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Senior Citizens Bluegrass Night
by Martha Sparks
Society Editor

Martha Sparks

Society Editor

The 7th Annual Senior Citizens Bluegrass Night will be held this Saturday, August 11, at 7:30 p.m. in the Coalfield Jamboree in Logan. The event is free to anyone of any age to attend.

Known as a great mandolinist in his own right, as well as a member of the revolutionary Osborne Brothers band, Bobby Osborne has often been associated with the cutting edge of bluegrass. But the story of his musically rich life leads back to a story that is as sentimental as one of Osborne’s soaring mandolin solos is technically pristine. It is the story of a young man, not quite the legal age of 18 and under massive pressure from his father, singing the song “Ruby” over radio station WPFB in Middletown, Ohio.

It was the young Osborne’s first radio broadcast. Apparently 50 telegrams arrived immediately requesting that he sing the song again, something that, needless to say, does not happen every time someone is making his or her debut radio broadcast. “Ruby” became something of a good-luck mantra for the Osborne Brothers, who have called it their signature song. It became the group’s first recording and was the chosen selection when the group was picked to become a member of the Grand Ole Opry. The group even performed it for President Richard Nixon in the East Room of the White House.

The same year as the historic “Ruby” broadcast, Osborne joined the juggernaut Lonesome Pine Fiddlers band. This group was just changing directions from Western swing to bluegrass. Osborne was picking guitar in that period and the other members were Larry Richardson on banjo, Ezra Cline on bass, and Ray Morgan on fiddle. In 1950, Osborne and his brother Jimmy Martin launched a new combo with the somewhat cumbersome name of Jimmy Martin, Bob Osborne & the Sunny Mountain Boys. The Cline brothers, Curley Ray and Charlie, rounded out this combo, along with a performer who called himself Little Robert. His real name was Robert A. Van Winkle, which he probably didn’t use because bandleaders would be afraid of him falling asleep during the set.

Osborne also freelanced as a picker with bands such as the Miami Valley Playboys and the Silver Saddle Boys. He also played with the Stanley Brothers for several weeks, just before he was drafted into the Marines. He was stationed in Korea, put right in the midst of some of the fiercest fighting in that conflict. He was wounded in action and received the Purple Heart medal. When he got out of the Army, the Osborne Brothers decided to create a group together. At first, they were again collaborating with Jimmy Martin on projects such as a session for RCA, as well as broadcasting over their own spot in Knoxville. In 1956, the brothers’ new group picked up steam and began performing on The Wheeling Jamboree. The band would continue on this West Virginia radio program for four years.

A major aspect of Osborne’s career then follows the course of the Osborne Brothers. One of the major moves made by this group was radically altering the instrumental makeup of a bluegrass combo. Drums, always considered a no-no for bluegrass, were added for the first time by the Osbornes and remain an aspect of progressive bluegrass outfits of the 21st century, such as Leftover Salmon or the String Cheese Incident. The pedal steel guitar, the only really required instrument in a country & western band and definitely appreciated in Western swing, was not present on-stage in a bluegrass band until the Osbornes broke the ice.

No doubt because of the group’s forward thinking, it became the first bluegrass group to perform on a college campus in the early ’60s. These were the early days of what would become a new era for the genre, as a new college-age audience fanatically began to embrace many traditional musical styles. As the years went on, the brothers toned down their instrumental experimentation and returned to a much more traditional sound and approach. Once again, however, the group was in tune with public tastes, and by the mid-’90s many Nashville country artists and their audiences were ready to do the same thing, dropping the pop-influenced, now cold potato of Nashville commercialization and returning to acoustic bluegrass and old-time sounds.

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