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Newly released!! The new CD by Audey Ratliff is now available for purchase. $15 plus $2 shipping. This 14 song CD is a great addition to your music library. "Great choice of material....Well done!" Produced by James Shelton ORDER YOURS TODAY! Click the paypal "buy now" button or check out our page |
Barry McCloud of "Country Music Facts and News" writes the following about Piece of Cake........."So I get this email about mandolin maker Audey Ratliff's CD. So I email him back and lo and behold down comes this innocent looking package which contains a little gem. This is one of the best........... I have heard in a very, very long time. The tonal quality of Audey's instruments should have every mandolin player heading to Church Hill, Tennessee. James Alan Shelton's production is impeccable. This is a must have, must play and must keep CD!!"
Reviewer Joe Ross writes........Timing, tone, technique .... Tennessee-based luthier and mandolinist Audey Ratliff's first solo album "Piece of Cake" has all three of these necessary elements for success. The southpaw instrumentalist clearly knows how to coax splendid melodic notes from his eight strings. The clarion sound of his expressive instrument is best captured in the one-minute solo, "Carolyn's Concerto," written by blind Irish harper Turlough O'Carolan. Then, he lays down a high-stepping mandolin arrangement of the Texas fiddle favorite, "Twinkle Little Star." It's double your pleasure when Audey picks twin mandolins in harmony on four tracks, and the CD's closer "Never on Sunday" keeps the mando front-and-center through to the tune's dynamic ending. Playing guitar, bass and occasionally singing on the project, Ratliff keeps the arrangements fairly lean with added support of producer James Alan Shelton (banjo, guitar, bass, vocal), Savannah Vaughn (fiddle, vocals), and John Malayter (guitar on "Foggy Mountain Special"). For example, "Sleepy Eyed John" and five other songs feature just Ratliff and Shelton playing multiple instruments. "Cactus Polka" may be better known as the Jesse Polka, and it's always been one of my favorites for mandolin and fiddle. Audey's mandolin and singing convey many feelings and emotions from upbeat happy to melancholy sad. Most impressively, Ratliff demonstrates his finely-honed ability to transform Appalachian-grown maple into a different kind of tree comprised of ancient roots, contemporary branches, and foliage with personalized colorings as diverse as the seasons.
Dave Higgs of Nashville Public Radio says......There's lots of fine mandolin playing, of course, along with some nice vocals on songs creatively arranged and powerfully interpreted. I especially enjoyed "Oh Lonesome Me", "Sleepy Eyed John", "John Dig a Hole", "Pretty Little Miss" and the fine title track. Throwing in some numbers like "Carolyn's Concerto"-bluegrassizing -Carolan, (named after Turlough O'Carolan, the blind Irish harper who wrote the piece in the late 17th or early 18th century) into "Carolyn" was a nice touch. "Cactus Polka" and "Never On Sunday" was sheer genius.
Audey Ratliff-Biography Audey Ratliff's first musical memory is of being carried backstage on his father's shoulders to meet Uncle Josh Graves at a Flatt & Scruggs concert in the early 1960's. Born in Portsmouth, Virginia on August 2, 1957 and raised as a government brat, Ratliff spent his youth living in many varied locales from Alaska to the Panama Canal Zone. His father Tom Ratliff, a talented dobro player, worked for the Federal Aviation Administration. The family moved around quite a bit during Audey's formative years before finally settling down for good in the musically rich region of East Tennessee in 1970. Ratliff first played guitar in local bands, then picked up acoustic bass before finally settling on the mandolin as his instrument of choice. In the 1970's he was a founding member of the Kingsport, Tennessee based bluegrass group The Boys In The Band, which at various times also included such reknowned musicians as Tim Stafford, Barry Bales and Adam Steffey. Ratliff holds the distinction of being the first person to give mandolin lessons to Adam Steffey, who has been named IBMA Mandolin Player Of The Year five times. For a year in the late 1970's Ratliff was the bass player for Whetstone Run, a well known band from Pennsylvania. During this time he recorded an album with that group titled Time Sure Flies. Other session work includes recordings by The Larkins, The Ball Sisters, Tennessee Skyline and guitarist James Alan Shelton's 2002 Song For Greta album on Rebel Records. Ratliff's latest recording is his first ever solo release A Piece Of Cake on Dream Walk Records. The project was produced by James Alan Shelton. Being left handed, Ratliff always had to have a custom instrument built and that experience led to his interest in lutherie. From his first homebuilt instruments in 1982, he has built Ratliff Mandolins into a world reknowned mandolin business with sales not only in the United States but in Europe, Africa and South America as well. His one man shop is located in Church Hill, Tennessee. Some of his clients include Jimmy Gaudreau, Norman Wright, Adam Steffey, Shawn Lane, Tammy Rogers of the Steeldrivers, Billy Panda, Stephen Cagle, Emory Lester, Jennifer McClain, Dino DiGiacomo and Buddy Woodward of the Dixie Bee-liners. With a mandolin style that is traditional yet creative, Ratliff strives to play with an ear to the melody and a desire to complement the song as tastefully as possible. In addition, his unique vocal phrasing gives him a singing style that is all his own. His performing instruments are a Ratliff R-5 mandolin and a mid seventies D-28 Martin guitar. For the past thirty five years, Audey Ratliff has been professionally involved in music as a performer, teacher, studio musician and luthier. He currently divides his time between building mandolins and performing with three regional groups: Tennessee Skyline, Savannah Vaughn & Fall Creek and The Laurel Duo with John Malayter. His one thousandth Ratliff Mandolin will be completed sometime in late 2008. |
Ratliff Mandolins is located in Church Hill, Tennessee. Church Hill is in beautiful north east Tennessee in the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains. We're about 90 miles north of Knoxville close to the Tennessee, Virginia, North Carolina borders. At Ratliff Mandolins, we hand-craft instruments of beauty in the time-honored tradition of the South, choosing only the finest materials and building each instrument to the highest standards. We're a small shop, building only a limited number of instruments each year, and have been in business since 1982. |
Write to us at:
Ratliff Mandolins
P.O. Box 914
Church Hill, TN 37642
Visit us at:
440 West Main Blvd.
Church Hill, TN 37642
Use the telephone to talk to us at 1-423-357-4381.
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