Biographies

“Playing music is the easy part,” says Russell Moore with an ever-so-slightly rueful laugh as he looks back on more than thirty years of doing what he grew up wanting to do. “By the time we put this band together”—he’s talking about IIIrd Tyme Out, his musical vehicle for over twenty years now—“I was realistic enough to know that bands come and go. Being able to stay together is the hurdle that everyone faces. So I didn’t have a preconceived notion that someday I’d be celebrating twenty years with IIIrd Tyme Out—but I did feel like I would be playing music for the rest of my life.”

As it turns out, while many bands have come and gone since that May in 1991, Russell Moore & IIIrd Tyme Out have endured. In the process, they’ve managed to climb to the top not just once, but twice—winning a slew of IBMA vocal awards, including two Male Vocalist of the Year honors, in the mid and late 1990s, then persevering through rough times to see Moore recapturing the Male Vocalist trophy for the past three years. Along the way, they’ve made a whole new generation of fans, and with the release of Timeless Hits From The Past… BLUEGRASSED by Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, the quintet are poised to deliver their distinctive kind of music more widely than ever.

For Moore, it’s been a long journey from his childhood Texas home. Raised in Pasadena, near Houston, he heard a lot of country music growing up—“I was five miles from Gilley’s right during the Urban Cowboy craze,” he notes—but it was bluegrass that really turned his head as he moved into his teen years. “Bluegrass was accessible,” he recalls. “The bands, the musicians, they were so approachable—and even though we weren’t in the bluegrass mainstream geographically, I was able to see artists like Bill Monroe, Larry Sparks ands the Lewis Family, and you could just be around them. That was intriguing to me.”

Within a few years, Russell was playing mandolin in a regional band, and by the time he was in his early 20s, he had teamed up with a couple of like-minded youngsters to create Southern Connection, making the move to North Carolina to pursue bluegrass success—though it turned out that when he first found it, it was as a guitar-playing sideman. Joining Bluegrass Hall of Famer Doyle Lawson and his legendary band, Quicksilver, Moore quickly found himself in the bluegrass forefront, remaining there with Lawson through six years and as many bluegrass and bluegrass gospel albums. And though his tenure with Quicksilver barely overlapped the establishment of the IBMA’s awards, Moore shared in the first of many to come when the group took home the Song Of The Year crystal in 1990 for “The Little Mountain Church House.”

Still, a desire to make his own mark impelled Russell, along with bandmates Mike Hartgrove and Ray Deaton, to take the bold step of creating their own group in 1991. Naming themselves IIIrd Tyme Out—a reference to the number of professional bands they’d already been in, complete with a memorable twist on spelling—the group hit the ground running, releasing three well- received albums on the venerable Rebel Records label in just four years. “We weren’t immune from the same things that any other band starting up has to endure,” Moore recalls. “You have to prove yourself—you have to let people know that you’re sincere, and that you’re going to work hard. But once we were able to get enough show dates that we didn’t have to have day jobs, we felt pretty good that as long as we continued to work hard, put the music out that we knew we were capable of, be personable and humble and appreciative—we felt that we could continue on if we chose to.”

And continue on they did. In 1994, they earned the first of an unsurpassed seven consecutive IBMA awards for Vocal Group of the Year, along with Russell’s first Male Vocalist of the Year title. For the remainder of the decade and into the new century, IIIrd Tyme Out was among the most important acts in the field, earning acclaim for the compelling artistry—especially vocal—they brought both to a string of well-received albums and to stages across the United States. Yet all was not well within the group, and in the early part of the new century, partnership tensions and

 

personnel instability came to a head—and with them, the very real possibility of an end to the group.

It was at that point that Russell Moore stepped up. “I was stubborn,” he says with a smile. “I knew there was a lot that could be done with this group, and I was stubborn enough to say, I have put too much into this to let it just get away. So when everything came down to it, I knew that it was time. I could have started something brand new, but I would have had to give up everything that we had worked for. So I decided to stick it out. I kept hoping that everyone would start pulling in the same direction—and I kept praying, too.”

