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Earl Scruggs

Earl Scruggs

Musician · 1924–2012 · Flint Hill, North Carolina · Also a recording artist
Best known for Banjo

Earl Scruggs is, with Bill Monroe, one of the two irreplaceable founders of bluegrass music — the banjo player whose three-finger picking style, perfected by 1945, created the rapid, driving instrumental sound that distinguished bluegrass from every form of country music that preceded it. “Scruggs-style” is not merely a playing approach; it is the defining instrumental signature of an entire genre, learned and imitated by every bluegrass banjoist since.

  • Born Earl Eugene Scruggs in the cotton-mill town of Flint Hill in Cleveland County, North Carolina. Father George Elam Scruggs, a farmer and five-string banjo player, died when Earl was four. Older brothers Junie and Horace both played.
  • Developed his signature three-finger roll by age ten, refining an approach that had been played locally by Smith Hammett, Snuffy Jenkins, and others. Earl's innovation was the cleanliness, speed, and systematic application of the roll across every song — turning the banjo from an accompaniment into a lead instrument.
  • Joined the Carolina Wildcats and then Lost John Miller and His Allied Kentuckians, touring in the early 1940s. Worked in a thread mill during WWII (exempted from service as the sole support of his widowed mother).
  • Auditioned for Bill Monroe in December 1945 at the Grand Ole Opry. Monroe hired him on the spot — Earl's picking style stunned the Opry audience and announced a new sound. With Lester Flatt, Chubby Wise, and Cedric Rainwater, the 1946–48 Blue Grass Boys became the seminal bluegrass band.
  • Left Monroe in February 1948. Formed the Foggy Mountain Boys with Lester Flatt later that year. Their 20-year partnership produced some of the most recognizable recordings in American music: “Foggy Mountain Breakdown” (1949), “Earl's Breakdown,” “Flint Hill Special,” “The Ballad of Jed Clampett” (Beverly Hillbillies theme), “Nashville Skyline Rag.”
  • “Foggy Mountain Breakdown” was used prominently in the 1967 film Bonnie and Clyde, winning a Grammy and introducing Scruggs-style banjo to the rock and folk-rock generation. Re-recorded in 2001 with an all-star cast (Steve Martin, Vince Gill, Marty Stuart, Albert Lee, and others), winning a second Grammy.
  • Split with Lester Flatt in February 1969 over musical direction — Earl wanted to play with his sons Gary, Randy, and Steve in rock, folk, and country-rock contexts; Lester wanted to stay traditional. Neither played with the other again.
  • Formed the Earl Scruggs Revue (1969–1980) with his three sons. Recorded with Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, the Byrds, Doc Watson, and many rock-era figures. Widely seen as the more progressive partner in the Flatt & Scruggs split.
  • Published the influential instructional book Earl Scruggs and the 5-String Banjo (1968), which introduced Scruggs-style picking to hundreds of thousands of aspiring banjoists worldwide.
  • Returned to recording in the 2000s. Earl Scruggs and Friends (2001) brought together Bruce Hornsby, Billy Bob Thornton, Sting, Elton John, and Don Henley around his banjo. The Three Pickers (2003) with Doc Watson and Ricky Skaggs won a Grammy.
  • Inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame (1985) and Bluegrass Music Hall of Honor (1991). Received the National Heritage Fellowship (1989), Kennedy Center Honors (1992), and National Medal of Arts (1992). Awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008.
  • Four Grammy wins, 29 nominations across six decades. Designated a “Living Legend” by the Library of Congress in 2000.
  • Died of natural causes in Nashville on March 28, 2012, at age 88, two weeks before Doc Watson. Buried at Spring Hill Cemetery in Madison, Tennessee.

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