“Shady Grove” is a traditional Anglo-American banjo and fiddle song of the southern Appalachian repertoire, with deep modal roots in the older mountain courtship-song tradition. The song first appears in print collections from the 1910s and 1920s; Cecil Sharp collected variants during his 1916–1918 fieldwork, and the song has remained a constant presence in old-time and bluegrass repertoires through the rest of the 20th century.
The lyric is a courtship-and-yearning piece: the singer addressing Shady Grove (a sweetheart, not a place — though some variants treat “Shady Grove” as both name and setting), with verses cycling through familiar mountain courtship imagery and floating-verse stanzas. The song’s modal melody — usually played in tunings that emphasise its dropping-fourth interval — gives it a distinct old-time sound.
Crooked Still’s 2004 reading — the version associated with this entry — is one of the more distinctive modern recordings. Crooked Still, the early-2000s old-time-into-progressive-acoustic project featuring Aoife O’Donovan on lead vocal, Greg Liszt on banjo, and Rushad Eggleston on cello, carried the song into a younger contemporary acoustic audience. The song works as an up-tempo vocal feature in modal G with a strong banjo break and a clear harmony slot.