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A single-disc retrospective covering the years 1987-96, High Lonesome and Blue is an essential portrait of an important artist's development. Culled from six albums bluegrass torchbearer Del McCoury recorded for Rounder, these 16 tracks trace his expansive approach to the genre and the coalescing of the formidable Del McCoury Band, which has grown to include Del's sons Ronnie and Rob, bassist Mike Bub, and fiddle maestro Jason Carter -- a lineup that instantly became the gold standard of progressive traditional music. The earliest cuts date from the 1987 long-player Del cut with his brother Jerry, The McCoury Brothers, and the ensuing sequence showcases Del's keening high lonesome vocal style and his band's instrumental virtuosity in serving both original songs (penned by Del, and later by Ronnie as well) and offbeat cover choices. A few tunes will be familiar even to recent McCoury converts, such as the 1990 version of Del's mid-tempo heartbreaker "I Feel the Blues Moving In," complete with twin fiddles right out of the Bob Wills lexicon, and, from 1996, "The Cold Hard Fact" (co-written by Ronnie), a briskly rendered cheatin' song marked by an exhilarating Del vocal that blends irony, outrage, and self-pity in the turn of a phrase. Elsewhere there's a wrenching take on George Jones's honky-tonk lament "Don't Stop the Music"; a furious workout on the Lefty Frizzell chart-topper "If You've Got the Money, Honey"; the band's first collaboration with Steve Earle on the latter's spirited "If You Need a Fool"; and a classic, dirgelike, honky-tonk weeper, "Don't Our Love Look Natural." Treasures abound throughout, and repeat listenings are in order. As the song says, don't stop the music. David McGee, Barnes & Noble