did not stay long there, moving on instead to Bristol, Virginia, and WCYB to start the show Farm and Fun Time, where they stayed "off and on for 12 years".
At first they covered "a lot of Bill Monroe music" (one of the first groups to pick up the new "bluegrass" format). They soon "found out that didn't pay off—we needed something of our own. So we started writing songs in 1947, 1948. I guess I wrote 20 or so banjo tunes, but Carter was a better writer than me." When Columbia Records signed them as the Stanley Brothers, Bill Monroe left in protest and joined Decca. Later, Carter went back to sing for the "Father of Bluegrass", Bill Monroe.
Ralph Stanley gave his opinion on Bill Monroe's apparent change of heart: "He ,Bill Monroe, knew Carter would make him a good singer. . . Bill Monroe loved our music and loved our singing."
The Stanley Brothers joined King Records in the late '50s, a record company so eclectic that it included James Brown at the time. In fact, James Brown and his band were in the studio when the Stanley Brothers recorded "Finger Poppin' Time". "James and his band were poppin' their fingers on that" according to Ralph. At King Records, they "went to a more 'Stanley style', the sound that people most know today."
Ralph and Carter performed as The Stanley Brothers with their band, the Clinch Mountain Boys, from 1946 to 1966. Ralph kept the band name when he continued as a solo after Carter's death, from 1967 to the present.
After Carter died of complications of cirrhosis in 1966, after ailing for "a year or so", Ralph faced a hard decision on whether to continue performing on his own. "I was worried, I didn't know if I could do it by myself. But boy, I got letters, 3,000 of 'em, and phone calls . . . I went to Syd Nathan at King and asked him if he wanted me to go on, and he said, 'Hell yes! You might be better than both of them.'"
He decided to go it alone, eventually reviving the Clinch Mountain Boys. Larry Sparks, Roy Lee Centers, and Charlie Sizemore were among those with whom he played in the revived band. He encountered Ricky Skaggs and Keith Whitley arriving late to his own show: "They were about 16 or 17, and they were holding the crowd 'til we got there. . . They sounded just exactly like (the Stanley Brothers)." Seeing their potential, he hired them "to give 'em a chance", though that meant a seven-member band. Eventually, his son, Ralph Stanley II, took over as lead singer and rhythm guitarist for the Clinch Mountain Boys.
Clinch Mountain Boys members:
1967 to 2016:
Ralph Stanley (Lead vocalist, banjo)
Jack Cooke (bass)
Curly Ray Cline (fiddle)
George Shuffler (guitar, bass)
Melvin Goins (bass, guitar)
Larry Sparks (Lead vocalist, guitar)
Roy Lee Centers (Lead vocalist, guitar)
Ricky Skaggs (mandolin, fiddle)
Keith Whitley (Lead vocalist, guitar)
Charlie Sizemore (Lead vocalist, guitar)
Ricky Lee (guitar)
Junior Blankenship (guitar)
Kenneth Davis (guitar)
Renfro Proffit (guitar)
Ron Thomason (mandolin)
Steve Sparkman (banjo)
James Alan Shelton (guitar)
Sammy Adkins (Lead vocalist, guitar)
Todd Meade (fiddle)
Ralph 'Hank' Smith (Lead guitar)
Ernie Thacker (Lead vocalist, guitar, mandolin)
John Rigsby (mandolin)
Dewey Brown (fiddle)
Audey Ratliff (bass)
Ralph Stanley II (Lead vocalist, guitar)
Nathan Stanley (mandolin, Lead vocalist, guitar)
James Price (fiddle)
Randall Joe Hibbitts (bass)
Mitchell Van Dyke (banjo)
Jarrod Church (banjo)
Alex Hibbitts (Mandolin)
Jimmy Vaughn (Rhythm Guitar, Vocals)
Political career
Around 1970, he ran for Clerk of Court and Commissioner of Revenue in Dickenson County only to state this:
What happened is, somebody traded me off—they used my popularity and money to elect somebody else. I was done dirty. And I'm so proud that I was done dirty, because if I had been elected ... I woulda had a job to do ... maybe woulda finally quit. So that's one time I was done dirty and I want to thank them for it now.
