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Premium Red Artificial Grass - Realistic Fake Turf for Landscaping, Backyard, Patio & Outdoor Decor | Durable & UV Resistant
$10.35
$13.81
Safe 25%
Premium Red Artificial Grass - Realistic Fake Turf for Landscaping, Backyard, Patio & Outdoor Decor | Durable & UV Resistant
Premium Red Artificial Grass - Realistic Fake Turf for Landscaping, Backyard, Patio & Outdoor Decor | Durable & UV Resistant
Premium Red Artificial Grass - Realistic Fake Turf for Landscaping, Backyard, Patio & Outdoor Decor | Durable & UV Resistant
$10.35
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Description
Product Description It should come as no surprise that Ilya Toshinskiy's new solo album, Red Grass (Hadley Music Group), is an instrumental bluegrass album and a dream come true for Toshinskiy. Though acclaimed for his guitar prowess, he considers banjo his first instrument. While being trained in classical guitar as a preteen, Ilya heard another student of his teacher, a bluegrass enthusiast, playing banjo and was mesmerized. He insisted on learning that instrument and quickly excelled, soaking up the influence of Earl Scruggs and others. In the former Soviet Union, seriously lacking in resources for the bluegrass musician, such a pursuit required a single-minded commitment and ingenuity. There were trips by his teacher to the Lenin Library in Moscow to take photographs of banjo tablatures that had somehow made their way into the shelves there. There were thumb picks made from plastic rulers that were boiled until they could be molded around Ilya's thumb by his teacher as well as crude, jagged metal picks made from tin cans. And cheap Korean and West German banjos whose sound was lacking. But dedication paid off. Ilya went on to become a founding member of the band that ultimately became known as Bering Strait, a coed group of bluegrass-influenced but musically omnivorous Russian prodigies who moved to Nashville as teens in the 1990s, generated a ton of buzz, scored a major-label record deal, received a 2003 Grammy nomination (best country instrumental performance on which Toshinskiy played lead guitar and banjo) and were featured on 60 Minutes ... yet never really caught on at radio. Toshinskiy, who was increasingly being offered session work, struck out on his own before Bering Strait disbanded in 2006. Since then he has shined as a studio musician, a five-time winner of Music Row's award for top guitar player (for playing on the most Top 10 Billboard records) and a two-time Academy of Country Music player of the year (specialty instruments). Artists whose records his playing has graced include Carrie Underwood, Tim McGraw, Reba McEntire, Glen Campbell, Kacey Musgraves, the Doobie Brothers and Rascal Flatts (he played the banjo on the trio s 2012 chart-topper Banjo ). Red Grass offered him the opportunity to turn the page with his own album of banjo music. He flexes his instrumental and compositional skills on 10 original numbers (he also plays slide mandolin on one song). The album bears the stamp of a focused, disciplined, fearless artist playing the music of his heart. There are no lyrics, but lyricism abounds in Ilya's expressive banjo playing, which conveys a range of emotions. The songs, he says, grew from him jamming on his back porch. Many of the titles hold personal meaning: Train Station, for example, refers to the depot in his Russian hometown where he would wait in the cold for the next train to Moscow to the music conservatory. Ilya praises his dream team of supporting musicians: Bryan Sutton and Jake Stargel on acoustic guitar; Byron House on upright bass; Andy Leftwich and Aubrey Haynie on mandolin and fiddle; Jerry Douglas on Dobro; Luke Bulla on fiddle; Sam Bush on mandolin. They really elevated the whole record, he says, compelling him to rewrite some tunes to make them stronger. I am pretty proud of this effort. Everybody played amazingly, and it was a blast. The album-closing Swan Song features only Ilya and his banjo, a fitting end to a record that is sure to make believers out of a new group of fans. Review 1. I have seen Ilya Toshinsky's journey from young teenage Russian banjo player in Cheerful Diligence aka Bering Strait. Not many musicians have stood at the North Pole while playing a banjo and lived. Through so much hard work and tenacity, Ilya has grown into a great musician, much respected by his session comrades here in the US not just for the prowess he has gained on many instruments or his ease in the studio as a director of sorts, but as the man he has become while so many people only watched in wonder. --Jerry Douglas-13-time Grammy winner and three-time Country Music Association Musician of the Year2. I've had the pleasure of working as a session player on lots of records with Ilya and it's great to finally hear him do his own thing. --Bryan Sutton-Grammy winner & 9 time IBMA Guitar Player of the Year
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Reviews
*****
Verified Buyer
5
I have been familiar with Ilya Toshinskiy since his time in the band Bering Strait where he played banjo and lead guitar. They were all child prodigies, classically trained in the former Soviet Union. There was a wonderful documentary about the band called The Ballad of Bering Strait and the opening scene showed Ilya taking his final music exam at the conservatory and playing bluegrass banjo tunes by Earl Scruggs and Bela Fleck which shows his love for this instrument. At last, he has put out a solo banjo album and all I can say is WOW! It is an album of all original music that shows the influence of his classical training, exposure to many other kinds of music but also shows his deep love of bluegrass. The title track is one of those instrumentals that blows your hair back with the stellar instrumental support Jerry Douglas on dobro, Bryan Sutton on acoustic guitar, Byron House on upright bass, Luke Bulla on fiddle and Andy Leftwich on mandolin. And while there's plenty of that kind of stuff on this record, there is the more pensive, melancholy tune "At The End Of The Day" that could just as easily be a piano instrumental and the more stripped down "Birch Leaf" that sounds like something out of a film with just banjo and Byron House playing the bow on the upright bass. "Old River" should satisfy all the traditional bluegrass lovers out there while he finishes with "Swan Song" with only him and his banjo playing three distinct movements and showing us just how versatile this instrument can be. For those interested, I looked up his current bio on All Music and he has played on some of the biggest records to come out of Nashville in recent years including the song "Banjo" by Rascal Flatts so its great to see him turn his attention to a an album of his own. I just hope he will take the time to put another instrumental album out in the future because I think he will gain many fans who will want more after this one. It is a delight to listen to from top to bottom. Red Grass

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