Arden, North Carolina (April 2, 2021) — Following “Flowers And Lace,” a radio favorite that showed off their skill with a sentimental, yet contemporary ballad, The Grascals are back with a nod to the hardest of their hard-core bluegrass roots. Featuring a rousing, joyous lead vocal from guitarist Chris Davis and an equally robust harmony from John Bryan (guitar), “Traveling The Highway Home” reaches back not only to iconic bluegrass from the 1970s, but back to country music’s golden era.
Written by the Bailes Brothers and first recorded in 1951 by the legendary Molly O’Day, “Traveling The Highway Home” appeared on the epochal 1977 Ralph Stanley album, Clinch Mountain Gospel, which caught the group during Keith Whitley’s final stint as a Clinch Mountain Boy. Alison Krauss once said, “I can’t think of anything better than this record,” and it is second in influence to only a handful of classics. The song itself is emblematic enough of the style to have served as the title of a book on Stanley and his music.
“I’ve always loved Ralph Stanley’s gospel music,” Davis says. “And ‘Traveling The Highway Home’ always stood out the most as a favorite of mine. The vocals soaring above their hard driving Bluegrass style was one of the highlights of their music. This is a Grascals take on that effort and I was so thrilled to sing this alongside my bandmate John Bryan, who really gets that high lonesome Bluegrass Gospel sound.”
Indeed, from the high-energy kick-off by Steve Martin Prize recipient and 5-time IBMA Banjo Player of the Year, Kristin Scott Benson, through blazing solos by fiddler Adam Haynes, Danny Roberts (mandolin), Davis and Benson again, this take on a treasured, historic favorite embodies the deep sense of continuity and musical community that have kept The Grascals beloved among the bluegrass faithful even as their more contemporary efforts have won them a broader set of fans. From “Flowers And Lace” to “Traveling The Highway Home” is a long musical distance, but The Grascals have convincingly traversed it once again.
Listen to “Traveling The Highway Home” HERE.
The Grascals would like to dedicate this new release to the memory of their dear friend J.T. Gray, owner of the Station Inn in Nashville, Tennessee. The Grascals became a band within the walls of the historic establishment and their first show was played on that stage and they always considered it “home.” J.T. drove entertainer coaches for many years to financially support The World Famous Station Inn and keep the doors open, and it just seems right to honor him with “Traveling The Highway Home.”
About The Grascals
Great musicians will always find a way to make good music, but for great musicians to make great music, they must form a bond – one that, more often than not, goes beyond the purely musical to the personal. For The Grascals, that bond has been forged at the intersection of personal friendships, shared professional resumes and an appreciation for the innovative mingling of bluegrass and country music that has been a hallmark of the Nashville scene for more than forty years.
Their cutting-edge modern bluegrass is delivered with a deep knowledge of, and admiration for, the work of the music’s founding fathers. Timely yet timeless, The Grascals make music that is entirely relevant to the here and now, yet immersed in traditional values of soul and musicianship. It’s a unique sound that has earned three Grammy® nominations and two Entertainer of the Year awards from the International Bluegrass Music Association, as well as national media attention that seems to perpetually elude acts entrenched in niche genres. Such appearances include The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Fox & Friends, The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, and CBS’ The Talk. All the while, stages that represent the strongest bastions of tradition continually welcome them, as evidenced by the over 150 performances on the Grand Ole Opry. Honors also include performing twice for President George W. Bush and at President Barack Obama’s inaugural ball at the Smithsonian.
As their records prove, The Grascals’ rare musical empathy gives them an unerring ear for just the right touch to illuminate each offering’s deepest spirit – whether they’re digging into one of their original songs or reworking a bluegrass classic or a pop standard. Take for instance, fan favorite, “Last Train to Clarksville.” Non-bluegrass listeners enjoy a new take on a familiar song, while diehard bluegrass audiences who may have never heard the Monkees classic, respond in-kind, not even realizing that the song has been Grascalized.