With Moore in charge—and with his name now in front, recognizing both his new leadership role and the group’s single biggest musical focus—IIIrd Tyme Out began to rebuild. Signing with Rural Rhythm Records in 2007, the quintet solidified a new lineup (the same one it has today), and the 2009 release of Russell Moore & IIIrd Tyme Out, with its hit single, “Hard Rock Mountain Prison,” paved the way for Moore to take another Male Vocalist honor in 2010. Prime Tyme and its irresistibly catchy “Pretty Little Girl From Galax” followed in 2011, as did another Male Vocalist trophy, and Moore was called to the stage yet again at 2012’s IBMA awards to accept still further recognition of his preeminence as a singer.

Yet IIIrd Tyme Out is hardly a one-man show, even with a frontman as spectacular as Moore. Banjo man Steve Dilling has been with the band nearly as long as Moore, and his hard-edged drive, signature endings, strong vocals and quick-witted between-songs commentary have become integral parts of the group’s sound. Wayne Benson, who started in the band around the same time as Dilling and stayed for nearly a decade before taking a job with the John Cowan Band, returned in 2007; his tasteful, influential approach to the mandolin is a focal point of the group’s instrumental prowess even as he continues to contribute in the vocal department.

Though he’s the youngest member of the band, fiddler Justen Haynes follows Dilling when they’re ordered by length of continuous tenure. A member for nearly a decade, he’s a second- generation bluegrasser who’s earned the admiration of peers and fans alike for his supple melodic lines and tasteful vocal support. And though bassist Edgar Loudermilk is the newest member of the group, he was already known to fans for stellar work with the likes of Marty Raybon—and he’s been making major contributions as a compelling vocalist in his own right, too.

Their latest release, Timeless Hits From The Past…BLUEGRASSED, is one of the first fruits of the quintet’s latest business relationship, as Moonstruck Management’s Peter Keiser alerted them to Cracker Barrel Old Country Store’s plans for another bluegrass album. “Had it not been for Moonstruck, that wouldn’t have happened,” Moore notes. “When they came back to us, Cracker Barrel wanted to know if we had a concept, so we started discussing themes. We started off thinking about a George Jones tribute, but I felt that we were leaving out too many great artists and great songs—and once we went to the more general idea, we had room not just for the country stuff that’s helped to shape who we are, but some of the key songs of IIIrd Tyme Out that have shaped us, too. And then, when [Alison Krauss & Union Station’s] Barry Bales offered to help us, it was like a light bulb went on. I thought, maybe it’s time that we did bring someone in from outside the band to put an ear and thumbprint on it, make it the best it could possibly be. It’s something different for us, and it really worked out well.”

The new project has plenty of nods to classic country in vintage numbers like “Mama Tried,” “Farewell Party” and “Golden Ring” (which features a stunning Moore duet with gospel sensation Sonya Isaacs), but there are some surprises, too. “’Modern Day Bonnie & Clyde,’ that one’s kind of different,” Moore notes with a chuckle. “It’s more rock-influenced. But Travis Tritt’s record had some killer dobro on it, and he’s a banjo player, so there were some ties,” he adds. Similarly, he calls Don Williams’ “Tulsa Time” another change of pace. “I’m not playing any kind of bluegrass

rhythm on that, but it wasn’t tough to do; I’ve messed around with that kind of stuff for years. And that particular song, we’ve messed around with it backstage, just having fun.”

Yet there’s room, too, as Moore notes, for a couple of key songs from Russell Moore & IIIrd Tyme Out’s own past. Their arrangement of the doo-wop classic, “Only You”—a song that has brought audiences to its feet for well over a decade—gets a few new twists, and an all-time favorite, “John & Mary,” gets a new lease on life with some help from country chanteuse Pam Tillis.

