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  1. The New South is a bluegrass band formed in 1971 [1] by banjo player J. D. Crowe. Their first two albums, Bluegrass Evolution and the eponymous record known by the album number, "Rounder 0044," established them as a dominant force in bluegrass, though the two albums are wildly different.

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  3. Retitled The New South, the band experimented with an electrified bluegrass/country/folk synthesis that can be heard on the Starday album “Bluegrass Evolution.” One of the most brilliant ensembles in the history of bluegrass music came together in late 1974, after Larry Rice left to tour with a Dickey Betts-led spinoff of the Allman Brothers.

  4. J. D. Crowe. James Dee Crowe (August 27, 1937 – December 24, 2021) was an American banjo player and bluegrass band leader. He first became known during his four-year stint with Jimmy Martin in the 1950s. Crowe led the bluegrass group New South from 1971 until his death in 2021.

  5. 26 dic 2021 · The legendary banjo player, who died on Christmas Eve, on angering the "grassholes" and forming the New South, his genre-stretching band. By Michael Streissguth. December 26, 2021. In a...

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  6. J.D. Crowe & the New South, 1972-present; Bluegrass Album Band, 1980-1990 (six recording projects and occasional performances) By the Way. Based for most of his more than half-century career in the city of his birth: Lexington, Kentucky. Initially aspired to be an electric guitarist, with Ernest Tubb’s Texas Troubadours.

  7. J.D. Crowe & the New South. One of the first modern progressive bluegrass groups, featuring future stars like Ricky Skaggs, Jerry Douglas, and Doyle Lawson.