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Music DVD – Concert of Celebration

Concert of Celebration DVDMusic DVD – Concert of Celebration

$25 Donation


Share America Foundation, Inc. features in the 2012 release a cast of music stars and legends Starring Randall Franks with Guest Stars (In order of appearance) Paul Brown, The Marksmen Quartet, John and Debbie Farley, Ramblin’ “Doc” Tommy Scott, and Luke McLuke, Curly Seckler, Charlie “Peanut” Faircloth with the Trust Jesus Singers, Chubby Wise,  David Davis, Johnny Counterfit, Gary Waldrep, Barney Miller, Jeff & Sheri Easter, Bill Monroe and The Blue Grass Boys, Butch Lanham, Doodle and the Golden River Grass,  Dale Tilley, Jesse McReynolds, Johnnie Sue, and Nelson Richardson. Two Hours of Entertainment, 29 Musical Performances including these favorites and more:
Ain’t Gonna Study War ♫ Amazing Grace ♫ Grandpa Was A Farmer  ♫ How Great Thou Art ♫ Wayfaring Stranger ♫ Crying My Heart Out For You ♫ You Can’t Stop Time ♫ Lord, I Am Coming Home ♫ When the Saints Go Marching In ♫ Golden Slippers ♫ Farther Along ♫ The Way Is In God’s Hands ♫ The Other Side of Heaven ♫ Cripple Creek  ♫ In the Garden ♫ Swing Low, Sweet Chariot ♫ You Better Get Ready ♫ Back Up And Push ♫ When They Ring Those Golden Bells for You and Me ♫ What a Friend We Have in Jesus ♫  The Old Gospel Ship ♫ Meet Me in Heaven ♫ I Want to Go There

Two Hours of Entertainment, 29 Musical Performances featuring a host of stars raising funds for the Share America Foundation, Inc. available for a $25 donation.

Randall Franks – An Appalachian Musical Revival – Live at the Ringgold Depot

AppalachianwebRandall Franks – An Appalachian Musical Revival – Live at the Ringgold Depot

$18 Donation

An Appalachian Musical Revival Live at the Ringgold Depot
Share America SAF101  (2008)
Randall Franks
With Four Fold, Buddy Liles, The Marksmen Quartet, Barney Miller, The Smoky Mountain Boys, The Southern Sound Quartet, The Testimony Quartet, Voices Won, Walnut Grove Bluegrass Band, The Watkins Family, Garrett Arb, Brady Hughes, John Rice, Deborah Taylor, Calvary Strings, Mt. Peria Baptist Church Male Chorus, Ringgold United Methodist Church Chancel Choir
Must Be A Reason – Randall Franks with The Watkins Family
Everywhere I Go – The Testimony Quartet
Old Country Church – Walnut Grove Bluegrass Band
Going Home – Four Fold
Uncloudy Day – Garrett Arb and Randall Franks
When God Dips His Pen of Love in My Heart – Ringgold United Methodist Church Chancel Choir
Walkin’ Along the Old Church Road – Garrett Arb
You’re Never Alone – Buddy Liles
An Appalachian Musical Revival Live at the Ringgold Depot con’t.
Way Down Deep in My Soul – The Marksmen Quartet
Wagon Tracks – The Marksmen Quartet
Jesus Loves Me – Brady Hughes
Have You Heard the News – Mt. Peria Baptist Church Male Chorus featuring Mose Lumpkin
New Manna – Calvary Strings
Ten Thousand Years – Barney Miller
The Glory Train  – John Rice and Randall Franks
This Is the Day the Lord Has Made – The Southern Sound Quartet
Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing – Deborah Taylor
Back Then – The Smoky Mountain Boys
Roll Back the Stone  – The Watkins Family
In the Garden – Randall Franks and Voices Won

Share America Foundation in association with Crimson Records presents Randall Franks and list of music stars at the 2008 for An Appalachian Musical Revival Live at the Ringgold Depot to raise funds for the Share America Foundation, Inc. Donation of $18

Randall Franks – Sacred Sounds of Appalachia

sacred-FRONT-INSERTRandall Franks – Sacred Sounds of Appalachia

$14 plus $2 S&H




Sacred Sounds of Appalachia

Available in Crimson Records CD
Randall “Randy” Franks
Other performers: The Peachtree Pickers: Mark Wheeler, Lewis Phillips, Steve “Rabbit” Easter, Travis Lewis, Bill Everett, Eugene Akers, Earle Wheeler
Crimson Records CRZ111 (1998) Originally leased Zion Records (Sonlite) (1992)
featuring Uncloudy Day, Beautiful Star of Bethlehem, Leaning on the Everlasting Arms, Sweet Hour of Prayer, Will the Circle Be Unbroken, Old Time Religion, Amazing Grace, Kneel At the Cross, Just A Rose Will Do, This World Is Not My Home

Popular around the world, this instrumental recording of hymns became one of Randall Franks’s most featured albums on radio as he shared his artistry on fiddle, guitar, mandolin and mountain dulcimer alongside some of America’s greatest acoustic musicians.

