Bill Monroe & His Blue Grass Boys (with guests), The Goins Brothers, Mac Wiseman, Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver Bean Blossom Festival Bean Blossom, IN 6/18/1981 Source: SPPS-anon1C327 Transfer by Keith Kreider - Maxell XLII90:Nakamichi CR-5A>Hydra cables>Lunatec V3>M-Audio Firewire 410>Wavelab 5.01b. Material taken from 6/18,19,20/1981 1. Instrumental (?) (some tape distortion) 2. Molly & Tenbrooks 3. Come Hither to Go Yonder 4. Cryin' Holy Unto the Lord 5. The Road to Columbus 6. In the Pines 7. Foggy Mountain Breakdown 8. Melissa's Waltz for J.B. (with Jesse McReynolds & Larry Sledge) 9. Will You Be Loving Another Man 10. Soldier's Joy 11. White House Blues 12. Little Joe 13. Old Ebenezer Scrooge 14. Precious Memories 15. Grassy Fiddle Blues 16. Shuckin' the Corn 17. Shenandoah Breakdown 1. (Talking) 2. Salty Dog Blues 3. Thinking About You 4. Billy in the Lowground 5. Toy Heart 6. Get Above Your Raisin' 7. Gone Home 8. You Can't Judge a Book By Its Cover 9. Little Joe 10. They'll Never Take Her Love From Me 11. It Rains the Same in Missouri 12. The Lonesome River 13. Happy on My Way 14. Yellow River 15. Your Love is Like a Flower 16. Put a Rainbow in the Clouds for Me 17. Train 45 (x) Notes: Side A (Disc One): Bill Monroe & His Blue Grass Boys Side B (Disc Two): The Goins Brothers (1-7) Mac Wiseman (8-11), Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver (12-17) Anonymous Collection Cassette #327 features recordings made at Bill Monroe's Bean Blossom Festival, Bean Blossom, IN, June 18-20, 1981. Side A features Bill Monroe & His Blue Grass Boys (in all likelihood, Wayne Lewis-guitar, Kenny Baker-fiddle, Butch Robins-banjo, & Mark Hembree-bass, although there are edits between tracks making it difficult to identify band members). Several guests appear, including mandolinists Jesse McReynolds (of Jim & Jesse fame) and Larry Sledge (who played and recorded with many people, including Monroe and Norman Blake's Rising Fawn String Ensemble). Circulating recordings of Monroe in 1981 are relatively scarce. Monroe was diagnosed with cancer that year, and spent time away from the stage recovering from his treatment; thus, this tape should be quite appealing to Monroe collectors. For me, the most interesting tunes in the set are several relatively new-for-the-time instrumentals Come Hither To Go Yonder, The Road to Columbus, Melissa's Waltz for J.B., Old Ebenezer Scrooge, Grassy Fiddle Blues (a fine Kenny Baker showpiece), and the mysterious first track. Side B of the tape features several partial sets by the tradition-minded Goins Brothers (Melvin Goins-guitar, Ray Goins-banjo, Art Stamper-fiddle, & Dan Jones-bass), Mac Wiseman (The Voice With a Heart, backed by an unknown band and singing a number of tunes seldom heard on other circulating tapes of this marvelous performer), and Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver (Doyle Lawson-mandolin, Terry Baucom-banjo, Lou Reid-bass, & Jimmy Haley-guitar) with their always stellar vocal harmonies and instrumental work. --Mitchell Wittenberg