Grass It Up is an American bluegrass music band [1] based in Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Grass It Up began in 2004 with singer-songwriter David Jeffrey (guitar, mandolin) and Jon Bross (bass) playing progressive bluegrass at the Front Range Barbeque, a restaurant in Colorado Springs. On Wednesdays musicians from the region would sit in with the duo. Shannon Carr (banjo, guitar) joined the band in 2005. [2] The band has appeared at public and private events at The Broadmoor resort since 2006.
The trio released its first album, Goin’ to Colorado, in October 2006. They performed at the Keystone Bluegrass and Brews Festival and the Happy Ass Ranch Bluegrass Festival beginning in 2007. They organized and performed at Lavapalooza at Lago Arenal, Costa Rica, in 2007 and 2008 and in both those years competed in band contests at Telluride Bluegrass Festival and Rocky Grass.
Grass It Up released its second album, Shoot the Moon in April 2008; that year Danny Karpel began playing piano on stage with the band. They performed at the newly founded MeadowGrass music festival in 2009 and annually thereafter, as well as at The Black Rose Acoustic Society and at the Grapes & Grass Festival in Guerneville, California in 2009 and 2011. The band was included in the 2009 "best of" survey of the Colorado Springs Gazette.
The band's 2010 album, Day After Yesterday, incorporated Karpel on piano and Ben Lewis playing fiddle; they appeared at the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center events in 2010 and 2011. They performed as a jam band, with Bruce Hayes, Keith Reed, and Vince Herman.
With the addition of Jim Marsh in 2010, Grass It Up began playing more traditional bluegrass. They performed at the Crested Butte Center for the Arts in 2011 and appeared at the Western Jubilee Theater. [3] Live, Grass It Up's first live album, released on Purple House Records, was recorded that February at the Western Jubilee Warehouse in Colorado Springs and mastered at Airshow Mastering in Boulder, Colorado by David Glasser. [4] The album features songs written by Lewis, Jeffrey, Carr, Marsh, and Stephen Hartsfield.
Also released through Purple House, Alabama Tory was recorded at Hideaway Studios in April 2012, by Mark Benning. The band at that time consisted of Jeffrey, Carr, Marsh, Bross and Jay Genender. The album included songs by Jeffrey, and Marsh, as well as the title song by Hartsfield. [5]
In 2013, Grass It Up was chosen as the best bluegrass/country band at the Indy Music Awards Festival in Colorado Springs. [6] They opened for the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band at Stargazers Theater in July that year and joined John McEuen there in August.
David Siegel began playing fiddle with the band in 2014. Grass It Up continued to perform regularly in El Paso County, and at bluegrass festivals. [7] The band appeared annually between 2010 and 2015 in the "Best of" list of Colorado's weekly Independent newspaper, [5] and in 2015 won another Indy Music Award. [8]
In 2016, Grass It up released its album, Borrowed Time, which was recorded live at the Western Jubilee Warehouse Theater in Colorado Springs in June of that year. That month the band also performed at the Pickin' on the Divide festival. [9]
Jon Bross joined Up, an 8-man rhythm and funk group in Milwaukee, as a student at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater (1989–1993) and later joined Gyration (a 10-man disco and funk review) on rhythm guitar.
David Jeffrey, [10] born and raised in Alexandria, Alabama, played music in church and studied at Jacksonville (Alabama) State University and The Atlanta Institute of Music. He has played with Randomwood and the JSU Jazz Band, and Blue Hooptie Revival. The majority of Grass It Up's songs have been written by Jeffrey.
Shannon T. Carr grew up in Alabama playing church music, and attended Jacksonville State University on piano and jazz scholarships. He played with Going Nova, the Distant Cousins, Stimson Brothers and Blue Hooptie Revival. He studied claw-hammer banjo with Jim Marsh and the Gnat Valley Ramblers.
Jim Marsh hosted "Pickin’ ‘n Singin’" on TV 24 in Anniston, Alabama, with the Distant Cousins, with whom he played for 24 years. Marsh opened Cheaha Mountain Amphitheater near Heflin, Alabama, and performed at the Talladega National Forest in 2000. Marsh mentored Carr and Jeffrey in Alabama, and moved to Colorado to join Grass It Up in 2010. [11]
David Siegel graduated from the Colorado Springs Conservatory and earned a bachelor's in music in violin performance in 2012 from the Manhattan School of Music. He is executive director of the Bee Vradenburg Foundation. [12]
Béla Anton Leoš Fleck is an American banjo player. An acclaimed virtuoso, he is an innovative and technically proficient pioneer and ambassador of the banjo, playing music from bluegrass, jazz, classical, rock and various world music genres. He is best known for his work with the bands New Grass Revival and Béla Fleck and the Flecktones. Fleck has won 17 Grammy Awards and been nominated 39 times.