Randall Franks – Handshakes and Smiles

Handshakes-INSERTRandall Franks – Handshakes and Smiles

$14 plus $2 S&H




Handshakes and Smiles

Available in Crimson Records CD

Randall “Randy” Franks
Other performers: Mark Wheeler, Jeff and Sheri Easter, Lewis Phillips, Travis Lewis, Jesse McReynolds, Eugene Akers, Steve Easter, Darrin Chambers, Carol Lee Cooper, and Dennis McCall
Crimson Records CR2679 (1990)
I’ll Meet You in Church Sunday Morning, Meeting in the Air, Until Jesus (Randall Franks), Rock of Ages, Handshakes and Smiles, You Better Get Ready (Randall Franks and Mark Wheeler), Pass Me Not, Everlasting Joy, This Little Light of Mine, He’s Never Gonna Fool Me Again (Randall Franks) 

Handshakes and Smiles was a top 20 Christian music seller for Randall Franks making him the first bluegrass artist to ever reach the top of the Christian music sales charts. It features several of Randall Franks most popular radio and TV musical releases to country and gospel music including its title song – “Handshakes and Smiles,” “You Better Get Ready,” “He’s Never Gonna Fool Me Again,” “Rock of Ages,” and “Pass Me Not.”

David Davis and WRB

 

David Davis, of Cullman, Alabama, grew up immersed in a rich musical heritage that shaped his lifelong passion for bluegrass. Coming from a family of musicians—his grandfather J.H. Bailey played banjo and fiddle, his father Leddell and uncles performed in the “brother duets” style, and his uncle Cleo was an early member of Bill Monroe’s Blue Grass Boys—Davis began playing mandolin as a teenager, inspired by seeing Monroe perform at age 12. He honed his skills in the Monroe tradition, singing harmony in church and developing a distinctive, hard-driving style. In 1982, at age 21, Davis joined the Warrior River Boys, a band originally formed in the mid-1950s by Garry Thurmond in Alabama. When Thurmond’s health declined in 1984, he handed leadership to the 23-year-old Davis, who transformed the group into a prominent force in traditional bluegrass, touring extensively across the U.S. and recording over hundreds of songs early for Rounder, Rebel, Old Homestead, Wango, Time Life, Stonecrest Records and Black Warrior Music Records.

Under Davis’s leadership, the Warrior River Boys released several acclaimed albums that showcased their commitment to classic bluegrass sounds, blending originals, covers, and tributes. Notable releases include the self-titled David Davis and the Warrior River Boys (2004, Rebel Records), praised for its “big sound” and well-chosen repertoire, positioning the band as “among today’s top interpreters of Monroe-style bluegrass” while putting their own stamp on the music. Troubled Times (2006, Rebel) featured up tempo tracks like Merle Travis’s “John Henry, Jr.” and Hank Williams covers, highlighting Davis’s adherence to old-time influences. Two Dimes and a Nickel (2009, Rebel) was hailed as “one of the best recordings of the year,” with mostly new material. Later, Didn’t He Ramble: Songs of Charlie Poole (2018, Rounder) paid homage to early influences. Reviews often lauded Davis as a “tremendous singer and mandolin picker,” noting the band’s ability to breathe new life into familiar tunes and their poised ascent into bluegrass’s upper echelon.

David, while renowned for his masterful interpretations of traditional bluegrass standards, also made modest yet meaningful contributions to expanding the genre’s lexicon through original compositions and by introducing fresh material from contemporary writers. Among his originals, “The Lonesome Cry of the Whippoorwill,” co-written with Donny Hyatt and Stan Wilemon, evokes themes of solitude and nature with its driving rhythm, first recorded on his 2004 self-titled album. Similarly, the gospel-infused “It’s Just an Old Body,” co-authored with Harlon and Stan Wilemon, reflects on mortality and spirituality, debuting on the same release and adding a poignant, reflective voice to bluegrass’s emotional repertoire.  He also popularized Randall Franks’s “Filling the River with Tears” by his reinterpretation on Rebel Records.

The instrumental “Willow Valley,” solely penned by Davis, showcases intricate mandolin work and was introduced on the 2006 album Troubled Times, enriching the instrumental side of the bluegrass songbook. Beyond his own creations, Davis broadened the genre by being the first to record songs like Alan Johnston’s “The Ballad of Sarah Malone” and “The River Ran Black,” as well as Tommy Freeman’s “The Brambles, Briars, and Me,” infusing these new tunes with his Monroe-inspired authenticity and helping them gain traction within bluegrass circles.

