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HISTORY
In
Nashville today, you will find songwriters and artists who
have a strong sense of whats commercial; they are skilled
at the craft of putting together hit songs, and they are the
names you see in the credits of whatever songs currently occupy
the top ten. Then, on the fringes of country music, there
are those who create songs that are more personal, songs from
the heart that move you but which may or may not ever top
a chart. There are very few writers who fit both categories
with songs capable of breaking your heart that also
have hit potential but Harley Allen is definitely one
of those few.
Anyone who has followed bluegrass music for more than a few
years is familiar with Harleys bluegrass background
and with the legendary Allen name: Harley and his brothers
toured and recorded as the Allen Brothers. Harleys late
father, Red Allen, was not only one of the great lead voices
in bluegrass, but also sang the low harmony part on some of
the finest trios ever recorded with the Osbourne Brothers,
including "Once More" and "My Destiny."
Red was clearly an influence on Harleys singing, but
also gave him his initial inspiration to write songs at an
early age.
"I was about 12 or 13 and I remember noticing that Red
wrote a lot of his songs, and I wanted to try it and see what
it was like to write a song."
By
the time Harley was in his late teens, his gift of songwriting
was starting to take shape, and he began building what would
become a gigantic catalog of songs. He began listening to
some of the great songwriters and singers in country music,
like Hank Williams, Ira Louvin and Tom T. Hall. He found kindred
spirits in these performers; in fact, Billboard magazine places
him among them: "Allen wades through demons like a modern
day Hank Williams."
The move to Nashvilles Music Row from his home in Dayton,
Ohio was a very natural one for Harley, and his songwriting
talent earned him an immediate staff writing position at Ten
Ten Music Group. His critically acclaimed Mercury release
"Another River" was his debut into the country music
world. Entertainment Weekly was quick to point out what a
successful move his was: "In his transition from bluegrass
to country, Harley Allen, the son of grass great
Red Allen, matches the emotional intensity of the former with
the storytelling earthiness of the latter. His plaintive and
honest hillbilly delivery goes straight to the heart."
The songs of Harley Allen are well known to country music
lovers, with cuts recorded by the likes of Garth Brooks, Linda
Ronstadt, Don Williams, Hal Ketchum and Alison Krauss. Alan
Jackson has recorded several songs, which brought chart attention
to Harleys songwriting talent, with "Everything
I Love" becoming a top-ten title track of his 1996 release,
and "Between The Devil and Me" reaching R&R
and Billboard charts number one position in January
1998. In recognition of these songs, Harley accepted an award
from Music Row magazine in 1998 as Nashvilles top emerging
songwriter.
Still, Harley Allen fans might argue that none of these great
artists can render a Harley Allen song the way he can. The
stars themselves apparently agree. Linda Ronstadt reportedly
made his song "High Sierra" (also the first single
from the first Trio CD) as closely as she could to his demo,
as she felt the delivery could not be improved upon.
The new millennium is proving to be a smash with recent cuts
by Mark Wills, Gary Allen, George Jones and Alan Jackson.
Harley has also made some major accomplishments recently as
both a songwriter and performer. The incredible success of
John Michael Montgomerys "The Little Girl,"
which was nominated for three ACM Awards in 2001, made Harleys
talents as a songwriter stand out to the world. This could
only be followed up by a surprising and powerful movement
into the mainstream as one of The Soggy Bottom Boys on the
multi-platinum selling "O Brother Where Art Thou"
soundtrack. In 2001, his participation in the soundtrack earned
him two CMA Awards in the Single of The Year and Album of
the Year categories. He also won two GRAMMY'S at this year's
presentation. His contributions to the "O'Brother Where
Art Thou" soundtrack earned him one each for ALBUM OF
THE YEAR and BEST COUNTRY COLLABORATION WITH VOCALS for The
Soggy Bottom Boys on "I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow.
He also just won two ACADEMY OF COUNTRY MUSIC awards for VOCAL
EVENT- I Am A Man of Constant Sorrow and ALBUM OF THE YEAR
- O' Brother Where Art Thou?
