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Composed

BMI’s database credits Harley Allen with 24 published compositions, co-compositions, and arrangements including:

  • “It Hurts to Know”
  • “Keep On Going”
  • “Troubles Around My Door”

Early Influences

  • The Monroe Brothers
  • Bill Monroe, with Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs
  • Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs, with Curly Seckler

Came to Fame With

  • The Osborne Brothers & Red Allen

Performed With

  • Blue Mountain Boys (with Frank Wakefield and Noah Crase), 1952 – 1954
  • The Osborne Brothers & Red Allen, 1956 – 1958
  • Red Allen & the Kentuckians, 1959 (with Frank Wakefield – 1964) – 1967
  • Lester Flatt, Earl Scruggs & the Foggy Mountain Boys, 1967
  • Red Allen (solo), 1967
  • The Kentucky Mountain Boys, 1968
  • Red Allen & the Allen Brothers, 1971 – 1973

By the Way

  • Walked eight miles, at age 9 or 10, to see his first live country music show, featuring Charlie Monroe and the Kentucky Pardners.
  • Got his start in 1951 appearing on the Kentucky Barn Dance in Lexington, Kentucky.
  • Appeared at Carnegie Hall on September 21, 1963.
  • Had planned to record an album of trio arrangements with the Louvin Brothers.
  • Was a replacement in the Flatt & Scruggs show in 1967 when Lester Flatt suffered a heart attack.
  • Worked as a bluegrass DJ on WDXL-FM in Dayton, Ohio, 1979.
  • Red’s son Harley was a successful songwriter in Nashville with over 350 songs to his credit.

Led the Way

  • Popularized innovative harmony pattern with the Osborne Brothers.
  • Is recognized as one of the premier bluegrass vocalists of the 1950s and ‘60s, with a unique style, influenced by the blues.
  • Recorded classic material for MGM (with the Osborne Brothers), Rebel, County, Melodeon, and Folkways.
  • Bluegrass Hall of Fame, 2005

Composed

BMI’s database credits Harley Allen with 24 published compositions, co-compositions, and arrangements including:

  • “It Hurts to Know”
  • “Keep On Going”
  • “Troubles Around My Door”

Early Influences

  • The Monroe Brothers
  • Bill Monroe, with Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs
  • Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs, with Curly Seckler

Came to Fame With

  • The Osborne Brothers & Red Allen

Performed With

  • Blue Mountain Boys (with Frank Wakefield and Noah Crase), 1952 – 1954
  • The Osborne Brothers & Red Allen, 1956 – 1958
  • Red Allen & the Kentuckians, 1959 (with Frank Wakefield – 1964) – 1967
  • Lester Flatt, Earl Scruggs & the Foggy Mountain Boys, 1967
  • Red Allen (solo), 1967
  • The Kentucky Mountain Boys, 1968
  • Red Allen & the Allen Brothers, 1971 – 1973

By the Way

  • Walked eight miles, at age 9 or 10, to see his first live country music show, featuring Charlie Monroe and the Kentucky Pardners.
  • Got his start in 1951 appearing on the Kentucky Barn Dance in Lexington, Kentucky.
  • Appeared at Carnegie Hall on September 21, 1963.
  • Had planned to record an album of trio arrangements with the Louvin Brothers.
  • Was a replacement in the Flatt & Scruggs show in 1967 when Lester Flatt suffered a heart attack.
  • Worked as a bluegrass DJ on WDXL-FM in Dayton, Ohio, 1979.
  • Red’s son Harley was a successful songwriter in Nashville with over 350 songs to his credit.

Led the Way

  • Popularized innovative harmony pattern with the Osborne Brothers.
  • Is recognized as one of the premier bluegrass vocalists of the 1950s and ‘60s, with a unique style, influenced by the blues.
  • Recorded classic material for MGM (with the Osborne Brothers), Rebel, County, Melodeon, and Folkways.
  • Bluegrass Hall of Fame, 2005

From the Archives

From the Archives: The Osborne Brothers with Red Allen. Donated by Roger Sprung.

From the Archives: Red Allen and Frank Wakefield writing music together in Dayton, OH in 1986. Donated by Frank Wakefield.

“Allen was about to embark on an astonishing four-year burst of creativity and recording activity that would forever anchor his reputation as one of the most intense, hard-edged and soulful lead singers in the annals of bluegrass.”
Jon Hartley Fox, in liner notes to Red Allen: Keep on Going, The Rebel & Melodeon Recordings, Rebel 1127, 2004.
“I can’t play and sing with any person I don’t like, I don’t care how good they are. I’ve got to like a man first. Being a good man is as important as being a good picker and singer.”
Marty Godbey in “A Conversation with Red Allen,” Bluegrass Unlimited, June, 1979.
“My whole world changed when I lost my son, when Neal went away. That changed my whole outlook on life, and all of a sudden, music… You miss your kids when you’re out on the road. You just don’t live a normal life. But when we lost Neal, there was other things more important to me than picking, singing, and making a dollar.”
Glenna H. Fisher in “Red Allen: Bluegrass From the Man Who’s Been There,” Bluegrass Unlimited, January, 1984
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