Lynn Morris (musician)

Lynn Morris (born October 8, 1948) is an American bluegrass musician.

Morris was raised in Lamesa, Texas, where she played guitar early in life. While in college she began playing bluegrass music, and began playing banjo while completing a degree in art. She played with bluegrass groups City Limits and Whetstone Run, but found many bluegrass groups resisted women members.

In 1974, she won the National Banjo Championship, the first female to do so. Assembling her own group, the Lynn Morris Band, in 1988, she began recording for Rounder Records. Over time, her bandmates have included husband Marshall Wilborn, mandolinist Jesse Brock,singer/guitarist Chris Jones, mandolinist/banjo player Dick Smith, fiddler Tad Marks, banjo/fiddle player Ron Stewart, guitarist/singer Jeff Autry, mandolinist Matt Mundy, mandolinist David McLaughlin, banjoist Tom Adams, guitarist/mandolinist Audie Blaylock, and fiddler Stuart Duncan. She won several further bluegrass awards in the 1990s.

In 1996 the Lynn Morris Band performed in Scarborough, Ontario, Canada, as part of the Bluegrass Sundays winter concert series organized by the Northern Bluegrass Committee[1] In 2005 the band entertained at the Gettysburg Bluegrass Festival.[2]

Discography

  • The Lynn Morris Band (Rounder Records, 1990)
  • The Bramble and the Rose (Rounder, 1992)
  • Mama's Hand (Rounder, 1995)
  • You'll Never Be the Sun (Rounder, 1999)
  • Shape of a Tear (Rounder, 2003)
gollark: Cryptography code is probably a valid usecase for unsafe things, as long as there isn't much and you validate it extensively.
gollark: I vaguely remember reading that 70% of bugs in Chromium and Microsoft things were memory errors, although they probably have to be more performance-sensitive than random applications software so this might be unfair.
gollark: Just... don't do that?
gollark: And wrong in insidious ways, instead of failing obviously.
gollark: It makes it easier for the foolish humans to write wrong code than higher-level languages. Thus, it is "unsafe".

References

  1. Concert report in Strings, newsletter of the Pineridge Bluegrass Folklore Society, March 1996
  2. "Gettysburg Bluegrass Festival", report in Strings, newsletter of the Pineridge Bluegrass Folklore Society, October 2005
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.