NASHVILLE,
TN (9.04.08) Ralph Stanley II Sets Traditional Country Benchmark
With Stunning New Album: This One Is Two. Features Songs
by Lyle Lovett, Townes Van Zandt, Tom T. Hall, Elton John, Fred
Eaglesmith and Stanley Himself
Ralph Stanley II sets a new benchmark for traditional country
music with the September 23 release of This One Is Two
on Lonesome Day Records.
With Grammy nominations for his last two albums and a Grammy award
for his contributions to the album Lost In The Lonesome Pines,
Stanley boasts one of the most moving and dramatic voices in country
music, an instrument he polished and perfected during his 14 years
as lead singer for Ralph Stanley & the Clinch Mountain Boys.
This One Is Two (a reference to Stanley’s nickname)
showcases 11 emotionally probing songs by the best writers in
the business, among them Lyle Lovett, Townes Van Zandt, Fred Eaglesmith,
Tom T. and Dixie Hall and Elton John. Stanley co-wrote two of
the songs: “Honky Tonk Way,” a tough, grimy, up-close
look at a country singer’s life on the road, and “Lord
Help Me Find The Way,” a cry from the heart he composed
when he was suddenly forced to stand in for his famous father.
A particular jewel in this musical treasure chest is “Carter,”
Fred Eaglesmith’s mournful valedictory to Stanley’s
uncle, the late Carter Stanley of Stanley Brothers fame. In “Cold
Shoulder,” Stanley immerses himself in the mind and heart
of a lonely trucker who’s snowbound at night miles away
from his lover. He resurrects Lyle Lovett’s chilling murder
saga, “L. A. County,” a song he refers to as “my
‘Pretty Polly.’”
Stanley turned to ace storyteller Tom T. Hall for the album’s
first single, the high-velocity, relentlessly clacking “Train
Songs.” From Elton John he borrows the lyrical and sun-loving
“Georgia.” Songwriter Elmer C. Burchett Jr. brought
Stanley the sweetest “mother” song of recent memory,
“Moms Are The Reason Wild Flowers Grow.”
Produced by Mike Latterell and A & R-ed by Lonesome Day president
Randall Deaton, This One Is Two features background vocals by
former Shenandoah lead singer Marty Raybon, Grammy-winning Jim
Lauderdale, Darrin Vincent (of Dailey & Vincent), Dale Anne
Bradley and Steve Gulley. The musicians are Tim Crouch (fiddle,
guitar), Cody Kilby (guitar), Randy Kohrs (dobro), Harold Nixon
(bass), Adam Steffey (mandolin) and Ron Stewart (banjo). This
One Is Two is Stanley’s fifth solo album. It is preceded
by Carrying On (2004), Stanley Blues (2002, a Grammy nominee for
best bluegrass album), Pretty Girls, City Lights (2000) and Listen
To My Hammer Ring (1999).
For
more information on Ralph Stanley II, visit www.RalphStanleyII.com
or www.LonesomeDay.com