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Flatpicking guitarist
Dan Crary was born and raised in Kansas. It was there that he first developed an interest in guitar, particularly the steel-string, flat-top version favored by artists like
Doc Watson. In 1968,
Crary helped found the Bluegrass Alliance, and used
Watson's influence as a jumping-off point for innovation in the genre. Throughout the 1970s,
Crary appeared with the group Sundance, which included fiddler
Byron Berline and banjoist
John Hickman. He also developed his reputation as a master interpreter of traditional music (like that written for the fiddle) for six- and 12-string guitars. His albums include 1983's
Guitar, which was a who's who in the new bluegrass scene of the time.
Béla Fleck,
Sam Bush, and
Mark O'Connor all contributed to the record, which included modern bluegrass interpretations of classical music pieces. 1990 saw the establishment of
California with
Berline and
Hickman; the combo experimented even further with bluegrass' intersections into other genres, and stayed active even as
Crary appeared with his other projects, including Men of Steel with Genovese flatpicking master
Beppe Gambetta. MOS released a live recording in spring 2003. ~ Johnny Loftus