MISSY RAINES & THE NEW HIP, FREE CONCERT in-store Saturday Oct 10 at 2pm. It’s how we rock it during Fall For Greenville.

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It’s how we rock it during Fall For Greenville. This is not your Grandma’s Bluegrass and the new CD is here and Sale Priced right now!

“Inside Out” by Missy Raines and The New Hip is the product of the renowned bluegrass bass player’s twenty-year long dream. The album, she stresses, is a true collaboration between her and her carefully constructed band, The New Hip: Ethan Ballinger, (mandolin/mandola), Michael Witcher (resonator guitar/lap steel/vocals), and Dillon Hodges (guitar/vocals). “I’ve wanted this for a very, very long time. This band and this sound has existed, at least in my head, for almost two decades – it was just a matter of finding musicians that could read my mind,” laughs Raines.

Raines’ groundbreaking, adventurous musical career as one of the pre-eminent female bass players began with an unexpected surprise from her father. “My father had been playing a washtub that he’d made himself and then decided impulsively (without consulting my mother) to buy a bass. I was already playing the piano and guitar by then, but when you’re ten or eleven years old and there is a new instrument in the house…well, I couldn’t stay away from it. That’s the bass I still have and play today.”

Growing up in West Virginia, Raines was well placed to join her family in their favorite summer pastime of attending music festivals, which migrated to home picking parties in the winter. Her parents thought nothing of traveling 2-3 hours to go to a jam, and it was at these events that Raines cut her musical teeth.

As Raines’ technique improved she found herself jamming with and then learning from bigger and better players, most notably International Bluegrass Music Hall of Honor member Tom Gray (The Country Gentlemen, The Seldom Scene) “I met him through mutual friends when I was 12 and it was one of the biggest deals of my life up to that point,” she remembers. “Tom is an amazing person and he took me under his wing. He says though that I never asked him to show me how to do anything; that I would just talk about how he played. I thought I was picking his brain,” she laughs.

Raines cites her earliest influences as Bill Monroe, The Country Gentleman, The Stanley Brothers, The Bluegrass Alliance, and David Grisman. She then immersed herself in jazz before discovering the music of Joe Jackson in the early 1980s. “I’d never gotten into the rock/pop scene at all – I’d been affected by it peripherally but not directly. And then I got totally caught up in his music and his writing and a whole new world was suddenly opened up for me.”

Professionally, Raines has lent her skills to a variety of projects that have capitalized on her varied interests. She launched her career with experimental bluegrass outfit Cloud Valley and toured with Eddie and Martha Adcock before joining up with The Masters (Adcock, Kenny Baker, Josh Graves and Jesse McReynolds). Raines toured and recorded with Claire Lynch’s Front Porch String Band from 1995-2000 and again from 2005-2008, along the way developing a successful duo with band mate Jim Hurst. A stint with the Brother Boys opened Raines’ eyes to the value of musical spontaneity.

Missy Raines is now fulfilling a long-held vision: the release of Inside Out, her first full-length album that reflects all of her many musical influences while playing alongside her dream band The New Hip.

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Owner, founder, resident Mahler fanatic since 1975. Loves jazz, bluegrass, worldbeat, and old geezer blues rock by Canned Heat or Johnny Winter. Obsessed with 60’s and 70’s era John Lee Hooker. Don’t ask him about the Eagles.

This entry was posted on Thursday, September 24th, 2009 at 1:33 pm and is filed under News & Releases - Latest & Greatest.