After fifteen years of touring with the beloved Hot Band, Emmylou Harris
formed the Nash Ramblers, a new acoustic all-star group, in 1990, featuring Sam
Bush (fiddle, mandolin, vocals), Roy Huskey Jr. (bass), Larry Atamanuik (drums),
Al Perkins (dobro, banjo, vocals), and Jon Randall Stewart (acoustic guitar,
mandolin, vocals).
The band played on the road for several months before making their Nashville
debut at the Tennessee Performing Arts Center (TPAC) on September 28,
1990. That concert was recorded and shelved, while another live run at the
Ryman Auditorium the following spring was released as Emmylou Harris and the
Nash Ramblers At the Ryman to great acclaim, winning a Grammy and spurring
public interest in saving the beloved music hall.
Now, more than thirty years later, Rhino's James Austin has unearthed the
1990 TPAC recording and Nonesuch releases Ramble in Music City: The Lost
Concert for the first time. The TPAC set features different entirely different
songs from the Ryman album and includes music by A.P. Carter, Rodney Crowell,
Ruth Franks, the Louvin Brothers, Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, Paul Simon, and
Townes Van Zandt, among others, as well as her own compositions (track list
below).
Harris says of Ramble in Music City: “When James Austin, in my humble opinion,
the world's best and certainly most devoted music archaeologist, unearthed the
tapes of this ‘lost' concert, I was taken aback by their very existence, like
finding some cherished photograph misplaced so long ago the captured moment had
been forgotten. Then the memories came flooding in, of the Nash Ramblers, hot
off the road from our first tour, ready to rock and bringing their usual A-game
to the hometown turf.
"It only took one listen to realize not a single note was out of place or in
need of repair, a truly extraordinary performance by these gifted musicians.
What a joy it was to share the stage with them.”
A thirteen-time Grammy winner and Billboard Century Award recipient, Emmylou
Harris' contribution as a singer and songwriter spans six decades. She has
recorded more than thirty albums and has also contributed to countless fellow
artists' recordings. In recognition of her remarkable career, Harris was
inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2008. Her most recent new
release, a collaboration with Rodney Crowell, The Traveling Kind, followed the
long-time friends' first duet album, Old Yellow Moon, which won a Best Americana
Album Grammy Awards as well as two Americana Music Association Awards, for Album
of the Year and Duo/Group of the Year.