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This page has been established to support the campaign to induct the legendary Stanley Brothers (Carter and Ralph) in the 2010 Country Music Hall of Fame induction. Along with bluegrass forefathers Bill Monroe and Flatt & Scruggs (who are already inducted), The Stanley Brothers are early pioneers of bluegrass and country music and have helped lay the very foundation for what we know as bluegrass and country music today. Carter and Ralph Stanley are well-deserving of this distinguished honor and we all would very much like to see it happen with the 2009 induction.
Carter and Ralph Stanley hailed originally from Dickenson County, Virginia -- a beautiful, if stark, ridge country area, between the Kentucky and Tennessee borders, a place where it was hard to make a living. The family soon moved to McClure, Virginia where their parents worked a small farm in the Clinch Mountains. Music was a part of their lives from the word go, as they were able to listen to the likes of the Monroe Brothers and Mainer's Mountaineers (and of course the Grand Ole Opry) on local radio.
The War interrupted any thoughts of a musical career, and it was not until both brothers returned from the service that they were able to make their own mark in music -- ultimately ending up on WCYB Bristol, Tennessee, where they would remain for over ten years as stalwarts of the famed "Farm and Fun Time" radio show. Their music initially followed a more old time style favored by Mainer's Mountaineers, with Ralph playing the banjo in the old two-finger style, interspersed with old time clawhammer playing, before taking a stab at the new three-finger style popularised by Earl Scruggs.
They formed their band, the Clinch Mountain Boys, in 1946. They were perhaps the first band to adopt the new music style created by Bill Monroe in the mid-1940s that later became known as "bluegrass." Carter played guitar and sang lead while Ralph played banjo and sang with a strong, high tenor voice. Their harmonies are much admired, and many consider Carter Stanley to be one of the greatest singers in the history of country music. The brothers also wrote many of their own songs and Carter had a particular knack for writing deceptively simple lyrics that portrayed strong emotion. The Stanley's style can best be described as a traditional "mountain soul" sound that remained close to the Primitive Baptist vocal stylings they learned from their parents and others near their southwestern Virginia home. Ralph has often used the expression "...old-time, mountain style, what they call 'bluegrass' music", to differentiate the Stanley's sound from mainstream bluegrass.
The early Stanley Brothers recordings on Rich-R-Tone in Bristol, Tennessee, included Darrell "Pee Wee" Lambert on mandolin. They later added an innovative touch to their traditional sound with the guitar solos of George Shuffler who often used a crosspicking style.
Carter performed for several months with Bill Monroe in the summer of 1951. Ralph also played on several show dates when Monroe's regular banjo player was unavailable. While returning from one such enagement in August of 1951, Ralph was involved in a serious automobile accident. Following his recovery, Carter & Ralph reunited to front their Clinch Mountain Boys. As bluegrass music grew less popular in the late 1950s, the Stanley Brothers moved to Live Oak, Florida to headline the weekly Suwannee River Jamboree radio show on WNER. The three-hour show was also syndicated across the Southeast. Otherwise the brothers performed together until 1966. After Carter's death Ralph revived the Clinch Mountain Boys and is still performing in 2007. Among the musicians who have played in the revived Clinch Mountain Boys are Ricky Skaggs, Keith Whitley, Larry Sparks, Curly Ray Cline, Jack Cooke, Roy Lee Centers, Charlie Sizemore, Ray Goins, and Ralph Stanley II. Ralph's career received a big boost with his prominent role on the phenomenally successful soundtrack recording of the 2000 film, "O Brother, Where Art Thou?." The Stanley Brothers were inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Honor in 1992.
In 2005, The Barter State Theatre of Virginia premiered an original stage production entitled, "Man of Constant Sorrow: The Story of the Stanley Brothers," written by Dr. Douglas Pote.
Among the Stanley Brothers' best known recordings are:
* I'm A Man of Constant Sorrow (1950, Columbia)
* Rank Stranger
* Angel Band
* How Mountain Girls Can Love
* How Far to Little Rock? (novelty)
* Still trying to get to Little Rock (novelty)
* Ridin' That Midnite Train
* Clinch Mountain Backstep
* She's More To Be Pitied
* The Memory of Your Smile
* Love Me Darlin' Just Tonight
Please show your support and sign the online petition. You can also contact Kaye Hill at [email protected]. Kaye has been instrumental in this cause from the very beginning. She can send you a single petition letter for you to sign or a petition sheet where you can get about 25 signatures on one page. Thanks for your support and hopefully we will see The Stanley Brothers inducted in 2009!

My Blog

Dr. Ralph endorses Obama, the CMHOF campaign continues to 2010. (And a clarification)

First off, I'd like to say that I am not Ralph or Ralph II or any of the Stanley family, I've gotten several messages thinking that I am them.  I'm just a guy who runs this page, my name is Dan Deel, ...
Posted by on Sun, 05 Oct 2008 17:53:00 GMT

Message from Jeanie Stanley (Carter Stanley’s daughter)

Message from Jeanie Stanley (Carter Stanley's daughter)The 2008 Hall of Fame inductees are: Pop Stoneman, the Statler Brothers, Emmylou Harris and Tom T. Hall. Pop Stoneman has passed on but my deepes...
Posted by on Sun, 18 May 2008 13:01:00 GMT