After
a few months I had learned some simple fiddle
tunes and could get around them pretty well. I had heard a bit
of Bill Monroe's playing on record
and was impressed, but my favorite at the time had to be Sam Bush.
His playing was fast, clean and had a bit of rock guitar influence
that I could relate to. He and David Grisman were the big dogs on
mandolin in the late 70's.
It was a few years later that I casually decided to pick up a few
Monroe chops. Easy, right? I thought so until I sat down with the
"Bluegrass Special." That was a 12-bar blues riff in A
recorded in 1945 that featured Stringbean on banjo and Sally Ann
Forrester on accordion. I tried to play along with old Bill (31
at the time), and even though I could learn the notes, I just couldn't
make it sound the way he did. Such speed,
power and expression — every downstroke dripping with old-time
blues. Thus began my journey into the Bill Monroe sound that continues
to this day.
A friend on campus told me of a band needing a mandolin player.
Now, thrity years and several bands later, it's still as fun as
it was the first day I learned a two-finger G chord. Like I said,
I also play and teach guitar and banjo (as well as bluegrass upright
bass, in case anyone's interested), but the mandolin has always
been my "money" instrument. Of course, I use that term
in a highly relative sense. If you hear me say I make hundreds of
times more money playing mandolin than banjo, you'll know I'm talking
about hundreds of dollars versus zero dollars, respectively.
By the way, the current combo is called the Josh
Love Band, which I'm pleased to be part of, singing baritone
and playing, of course, mandolin.

Trust
me, that's a lot of love.
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