LINER
NOTES FOR
THE DILLARDS' BACK PORCH
BLUEGRASS/PICKIN' AND FIDDLIN'
By
Richie Unterberger
Over
the course of their
lengthy career, the Dillards would venture into numerous styles,
including folk-rock and country-rock, with particularly innovative
forays into the latter category. They'd started out as a bluegrass
group, however, and bluegrass would remain at the core of their music,
even as their blend of several genres broadened their listenership far
beyond the folk and bluegrass audiences. Nowhere was their approach
more in the solid bluegrass vein than on their first three Elektra LPs,
two of which are combined onto one CD in this reissue.
Although
their earliest Elektra album, 1963's Back
Porch Bluegrass, was their first record to gain wide
distribution, the two brothers in the Dillards already had several
years of recording experience by the time the LP came out. Doug Dillard
and his younger brother Rodney started playing together in Missouri
bands back in the 1950s, and while both were multi-instrumentalists,
Doug would be most known as a banjo player, and Rodney most celebrated
as a guitarist. In the late 1950s, they made some home recordings (with
young fiddler John Hartford among the backing musicians) that found
release on obscure singles (and an EP) billed to the Dillard Brothers
on the small K-Ark label. Some other tapes from the time, recently
issued on Early Recordings 1959,
feature not only Doug and Rodney, but also mandolinist/singer Dean Webb
and (as arranger) Mitch Jayne. With Jayne assuming the bass position,
the Dillards became a quartet, moving to California in 1962 (though yet
another recording predating the move, a summer '62 concert, found
release in 1999 on the CD A
Long Time Ago—The First Time Live!).
Things happened quickly for the group when they
arrived in Los Angeles. Jamming onstage at the Ash Grove folk club with
fellow bluegrass group the Greenbriar Boys, the Dillards were seen by
Jim Dickson, who offered them a recording contract. Elektra was in the
process of considerably expanding its West Coast operations, and
Dickson was a key figure in that development, producing folk albums for
the label by the Dillards and Hamilton Camp (also producing recordings
for the Modern Folk Quartet during the same era for another company,
Warner Brothers). Even before Back
Porch Bluegrass came out in 1963, the Dillards had made their
first appearance (as members of the Darling family) on television's The Andy Griffith Show, guesting in
that role on the program on several more episodes over the next few
years.
While there was much traditional about the bluegrass
on the Dillards' debut LP, in some respects it wasn't as traditional as
some purists would have liked. For one thing, half a dozen of the
tracks were original tunes, though most of the others came from
traditional sources. And as ludicrous as it might seem today, the
record also attracted some criticism for not being authentic. "We had
troubles when our first record came out with the bluegrass people,"
Rodney Dillard told me in 2001. "At that time, everybody was wanting to
put it in a museum, keep it the way it was, just look at it once in a
while, and protect it so it didn't change. And we came along and our
first album, Back Porch Bluegrass,
had echo on the record. One of the guys from one of the little
back-east [folk] rags said, 'Since when did they have echo chambers on
back porches?' Well, that guy'd probably never been off his block,
because you sit back here on my back porch right now, and you get
nothing but echo, because I live up on a side of a mountain. I came
from a rural area, grew up on a farm with no electricity and no
bathroom until I was fourteen. That music had been around just like the
dogs in a yard; I grew up with it. So from the very beginning, I had
problems with the traditionalists."
Surprisingly, Dillard expressed some disappointment
with the record in the book Everybody
On the Truck! The Story of the Dillards (written by Lee Grant
with the Original Dillards). "I hated Back
Porch Bluegrass when I first heard it, and to this day I will
not play the album," he declared. "I simply wasn't ready to be a lead
vocalist and I didn't like the way my voice was recorded. Everybody
else in the group performed well, but I didn't like my part." Vocal
numbers weren't the only items on the LP, however, which also featured
several instrumental selections, three of them written by Doug Dillard.
