Shipshewana's 2nd Annual Buggies & Bluegrass Week | September 5-9:
• September 5 - Rhonda Vincent
• September 6 - Malpass Brothers
• September 7 - The Steeldrivers
• September 8 - Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder
• September 9 - Old Crow Medicine Show
• & special guest hosts - the Moron Brothers
Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder
--A life full of music. That's the story of Ricky Skaggs. By age twenty-one, he was already
considered a "recognized master" of one of America's most demanding art forms, but his career
took him in other directions, catapulting him to popularity and success in the mainstream of
country music. His life's path has taken him to various musical genres, from where it all began
in bluegrass music, to striking out on new musical journeys, while still leaving his musical roots
intact.
Ricky struck his first chords on a mandolin over 60 years ago, and this 15-time Grammy Award
winner continues to do his part to lead the recent roots revival in music. With 12 consecutive
Grammy-nominated classics behind him, all from his own Skaggs Family Records label
(Bluegrass Rules! in 1998, Ancient Tones in 1999, History of the Future in 2001, Soldier of
the Cross, Live at the Charleston Music Hall, and Big Mon: The Songs of Bill Monroe in
2003, Brand New Strings in 2005, Instrumentals in 2007, Salt of the Earth with The Whites
in 2008, Honoring the Fathers of Bluegrass: Tribute to 1946 and 1947 in 2009 and Ricky
Skaggs Solo: Songs My Dad Loved along with Mosaic in 2010), the diverse and masterful
tones made by the gifted Skaggs come from a life dedicated to playing music that is both fed
by the soul and felt by the heart.
Ricky was born on July 18, 1954 in Cordell, Kentucky, and received his first mandolin at the
age of five after his father, Hobert, heard him harmonizing with his mother from across the
house as he played with his toys. Two weeks after teaching him the G, C and D chords, Hobert
returned from working out of town shocked to see his young son making chord changes and
singing along. He soon earned a reputation among the locals in his community. When the
legendary Bill Monroe came to Martha, Kentucky for a performance, the crowd wouldn't let
up until "Little Ricky Skaggs" got up to play. The father of bluegrass called six-year-old Skaggs
up and placed his own mandolin around his neck, adjusting the strap to fit his small frame. No
one could have imagined what a defining moment that would be in the life of the young prodigy.
By age seven, Skaggs performed with bluegrass legends Flatt & Scruggs on their popular
syndicated television show, for which he earned his first paycheck for a musical performance.
In 1971, he entered the world of professional music full-time with his friend, the late country
singer, Keith Whitley, when the two young musicians were invited to join the band of bluegrass
patriarch Ralph Stanley. Ricky soon began to build a reputation for creativity and excitement
through live appearances and recordings with acts such as J.D. Crowe & the New South. He
performed on the band's 1975 debut album for Rounder Records, which is widely regarded as
one of the most influential bluegrass albums ever made. A stint as a bandleader with Boone
Creek followed, bringing the challenges of leadership while giving him further recording and
performing experience.
In the late 1970's, Ricky turned his attention to country music. Though still in his 20's, the
wealth of experience and talent he possessed served him well, first as a member of Emmylou
Harris' Hot Band and later as an individual recording artist on his own. With the release of
Waitin' for the Sun to Shine in 1981, Skaggs reached the top of the country charts and
remained there throughout most of the 1980's, resulting in a total of 12 #1 hits. In 1982, he
became a member of the Grand Ole Opry, the youngest to ever be inducted at that time. As his
popularity soared, he garnered eight awards from the Country Music Association (CMA),
including "Entertainer of the Year" in 1985, four Grammy Awards and dozens of other honors.
These achievements also placed him front and center in the neo-traditionalist movement,
bringing renewed vitality and prominence to a sound that had been somewhat subdued by the
commercialization of the 'Urban Cowboy' fad. Renowned guitarist and producer, Chet Atkins,
even credited Skaggs with "single-handedly" saving country music.
