Live at the Ryman Marty Stuart

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CD

  • Release Date: 02/07/2006
  • Sales Rank: 29,365
  • Label: UNIVERSAL SOUTH
  • UPC: 602498831502
 
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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

In July 2003, in the midst of a crushing tour schedule, Marty Stuart put on a bluegrass show at the legendary Ryman Auditorium, and unbeknownst to him, the tapes were rolling. Fast-forward to February 2006, when the release of this knockout performance arrives, closely tailing Stuart's pair of 2005 releases (his moving gospel outing, Souls' Chapel, and his stirring tribute to the Lakota Sioux, Badlands). Playing "our version of bluegrass," Stuart and his Fabulous Superlatives draw mostly from the venerable canon but also take time to retool a couple of his country classics in a way that would surely draw a smile from Mr. Bill Monroe, were he still with us. Heartbreakers, toe-tappers, and barnburners are present and accounted for, and the depth of feeling everyone brings to their moment in the spotlight is really something. Check out the old standard "Shuckin' the Corn" with its incendiary dialogue between Stuart on mandolin, fiddler Stuart Duncan, and banjo man Charlie Cushman, who tears off some speed-picked runs worthy of the young Earl Scruggs. "The Whiskey Ain't Workin' Anymore," a duet hit for Marty and Travis Tritt, is here transfigured into a loping, mid-tempo acoustic drinkin' song ascending on high harmony. The set closes with Stuart's "Hillbilly Rock" -- which is set up by Superlative guitarist Kenny Vaughan's cool boogie-woogie original, "Walk Like That" -- remade as a frantic breakdown with pronounced locomotive overtones and sparked by red-hot solos on mandolin (Marty) and banjo (Cushman). The set gains extra ballast when dobro master Josh Graves joins the band onstage, adding a plaintive cry to "Train 45," moaning atmospherics to "Great Speckled Bird," and some bopping commentary to "Sure Wanna Keep My Wine." What a night to be at the Ryman. David McGee, Barnes & Noble



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