
RALPH STANLEY II
WEBSITE
RalphStanleyII.com
QUOTES
If you are one of those
people that miss the older sounds blaring out of the Lower
Broadway Honky-Tonk’s then this is a must have album
for you.
-Today's Country Magazine
Not that there is anything
wrong with his father’s legendary career, but it’s
very clear to see the family name is in more than capable
hands!
-Music News Nashville
|
Great
record albums evolve in their own direction at their own
speed, indifferent to the best-laid plans. Had it followed
the original schedule, Ralph Stanley II’s This
One Is Two would have been out a year or more ago.
And, given the talents behind it, it would have been a good
album. But it would not have been the remarkable musical
achievement it has now become.
During the album’s additional year of growth, new
songs were found and older choices laid aside, new musicians
were added to the already sparkling lineup and new arrangements
were ventured. Every element in the project was sharpened.
The result is an album that stands on even ground with the
best country recordings ever made.
Stanley, who’s known as “Two” to his friends
(and thus the album title), has spent nearly half his 30
years as lead singer and rhythm guitarist for his father’s
fabled bluegrass band, the Clinch Mountain Boys. But like
the great vocalist Keith Whitley, who preceded him in that
position, Stanley has always had a passion for hardcore
country songs, the ones that never wear thin from repeated
singing.
“I’ve always wanted to do something more traditionally
country,” he says, “because that’s the
music I really admired growing up. When I first signed to
Lonesome Day Records, we talked about me doing a half-and-half
album, half country and half bluegrass. But the country
part turned out so well that we decided to do a whole album
of it, nothing but country. And I’m so glad we did.”
Those who cherish a direct, unadorned and emotionally honest
sound will be glad as well. Stanley’s voice resonates
with the same sensitivity and conviction we hear in such
masters as George Jones, Merle Haggard and John Anderson.
His song choices in This One Is Two are equally
persuasive. Besides the two solidly country pieces he co-wrote
himself, he interprets memorable lyrics from the pens of
Lyle Lovett, Tom T. Hall, Townes Van Zandt, Fred Eaglesmith,
J. P. Pennington and Elton John, among others.
In this sweep, Stanley ruminates about life on the road
(“Honky Tonk Way,” “If This Old Guitar
Could Talk”), homicidal jealousy (“L. A. County”),
the excitement of the rails (“Train Songs”),
the beauties of the Peach Tree State (“Georgia”),
the agony of separation (“They Say I’ll Never
Go Home,” “Cold Shoulder”), his legacy
as the son and nephew of the trailblazing Stanley Brothers
(“Lord Help Me Find The Way,” “Carter”),
the comfort of easy ladies (“Loretta”) and the
irreplaceability of mothers (“Moms Are The Reason
Wild Flowers Grow”). It’s an 11-course feast
of pure country.
Mike Latterell produced and engineered the sessions, with
an assist from Marty Raybon, former lead singer of the group
Shenandoah. Lonesome Day chief Randall Deaton took the lead
in finding songs and stepped in as executive producer. The
players include Randy Kohrs, Tim Crouch, Adam Steffey, Cody
Kilby, Harold Nixon and Ron Stewart and the background singers
are Raybon, Jim Lauderdale, Darrin Vincent, Dale Ann Bradley
and Steve Gulley.
Despite his deep roots in bluegrass, Stanley is no newcomer
to country music. Elements of it emerged prominently in
his four earlier solo albums: Carrying On (2004),
Stanley Blues (2002), Pretty Girls, City Lights
(2000) and Listen To My Hammer Ring (1999). He
earned Grammy nominations with Stanley Blues and Carrying
On and, as a member of the Clinch Mountain Boys, won a best
bluegrass album Grammy in 2003 in conjunction with his father
and Jim Lauderdale for Lost In The Lonesome Pines.
Raised in remote southwestern Virginia, Stanley began going
out on the road with his father when he was just two years
old. At four, he began learning to play guitar. By the time
he was 16, he had accumulated enough time in the spotlight
to take over as lead singer of the Clinch Mountain Boys,
a job previously held by the likes of Carter Stanley, Larry
Sparks, Keith Whitley, Ricky Skaggs and Charlie Sizemore.
“People get all caught up in labels,” Stanley
observes, “what’s country and what’s bluegrass.
I guess there’s a place for that. But all I look for
are songs that ring true to me. I can handle it from there.”
|

TIME
to
buy songs, click here!
-
Cold Shoulder
-
Georgia
-
They Say I'll Never
Go Home
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L.A. County
-
Train Songs
-
Moms Are The Reason
Wild Flowers Grow
-
Carter
-
Honky Tonk Way
-
If This Old Guitar
Could Talk
-
Loretta
-
Lord Help Me Find
The Way
This One is Two
includes songs written by Lyle Lovett, Townes Van Zandt,
Fred Eaglesmith, Tom T. and Dixie Hall and Elton John. The
album is recorded and mixed by Mike Latterell.
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