Sam Bush, a pioneering force in progressive bluegrass, has spent over five decades redefining the genre with his signature mandolin style and genre-blending approach. Born in Bowling Green, Kentucky, he was immersed in music from an early age, influenced by his father’s fiddle playing and inspired by artists like Bill Monroe and the Osborne Brothers. By his teens, Bush had already won a three national championships in the junior division of the National Oldtime Fiddler’s Contest and recorded his first album, Poor Richard’s Almanac.
In 1966, at just 18, he turned down an offer to join country star Roy Acuff’s band, choosing instead to follow a more experimental path. He joined the Bluegrass Alliance in 1969, where he first played with future collaborators. The following year, Bush and his bandmates formed New Grass Revival, igniting a revolution in bluegrass by incorporating elements of rock, jazz, reggae, and improvisation. Despite initial resistance from traditionalists, the band gained a devoted following, toured with Leon Russell, and became a staple of the festival circuit. Bush’s innovative mandolin technique and boundary-pushing compositions helped solidify New Grass Revival’s legacy through the 1970s and 1980s.
Bush moved on from the band in 1989 after two decades, spending the next several years collaborating with Emmylou Harris’ Nash Ramblers and later Lyle Lovett. He earned multiple International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) Mandolin Player of the Year awards and reconnected with Béla Fleck to tour with the Flecktones. In 1995, he embarked on a solo career, releasing acclaimed albums such as Glamour & Grits (1996) and Laps in Seven (2006), showcasing his signature mix of bluegrass, jam-band energy, and instrumental mastery.
We first got Sam Bush on stage here in Eugene back in 1998 at our first Twin Rivers Folklife Festival in 1998. Then again a couple of years ago…like 23 years later when he joined Béla Fleck on his My Bluegrass Heart stop at The Shedd in 2021. Great to have him out.