Its time for the country music world to discover what
Nashvilles Music Row elite already know. As the Bluebird
Café News announced, "Harley Allen is everything
so many hat act wannabes wannabe. He is the real deal."
HARLEY ALLEN CUTS
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SONG
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ARTIST
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ROLLIN
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GARTH BROOKS
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FOR YEARS
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SAMMY KERSHAW
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BETWEEN THE DEVIL AND ME
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ALAN JACKSON
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WHO I AM
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ALAN JACKSON
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EVERYTHING I LOVE
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ALAN JACKSON
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THE ANGELS CRIED
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ALAN JACKSON AND ALISON KRAUSS
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ANOTHER GOOD REASON
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ALAN JACKSON
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BOURBON BORDERLINE
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GARY ALLAN
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LEARNING TO LIVE WITH ME
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GARY ALLAN
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HIGH SIERRA
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TRIO
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HIGH SIERRA
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LINDA RONSTADT
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DO I LOVE YOU
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SHANLEY DEL
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IN YOUR LONELINESS
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RHONDA VINCENT
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COWGIRL
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TRACY BYRD
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IT DOESNT MATTER
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ALISON KRAUSS
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IT AINT FAIR
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WESLEY DENNIS
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NEW FACES IN THE FIELDS
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TY ENGLAND
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NO EASY ROAD
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HAL KETCHUM
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OUT OF MY HANDS
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HAL KETCHUM
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PARADISE
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CRAIG MORGAN
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STILL WAITING
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MARK WILLS
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THE DREAM
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DON WILLIAMS
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THE DREAM
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JOHN AND AUDREY WIGGINS
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WHEN LOVE ARRIVES
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RHONDA VINCENT
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I AINT BEEN CHEATIN AS LONG
AS YOU
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THE LYNNS
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THE LITTLE GIRL
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JOHN MICHAEL MONTGOMERY
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LIFE OR LOVE
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ALAN JACKSON
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I STILL LOVE YOU
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ALAN JACKSON
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MEAT AND POTATO MAN
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ALAN JACKSON
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THE MAN HE WAS
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GEORGE JONES
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| I SLIPPED AND FELL IN LOVE |
ALAN JACKSON |
HARLEY ALLEN DISCOGRAPHY
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YEAR
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ALBUM
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PROJECT
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LABEL
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| 1970 |
ALLEN GRASS
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RED ALLEN, AND
THE ALLEN BROTHERS
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LEMCO RECORDS
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| 1972 |
MY OLD KENTUCKY HOME
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RED ALLEN ,AND
THE ALLEN BROTHERS
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KING BLUEGRASS RECORDS
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| 1974 |
SWEET RUMORS
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THE ALLEN BROTHERS
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ROUNDER RECORDS
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| 1976 |
CLARAS BOYS
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THE ALLEN BROTHERS
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ROUNDER RECORDS
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| 1980 |
ACROSS THE BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAINS
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HARLEY ALLEN
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FOLKWAYS RECORDS
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| 1983 |
SUZANNE
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HARLEY ALLEN
AND MIKE LILY
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FOLKWAYS RECORDS
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| 1985 |
TRADITION
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RED ALLEN
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FOLKWAYS RECORDS
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| 1986 |
LIVE AND LET LIVE
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RED ALLEN
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FOLKWAYS RECORDS
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| 1987 |
TRIBUTE TO THE MAN
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RED ALLEN
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FOLKWAYS RECORDS
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| 1989 |
HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS
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DAVID GRISMAN
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ROUNDER RECORDS
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| 1989 |
LIVE AT THE THE BIRCHMERE
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BIG DOGS WITH TONY TRISCHKA
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STRICTLY COUNTRY RECORDS
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| 1990 |
HARLEY ALLEN
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HARLEY ALLEN
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VECTOR RECORDS
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| 1996 |
ANOTHER RIVER
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HARLEY ALLEN
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MERCURY RECORDS
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| 2000 |
O BROTHER WHERE ART THOU MOTION PICTURE SOUNDTRACK
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(Various Artists) |
LOST HIGHWAY RECORDS |
| 2001 |
LIVE AT THE BLUEBIRD CAFÉ
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HARLEY ALLEN
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AMERICAN ORIGINALS
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