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The bluegrass/jam-band connection isn’t lost on Del McCoury. “I played once in Virginia at a bluegrass festival,” he recalls, “and just before I left, David Grisman came up to me and said, ‘I want you to meet my new banjo player.’ And it was Jerry Garcia [who at the time was playing banjo with Grisman in Old and in the Way]…. He told me, ‘You know, I wanted a job with Bill Monroe. I wanted to be a Blue Grass Boy too.’ ”
Of course, back in 1963, when Del himself joined Monroe’s Blue Grass Boys, it’s doubtful he had the slightest notion that 45 years later he’d be performing in front of thousands of the great unwashed, standing center stage as women bare their breasts at him and billows of the kind bud waft overhead like the Smoky Mountain fog.
But it’s a welcome surprise for the 68-year-old singer, who fronts what is widely considered the premier bluegrass band of the last two decades—since 1994, DMB has been voted the International Bluegrass Music Association’s Entertainer of the Year nine times. And this New Year’s Eve, the group—including Del’s sons Ronnie on mandolin and Rob on banjo, along with fiddler Jason Carter and bassist Alan Bartram—are the focal point of a show at the Ryman that will shine a spotlight on their long, strange trip: Del and the boys will play a traditional set, then will be joined by Leftover Salmon’s Drew Emmitt (mandolin) and Vince Herman (guitar) and Phish’s Jon Fishman for (bluegrass snobs, avert your eyes) an electric set. Steep Canyon Rangers open the show, and bluegrass artist Ronnie Bowman (and perhaps a few surprise guests) will also partake in the celebration.
The DMB’s full initiation into the jam-band world took place on July 18, 1999, during Camp Oswego, a festival in upstate New York hosted by Phish. DMB had been invited to play at a side stage, but Phish pulled the bluegrass band onto the main stage in the middle of their headlining set in front of 65,000 screaming fans.
“I didn’t have an appreciation for how massive Phish was at that time,” Strickland says. “I didn’t think it was going to work. Phish just stopped in the middle of the set, brought ’em out, and they played a very traditional set for 15 or 20 minutes. And they’re just having a great time. And Del, to his credit, is just up there doing his thing. But he’s getting sort of lost too, because that’s the first time we’ve had bare-breasted women in the crowd. You don’t have that at traditional bluegrass shows.