Add it all up, and the future is looking very bright for Russell Moore & IIIrd Tyme Out. Indeed, if one measure of success is the degree to which younger and newer musicians look to a group for inspiration, then IIIrd Tyme Out is about as successful as a bluegrass group can be, for a whole generation of young pickers and singers can be heard across the country trying their hand at IIIrd Tyme Out classics. “It’s one of the greatest compliments you could ever have,” Moore acknowledges. “It’s humbling to know that they think that much of what we’re doing—and sometimes it makes you think wow, we really are making a difference. People are taking notice.

“All the awards, all the recognition, those things are just by-products of doing what we love to do —and of having everybody pulling in the same direction. So to get them is a little overwhelming, sometimes. But when you know that somebody else out there is getting something from you because of your music, well, that’s the thing about music that got me into it—just the love of the music, and the way it made me feel. It always has been therapeutic, and it still is—and you can’t ask for more than that.” 

 


 

Here are IIIrd Tyme Out’s accomplishments to date…

1992 SPBGMA Male Vocalist of the Year – Russell
1993 SPBGMA Bluegrass Band of the Year Overall
1993 SPBGMA Male Vocalist of the Year – Russell
1994 SPBGMA Male Vocalist of the Year – Russell
1994 IBMA Male Vocalist of the Year – Russell
1994 IBMA Vocal Group of the Year
1995 IBMA Vocal Group of the Year
1995 SPBGMA Vocal Group of the Year
1996 IBMA Vocal Group of the Year
1997 IBMA Vocal Group of the Year
1997 IBMA Male Vocalist of the Year – Russell
1998 SPBGMA Vocal Group of the Year
1998 SPBGMA Gospel Group of the Year (Contemporary)
1998 SPBGMA Song of the Year “Working on the Road to Gloryland”
1998 BN Fans Choice Awards Vocal Group of the Year
1998 BN Fans Choice Awards Instrumental Group of the Year
1998 BN Fans Choice Awards Male Vocalist of the Year – Russell
1998 BN Fans Choice Awards Tenor Vocalist of the Year – Russell
1998 BN Fans Choice Awards Mandolin Player of the Year – Wayne
1998 BN Fans Choice Awards Song of the Year “Working on the Road to Gloryland”
1998 BN Fans Choice Awards Album of the Year “Living on the Other Side”
1998 IBMA Vocal Group of the Year
1999 SPBGMA Vocal Group of the Year
1999 BN Fans Choice Awards Vocal Group of the Year
1999 BN Fans Choice Awards Male Vocalist of the Year – Russell
1999 IBMA Vocal Group of the Year
2000 SPBGMA Vocal Group of the Year
2000 SPBGMA Bluegrass Album of the Year – Live at the Mac
2000 SPBGMA Bluegrass Mandolin Performer of the Year – Wayne
2000 SPBGMA Bluegrass Fiddle Performer of the Year – Mike
2000 SPBGMA Male Vocalist of the Year (Contemporary) – Russell
2000 IBMA Seven Time Vocal Group of the Year
2001 SPBGMA Vocal Group of the Year
2001 SPBGMA Contemporary Gospel Group of the Year
2001 SPBGMA Mandolin Player of the Year – Wayne
2002 SPBGMA Vocal Group of the Year
2002 SPBGMA Mandolin Player of the Year – Wayne
2003 SPBGMA Male Vocalist of the Year – Contemporary – Russell
2003 SPBGMA Entertaining Group of the Year
2004 SPBGMA Gospel Group of the Year – Traditional
2004 SPBGMA Entertaining Group of the Year
2004 SPBGMA ‘Master’s Gold Award’ Recipient – Russell
2004 IMA Country/Bluegrass Album of the Year – Singing on the Streets of Gold
2005 SPBGMA Bluegrass Band of the Year – Overall
2007 ‘Telly’ Award (P. Williams video production)
2007 SPBGMA Male Vocalist of the Year – Contemporary – Russell                                                                                                                                                                                   2010 IBMA Male Vocalist of the Year – Russell                                                                                                                                                                                                                       2011 IBMA Male Vocalist of the Year – Russell
2012 IBMA Male Vocalist of the Year – Russell