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Can't You Hear Me Callin': The Life of Bill Monroe, Father of Bluegrass
 
 
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Can't You Hear Me Callin': The Life of Bill Monroe, Father of Bluegrass (Hardcover)

~ (Author) "A wagon road led south from the railroad depot in Rosine, Kentucky..." (more)
Key Phrases: compact disk set, bluegrass festival movement, blue grass music, Bill Monroe, Blue Grass Boys, Bessie Lee (more...)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

The legendary mandolinist and bandleader Bill Monroe wove his personal vision through more than 60 tireless years of recording and performing, inventing almost single-handedly the music that is now known--in a nod to his first band, the Blue Grass Boys--as bluegrass. In his thoughtful biography Can't You Hear Me Callin', Richard D. Smith argues that "no single artist has had as broad an impact on American music." As evidence, he highlights dozens of country and rock & roll musicians, both white and black, who were inspired by Monroe's powerful mandolin playing on the Grand Ole Opry's weekly broadcasts. (Chuck Berry's "Maybelline," for example, is an almost note-for-note copy of Monroe's instrumental "Ida Red.") Until now, however, Monroe's hesitation to reveal personal details has kept his personality as mysterious as one of the foggy mountaintops he sang about in his signature high lonesome tenor.

Bluegrass audiences required a rural, Southern authenticity from the "Father of Bluegrass," and Monroe was slow to deny their exaggerations. Smith, however, dismisses many of the backwoodsy stories that grew up around the Monroe myth, instead emphasizing truer biographical elements: loneliness, fear of abandonment, compulsiveness with women. Perhaps the book's main scholarly step forward is the depth of interviews and research the author conducted with the women in Monroe's life. Indeed, Smith remarks that "without exception," none of Monroe's platonic or romantic women friends had been interviewed before. These women reveal a second Bill Monroe, relaxed and gentle in private despite his imperious manner onstage.

Much of the book relies on the archives of the late Ralph Rinzler, a Smithsonian folklorist whose plans to write a Monroe biography were thwarted by his untimely death. Taking up where Rinzler left off, Smith employs solid scholarship and thorough fieldwork, yet he remains clearly in awe of his subject, ranking him as a "true giant of American music" on the level of Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, Hank Williams, and Charles Ives. Can't You Hear Me Callin' is the first published attempt at a comprehensive, critical biography of Bill Monroe. Surely, it won't be the last--a testament to the enigmatic genius whose every note extended one of our most emotive and demanding musical genres. --Edward Skoog



From Booklist

By the time of his death, Bill Monroe (1911^-96) was a major icon of American music, revered as the man who singlehandedly created an entire musical genre, bluegrass. Smith, the author of the excellent Bluegrass: An Informal Guide (1995), offers a thoughtful, somewhat subdued account of Monroe, tracing his life from a music-rich but isolated childhood in the pastoral backroads of Kentucky to his early years as a struggling professional musician to his well-deserved status as an acclaimed elder statesman and musical ambassador. Forging a style that was both traditional and sophisticated, Monroe appealed to urban and rural audiences with heart-on-sleeve confessional lyrics and dazzling displays of instrumental virtuosity on his own mandolin, complemented, at a minimum, by banjo, fiddle, guitar, and bass. His influence can be heard in the music of everyone from Elvis Presley and Buddy Holly to Jerry Garcia and Ricky Skaggs. Smith mutes potentially sensational matters, such as that Monroe was an incorrigible womanizer, to paint a sensitive, tasteful, well-balanced portrait of a complicated man. June Sawyers
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Little, Brown and Company (July 1, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0316803812
  • ISBN-13: 978-0316803816
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.7 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #596,438 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Richard D. Smith
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Can't You Hear Me Callin': The Life of Bill Monroe, Father of Bluegrass
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26 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (26 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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16 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Once in a Blue Moon, July 29, 2000
By Jean Brown (Falls of Rough, KY United States) - See all my reviews
a biography comes along that one reads and comes away feeling like they really know the subject...that is certainly true of CAN'T YOU HEAR ME CALLING by Richard D. Smith. Bill Monroe is portrayed in all his glory but also shown as a real person with all the foibles and flaws but also his genius. Living a few miles from his birthpalce Rosine KY I knew of Bill Monroe but until reading this book I had no idea of his many contributions to the music industry. To find he composed many songs that I love but had never connected to Bluegrass (Georgia Rose, Rawhide etc.) was a surprise and makes me anxious to hear more of his music. The author conveyed so well how Bill Monroe the man was a product of a time, a place and a family that so influenced not only his music but also the person he became...one comes way a little more aware of how that is true of all of us.
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A "powerful" biography, July 18, 2000
By A Customer
This is a powerful book, and Richard Smith has succeeded in presenting an especially well-rounded portrait of an especially complex individual.

