Thanks to:
Barry R. Willis Author/Publisher
of "America's Music: Bluegrass." for this biography.
(His book is available from
Amazon.com)
In
1934, Lester and wife Gladys bought a home in Sparta for $350 down and
$5 per month payments. When the mill shut down that fall, the Flatts moved
to McMinnville, Tennessee. Before the year was out, however, they were
both employed in Johnson City by a silk mill there. The next year found
them with the mill in the different location near Roanoke, Virginia. The
Flatts did a little local entertaining together as a duo, and there in
Roanoke, Lester joined Charlie Scott’s Harmonizers, playing on WDBJ. Flatt’s
bout with rheumatoid arthritis forced him to quit the mill and to pursue
music on a more regular basis. Lester and Gladys Flatt moved to Burlington,
North Carolina, in the fall of 1940, where Gladys worked for the huge Burlington
Industries, and Lester joined veteran entertainer Clyde Moody on WBBB where
he sang tenor to Moody and played mandolin with Moody’s band. Also,
it was during this period when Flatt worked at the mill that he worked
with Jim Hall and the Crazy Mountaineers. In 1943, Flatt played with Charlie
Monroe’s Kentucky Pardners in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Flatt played
mandolin with this band only because Charlie played the guitar; he wasn’t
accomplished on the mandolin but got a pay raise from Charlie to do it.
He had to sing tenor to Charlie (just like Charlie’s brother, Bill, had
done in the Monroe Brothers duets). Even though Flatt’s voice was capable
of this type of work, he didn’t like it, and upon leaving Charlie Monroe
he vowed never to do it again. There at WSJS (Winston-Salem) they were
recorded on a thirty-minute 16-inch disc—a transcription (this was before
tape recording). The master disc was then duplicated and shipped to other
radio stations allowing the artist to appear at two or more places at once.
They played on the Noon-Day Jamboree which was broadcast over seven radio
stations and brought tremendous appearance demand. This led to Charlie’s
purchase of a huge tent which could seat 2,000 people. They would fill
it twice almost every night. The band had seven people plus a tent crew.
Although he usually played mandolin with the band, it was here that most
of Flatt’s guitar playing became refined. As did Clyde Moody, Cleo Davis,
Charlie Monroe and occasionally Zeke Morris, Flatt adopted that style which
included a thumb pick and a steel pick on the index finger. Flatt played
guitar bass runs and melodies with his thumbpick on the low strings while
brushing the high strings with his first finger to add rhythm. After quitting
the Kentucky Pardners, Bill Monroe offered Flatt
a
job as rhythm guitarist and lead singer with the Blue Grass Boys, which
he accepted. Stringbean met him at the bus station in Nashville and
ushered him around until performance time. They all played on the Opry
that night with no rehearsal. This was March 1945 according to some sources.
Flatt’s voice fit well with the Blue Grass Boys and Monroe, quick to recognize
good talent in his band, began listing Flatt’s name on the labels. Out
of the next nineteen singles which featured vocals, only three did not
feature Flatt singing lead.
Lance
LeRoy, bluegrass enthusiast, band manager and well-respected Lester Flatt
biographer, gave his opinion of bluegrass at its best, “Looking back on
it all, I think it would require someone with extreme tunnel vision to
dispute the viewpoint that bluegrass music was first introduced to the
world there around Christmas of 1945 when Earl first appeared on the Grand
Ole Opry with Bill and the Blue Grass Boys. I don’t buy this ‘bluegrass
as we know it today’ cop-out. I regard it as being the first time bluegrass
music was introduced to the world...PERIOD! It took Earl’s three-finger
roll on the five-string banjo to supply the music’s single most distinguishing
characteristic. The four other parts were already here; he added the fifth
one that is absolutely essential if you are going to have bluegrass music.
The sound of the banjo played with a three-finger roll has always symbolized
‘bluegrass’ to both fans and the general public as well. I doubt that any
other of the instruments even come close.
There were just the four of us and we were only there two or three weeks.
We called Jim Shumate, wanting a fiddle player; he wanted us to come to
Hickory (North Carolina) to work on a radio station there. He was working
in a furniture store in Hickory and didn’t want to leave. We were there
just a matter of weeks.” (Eanes didn’t make the trip.)
“In their twenty-one years together, Flatt and Scruggs had more impact
on the music, in my opinion, than anything that’s gone on before or since.”
LeRoy, who knew Lester Flatt as well as anyone, continued to describe the
situation, “They went their separate ways in early spring of 1948, neither
one apparently with any immediate plan to continue playing music professionally.”
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