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Composed

BMI’s database credits John Hartford with 214 published compositions, co-compositions, and arrangements. A few of his original songs and collaborations are

  • “Gentle on My Mind”
  • “In Tall Buildings”
  • “Skippin’ In the Mississippi Dew”
  • “Steam Powered Aereo Plane”

Early Influences

  • Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs
  • Benny Martin
  • Gene Goforth

Came to Fame With

  • Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour (TV show), 1969

Performed With

  • Mississippi Valley Boys, mid-1950s.
  • Don Brown and the Ozark Mountain Trio, 1958
  • Missouri Ridgerunners, late 1950s
  • Dixie Ramblers, late 1950s
  • Red Cravens and the Bray Brothers, early 1960s
  • Solo performer, late 1960s, early 1970s through 2001. Notable backing musicians included the Aereo-plain Band (1971), Jamie Hartford (1991), and Hartford String Band (late 1990s)

Led the Way

  • Best known for composing the mega hit song “Gentle on My Mind.”
  • Four-time Grammy winner.
  • Contributed music and commentary to Ken Burns’ television documentary, The Civil War.
  • Contributed music to the O Brother! Where Art Thou? sound track and appeared as a headliner on the Down From the Mountain tour.
  • Inducted into the Americana Music Hall of Fame in 2005, International Bluegrass Hall of Fame in 2010, and Folk Alliance Hall of Fame in 2011.

By the Way

  • Worked as a river boat deckhand and pilot and as a script writer for the Smothers Brothers and Glen Campbell TV shows.
  • Never considered himself to be a good instrumentalist.
  • Descendant of Patrick Henry (“Give me liberty, or give me death”) and a cousin of playwright Tennessee Williams.
  • Saved the keys of more than 1,500 hotel rooms he stayed in over his career.

Composed

BMI’s database credits John Hartford with 214 published compositions, co-compositions, and arrangements. A few of his original songs and collaborations are

  • “Gentle on My Mind”
  • “In Tall Buildings”
  • “Skippin’ In the Mississippi Dew”
  • “Steam Powered Aereo Plane”

Early Influences

  • Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs
  • Benny Martin
  • Gene Goforth

Came to Fame With

  • Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour (TV show), 1969

Performed With

  • Mississippi Valley Boys, mid-1950s.
  • Don Brown and the Ozark Mountain Trio, 1958
  • Missouri Ridgerunners, late 1950s
  • Dixie Ramblers, late 1950s
  • Red Cravens and the Bray Brothers, early 1960s
  • Solo performer, late 1960s, early 1970s through 2001. Notable backing musicians included the Aereo-plain Band (1971), Jamie Hartford (1991), and Hartford String Band (late 1990s)

Led the Way

  • Best known for composing the mega hit song “Gentle on My Mind.”
  • Four-time Grammy winner.
  • Contributed music and commentary to Ken Burns’ television documentary, The Civil War.
  • Contributed music to the O Brother! Where Art Thou? sound track and appeared as a headliner on the Down From the Mountain tour.
  • Inducted into the Americana Music Hall of Fame in 2005, International Bluegrass Hall of Fame in 2010, and Folk Alliance Hall of Fame in 2011.

By the Way

  • Worked as a river boat deckhand and pilot and as a script writer for the Smothers Brothers and Glen Campbell TV shows.
  • Never considered himself to be a good instrumentalist.
  • Descendant of Patrick Henry (“Give me liberty, or give me death”) and a cousin of playwright Tennessee Williams.
  • Saved the keys of more than 1,500 hotel rooms he stayed in over his career.

From the Archives

“The first live bluegrass I had ever seen was Lester and Earl and Benny Martin and Curly Seckler, and boy – I’ll tell you what – I stood right in the front row with my mouth open, and I think it had a profound effect on me, ‘cause I’ve never been right since.”
John Hartford, quoted by Doug Green in “John Hartford I Haven’t Been Right Since,” Muleskinner News, August, 1973.
“I wrote ‘Gentle on My Mind’ after seeing Dr. Zhivago. I was writing all the time then, writing while I tied my shoes, writing while I ate. I had Julie Christie’s face in front of me while I was writing those first two lines.”
John Hartford, quoted by Katie Laur in “Oh Captain, My Captain,” in Cincinnati magazine, October, 2001.
“When I’m working by myself, I still work as a band. I’m not a one man act; I’m a one man band, because I tune to standard and play in strict metre. So actually I’m a dance band even though I’m by myself on stage.”
John Hartford, quoted by Arthur Menius in “John Hartford Living His Dreams,” Bluegrass Unlimited, June, 1985.
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