Probably the most famous bluegrass band of all time was
Flatt & Scruggs and
the Foggy Mountain Boys. They made the genre famous in ways that not even
Bill Monroe, who pretty much invented the sound, ever could. Because of a guitar player and vocalist from Tennessee named
Lester Flatt and an extraordinary banjo player from North Carolina named
Earl Scruggs, bluegrass music has become popular the world over and has entered the mainstream in the world of music.
Like so many other bluegrass legends,
Flatt & Scruggs were graduates of
Bill Monroe's Blue Grass Boys. Because of the unique sound they added ("overdrive," one critic called it),
Monroe felt let down after
Flatt's quality vocals and
Scruggs' banjo leads left in 1948. Quickly the two assembled a band that in the opinion of many was among the best ever. With so many extraordinary musicians and the solid, controlled vocals of
Flatt, it's no wonder
the Foggy Mountain Boys were the band that brought bluegrass to international prominence. From 1948 until 1969, when
Flatt & Scruggs split up to pursue different musical directions, they were the bluegrass band, due to their Martha White Flour segment at the Opry and, especially, their tremendous exposure from TV and movies.
Flatt and
Scruggs were originally brought together by
Monroe in 1945, when they joined a band that, circa March of the following year, would also feature fiddler
Chubby Wise and bassist Cedric Rainwater. This "classic" quintet created the sound of bluegrass and helped bring it to national recognition through radio shows, records, and concerts. After three years with
Monroe,
Flatt left the mandolinist behind in 1948, and
Scruggs followed his lead shortly afterward. The duo formed their own band,
the Foggy Mountain Boys. Within a few months, they recruited ex-Blue Grass Boy Rainwater, fiddler Jim Shumate and guitarist/vocalist
Mac Wiseman. Initially, the band played on radio stations across the South, landing a record contract with Mercury Records in late 1948. Over the next two years, they toured the U.S. constantly, played many radio shows, and recorded several sessions for Mercury. One of the sessions produced the original version of "Foggy Mountain Breakdown," which would become a bluegrass standard.
In 1951,
Flatt & Scruggs switched record labels, signing with
Columbia Records. By this point, the band now featured mandolinst/vocalist
Curly Seckler, fiddler
Paul Warren, and bassist
Jake Tullock. Where the careers of other bluegrass and hard country acts stalled in the early and mid-'50s,
the Foggy Mountain Boys flourished. One of their first singles for
Columbia, "'Tis Sweet to Be Remembered," reached the Top Ten in 1952, and in 1953, the Martha White Flour company sponsored a regular radio show for the group on WSM in Nashville. In 1955, the band joined the Grand Ole Opry. The following year, they added a Dobro player called
Buck Graves to the lineup.
Flatt & Scruggs reached a new audience in the late '50s, when the folk music revival sparked the interest of a younger generation of listeners. The duo played a number of festivals targeted at the new breed of bluegrass and folk fans. At the same time, country music television programs went into syndication, and the duo became regulars on these shows. In the summer of 1959,
Flatt & Scruggs began a streak of Top 40 country singles that ran into 1968 -- their chart performance was directly tied to their increased exposure. The duo's popularity peaked in 1962, when they recorded the theme song to the television sitcom The Beverly Hillbillies. The theme, called "The Ballad of Jed Clampett," became the first number one bluegrass single in early 1963, and the duo made a number of cameos on the show.
The Beverly Hillbillies began a streak of cameo appearances and soundtrack work for
Flatt & Scruggs in television and film, most notably with the appearance of "Foggy Mountain Breakdown" in Arthur Penn's 1968 film Bonnie and Clyde. With all of their TV, film, and festival appearances,
Flatt & Scruggs popularized bluegrass music more than any artist, even
Monroe. Ironically, that popularity helped drive the duo apart.
Scruggs wanted to expand their sound and pushed
Flatt to cover
Bob Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone" in 1968 as well as land concert appearances in venues that normally booked rock & roll acts.
Flatt wanted to continue in a traditional bluegrass vein. Inevitably, the opposing forces came to a head in 1969, and the duo parted ways. Appropriately,
Flatt formed a traditional bluegrass band, the Nashville Grass, while
Scruggs assembled a more progressive outfit,
the Earl Scruggs Revue.
Throughout the '70s, both
Flatt and
Scruggs enjoyed successful solo careers. In 1979, the duo began ironing out the details of a proposed reunion album, but they were scrapped upon
Flatt's death on May 11, 1979.
Scruggs made many albums after his parting with
Flatt, highlighted by 1982's
The Storyteller and the Banjo Man (with
Tom T. Hall) and 2001's
Earl Scruggs and Friends (which featured an all-star cast including
Johnny Cash,
Elton John,
Sting,
Vince Gill,
Albert Lee,
Leon Russell, and
Steve Martin).
Scruggs was often seen on TV as well, often for reunion appearances. He died in Nashville in 2012. In 1985,
Flatt & Scruggs were inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. ~ David Vinopal