Bill Clifton
Blue Ridge Mountain Blues
Single: Blue Ridge Mountain Blues (1958) Bluegrass Discography
Source Recording: Earl Scruggs (2001)
“Blue Ridge Mountain Blues” was written by Cliff Hess in 1924, originally titled “Blue Ridge Blues” and published under Hess’s pseudonym Roy B. Carson. Hess was a New York–based songwriter; the song’s homesick framing — the narrator longing to return to the Blue Ridge Mountains — was part of the broader Tin Pan Alley fascination with rural-mountain themes that produced many country and country-adjacent standards of the early 1920s.
The first commercial recording was made in April 1924 by the blind Tennessee musician George Reneau and the singer Gene Austin under the title “Blue Ridge Blues.” Vernon Dalhart re-recorded the song in August 1925, and his version is the one that effectively carried the song into the early country-music canon. Dalhart’s smooth tenor delivery and clear diction made it a popular hit and established the song as a country radio staple.
The song crossed into the bluegrass repertoire through Bill Clifton, who became closely associated with it, and through subsequent treatments by The Country Gentlemen, the Avett Brothers, Creedence Clearwater Revival’s Blue Ridge Rangers project, and many others. It remains one of the more durable songs of its era, kept alive by both bluegrass-traditional and folk-revival singers.
Blue Ridge Mountain Blues
Single: Blue Ridge Mountain Blues (1958) Bluegrass Discography
Blue Ridge Mountain Blues
Single: Blue Ridge Mountain Blues (1963) Bluegrass Discography
Blue Ridge Mountain Blues
Jim and Jesse Show (1972)
Bluegrass Discography
Blue Ridge Mountain Blues
Travel the Gravel (1998)
Discogs
Blue Ridge Mountain Blues
On the Road (2001)
Bluegrass Discography
Blue Ridge Mountain Blues
Pickin’ the Blues (2004)
Bluegrass Discography
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