| NPR Shop | NPR Community | Login | Register

Share this page using one of the following services:

  • Stumble Upon
 

What is this?

 

Ricky Skaggs Sings Songs Of His Childhood

Ricky Skaggs; courtesy of the artist
courtesy of the artist

Ricky Skaggs' latest album is Songs My Dad Loved.

Hear The Music

"What Is a Home Without Love"

Purchase Featured Music

close window
 
  • "What Is a Home Without Love"
  • CD: Solo: Songs My Dad Loved
  • Artist: Ricky Skaggs
  • Label: Skaggs Family Records
  • Released: 2009
  •  
 
Your purchase helps support NPR Programming. How?
 

"I Had but 50 Cents"

Purchase Featured Music

close window
 
  • "I Had But 50 Cents"
  • CD: Solo: Songs My Dad Loved
  • Artist: Ricky Skaggs
  • Label: Skaggs Family Records
  • Released: 2009
  •  
 
Your purchase helps support NPR Programming. How?
 

September 18, 2009 - Ricky Skaggs has been making music for 50 years now. He played with bluegrass great Ralph Stanley when he was still in his teens, went on to have a streak of country hits and then went back to bluegrass. Now, he's returned to the songs he learned from his father when he was a young boy in eastern Kentucky. Skaggs is solo on his new album, Songs My Dad Loved, singing and playing all the instruments, including fiddles, banjo, piano and lots more. Melissa Block spoke to Skaggs about his father and the music they shared.

Skaggs says his dad, Hobert Skaggs, bought him a mandolin when he was only 5.

"One Saturday morning, this little mandolin was in my bed," he says. "And I just fell in love with wood and strings. It was like the greatest gift I could have gotten."

Skaggs' father taught him a few chords: G, C and D. A bit after that, Skaggs' father got snowed in on a construction job and couldn't come home for a couple weeks. By the time he got back, his son could sing and play.

"It really got him so excited he went out and bought a guitar," Skaggs says.

Skaggs says he thinks he knows why his dad gave him the mandolin. His father had played with his brother, Skaggs' uncle, before the brother was killed in World War II. Skaggs the elder played guitar and lead vocals, while his brother sang backup and played the mandolin.

"My dad just kind of made one of those inner vows," Skaggs says. "He had a purpose in his heart that he wanted me to play the mandolin."

To hear the full interview, in which Ricky Skaggs describes playing with Earl Scruggs, click the listen link above.

Share this page using one of the following services:

  • Stumble Upon
 

What is this?

 

Comments

Please note that all comments must adhere to the NPR.org discussion rules and terms of use. See also the Community FAQ.

 

NPR reserves the right to read on the air and/or publish on its Web site or in any medium now known or unknown the e-mails and letters that we receive. We may edit them for clarity or brevity and identify authors by name and location. For additional information, please consult our Terms of Use.

 
 

Feeds

PodcastRSS

  • Music Interviews & Profiles
     
  • Spotlight on Country
     
 
 

 

  • Ricky Skaggs

    Purchase Featured Music

    close window
     
    • CD: Solo: Songs My Dad Loved
    • Artist: Ricky Skaggs
    • Label: Skaggs Family Records
    • Released: 2009
    •  
    •  
     
    Your purchase helps support NPR Programming. How?