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Obit: Doug Dillard RIP (May 2012)

17 May 12 - 09:02 AM (#3352000)
Subject: Obit: Doug Dillard RIP (May 2012)
From: GUEST,Mary Katherine

Doug Dillard Dead: Bluegrass Banjo Great Dies at 75

Banjo player and TV performer Doug Dillard, who gained fame for his appearances on "The Andy Griffith Show" with musical group the Dillards (known on the TV series as the "Darlings") has died following a lengthy illness. A family spokesperson tells The Boot that Dillard was taken to a Nashville emergency room on Wednesday night (May 16) and died shortly thereafter.

Doug Dillard was born in Salem, Mo., in 1937 and was playing guitar by age 5. He received his first banjo as a teenager and soon began performing with various bands on radio and TV. He had been encouraged to pursue his instrument by banjo legend Earl Scruggs. According to his official bio, at 16, Dillard wrote a letter to Scruggs and received a positive reply. He then pestered his parents into driving him to Scruggs' home in Madison, Tenn., some five hundred miles away from Salem. Doug brazenly walked up to the front door and rang the bell, introducing himself and asking the iconic banjo picker to install Scruggs' tuners on his banjo.

Along with his brother Rodney, Doug soon formed the Dillards. Their folk-bluegrass blend became popular on college campuses and elsewhere, which led to their move to California and resulted in a recording contract and their stint on the hit CBS series starring Andy Griffith. After parting ways with the Dillards, Doug joined folk-rock group the Byrds on their first European tour. After the tour, Doug teamed up with former Byrds member Gene Clark, forming the influential Dillard & Clark, one of the first acts to popularize the country-rock sound that would include other artists such as Gram Parsons and the musicians who would later form the Eagles. Comedian and banjo player Steve Martin recently told The Boot that Doug Dillard was among the first influences on his banjo playing.

A Grammy-nominated instrumentalist, Doug's distinctive banjo can also be heard on albums by everyone from Hoyt Axton, Johnny Cash, Arlo Guthrie and Linda Ronstadt to Kay Starr, Glen Campbell, the Monkees and the Beach Boys. In 2009, the Dillards were inducted into the IBMA's Bluegrass Hall of Fame.

Funeral arrangements for Doug Dillard are pending.


17 May 12 - 12:23 PM (#3352081)
Subject: RE: Obit: Doug Dillard RIP (May 2012)
From: Bee-dubya-ell

Sad news.

Dillard also composed "Doug's Tune", a banjo instrumental that's a standard at bluegrass festival picking sessions.


17 May 12 - 01:49 PM (#3352101)
Subject: RE: Obit: Doug Dillard RIP (May 2012)
From: topical tom

RIP Doug. I remember how I enjoyed your music in those "Andy Griffith days".


17 May 12 - 03:34 PM (#3352134)
Subject: RE: Obit: Doug Dillard RIP (May 2012)
From: catspaw49

Quite a career and and one hellva' huge influence. There's a nice note from Arlo over on Arlonet.

Spaw


17 May 12 - 04:14 PM (#3352140)
Subject: RE: Obit: Doug Dillard RIP (May 2012)
From: Dave Swan

Doug's Tune

Thanks.


18 May 12 - 07:51 AM (#3352381)
Subject: RE: Obit: Doug Dillard RIP (May 2012)
From: SINSULL

I bought my first "folk" album when I was about 12 - a selection of tunes by an assortment of artists. The Dillards' Reuben's Train was my favorite cut.
He's gone where those chilly winds don't blow.
RIP and thank you.
SINS