David and the Warrior River Boys earned significant recognition, including Davis’s induction into the Alabama Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame in 2010 for his 26 years leading the band and contributions to the genre, followed by the America’s Old-Time Country Music Hall of Fame in 2014. The band’s albums frequently appeared on bluegrass charts, with songs like “The Lonesome Cry of the Whippoorwill” and “Milwaukee Blues” becoming fan favorites. The group’s lineup evolved over four decades, typically featuring Davis on mandolin and lead vocals, alongside core members like Marty Hays on bass and shared vocals, Robert Montgomery on banjo, Owen Saunders on fiddle, and guitarist Stan Wilemon and Jeff Griffy. Past members included fiddlers Charlie Cline and Randall Franks, and guitarist Tom Ewing, all three former Blue Grass Boys with Bill Monroe.

The band included numerous musicians which continue to shine in their talents such as Gary Waldrep, Alan Sibley, Daniel Grindstaff, Nick Poe, C.J. Lewandowski, Jeremy & Corrina Rose Logston Stephens, and others.

David left a lasting legacy as a dedicated traditionalist before his tragic death on September 15, 2024, at age 63, from injuries in an automobile accident near his Alabama home. His passing shocked the bluegrass community, where he was remembered as a skilled bandleader, friend, and preserver of Monroe’s mandolin legacy, with tributes emphasizing his profound impact on the genre.

David Davis and the Warrior River Boys Available Releases

Order Today

 

David Davis and the Warrior River Boys (Rebel Records)

 

David Davis and the Warrior River Boys (Rebel Records)

$21 ($15 plus $6 Postage and Handling)

Lonesome Cry of the Whipporwill, Leavin’ Tennessee, The Old Leather Bag, Today Is the Day I Get My Old Watch and Chain, My Rocky Sweetheart, In the Shade of the Old Buffalo, It’s Just and Old Body, Coat of Southern Gray, Lonesome in Life, Freight Train Blues, I Haven’t Seen Mary in Years, A Few Dollars More

Musicians
David Davis: Mandolin, Vocals
Marty Hays: Bass, Vocals
Josh Smith: Banjo, Vocals
Jeff Griffy: Lead & Rhythm Guitar
Owen Saunders: Fiddle(s)

Production Credits
Produced by Otis Lynn Dillon, David Davis and Josh Smith
Recorded and mixed at River Track Studio, Fort Gay, WV
Engineered by Otis Lynn Dillon and Robert Maynard
Mixed by Otis Lynn Dillon
Assisted by David Davis and Josh Smith
Mastered by John Eberle at Americana Mastering, Nashville, TN

Retrospective 1984-2014 Live 2 CD Set

Retrospective 1984-2014 LIVE (2 CD SET)

$26 ($20 plus $6 Postage and Handling)

50 Songs: The Lonesome RiverI’ll Remember Your Love; Old, Old House; The Voice in the Night; Crying Holy; My Louisiana Love; Jack and May; You’re That Certain Someone; Can’t Pick the Rose for the Thorns; We Shall Rise; Happy on My Way; I Don’t Know What to Do; Leaving Texarkana; Listening to the Falling Rain; The Whole World Seems Different; Rocky Mountain Sweetheart; In the Garden; (I Heard That) Lonesome Whistle; Farewell to Long Hollow; Bright Sherman Valley; Lovesick and Sorrow; Rolling On; The Mystery of Number Five; Lloyd’s Tune; Going Back to the Blue Ridge Mountains; My Dixie Home; Wagon Wheel; Wild Horses; Hold to God’s Unchanging Hand; I Haven’t Seen Mary in Years; In the Shade of the Big Buffalo; For a Few Dollars More; The Lonesome Cry of the Whippoorwill; Today’s the Day I Get My Gold Watch and Chain; The River Ran Black; Milwaukee Blues; John Henry, Jr; Long Black Veil; A House of Gold; In the Pines; Evening Prayer Blues; Carroll County Blues; Two Dimes and a Nickel; Dusty Miller; Ballad of Sarah Malone; The Gold Rush Is Over; Never Looking Back; On the Jericho Road; It’s Just an Old Body; He Will Set Your Fields on Fire

 

From the Vault Vol. 1 (Live 1994)

 

From the Vault (Live 1994)

$16 ($10 plus $6 Postage and Handling)

 

 

 

David Davis and the Warrior River Boys Poster

$16 ($10 plus $6 Postage and Handling)

 

 

Plum Pitiful (Time Life – Various Artists)

$16 ($10 plus $6 Postage and Handling)