In 1997, after Ricky's then-current recording contract was coming to an end, he made the
decision to establish his own record label - Skaggs Family Records. Since then, Skaggs and his
band Kentucky Thunder have released an amazing 12 consecutive Grammy-nominated classics
(8 of which went on to earn the revered award) while also opening the label to a variety of other
musical artists, all the time keeping emphasis on bluegrass and other forms of roots music.
Ricky and Skaggs Family Records have had the privilege of working with many musical talents,
including the Del McCoury Band, Jerry and Tammy Sullivan, Blue Highway, The Whites,
Mountain Heart, Melonie Cannon, Ryan Holladay, Keith Sewell, Cherryholmes and Cadillac
Sky.
Ricky's first release for Skaggs Family Records, Bluegrass Rules!, set a new standard for
bluegrass, breaking new sales records in the genre, winning Skaggs his sixth Grammy Award
and earning the International Bluegrass Music Association's (IBMA) Album of the Year
Award. In 1999, his second all-bluegrass album, Ancient Tones, won a Grammy Award for
Best Bluegrass Album - his second consecutive Grammy in that same category. Just one year
later, Ricky won his eighth Grammy Award in the Best Southern, Country or Bluegrass Gospel
Album category for Soldier of the Cross, his first all-gospel project with his band Kentucky
Thunder.
Ricky made further progress with the release of his fourth bluegrass album in 2000, Big Mon:
The Songs of Bill Monroe, a project which featured an all-star cast of musicians ranging from
Dolly Parton, Patty Loveless and Travis Tritt to Joan Osborne, John Fogerty and Bruce
Hornsby, and celebrated the music and the life of Ricky's mentor, Bill Monroe. Big Mon
received much critical acclaim, including a Grammy nomination for Best Country
Collaboration with Vocals. The album was re-released by Lyric Street Records in 2002 under
a new name, Ricky Skaggs and Friends Sing the Songs of Bill Monroe. His fifth bluegrass
album, History of the Future (2001), a timeless collection of both traditional bluegrass
standards and newly conceived acoustic gems received rave reviews and industry accolades,
including a Grammy nomination for Best Bluegrass Album and an IBMA nomination for
Album of the Year, once again placing Skaggs among the leading innovators in the genre.
Skaggs' first all-live album with Kentucky Thunder, Live at the Charleston Music Hall (2003)
led to an IBMA Award for Instrumental Group of the Year - an award Skaggs and Kentucky
Thunder has taken home 8 times in the last decade. The decision to record a live album was an
obvious one for Skaggs. From a string of high-profile tour dates with the Dixie Chicks in 2000,
to his position as host of the unprecedented "All*Star Bluegrass Celebration" which aired
nationwide on PBS in 2002, to his participation in the wildly successful 41-city 'Down from
the Mountain' tour - Ricky has become one of bluegrass' most dynamic and sought-after live
performers. Live at the Charleston Music Hall was honored in 2004 with a Grammy Award
for Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group for the Harley Allen-penned track, "A Simple
Life."
He counts the current configuration of Kentucky Thunder among the best group of musicians
he has ever worked with. "This group of guys meets my approval every night," Ricky
says. "Each and every one of the pickers in Kentucky Thunder totally amazes me in every
show...and that, to me, outweighs any award we could ever win." The all-star lineup of
Kentucky Thunder includes Russ Carson (banjo), Jake Workman (lead guitar), Dennis Parker
(baritone vocals, guitar), Gavin Kelso (bass), Mike Rogers (tenor vocals, rhythm guitar) and
Billy Contreras (fiddle).
In 2005, Ricky earned his 10th career Grammy (Best Bluegrass Album) for Brand New Strings
- a beautiful collection of music featuring four Skaggs originals as well as several tunes by
some of his most admired contemporaries, including Harley Allen, Guy Clark and Shawn
Camp. In 2006, Skaggs was honored with a Grammy Award - this time in the Best Musical
Album for Children category - for his contribution to Songs from the Neighborhood: the
Music of Mister Rogers. Greater success followed with the release of Ricky Skaggs and
Kentucky Thunder Instrumentals, an album of all-original, all-instrumental material in the fall
of 2006. Praised by fans and critics alike as a landmark album for Skaggs, Instrumentals
debuted at No. 1 on Billboard's bluegrass album chart and earned Ricky his 12th career Grammy
Award (Best Bluegrass Album).
