Bluegrass banjo player Doug Dillard passed away
last night after a lengthy illness. He was 75.
Dillard began playing banjo as a child and idolized Earl Scruggs
(who passed
away back in March). After Scruggs replied to a letter he
wrote, Dillard convinced his parents to drive him to Scruggs home
in Madison, Tennessee. He knocked on Scruggs’ door and asked the
bluegrass legend to install his tuners on his banjo. Dillard was
only sixteen at the time.
Dillard and his younger brother Rodney along with Dean Webb and
Mitch Jayne would form The Dillards. They got their first break on
The Andy Griffith Show as a fictional bluegrass band known
as The Darlings and made regular appearances on the show between
1963 and 1966. Here they are singing “Dooley”.
The Dillards were to bluegrass what Bob Dylan was to folk in
that they were amongst the first bluegrass groups to play with
electric instruments. Dillard liked the electric sound so much that
he eventually left The Dillards to tour with The Byrds. He became
close with Gene Clark and in 1968 they left The Byrds to form
Dillard & Clark. They recorded two albums The Fantastic
Expedition of Dillard & Clark and Through the Morning,
Through the Night. Neither album sold well but Dillard &
Clark were an influence on country-rock acts like Gram Parsons, The
Eagles and Poco and The Flying Burrito Brothers. Take a listen to
“Why Not Your
Baby” and you’ll hear why Dillard & Clark were indeed on a
fantastic expedition.
JohnD| 5.17.12 @ 2:31PM
I loved their version of Dooley; the Dillards were more folk than bluegrass really, but a great act nonetheless.
Colin | 5.17.12 @ 8:24PM
Saw The Dillards "live" at a very small folk house (The Mecca) in Orange County, California in 1964. I'd never really been much of a blue grass fan ... up till then. After hearing their set, I've been a banjo fan for life.
The guy was ... exceptional.