Lester Flatt | |
---|---|
Birth name | Lester Raymond Flatt |
Born |
Duncan's Chapel, Overton County, Tennessee, U.S. |
June 19, 1914
Died | May 11, 1979 Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. |
(aged 64)
Genres | Bluegrass, Country |
Occupation(s) | Musician, songwriter |
Instruments | Vocals, guitar, mandolin |
Years active | 1940–1979 |
Associated acts | Bill Monroe, Earl Scruggs, Foggy Mountain Boys, Nashville Grass |
Lester Raymond Flatt (June 19, 1914 – May 11, 1979) was an American bluegrass guitarist and mandolinist, best known for his collaboration with banjo picker Earl Scruggs in The Foggy Mountain Boys (popularly known as "Flatt and Scruggs").
Flatt's career spanned multiple decades, breaking out as a member of Bill Monroe's band during the 1940s and including multiple solo and collaboration works exclusive of Scruggs. He first reached a mainstream audience through his performance on "The Ballad of Jed Clampett", the theme for the network television hit The Beverly Hillbillies, in the early 1960s.
Flatt was born in Duncan's Chapel, Overton County, Tennessee, to Nannie Mae Haney and Isaac Columbus Flatt. He first came to prominence as a member of Bill Monroe's Blue Grass Boys in 1945 and played a Charlie Monroe-inspired thumb-and-index guitar style. In 1948 he started a band with fellow Monroe alumnus Earl Scruggs, and for the next twenty years Flatt and Scruggs and the Foggy Mountain Boys were one of the most successful bands in bluegrass. When they parted ways in 1969, Flatt formed a new group, the Nashville Grass, hiring many of the Foggy Mountain Boys. He continued to record and perform with that group until his death in 1979. His role as rhythm guitar player and singer in each of these seminal ensembles helped define the sound of traditional bluegrass music. His solid guitar playing and rich lead voice are unmistakable in hundreds of bluegrass standards.
He is also remembered for his library of compositions. The Flatt songbook looms titanic for any student of American acoustic music.
Flatt was posthumously inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1985 with Scruggs. He was posthumously made an inaugural inductee into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Honor in 1991. His hometown of Sparta, Tennessee, held a bluegrass festival in his honor for a number of years, before being discontinued a few years prior to the death of the traditional host, resident Everette Paul England; Lester Flatt Memorial Bluegrass Day is part of the annual Liberty Square Celebration held in Sparta.