Cross pollination has been a mainstay throughout Ricky's career, from his weekly
collaborations with various artists as host of The Nashville Network's Monday Night Concerts
in the 1990's to his recent pairings with Bruce Hornsby and The Whites. Released in March of
2007, Ricky Skaggs and Bruce Hornsby (Sony/Legacy) drew from the deep roots in mountain
music - adding piano and Hornsby's inimitable songwriting to the core bluegrass lineup of
mandolin, guitar, bass, fiddle and banjo. A major 'CMT Crossroads' special coincided with the
album's release.
His next recorded project, released in September of 2007 on Skaggs Family Records, was a
literal family affair. After years of blending their voices from the living room to the stage, Ricky
Skaggs and The Whites teamed up for their first collaborative gospel album, Salt of the Earth,
which resulted in a 13th career Grammy Award for Best Southern, Country or Bluegrass Gospel
Album, followed by a Gospel Music Association Dove Award for Bluegrass Recorded Album
of the Year and Inspirational Country Music Awards for Musician of the Year as well as
Mainstream Country Artist of the Year and Inspirational Bluegrass Artist of the Year (with The
Whites).
In 2008, Skaggs paid tribute to the man he has often referred to as his "musical father", Bill
Monroe, and the original lineup of the Bluegrass Boys (Earl Scruggs, Lester Flatt, Chubby Wise
and Howard Watts) with the release of Honoring the Fathers of Bluegrass: Tribute to 1946
and 1947, earning a 14th career Grammy Award for Best Bluegrass Album.
A musical father in his own right, Skaggs continued on the full circle path with the addition of
a ReIssue Series of his groundbreaking country music masterworks to the Skaggs Family
Records catalog in 2009. Beginning with 1982's Highways & Heartaches, and followed by
1981's Waitin' for the Sun to Shine and 1983's Don't Cheat in Our Hometown, the ReIssue
Series will include nine albums total and includes bonus retrospectives with each release, which
feature Ricky, in his own words, sharing never-before-told stories about the making of each
project.
Skaggs' first-ever solo album, Ricky Skaggs Solo: Songs My Dad Loved (2009), celebrated the
man that caused him to fall in love with music - his father, Hobert Skaggs. He elaborates, "If
I could've gotten my dad into the studio, this is how I would've wanted him to sound." Playing
every instrument and singing every note on the album, Ricky brought raw, emotional honesty
to the songs. By coming home to the music that meant so much to him as a child, Ricky tapped
into a wellspring of passion that is channeled into every tune, as though he willed himself back
to his family's house in Kentucky. Solo was honored in the American roots field with a Grammy
nomination for Best Traditional Folk Album in 2010.
Ricky Skaggs' album, Mosaic (2010), marked a return to a full band sound that mixed elements
of Country music with Beatles-esque melody and lyrics that spoke to Skaggs' faith, "making
music that is in my head and in my heart," as Ricky said. Grammy winning songwriter/producer
Gordon Kennedy, who co-wrote Eric Clapton's "Change the World," was instrumental as coproducer and writer. This most special album hooks the heart, as the sounds invite you in to
take notice and come closer. They blended their talents and love of music with their love for
the Lord to create this distinctive collaboration of writing and talent, unparalleled in strength of
genius. The song, "Return to Sender" from Mosaic was nominated for a Grammy for Best
Gospel Song, and the album was a contender for Best Pop/Contemporary Gospel Album at the
53rd Grammy Awards, receiving major critical acclaim.
Marking Ricky's 50th year in music was the release of Country Hits Bluegrass Style (2011), a
compilation of many of Skaggs' #1 country hits and fan favorites played in a bluegrass style.
Combining his country and bluegrass roots along with Ricky's impeccable tenor voice, his eight
time IBMA Instrumental Band of the Year, Kentucky Thunder, and some of Ricky's original
award-winning country band alumni together with special friends added to the magic of this
release.
