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Arts & Entertainment

Dr. Ralph Stanley and The Clinch Mountain Boys

“Hard, starkly beautiful music,” says Newsweek about this living legend from rural southwest Virginia.  For more than 60 years, bluegrass banjoist Dr. Ralph Stanley has continued to preserve traditional bluegrass, old-time and mountain music with his celebrated band, The Clinch Mountain Boys, which he formed with his brother Carter in 1946. Not content to rest on his laurels, at age 84, Stanley still tours with the vigor and elan of a rock star, performing more than 150 concerts each year. In the last decade, he became the first artist inducted into the Grand Ole Opry in the 21st century; earned a Grammy Award for his work on the soundtrack for the acclaimed film, “O Brother, Where Art Thou?”; received the National Medal of the Arts; and opened the Ralph Stanley Museum and Traditional Mountain Music Center in Clintwood, Virginia. Don’t miss this incredible night of music that will enchant bluegrass fans across generations! “One of the last, and surely the purest, of the traditional country musicians.” (The New York Times)

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