Stanley's work was featured in the 2000 film O Brother, Where Art Thou?, in which he sings the Appalachian dirge "O Death." The soundtrack's producer was T-Bone Burnett. Stanley said the following about working with Burnett:
T-Bone Burnett had several auditions for that song. He wanted it in the Dock Boggs style. So I got my banjo and learned it the way he did it. You see, I had recorded "O Death" three times, done it with Carter. So I went down with my banjo to Nashville and I said, "T-Bone, let me sing it the way I want to sing it," and I laid my banjo down and sung it a cappella. After two or three verses, he stopped me and said, "That's it."
With that song, Stanley won a 2002 Grammy Award in the category of Best Male Country Vocal Performance. "That put the icing on the cake for me," he said. "It put me in a different category."
Known in the world of bluegrass music by the popular title, "Dr. Ralph Stanley" (after being awarded an honorary Doctorate of Music from Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tennessee in 1976), Stanley was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Honor in 1992 and in 2000, and became the first person to be inducted into the Grand Ole Opry in the third millennium.
He joined producers Randall Franks and Alan Autry for the In the Heat of the Night cast CD Christmas Time’s A Comin’, performing "Christmas Time's A Comin'" with the cast on the CD released on Sonlite and MGM/UA; it was one of the most popular Christmas releases of 1991 and 1992 with Southern retailers.
He was featured in the Josh Turner hit song "Me and God" released in 2006.
In 2006, he was awarded the National Medal of Arts. On November 10, 2007, Stanley and the Clinch Mountain Boys performed at a rally for presidential candidate John Edwards in Des Moines, Iowa, just before the Democratic Party's annual Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner. Between renditions of "Man of Constant Sorrow" and "Orange Blossom Special", Stanley told the crowd that he had cast his first vote for Harry S. Truman in 1948 and would cast his next for John Edwards in 2008.
Country singer Dwight Yoakam has stated that Ralph Stanley is one of his "musical heroes."
Stanley's autobiography, Man of Constant Sorrow, coauthored with the music journalist Eddie Dean, was released by Gotham Books on October 15, 2009. In 2012, Stanley was featured on several tracks of the soundtrack for Nick Cave's film Lawless, with music by Cave and Warren Ellis. His solo track "White Light/White Heat" is prominent in several scenes of the movie.
Stanley maintained an active touring schedule; appearances in recent years have included the 2012 Muddy Roots Music Festival in Cookeville, TN, and the 2013 FreshGrass Festival in North Adams, MA. In June 2013, he announced a farewell tour, scheduled to begin in Rocky Mount, NC, on October 18 and extending to December 2014. However, upon notification of being elected as a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (awarded October 11, 2014) a statement on his own website appeared, saying that he would not be retiring.
On June 23, 2016, Stanley died after battling skin cancer.
Ralph Stanley created a unique style of banjo playing, sometimes called "Stanley style". It evolved from Wade Mainer style two-finger technique, later influenced by Scruggs style, which is a three-finger technique. "Stanley style" is distinguished by incredibly fast "forward rolls", led by the index finger (instead of the thumb, as in Scruggs style), sometimes in the higher registers using a capo. In "Stanley style", the rolls of the banjo are continuous, while being picked fairly close to the bridge on the banjo, giving the tone of the instrument a very crisp, articulate snap to the strings as the player would strike them.
He's known in the world of bluegrass music by the popular title, "Dr. Ralph Stanley" after being awarded an honorary Doctorate of Music from Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tennessee, in 1976.
He was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Honor in 1992 and in 2000.
He became the first person to be inducted into the Grand Ole Opry in the third millennium.
His work was featured in the 2000 film O Brother, Where Art Thou?, in which he sings the Appalachian dirge "O Death."
That song won him a 2002 Grammy Award in the category of Best Male Country Vocal Performance.
The Virginia Press Association made him their Distinguished Virginian of the Year in 2004.
The Ralph Stanley Museum and Traditional Mountain Music Center opened in Clintwood, Virginia in 2004.
He was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 2006, the nation's highest honor for artistic excellence.
The Virginia legislature designated him the Outstanding Virginian of 2008.
