Danny Roberts - How I Live, How I'll Die [Single]
  • How I Live, How I'll Die
  • How I Live, How I'll Die
    Genre: Bluegrass
    MP3 (03:28) [11.45 MB]
Biography
For over 30 years, mandolinist Danny Roberts has been a steady presence in the heart of the bluegrass mainstream. He was a founding member of New Tradition, a prominent bluegrass gospel group that toured widely throughout the 1990s, released eight well-received albums and served as a “school of bluegrass” for musicians who went on to work with artists such as the Lonesome River Band, Rhonda Vincent & The Rage and the Special Consensus. Later, he helped to found The Grascals, the award-winning bluegrass sextet that quickly rose to the music’s top ranks when they earned the International Bluegrass Music Association’s Song and Emerging Artist of the Year awards in 2005 and its top Entertainer of the Year honors in 2006 and 2007; he continues to serve as the group’s mandolin player and senior member. “How I Live, How I’ll Die” follows “Small Town America,” his first solo release in nearly a decade.
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On the heels of 2022’s hit single, “Small Town America,” Danny Roberts — best known as a founder of and mandolinist for bluegrass powerhouse, The Grascals — returns with a somber meditation that takes its place in a long line of powerful country and bluegrass songs reflecting the hard, dangerous working life of underground coal miners.

“‘How I Live, How I’ll Die’ started off as a Monroe-style instrumental that I had written several years ago,” Roberts recalls. “I really liked the melody and decided it would actually be well-suited for a vocal song, and it just felt like it should be about coal mining. I’ve never worked in a coal mine, but I have a good friend that grew up in West Virginia in a mining family, and my wife’s family is from Southwest Virginia with a coal mining legacy and the lyrics came from the stories that I heard from them. I basically had the song written but felt like there was just something missing so I sent it to my friend and great songwriter, Daryl Mosley, and he added just what I felt like the song needed. ‘How I Live, How I’ll Die’ has a bit of a spooky, lonesome sound and feel and I believe that’s exactly what it’s like living a coal miner’s life.”

That lonesome sound and feel kick in with the very first notes of “How I Live, How I’ll Die,” as Roberts’ mandolin and Tony Wray’s guitar invoke the old-time brother duets that preceded and influenced bluegrass. Even when the full band joins in — Wray adding touches of banjo alongside long-time friend (and Grascals founder) Jimmy Mattingly’s fiddle and Andrea Roberts’ bass — the song’s minimalist accompaniment accentuates and keeps the focus squarely on the song’s fatalistic lyric and Roberts’ stoic delivery:

I’m growing old while I’m still young
And breathing death into my lungs
A life that’s short but it seems so long
One day you’re here, the next day you’re gone

If “Small Town America” explored Roberts’ appreciation of the quiet joys and warmth of one side of rural American life, “How I Live, How I’ll Die” reveals — in an offering that exemplifies the intertwining of modern creativity and traditional expression — a deeply thoughtful, multi-dimensional artist well aware of its darker side, too.

About Danny Roberts
For over 30 years, mandolinist Danny Roberts has been a steady presence in the heart of the bluegrass mainstream. Born and raised in Leitchfield, Kentucky, he was a founding member of New Tradition, a prominent bluegrass gospel group that toured widely throughout the 1990s, released eight well-received albums (including two for Mountain Home Music Company) and served as a “school of bluegrass” for musicians who went on to work with artists such as the Lonesome River Band, Rhonda Vincent & The Rage and the Special Consensus. At the beginning of the century, Danny began working for Gibson Musical Instruments, eventually becoming head of its Mandolin Division and Nashville Plant and Repair Supervisor before starting his own repair service, Just Off The Bench. While still at Gibson, he helped to found The Grascals, the award-winning bluegrass sextet that quickly rose to the music’s top ranks when they earned the International Bluegrass Music Association’s Song and Emerging Artist of the Year awards in 2005 and its top Entertainer of the Year honors in 2006 and 2007; he continues to serve as the group’s mandolin player and senior member. Danny released his first solo album in 2004, and made his Mountain Home Music Company debut as a solo artist with 2014’s Nighthawk.
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  • AirPlay Direct Member Since:
    01/30/23
  • Profile Last Updated:
    01/11/24 16:23:20

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