Biography
A fiddler from the Tennessee-North Carolina border, G.B. Grayson was among the first to record several folk standards, including Tom Dooley, The Banks of the Ohio, and Train 45. Born in 1888, he was blinded as an infant and became a musician. Many of his best recordings for Victor were made with Henry Whitter, a guitarist and harmonica player. Perhaps the longest-lasting (thanks to its revival in the '50s by the Kingston Trio), Tom Dooley was a song dear to Grayson's heart -- his grand uncle, a North Carolina sheriff, had arrested Tom Dooley himself. Grayson died in 1930, the victim of an automobile accident. ~ John Bush, Rovi



 
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"The Red And Green Signal Lights" G. B. Grayson & Henry Whitter hillbilly on Victor V-40063 (1928)
The Fiddler Who Shaped Country Music
1st RECORDING OF: Tom Dooley - Grayson & Whitter (1929)
Grayson & Whitter-What You Gonna Do With The Baby
Grayson and Whitter-The Nine Pound Hammer
G.B. Grayson - Handsome Molly
Grayson & Whitter - Rose Conley
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