Music for the Mountain is a weekly bluegrass radio program featuring that hard-driving bluegrass sound, with classic and new tunes running the gamut from Bill Monroe to Sierra Hull. The program is posted here in two sections for broadcasters to insert breaks for station identification, etc. Please be careful to add enough additional material as the length of the segments will vary from week to week
Intro - Bill Monroe & The Bluegrass Boys - Watermelon Hanging On The Vine / Roanoke - Off The Record, Vol. 1: Live Recordings, 1956-1969 - Smithsonian Folkways)
BLUE HIGHWAY - Lonesome Hearted Blues - Blue Highway - Ceili
(break)
JIM & JESSE - My Long Journey Home - Songs From The Homeplace - Pinecastle
THE TUTTLES with AJ LEE - White House Blues - Endless Ocean - Back Studio
BUDDY MERRIAM - Batchin' It - Back Roads Mandolin - Lily Pad
(break)
JAMES KING - The Devil's Train - Three Chords And The Truth - Rounder
TOM MINDTE - Buzzin' With Buzz - Something I've Been Working On - Patuxent
(Dale Ann Bradley ID for Music for the Mountain)
DALE ANN BRADLEY - Ain't It Funny - Pocket Full Of Keys - Pinecastle
(break)
JAMES REAMS & THE BARNSTORMERS - Songbird - Rhyme Season - Mountain Redbird
EBBY JEWELL & THE BLUEGRASS KINSMEN - Wash The Blues Away - Renewal - TBK
THE EXPEDITION SHOW - Backroads And Little Towns - The Expedition Show - Mountain Fever
(break)
LOST & FOUND - If Today Was The Last Day - Down On Sawmill Road - Rebel
FLATT & SCRUGGS - I'm Gonna Settle Down - Flatt & Scruggs, 1948-1959 - Bear Family
THE TRADITIONAL GRASS - You'll Never Be The Same - The Blues Are Still The Blues - Rebel
(break)
BAND OF RUHKS - Coal Mining Man - Band Of Ruhks - 101 Ranch
RALPH STANLEY - Cluck Old Hen - Something Old, Something New - Rebel
(Ralph Stanley ID for Music for the Mountain)
DON RIGSBY - The Mountain Doctor - Doctor's Orders: A Tribute to Ralph Stanley - Rebel
MATT LEADBETTER - Lonesome Road Blues - Matt Leadbetter - Self
(Outro - Bill Monroe & The Bluegrass Boys - Y'all Come - Off The Record, Vol. 1: Live Recordings, 1956-1969 - Smithsonian Folkways)