There's been quite a bit of discussion of the book on several Bluegrass oriented internet lists, most of it positive, although there have been a few carping posts on the decision to expose some of unpublished, but oft-rumored, facts and incidents in Monroe's life.

Wisely bypassing the on-going "what is Bluegrass, anyway" debate, the book offers a very common-sensible approach to whether or not Monroe indeed invented the genre -- RDS posits an "auteur" theory of the foundation of Bluegrass, giving WSM the principle credit, but also elevating several others to near-founder status: Earl Scruggs, Jimmy Martin and, to a lesser, but important extent, Don Reno.

Richard talked to many (if not most) of the (surviving) women in WSM's life; they were seemingly very forthcoming about Bill and his good and bad traits, and their stories are integral to the overall picture. The one person who did not talk to him, who's input would have been invaluable, but who come across much better than I (and, I suspect, many others in the BG world) expected, was Bill's son, James. Input from surviving members of the BG Boys is also critical to the overall success and utility of the book.

One of the complaints that I have: the book is too short, and neglects to cover many of the stories that circulate in the Bluegrass world, either to confirm or debunk. My other major complaints: the index, which seems rather perfunctory, and the notes -- I would have preferred source notes at the back (as they appear), but with parenthetical remarks in the body of the text, as footnotes, rather than combining the two in one section after the entire text. These notes are integral to the story, and I'm going to have to reread the book just to coordinate these asides with the main text; I was flying through it on my first of, (probably) many readings.

But these are nits, and I almost had to search in order to pick 'em. Overall, it's an outstanding job. Also, I feel very proud both for Richard and for Mr. Monroe that the book appears under the imprint of a mainstream trade publisher, rather than being in the relative backwater of an academic press.

Thank you, Richard, for spending the time and effort to bring this book to us. It passes my own personal test for great art: It made me laugh, it made me cry, it made me think. What more can one ask!

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13 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars character study is useful despite the hero worship, August 26, 2003
By Tony Thomas (SUNNY ISLES BEACH, FL USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
Smith's book is conflicted. The distinct contribution of this book is not so much what it says about the music. There isn't much here about the music that is new, sustaining, or distinct. In fact, at times, Smith seem to inflate the importance of Monroe in rather trifling ways that really undercut the significance of Monroe.

I am very glad Smith accurately and fairly portrayed the role the late Ralph Rinzler played in really saving Monroe's career and making him more known in the folk revival.

What is interesting is what the book shows about Monroe's character. Despite Smith's desire to guild the lily and create a halo around his hero, he unearths a history of great emotional problems that had a heavy impact on Monroe's life. Smith traces them from the difficult, lonely, childhood Monroe had all the way to Monroe's last days very consistently. Monroe was a compulsive womanizer throughout his life, never faithul in any relationship, usually having a semi permanent mistress in addition whatever common law or legal wife he had, and usually having several other women out on the road.

Plainly, Monroe was small minded and propriatorial about "owning" Bluegrass. He was especially hateful to others like his former employees starting with Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs who dared to play it on their own. Monroe refused to speak to Lester and Earl for decades, threatened to fire his own band members for merely talking to Lester and Earl or members of their band, and refused to appear on the same bill at Bluegrass Festivals with them until he was forced too. This despite the fact both Flat and Scruggs retained a professional respect for Monroe then and now, while Lester Flatt and his wife always had a deep personal admiration and care for Monroe.

It's still shocking to me to read about the great fiddle genius Kenny Baker who played with Monroe on and off for 23 years!. Baker simply demanded to know where the band would be touring so his family could send him word of the progress of Baker's dying brother. Monroe refused to tell him because he'd never told band members where the tour was going before. Even though Baker was an acknowledged genius of Bluegrass fiddle whose work suited Monroe's taste more than any of a number of fiddlers who preceded him and followed him, an interview I saw on the web with a long-time band members, explains Monroe always referred to Baker as a "drunk."