Long awaited by country and bluegrass music fans alike, Music To My Ears (2012) included
fresh new bluegrass tunes co-written by Skaggs along with a brand new instrumental. Many
bluegrass standards were incorporated and added to its charm. The album featured a duet with
Ricky Skaggs and Barry Gibb (of Bee Gees fame) on deeply moving "Soldier's Son," along
with a new bluegrass treasure "You Can't Hurt Ham," inspired by a true story of Mr. Bill
Monroe.
In 2013, music legends Ricky Skaggs and Bruce Hornsby came together again for a live album,
titled Cluck Ol' Hen. Bluegrass treasures and lively expanded hits are to be discovered on this
fresh collection of songs from the masterful duo of Skaggs and Hornsby. These live songs were
originally recorded when the two music icons first hit the tour circuit together. Hornsby's
spirited piano brings a new dimension to these songs, with electrifying solos and improvisation
thrown in the mix of Skaggs, Hornsby and Skaggs' band, Kentucky Thunder. A string of tour
dates coincided with the release, including a stop at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tenn.
With the release of Hearts Like Ours (2014), a dream came true for Ricky Skaggs and his wife,
celebrated artist Sharon White of The Whites. Previously in 1987 the pair won a CMA Vocal
Duo of the Year award for "Love Can't Ever Get Better Than This," but White was touring
with her family band and Skaggs was on fire with his solo career, so releasing a full project
wasn't possible at the time. This first-ever studio album was produced by Skaggs and White
and features the couple dueting on handpicked country love songs.
As a musician, Skaggs is a brilliant traditionalist but is also willing to mix genres, recording
and touring with many different artists such as Bruce Hornsby and Ry Cooder. With dates in
2015, Ry Cooder, Sharon White and Ricky Skaggs embarked upon the critically acclaimed
'Cooder-White-Skaggs - Songs for the Good People' tour that featured the trio singing
gospel, blues and country along with superior musicianship. Backing the trio was Mark Fain on
bass, Ry's son Joachim Cooder on drums, with Sharon's father Buck White on piano and sister
Cheryl White's harmony vocals. Stops crossing the country included Berklee Performance
Center in Boston and Carnegie Hall in New York, with tour dates continuing into 2016. Most
recently, Skaggs has added Country tour dates as he plugs in and plays full shows of his charttopping hits.
Skaggs demonstrates wizardry in the studio, producing not only his records but sets from acts
such as The Whites and Dolly Parton, as well as the Love Remains disc from Hillary Scott &
The Scott Family, which won him his 15th Grammy for Best Contemporary Christian Music
Album as a producer.
2018 was a stellar year for Skaggs, with the addition of three more Hall of Fame inductions:
the National Fiddler Hall of Fame, IBMA's Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame and country
music's greatest honor, the Country Music Hall of Fame. Along with his three previous
inductions into the Kentucky Music Hall of Fame, the Gospel Music Association's Gospel
Music Hall of Fame and the Musicians Hall of Fame, all six awards display his ability to
masterfully cross genres with versatility in styles and instruments.
The year 2020 saw Ricky receiving what his mother always wanted him to; his high school
diploma. The school, Lawrence County High School in Louisa, Kentucky, bestowed upon him
an honorary diploma for all of his work in music, even though it was just a little bit later than
when his mother would have imagined it, almost 50 years later! Ricky says, "It was an amazing
surprise and answered prayer of my mom. She wanted me to graduate before I went full time
with Ralph Stanley on the road."
Also in 2020, Ricky was awarded the prestigious National Medal of Arts for his contributions
to the American music industry. It is the highest award given to artists and arts patrons by the
United States government. As a virtuoso of the mandolin and fiddle, Ricky Skaggs creates and
produces bluegrass music that preserves the musical legacy of the most talented artists of his
generation.
Ricky Skaggs has often said that he is "just trying to make a living" playing the music he loves.
But it's clear that his passion for it puts him in the position to bring his lively, distinctively
American form of music out of isolation and into the ears and hearts of audiences across the
country and around the world. Ricky Skaggs is always forging ahead with cross-cultural, genrebending musical ideas and inspirations.