The most famous and familiar of the album's songs was the closing
"Duelin' Banjo"—the same tune which, when played (as "Dueling Banjos")
by Eric Weissberg and Steve Mandell as the theme to the movie Deliverance, would rise to #2 in
the charts in 1973.
For their next LP, the Dillards would opt to record
in concert, putting out Live...Almost
in 1964. By the time of their third Elektra album, 1965's Pickin' and Fiddlin', the group was
both feeling and contributing to the winds of change. Their producer,
Jim Dickson, was playing a behind-the-scenes role in the birth of
folk-rock as mentor and co-manager for the Byrds. The Dillards played
their own unheralded role in that transition, with Dean Webb helping
teach the Byrds their vocal harmony parts for "Mr. Tambourine Man," the
Bob Dylan cover that ignited the folk-rock explosion. The Dillards
themselves were thinking of expanding into different and even electric
sounds, and Dickson credits the Dillards as an important catalyst in
getting him to move in a more progressive direction.
"I was not so much looking for a fusion between folk
and rock, but ways to enhance folk music," he elaborated in the
author's 2002 book Turn! Turn!
Turn!: The '60s Folk-Rock Revolution. "At first, using jazz
musicians Red Mitchell, Jimmy Bond, Bud Shank, Billy Higgins, and Frank
Butler, and sometimes cello. I wanted more music: countermelodies from
the bass instead of just playing changes. This was followed by [David]
Crosby [playing] with [guitarist] Tommy Tedesco, [drummer] Earl Palmer,
[and bassist] Ray Pohlman. The above musicians and Glen Campbell [with
whom the Dillards played on two Dickson-produced 1964 LPs credited to
the Folkswingers] were among those I made experiments with, looking for
sounds to support folksingers. Working with the Dillards convinced me
that better players were possible, as well as [of] the virtues of group
singing."
Given that the Dillards were both feeding the
birth of folk-rock and soon to move into folk-rock on their own
records, it's a little surprising that Pickin' and Fiddlin', recorded with
fiddler Byron Berline, is an avowedly traditional album. "We owed
[Elektra] another album, and we weren't too happy with 'em," explained
Webb to me in a 2001 interview. "'Cause we didn't think they were doing
anything with our material, so we just did that third album where we
got a friend of ours named Byron Berline. In a way, it was a good album
for what it was, and it helped Byron get started." Indeed, Berline
would record more than a dozen albums as a solo artist, though he's
most known to rock fans for his guest appearances on records by the
likes of the Flying Burrito Brothers, the Byrds, the Nitty Gritty Dirt
Band, Arlo Guthrie, Gram Parsons, Bob Dylan, the Band, James Taylor,
and the Rolling Stones (that's his fiddle on "Country Honk," from the
Stones' Let It Bleed).
"But we just kind of did more or less some
traditional material on there," added Webb. "We didn't go to any
trouble with any written material, particularly because we didn't feel
our record company was going to do anything. We were getting a lot of
criticism from a lot of the New York types, who said we were all a
bunch of phonies and whatever, and didn't know anything about the
country side of the whole thing. It was kind of a, 'Well, we'll show
you what we can do with this
sort of thing.'" In John Einarson's Desperados:
The Roots of Country Rock, Rodney Dillard was yet more direct:
"That wasn't a record made for anyone but the traditionals. We got
completely hacked to pieces by them. So we said, 'Okay, screw you guys,
we'll make an album, and we'll play it right up your ass!,' so we did."
And he did mean play—all of the tracks are instrumental, despite the
group's formidable strengths as singers and harmonizers.
Having established their traditional credentials
beyond a shadow of a doubt, the Dillards then ended their association
with Elektra, moving into folk-rock with a couple of obscure mid-'60s
singles on Capitol. When they rejoined Elektra in the late 1960s (minus
Doug Dillard, who joined ex-Byrd Gene Clark to form Dillard &
Clark), both they and the label were ready to let loose with
full-blown, pioneering country-folk-rock. That story is told on two
other Collectors' Choice Music reissues, Wheatstraw Suite and Copperfields. -- Richie Unterberger
unless otherwise specified.
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