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Jimmy Martin

Jimmy Martin

  • Avg user rating: 4h stars Out of 52 votes
  • Your rating:  Write your review
  • Similar Artists: Bill Monroe, Ralph Stanley, Stanley Brothers, Osborne Brothers, Flatt & Scruggs, Roy Acuff

Playlist

Brakeman's Blues (1:55) Date added: 08/30/04 | Total listens: 31,360
Ocean Of Diamonds (2:49) Date added: 08/30/04 | Total listens: 45,629

User reviews for Jimmy Martin

Average rating4h starsOut of 52 votes

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Editor's review

The self-professed 'King of Bluegrass' is a true country music legend, thanks to his sharp arrangements and clear, sturdy high-lonesome voice, easily among the genre's finest. Chills crawl up your spine as his singing reaches high into the heavens, while back here on Earth the music remains firmly grounded by some seriously tight, bright picking.

Biography

Jimmy Martin was born and raised in the rural farming town of Sneedville, Tennessee. At the age of 4 he lost his father, Ease Martin, to pneumonia. To help his family, Jimmy left school after the 3rd grade to work in the tobacco fields. He made his first guitar out of a Prince Albert cigar can because Prince Albert was a sponsor of the Grand Ole Opry. Though his family did not have a radio, Jimmy would go into town on Saturday night and ask someone sitting in their car if they could turn their radio on so he could here Bill Monroe and Roy Acuff on the Grand Ole Opry.
Jimmy was 22 years old when he got fired from a paint factory in Morristown, TN for singing on the job. He then boarded a bus for Grand Ole Opry in Nashville. There, he talked his way backstage to meet his idol, bluegrass pioneer, Bill Monroe. Impressed by the young man's courage, Monroe agreed to audition Jimmy on the spot. They sang the "Old Cross Roads" together, Jimmy sang "Poor Ellen Smith", and then, to test Jimmy's guitar playing, Monroe had fiddler Chubby Wise play the "Orange Blossom Special." A week later, Jimmy was in Fort Smith, Ark., singing on stage with Bill Monroe.

Jimmy spent 5 years as Monroe's lead singer and rhythm guitar player. Together they recorded such classics as "The Little Girl and the Dreadful Snake," "Uncle Pen," "A Voice From On High," "Sitting Alone in the Moonlight," "I'm Blue," "I'm Lonesome," "Walking in Jerusalem," and countless others.

Following a brief stint as Jimmy Martin and the Osborne Brothers, Jimmy started his own band Jimmy Martin and the Sunny Mountain Boys. Under this moniker, he recorded 136 sides for Decca Records, including "Widowmaker," "Sunny Side of the Mountain," "Freeborn Man," "Ocean of Diamonds," "Rock Hearts," "Hit Parade of Love," "Don't Cry to Me," and "Future on Ice." Following his 18 years with Decca, Jimmy recorded 6 albums for Gusto Records before starting his own label, Sunny Mountain Music.

In 1972 Jimmy joined a parade of stars, including Roy Acuff, Earl Scruggs, Mother Maybelle Carter, Merle Travis, and Doc Watson, to record a three record album, Will the Circle be Unbroken, with the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. Jimmy sang the "Grand Ole Opry Song", "Losing You", "Sunny Side of the Mountain", "My Walking Shoes", and "You Don't Don't My Mind". The album went on to become a Gold Record.

Jimmy has landed numerous hits on the country charts, won songwriter and vocalist rewards, has been made a member of the International Bluegrass Hall of Honor and the Bean Blossom Hall of Fame and was recently named 'Ambassador' of the Bean Blossom Bluegrass Festival, the longest running bluegrass festival in the world.

He now plays 20 show dates a years and has been 'semi-retired for the past 18 years,' spending the fall and winter months hunting raccoon, rabbit, and squirrel. Dig on that!

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