- Chatham County Line
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Chatham County Line Origin Raleigh, North Carolina, United States Genres Bluegrass Years active 1999–present Labels Bonfire Records
Yep Roc Records / SonyMembers Dave Wilson
Chandler Holt
John Teer
Greg ReadlingChatham County Line is an American bluegrass musical group. Formed in Raleigh, North Carolina in 1999 from members of the band Stillhouse,[1] the band has released five albums including four on the influential Yep Roc label (who they were linked with by the notable producer Chris Stamey),[2] and have become popular in Europe[3] as well as their native USA.[4] Their most recent tour took in numerous European destinations, including the prestigious Lowlands rock festival in the Netherlands.[5] Chatham County Line made their Canadian debut in July 2009 at the Winnipeg Folk Festival, where they performed beside The Del McCoury Band and The Punch Brothers.
The members met in 1996 when lead singer/songwriter Dave Wilson was playing for "Stillhouse". Wilson was living in the Blue House, an infamous Raleigh crash pad and romper room for the areas hottest young musicians. The other members are banjo picker Chandler Holt, upright bassist Greg Readling, and multi-instrumentalist John Teer. Wilson and Readling were playing in the Blue House as "Stillhouse" when Teer and Holt became intrigued "to hear these guys playing original country music that didn't suck" as Holt recalls. Holt and Teer befriended Wilson at the Blue House and began sitting in with the band. Wilson, over a beer one night, asked the others if they were interested in starting a bluegrass band.[6]
Chatham County Line began as an opening act for The Carbines, Tift Merritt's band. Chris Stamey saw them open a show, offered to record them, and landed them a record deal with Yep Roc Records. The band then went on to create five albums. Chatham County Line in 2003, Route 23 in 2005, Speed of the Whippoorwill in 2006, IV in 2008, and Wildwood in 2010.[citation needed]
The IV album includes a track, Birmingham Jail, that tells the story of Addie Mae Collins, Denise McNair, Carole Robertson, and Cynthia Wesley, who were killed in the 16th Street Baptist Church Bombing. In The Washington Post, Allison Stewart writes:
“ The Raleigh-based bluegrass upstarts stock this tale of the 1963 Birmingham bombing with such gut-wrenching imagery, it's like they're trying to be depressing. You won't hear a more moving song all year. ” Discography
Title Album details[8] Peak chart
positionsUS Grass US Heat Chatham County Line - Release date: June 3, 2003
- Label: Bonfire Records
— — Route 23 - Release date: February 22, 2005
- Label: Yep Roc Records
12 — Speed of the Whippoorwill - Release date: May 30, 2006
- Label: Yep Roc Records
13 — IV - Release date: March 4, 2008
- Label: Yep Roc Records
6 — Wildwood - Release date: July 13, 2010
- Label: Yep Roc Records
3 33 "—" denotes releases that did not chart References
- ^ Stillhouse biography Stillhouse homepage; Retrieved on 2007-09-11
- ^ AMG entry Allmusic; Retrieved on 2007-09-11
- ^ Review article Metro Pulse; Retrieved on 2007-09-11
- ^ Label entry Yep Roc Records; Retrieved on 2007-09-11
- ^ Lowlands Festival line-up Lowlands Festival official site; Retrieved on 2007-09-11
- ^ CMT Biography CMT Biography; Retrieved on 2009-11-24
- ^ The Washington Post The Washington Post; Retrieved on 2009-12-03
- ^ Discography CMT.com; Retrieved on 2007-09-11
External links
Reviews
Categories:- Musical groups from North Carolina
- American bluegrass music groups
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