Stanley Brothers-Pretty Polly, Warrior River Boys-Down In The Willow Garden, Ralph Stanley & James King – Little Glass Of Wine, Don Reno & Bill Harrell-Little Maggie, Scott Brannon-Old Shep, Don Reno & Bill Harrell-Darlin’ Little Joe, Warrior River Boys-The Long Black Veil, James King & David Davis-Memories Of Mother And Dad,  David Davis & Scott Brannon-Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine, Bill Harrell-Baggage Coach Ahead, Bob & Danny Paisley-The Evening Train, Basement Band-Six More Miles, Don Reno & Red Smiley-Speak To Me Little Darlin’, Stanley Brothers-Mother’s Not Dead (She’s Only Sleeping), Charlie Moore-Rebel Soldier, Mac Wiseman-A Hero’s Death, Charlie Moore-Shackles And Chains, Stanley Brothers-Will You Miss Me When I’m Gone, Ray Davis-Orphan Joe, Stanley Brothers-Man Of Constant Sorrow

Blue Ribbon Bluegrass (Various Artists)

$16 ($10 plus $6 Postage and Handling)

The Cox Family-Pardon Me, The Nashville Bluegrass Band -The Train Carrying Jimmie Rogers Home, Alison Krauss & Union Station- Everytime You Say Goodbye, Here Today – Lonesome River, Luke and Jenny Anne Bulla-Talahassee, Ricky Skaggs-Lost and I’ll Never Find the Way, The Lynn Morris Band-You’ll Get No More Out of Me, The Johnson Mountain Boys- Duncan and Brady, Laurie Lewis-Who Will Watch the Home Place, The Warrior River Boys-Bright Sherman Valley, Tony Rice-Galveston Flood, Jim & Jesse-Dear Old Mother, The Del McCoury Band-Queen Anne’s Lace, JD Crowe and the New South-Why Don’t You Tell Me So, The Cox Family with Alison Krauss-When God Dips His Pen of Love in My Heart, James King-Old River, Vassar Clements-Turkey in the Straw, Hazel Dickens and the Johnson Mountain Boys-Here Today and Gone Tomorrow, The Bluegrass Album Band- Chalk Up Another One, Tony Trischka-Greenwood, Dry Branch Fire Squad-Girl at the Roadside Inn, Rice Brothers-Walk On Boy, Ricky Skaggs and the Whites- River of Jordan

America’s Music

$16 ($10 plus $6 Postage and Handling)

Support the David Davis

Appalachian Music Scholarship

 

Your donations to Share America Foundation, Inc. and it’s special David Davis Scholarship underwritten through the Pearl and Floyd Franks Scholarship Fund encourages youth in Appalachian music. Send Tax Deductible donations to Share America Foundation, Inc. P.O. Box 42, Tunnel Hill, Ga. 30755.

 

Randall Franks – Tunes and Tales from Tunnel Hill

TunesandTalesRandall Franks – Tunes and Tales from Tunnel Hill

$14 plus $2 S&H


Tunes and Tales from Tunnel Hill

Available in Crimson Records CD
Randall Franks with the Sand Mountain Boys
including Gary Waldrep, Kenny Townsel, Wayne Crain and Jerry Crain
Crimson 1634 (1995)
featuring Black Eyed Suzy, A Tunnel Runs Through It (Randall Franks)
Come Go With Me, Little Girl of Mine in Tennessee, Homecoming (Randall Franks), The Way Is in God’s Hands (Randall Franks and Mark Wheeler), In the Garden, Now I Know (Randall Franks), Uncle Elige’s Send Off (Randall Franks), Please Don’t Ever Take Your Love From Me, I’m Walkin’, Filling the River with Tears (Randall Franks), Big Tig, Mr. Roy and Me (Randall Franks), Night Train to Memphis
A popular bluegrass music and comedy collection by Randall Franks recorded during his most productive period of his country music career.

Randall Franks – Early Gospel Favorites

FRONT-early-Gospel-FavoriteRandall Franks – Early Gospel Favorites

$14 plus $2 S&H


Crimson Records (2010)
Randall Franks and the Peachtree Pickers with Jeff Blalock, Jerry Coursey, Greg   Earnest, Wes Freeman, Lyndon Kolb, Randy McClung, Matthew Mundy, Mark Nelson, Max Tillman and Roy Westray.
He’ll Set Your Fields on Fire, Who Do You Think, There’s A Man in Here, God Put a Rainbow in the Sky, Back Up and Push the Devil Away, It’s Me Again Lord, Jesus Is My Best Friend, Man in the Middle, Building on Sand

Randall Franks and his Peachtree Pickers perform bluegrass gospel music recorded for his first two albums “Ivory Halls” and “Building on Sand.”