Monroe tended to treat and pay band members like they were farm hands on a farm in Western Kentucky in the 1920s. If Bill Monroe needed his house painted, fence posts put in on one of his farms, or other work around home or farm, if you were in the band, you were expected to show up on time at 6 am in the morning and do that work as well for nothing extra,.

This book seems to accurately root Monroe's character in the difficulty he had with a disability in his eyes as a child and early teen, a disability cured when his older brothers moved to the Midwest and got jobs in factories and oil refineries and got together money for a healing operation. Monroe never seems to recover for the hazing and unkindness he faced from his brothers before the operation. This book recounts how even when Monroe was in his late 60s and an internationally famous cultural figure, while his brothers were in their seventies, men who had been mostly rescued from financial failure by their younger brothers, he would still fall into tears about how cruelly they had treated him as a child when he visited them!

There are many other stories of Monroe's small
mindedness, jealousy, and campaigns against musicians who worked for him. However, on reflection, the important question seems to be, that with all these problems, Monroe always had one of the great organizations in music of any kind, and the seminal group in Bluegrass. Musicians fought to work for and stay with Bill Monroe harder than some might have fought to get away. Musicians who Monroe chased away out of jealousy and then castigated once they left the band have seen their careers as a tribute to Monroe.

Monroe was a great, decisive, and innovative musician, singer, performer and arranger. His ability to lead, train and continue a band that became elite training school for all of bluegrass, matched with his ability to bring what blues, swing, and even jazz offered to the musicwithout losing what he called the "ancient sounds" congealed Bluegrass out of the ferment that was going through country music after World War II. Everybody with ears needs to hear him.

Of course, if you aren't familiar with Monroe's musical history and contributions, this book, does provide a basic introduction to that as well. But the real interest in the book is the conflict between Monroe's contributions to music, and his troubled emotions.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Can't you hear me callin'
This is an amazing story about one of Americas most influential musical icons. This is a must read for any fan of Bluegrass,or any student of music. Read more
Published 5 months ago by David S. Dwyer

4.0 out of 5 stars Father of Bluegrass- Blue Moon of Kentucky
The author gives an in depth look inside the life of Bill Monroe, our Father of Bluegrass. Monroe lived through trouble times through out his life and career. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Matthew

5.0 out of 5 stars A must for any bluegrass fan
"Can't You Hear Me Callin'" is a fascinating biography. There's so much more information in it about Monroe than one finds from most sources. Read more
Published 23 months ago by Bill Pen

5.0 out of 5 stars Father of Bluegrass
Bluegrass music has become a major part of our lives. The story behind the music is fascinating! The author has carefully documented his sources. Read more
Published on August 23, 2007 by John Drummond

5.0 out of 5 stars Well-Researched Biography
This is quite possibly the best biography I have ever read. Bill Monroe is a facinating character who lived a life of musical genius and person contradicitons. Read more
Published on August 16, 2006 by A. Burtch

5.0 out of 5 stars The Amazing Bill Monroe
Bluegrass is incredibly transparent. You feel like you know each of the singers and musicians personally if you listen to the music a lot. Read more
Published on June 17, 2006 by A. Quibell

4.0 out of 5 stars Currently the "Definitive" Bill Monroe Biography
This work is meticulously and exhaustively researched and includes wonderful stories and insights into the personality of the "Father of Bluegrass". Read more
Published on April 28, 2004 by Mark J. Fowler

4.0 out of 5 stars A GREAT START!
While this won't be the definitive work on Monroe it's the one that had to be written before anything further can be done. Read more
Published on December 15, 2003 by Charles Wilder

5.0 out of 5 stars But the road takes such a terrible toll...
This is without a doubt one of the best biographies I've ever read.I have been listning to Monroe's music for many years but until reading this book I knew very little about... Read more
Published on December 7, 2003 by J. Guild

4.0 out of 5 stars Overall Interesting
Who was Bill Monroe? Everyone who knows anything about country or bluegrass music knows the name but do you know the man? Most likely not. Read more
Published on June 29, 2003 by TheHighlander

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