
Danny Paisley 
Country / Country
Bob Paisley and banjo picker [wimpLink artistId="4243982"]Ted Lundy[/wimpLink] formed the Southern Mountain Boys in 1964, specializing in hard-driving traditional bluegrass. They recorded four albums between 1973 and 1978 before serious hip problems forced Paisley to step back. Later he re-formed the group as the Southern Grass, which is where his son, singer and guitarist [wimpLink artistId="5342316"]Dan Paisley[/wimpLink], enters the picture. The younger Paisley joined his father's band in 1971 when he was only 15 years old and he developed into one of the finest voices in all of bluegrass, using that familiar high and reedy tone that is so common in the genre, but adding in a sort of raspy sense of phrasing that is as refreshing as it is expressive. Following Bob's death in 2004, [wimpLink artistId="5342316"]Dan[/wimpLink] carried on the band, its name, and its tradition, working with his brother [wimpLink artistId="4827939"]Michael Paisley[/wimpLink] (bass); two sons of [wimpLink artistId="4243982"]Ted Lundy[/wimpLink], fiddler T.J. Lundy and banjoist [wimpLink artistId="15233851"]Bobby Lundy[/wimpLink]; and Donnie Eldreth (mandolin), the son of another original Southern Mountain Boys member, Don Eldreth, Sr. The reconstituted group released The Tradition Continues on Brandywine Records in 2005, following it with [wimpLink albumId="44322637"]Forty Years of Trouble[/wimpLink] on Strictly Country Records in 2007 and [wimpLink albumId="111667936"]The Room Over Mine[/wimpLink] on Rounder Records in 2008. ~ Steve Leggett