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Don Reno

Don Reno
Birth name Donald Wesley Reno
Born (1926-02-21)February 21, 1926
Buffalo, South Carolina, United States
Origin Haywood County, North Carolina, United States
Died October 16, 1984(1984-10-16) (aged 58)
Genres Bluegrass Music, Gospel Music, Country Gospel
Occupation(s) musician
Instruments 5-string banjo, acoustic guitar
Years active 1939–1984
Labels King, Starday, Monument, Jalyn, CMH
Associated acts The Morris Brothers, Arthur Smith, Bill Monroe, Red Smiley, Reno and Smiley, Bill Harrell, Reno & Harrell, Frank Wakefield, Don Wayne Reno
Website www.donreno.com
Notable instruments
"Nellie," a 1935/36 Gibson RB-3/RB-75 flathead previously owned by Earl Scruggs, 1933/34 Gibson RB-Granada banjo

Don Wesley Reno (February 21, 1926 – October 16, 1984) was an American bluegrass and country musician best known as a banjo player in partnership with Red Smiley, and later with guitarist Bill Harrell.

Born in Buffalo, South Carolina, Don Reno grew up on a farm in Haywood County, North Carolina. He began playing the banjo at the age of five. His father gave him a guitar four years later; and in 1939 13-year-old Reno joined the Morris Brothers in performing at a local radio station. He left one year later to join Arthur Smith, with whom he would years later record "Feudin' Banjos". In 1943 he received an offer from Bill Monroe to become a member of the Bluegrass Boys, but chose instead to enlist in the United States Army. Trained as a horse soldier at Fort Riley, Kansas, he was sent to the Pacific Theater to fight on foot. He eventually served in Merrill's Marauders and was wounded in action.

Influenced by old-time banjo player Snuffy Jenkins and others, Reno developed his own three finger "single-string" style that allowed him to play scales and complicated fiddle tunes note-for-note. The Reno style encompasses much more than just single-string picking; double-stops, double-time picking, triple-pull offs—all of these, and other techniques make Reno's playing recognizable. According to his son, Don Wayne Reno, "My dad told me more than once that the reason he started his own style of banjo picking was this: When he came out of the service, many people said 'You sound just like Earl Scruggs.' He said that really bothered him considering he never played a banjo while he was in the service, and when he returned to the U.S., he continued to play in the style he had always played before."


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