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Earl Scruggs: Three Fingers That Changed Banjo Forever

Episode 6528 Published 1 week, 4 days ago
Description

A 10-year-old boy storming off to his bedroom after a fight with his brother accidentally invented the three-finger roll that changed the banjo forever. Earl Scruggs took an instrument known as a comedian's prop and turned it into the driving engine of bluegrass music, playing rhythm and lead at the same time with a sound like thumbtacks plinking on a tin roof.

From a North Carolina textile mill to a 1945 Nashville audition that floored Lester Flatt, Scruggs's story is one of relentless innovation: he drilled into his own prized banjo to invent new hardware, and he risked his conservative fan base to keep his music evolving, even sharing an anti-war stage with Steppenwolf and the Byrds in 1969.

• He discovered the revolutionary three-finger roll by accident while blowing off steam at age 10

• At 21 he auditioned for Bill Monroe at Nashville's Tulane Hotel and stunned Lester Flatt

• He drilled cam detuners of his own design into his pearl-inlaid Mastertone banjo

• Wife Louise Scruggs, Nashville's first prominent female manager, booked the band into Carnegie Hall

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