The Greystone Ramblers
were formed at the Greystone Manor home of master harmonica
player Albert Hoopes in the Winter of 1985. The goal was to play for the
Old Fiddlers Picnic in
The Ramblers have played at events in the Philadelphia and West Chester,
Pennsylvania, area such as the Old Fiddlers' Picnic, Turks Head Music Festival,
Spring Gulch Folk Festival, Tall Cedars, The Carriage Event of Goshen, Delaware
Friends of Folk, St. Mary's Parish Hall Square Dances, West Chester
Christmas Revels, West Chester Rotary's Chili Cookoff, the 2005 Toys for Tots
Campaign, and a host of other community concerts, parades, and festivals.
The band lost its founder on Saint Patrick's Day, 1996, when Al Hoopes passed
away. However, his band mates honor his spirit and celebrate his joy in all
types of folk music by continuing to perform an array of styles on a wide range
of instruments.
An original member and
The band is blessed with a few semi retired performers who frequently sit in
with us, and can be heard on our first CD, The Greystone Ramblers. Richard Gordon, our former guitarist
and bassist, still sits in with the Ramblers from time to time. In addition to
his day job in the University of Delaware's computer center, Richard is
currently the bassist with Tater Patch,
an old-time band based in Wilmington, DE, and publishes a podcast that often
features music of the Ramblers http://www.mandorichard.net/mandocasts).
Marguerite Davis also took up with the band in 1986. Formerly known as
the " Irish Ellie Mae", she lives in the woods with a menagerie
of critters and growing things and likes it that way! Usually found
overcome with craftmania up to her neck in fibers and beads,
she also does freelance illustration and murals, teaches kids art
workshops, and tries to both paint and save the landscape whenever possible.
Consequently her contribution to the band's first album involved the
artistic aspects of the cover art and photo collage, and by-the-by she
also played harp, bodhran, and bones on a several cuts, and chimed in on a
chorus as well. Andy Andrews,
of the Plywood Cattle Company and
the Bala Hounds, joined us in
2001 with his frailing style banjo and vocals. Andy was born and raised and
lives in suburban Philadelphia, but has also lived in Pitkin County, Colorado, Trinidad, California and Tudela, Poro, Cebu, Philippines. His favorite classic cartoon is Betty Boop. A talented
composer and author, he is oddly fond of words ending in -ib, and thinks the
world would be a better place if more people read more of American
humorist H. Allen Smith.
What sets The Greystone Ramblers apart from all the other
folk / celtic / contra dance / old-time / bluegrass / jug bands you may have
heard? The Ramblers are an extended musical family, bringing together the
variety of the members' backgrounds and musical accomplishments into each piece
they play or sing. Indeed, no song is too outlandish to try, no tune is too
traditional to play, and no instrument is too unusual to include!
The Greystone
Ramblers can be contacted on their Website www.greystoneramblers.com
"The Greystone Ramblers are a Chester County based septet who play about
as good an Old Timey set as you are likely to hear.... with occasional forays
into traditional balladry and even New Orleans Jazz" ..Mike Miller,
Review of the CD The Greystone
Ramblers Tune Up 10/04