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Released in conjunction with an episode of PBS's Great Performances, The Three Pickers is a boon for those who love to hear -- and see -- hot, masterful picking. Even without the visuals, though, this disc proves an unending delight, as these veterans put fresh spins on some time-tested material. Joined by the inimitable Earl Scruggs on mandolin and Ricky Skaggs on mandolin, 80-year-old Doc Watson pretty much steals the show, not only with his impeccably fingerpicked guitar work but also with his amiable between-songs stage patter, which lends the affair a living room-concert intimacy. Staunch traditionalists all, the trio kick things off by sharing lead vocals and trading feisty licks on Bill Monroe's "Feast Here Tonight." On another Monroe gem, the tender-hearted "What Is a Home Without Love," Watson reminiscences the first time he heard the Monroe Brothers on his family's Gramophone player, ahead of some beautiful harmonizing with Skaggs on the choruses. "Earl's Breakdown" is an occasion for Scruggs to tear into a zigzagging banjo lead, with Skaggs in furious pursuit on mandolin and Watson bringing up the rear with a fleet-fingered bit of angular picking. Alison Krauss drops by to add some evocative fiddle commentary and pitches some chilling vocal harmony on the Carter Family's "Storms Are on the Ocean," as well as starring with Watson in a jaw-dropping a cappella reading of "Down in the Valley to Pray" (from O Brother Where Art Thou?). Gospel, breakdowns, traditional folk tales, traditional country -- no matter the style, these seasoned pros deliver the goods, and then some, when it comes to mating soulful expression to technical mastery. David McGee, Barnes & Noble