Glitter Grass from the Nashwood Hollyville Strings (sometimes called Dillard - Hartford - Dillard) is an album by John Hartford, Doug Dillard, and Rodney Dillard, released in 1977.[1]
Glitter Grass from the Nashwood Hollyville Strings | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1977 | |||
Genre | Bluegrass | |||
Label | Flying Fish | |||
Producer | Michael Melford | |||
John Hartford chronology | ||||
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Alternative Cover | ||||
Glitter Grass was reissued on CD in 1992 along with Permanent Wave on the Flying Fish label.[1]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Track listing
edit- "Don't Come Rollin'" (Gene Clark, Doug Dillard, Bernie Leadon) – 2:13
- "Cross the Border Line" (Daniel Moore) – 2:16
- "Two Hits and the Joint Turned Brown" (John Hartford) – 3:12
- "Don't Lead Me On" (Doug Haywood) – 2:48
- "Bear Creek Hop" (Traditional) – 1:54
- "No End of Love" (Hartford) – 4:11
- "Biggest Whatever" (Rodney Dillard, Bill Martin) – 3:18
- "Lost in a World" (R. Dillard, Linda Dillard) – 3:05
- "High Dad in the Morning" (Homer Dillard) – 2:45
- "California is Nicer Than You" (D. Dillard) – 3:23
- "Artificial Limitations" (R. Dillard) – 2:27
- "Get No Better" (Hartford) – 3:27
Personnel
edit- Rodney Dillard – vocals, dobro, guitar
- Doug Dillard – vocals, banjo, guitar
- John Hartford – vocals, banjo, fiddle, guitar
- Sam Bush – mandolin
- Jim Colvard – guitar
- Mac Cridlin – bass
- Linda Dillard – vocals
- Buddy Emmons – dobro, pedal steel guitar, harmony vocals
- Amos Garrett – guitar
- Jeff Gilkenson – harmonica, cello
- Kenny Malone – drums, percussion
- Scott Mathews – drums
- Michael Melford – mandolin, harmony vocals
- Hargus "Pig" Robbins – piano, keyboards
- Greg Selker – marimba
- Philip Aaberg – synthesizer, piano, clavinet
- Samm Bennett – conga
- Henry Strzelecki – bass
- Laura Creamer – vocals
- Ginger Blake – vocals
- Benny Martin – harmony vocals
- Pepper Watkins – harmony vocals
Production notes:
- Michael Melford – producer
- Ernie Winfrey – engineer
- Allen Sudduth – engineer
References
edit- ^ a b c "Glitter Grass from the Nashwood Hollyville Strings > Review". Allmusic. Retrieved July 2, 2011.