He was awarded the Key to the City of Garner, North Carolina on November 15, 2008
He was named a Library of Congress Living Legend in April 2000
He received a second honorary Doctorate of Music degree from Yale University on May 19, 2014.
He became an elected fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences on October 11, 2014.
From the January 2, 2015 death of Little Jimmy Dickens until his own death, Stanley was the oldest living member of the Grand Ole Opry.
Christmas Is Near
Ralph Stanley Lyrics
We have lyrics for 'Christmas Is Near' by these artists:
Larry Sparks When the spinifex flowers and harvest begins, We know that C…
Larry Sparks & The Lonesome Ramblers When the spinifex flowers and harvest begins, We know that C…
Rehya Stevens Bells are ringin' All the way to Tinsel Town Everybody knows…
We have lyrics for these tracks by Ralph Stanley:
All I Ever Loved Was You All I ever loved was you You broke a heart that…
All the Love I Had Is Gone I even loved the ground that you walked on But that…
Almost Home For many long years I've travelled this road I'm weary and t…
Angel Band My latest sun is sinking fast, my race is nearly…
Beautiful Oh beautiful Star of Bethlehem Shining afar through shadows…
Bright Morning Star Bright morning stars are rising Bright morning stars are ris…
Calling My Children Home "Calling My Children Home" Those lives were mine to love …
Calling You When you've strayed from the fold and there's trouble in…
Children Go Where I Send Thee Children go where I send thee. How shall I send thee? I′m…
Daddy's Wildwood Flower INSTRUMENTAL INTRO Mama was his Wildwood Flower, my Daddy u…
Distant Land To Roam I remember very well On one dark and dreary day Just as…
don I don't want your rambling letters Don't want…
Down Where The River Bends Its hard to keep tears out of my eyes This might…
East Virginia Blues I was born in East Virginia North Carolina I did go There…
Engine 143 Along came the F-15 the swiftest on the line Running over…
False Hearted Lover's Blues False hearts have been my downfall Pretty women have been my…
Fire and Brimstone I had a dream last night while I was laying…
Gathering Flowers for the Master Death is an angel sent down from above Sent for the…
Gloryland If you have friends in Gloryland Who left because of pain, T…
God I've got a home in that rock Don't you see (don't…
Going Up Home to Live in Green Pastures Troubles and trials often betray those causing the weary bo…
Gold Watch and Chain Oh, I’ll pawn you my gold watch and chain love And…
Great High Mountain Once I stood at the foot Of a great high mountain That…
Heaven Out on the hills of glory land So happy and free…
Hemlocks and Primroses Thinking of you while out for a ramble Down by a…
Hills of Home VERSE 1 IN THE DEEP ROLLING HILLS OF OLD VIRGINIA IS WHERE…
I Hope to Meet You in the Morning On Sunday, when the church bells start ringin' They're ringi…
I Just Think I Go and leave me if you wish to And I hope…
I'll Answer the Call The roads get rough and rocky That I traveled day by…
I'll Fly Away Some glad morning when this life is o'er, I'll fly away; To…
I'll Meet You in Church Sunday Morning On Sunday, when the church bells start ringin' They're ringi…
I'll Never Grow Tired of You It's been a long time Since you drifted away Now there's not…
I'll Wear A White Robe My bible tells me (my bible tells me) My Lord has…
I'm Thinking Tonight Of My Blue Eyes Would've been better for us both had we never In this…
Intro To Oh Death Oh death Oh death Won't you spare me over 'til another yea…
Introduction Miner's Prayer When the whistle blows each morning And I walk down in…
Jesus on the Mainline Chorus Jesus…
Katy Daley With her old man she came from Tipperary In the pioneering…
Keep On The Firing Line If you're in the battle for the Lord and right Just…
Let's Go to the Fair Come on boys let's go to the fair See the funny…
Letter From My Darling I can't answer her letter For she left me no address You…
Lift Him Up That's All When Jesus was around here on this land He certainly did…
Little Birdie Little birdie, little birdie Won't you sing to me your song …
Little Glass of Wine ... ... ... astaga *beep* hello? hello! ... ... hello. hello…
Little Maggie Over yonder stands little Maggie With a dram glass in her…
