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1979 Mac Martin & The Dixie Travelers Bluegrass Pittsburgh PA - 2-Page Article

$ 7.91

Availability: 22 in stock
  • Genre: Country
  • Industry: Music
  • Condition: Original, vintage magazine article; Good Condition.

    Description

    1979 Mac Martin & The Dixie Travelers Bluegrass Pittsburgh PA - 2-Page Article
    Original, vintage magazine article
    Page Size: Approx 8" x 11" (21 cm x 28 cm) each page
    Condition: Good
    Mac
    Martin
    &
    The
    Dixie
    Travelers
    The haunting bluegrass strains catch a
    current of wind and are carried far
    into the sylvan Western Pennsylvania
    setting.
    Families and couples are clustered be-
    tween the beautiful shade trees in a semi-
    circle of lawn chairs, blankets and
    benches.
    The atmosphere is relaxed and peace-
    ful, and even strangers seem like friends.
    On the bandshell stage, the focus of
    activity, a smiling guitarist graciously
    acknowledges the applause of the
    audience, then exits, his set completed.
    He is greeted by his young son, who
    wears his pride for his dad in the beam
    on his face.
    “Dad,” he asks, “do you want me to get
    out the albums (to sell)?”
    “No,” his father replies gently, “We’re
    not hungry.”
    The scene was last summer at a Sunday
    bluegrass fesitval in the Pittsburgh,
    Pennsylvania area. The father and son
    exchange was between Mac Martin of the
    Dixie Travelers, who are observing their
    25th anniversary in 1979, and his 12-year-
    old son, Bob.
    The “We’re not hungry” response
    to his boy says a lot about the man and
    his music.
    Who knows where Mac, now 53, (his
    real name is William D. Colleran)
    would have gone in the industry had he
    chosen to pursue music full time?
    Bill Vernon, in the liner notes to the
    Dixie Travelers’ 1974 “Dixie Bound”
    (County 743) album, succinctly captured
    the Martin essence when he observed:
    “Any authentically personal form of
    music has its justly celebrated great
    performers. At the same time, it is likely
    to have many other performers whose
    music is comparably proficient, creative
    and rewarding, but who, for any of
    several reasons, do not achieve the
    acclaim they richly deserve.”
    Mac’s accomplishments, Vernon sug-
    gested, largely have gone unnoticed.
    The Dixie Travelers, he reminded,
    often have been compared to the Flatt and
    Scruggs band as they sounded in the early
    ’50s.
    Vernon: “(The Dixie Travelers) have
    captured on record better than any other
    group, perhaps including Lester and Earl
    themselves, the atmosphere of informal
    greatness that characterized the Flatt
    and Scruggs WSM early-morning radio
    shows of the period.”
    Martin says that Flatt is his favorite
    all-time singer, and Vernon adds that
    “much of Mac’s singing is reminiscent
    of Flatt in his bluegrass prime.”
    Vernon also praises Martin for having
    “the good sense to bring to bluegrass
    great, neglected songs that fit naturally
    and wonderfully into bluegrass, signifi-
    cantly enriching both the material and
    bluegrass music itself in the process.”
    Dixie Traveler alumnus and author (of
    a book, viewed by many as the definitive
    work on bluegrass) Bob Artis:
    “Mac is unique in that he is one of the
    bluegrass old-liners, an original. That he
    is from Pittsburgh, that really makes him
    unique. I don’t think anybody performing
    has the background, the knowledge of old-
    time music that he does. I don’t think
    anyone playing has that old-time sound
    that he has, the early ’50s Flatt and
    Scruggs sound from the golden age of
    straight bluegrass.”
    What does Mac think about all this?
    Does he feel, as many suggest, he has
    been slighted in the credit department?
    "Well,” he considers the question. “I
    would have to take responsibility for
    that. I have never made it a point to
    make music the first thing in my life. It’s
    always been secondary to my regular job
    (which is as an accountant and office
    manager at a Pittsburgh music store).
    “No, life’s been good to me and music’s
    been good to me, and I don’t know if I
    deserve any more credit, to be honest
    with you.
    “...Way back in the early days, the
    ’50s, I could have gone with different
    bands. But at the time it was almost
    a matter of economics. You could have a
    full time job that would provide a liveli-
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