The String Cheese Incident (SCI) is an American jam band from Crested Butte and Telluride, Colorado, formed in 1993. The band is composed of Michael Kang, Michael Travis, Bill Nershi, Kyle Hollingsworth, and Keith Moseley, and, since 2004, Jason Hann.
Mark O'Connor is an American fiddle player, composer, guitarist, and mandolinist whose music combines bluegrass, country, jazz and classical. A three-time Grammy Award winner, he has won six Country Music Association Musician Of The Year awards and was a member of three influential musical ensembles: the David Grisman Quintet, The Dregs, and Strength in Numbers.
Norman L. Blake is a traditional American stringed instrument artist and songwriter. He is half of the eponymous Norman & Nancy Blake band with his wife, Nancy Blake.
Charles Samuel Bush is an American mandolinist who is considered an originator of progressive bluegrass music. In 2020, he was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame as a member of New Grass Revival. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame a second time in 2023 as a solo artist.
Delano Floyd McCoury is an American bluegrass musician. As leader of the Del McCoury Band, he plays guitar and sings lead vocals along with his two sons, Ronnie McCoury and Rob McCoury, who play mandolin and banjo respectively. In June 2010, he received a National Heritage Fellowship lifetime achievement award from the National Endowment for the Arts and in 2011 he was elected into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame.
Byron Douglas Berline was an American fiddle player who played many American music styles, including old time, ragtime, bluegrass, Cajun, country, and rock.
Old School Freight Train (OSFT) was a Charlottesville, Virginia-based band that combined bluegrass, jazz, Latin, and Celtic sounds to create their music.
Iron Horse is a bluegrass band from Killen, Alabama, US. They are known for performing and recording bluegrass cover versions of rock songs, particularly their bluegrass treatments of heavy metal songs popularized by Metallica. The band has two tracks on the tribute album Strummin' with the Devil: The Southern Side of Van Halen, which also features David Lee Roth, among other artists. They have recently been working on self-produced material and in October 2009 released an all-original Christmas project called "Small Town Christmas".
Gary Ruley and Mule Train is an acoustic bluegrass band based in Lexington, Virginia who also play New Grass and Jazz music.
Lynn Morris is an American bluegrass musician.
David Harvey is an American bluegrass mandolin player and luthier, responsible for the mandolins, banjos, and dobros produced by Gibson.
Rollin' In The Hay is an American alternative bluegrass band from Birmingham, Alabama. The group has self-released six CDs and also has created 15 nationally released instrumental tributes called the Pickin' On series. The band is listed in the Alabama Music Hall of Fame as "Music Achievers".
Mary Ellen Simpson is an American violinist, mostly noted for her work with Yanni, Gary Ruley and Mule Train and Walker's Run. She is a founding member of The Whiskey Rebellion band.
The Foggy Hogtown Boys is a Canadian bluegrass band, based in Toronto, Ontario.
HogMaw is an American band from York, Pennsylvania, United States. The music of HogMaw has been described as a combination of bluegrass, folk, funk, and heavy metal called "thundergrass".
David Michael Richey, known professionally as Slim Richey, was an American jazz guitarist, fiddle player, bandleader, and publisher.
Head for the Hills is an American four-piece from Fort Collins, Colorado.
Molly Rose Tuttle is an American vocalist, songwriter, banjo player, guitarist, recording artist, and teacher in the bluegrass tradition. She is noted for her flatpicking, clawhammer, and crosspicking guitar prowess. She has cited Laurie Lewis, Kathy Kallick, Alison Krauss and Hazel Dickens as role models. In 2017, Tuttle was the first woman to win the International Bluegrass Music Association's Guitar Player of the Year award. In 2018 she won the award again, along with being named the Americana Music Association's Instrumentalist of the Year. In 2023, Tuttle won the Best Bluegrass Album for Crooked Tree and also received a nomination for the all-genre Best New Artist award at the 65th Annual Grammy Awards. Also in 2023, Tuttle and Golden Highway won International Bluegrass Music Awards for album Crooked Tree and the title track in the categories of Album of the Year and Song of the Year, respectively, while Tuttle won Female Vocalist of the Year.
WinterWonderGrass is a multi-day bluegrass and roots music festival that takes place at a variety of ski resorts in the towns of Steamboat Springs, Colorado; Olympic Valley, California; and Manchester, Vermont. The festival incorporates multiple stages, day and evening performances, local and regional craft beer tastings, sustainable event production practices, and kids areas, with a portion of proceeds donated to local charitable organizations.