Little Mathie Grove On a high, on a high, on a high holiday, On…
Little Moses Away by the waters so blue The ladies were winding their…
Lonesome River I sit here alone on the banks of the river The…
Longing For Home And o're the dark waters we glide My heart's growing weary…
Look On And Cry My dearest friend it's fare you well You slighted me but…
Man Of Constant Sorrow I am a man of constant sorrow, I've seen trouble all…
Maple On the Hill In a quiet country village stood a Maple On The…
Medicine Springs Well I wandered way back in the mountains I was searching…
Midnight Storm We were wed in the hills of ol' Virginia We were…
Miner When the whistle blows each morning And I walk down in…
Motherless Children Motherless children sees a hard time When their mother's dea…
My Little Georgia Rose Now Come And Listen To My Story A Story That I…
My Lord's Been a Walking If you have friends in Gloryland Who left because of pain, T…
Nobody Nobody's love is like mine No one so…
Nobody’s Love Is Like Mine Nobody's love is like mine No one so faithful and kind Love…
Noboy's Love Is Like Mine Nobody's love is like mine No one so…
O Ooh death Whooooah death Won't you spare me over 'til a anot…
O Come All Ye Faithful Oh, come ye O come ye to Bethlehem Come and behold him Born…
O Death Ooh death Whooooah death Won't you spare me over 'til a anot…
O' Death ) Ooh death Whooooah death Won't you spare me over ‘til a an…
Oh Death Oh death Oh death Won't you spare me over 'til another yea…
Oh, Death Oh Death, Whoa, death! Won't you spare me over 'til another …
Old Richmond Prison Deep in the hills,Way down in virginia, Was where I lived…
On A Hill Lone And Grey On a hill lone and gray In a land far away In…
Orange Blossom Special Look a-yonder comin' Comin' down that railroad track Hey, lo…
Pig in a Pen I got a pig at home in a pen; Corn to…
Poor Orphan Child I hear a low faint voice that says Papa and mama's…
Poor Rambler Come and gather around me good people My life I must…
Rank Stranger I wandered again to my home in the mountains Where in…
Rank Strangers I wondered again to my home in the mountains Where in…
Rank Stranger I wandered again to my home in the mountains Where in…
Riding The Midnight Train No matter what I say or do You're never satisfied I've…
Rocky Island Way up on the Mountain, throw a little cane See my…
Roll In My Sweet Baby If I was on some foggy mountain top I'd sail away…
Sea of Regret The day I first met you my heart spoke to…
Sharecropper We moved here from somewhere when I was fourteen Worked this…
sinner man Sinner maaaan, Soooo discouraged While travel′n through this…
Six More Miles Six more miles to the graveyard Six more miles alone and…
Stone Walls and Steel Bars Stone walls and steel bars a love on my mind I'm…
Storms Are On The Ocean Well, I'm going away to leave you And I'm gone for…
Sure 'Nuff 'N Yes I Do Well, I was born in the desert, Came up from New…
The Death Of John Henry Listen in every heart there burns a flame For the love…
The Fields Have Turned Brown I left my old home to ramble this country My mother…
The Lonesome River I sit here alone on the banks of the river The…
The Memory of Your Smile I'm walking from one bar to another, And I don't know…
The Window Up Above I've been living a new way Of life that I love…
This Little Light Of Mine This Little Light Of Mine, I'm gonna let it shine, This Litt…
Twelve Gates to the City Oh what a beautiful city Oh what a beautiful city Oh what…
Waves On The Sea Oh, the waves on the sea, how they roll The chilly…
What About You Heart to heart, dear, how I need you Like the flowers…
Why Me Ralph? In the beautiful hills way back in Virginia By the side…
Will the Circle be Unbroken I was standing by my window On a cold and cloudy…
Will You Miss Me When death shall close these eye lids And this heart shall…
Window up Above I've been living a new way Of life that I love…
Worried Man Blues I went across the river, I lay down to sleep I…
you When you've strayed from the fold and there's trouble in…
You better sit down and pray Sit down, sit down, sit down, sit down Sit down won't…
Your Worries And Troubles Are Mine People keep asking and wondering why There's always a tear i…
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