Author, Kentucky Traveler (2013)
					Latest album Cluck Ol’ Hen with Bruce  Hornsby
					Multiple awards and honors including 14 Grammy awards
					Had 12 #1 hits  on the charts; Inducted into the Grand Ole Opry in 1982 (youngest member at the  time)
					Inducted into Gospel Music Assoc. Hall of Fame 2012
					Started Skaggs  Family Records in 1997
					Country Music  Association Artist of the Year 1985
					Married to Sharon White, 2 grown Children
				    
									 			
			 
			
			
			
			
					 
		
		
		GUEST
		
		Ricky  Skaggs, The Kentucky Traveler
		
		
		 
		CBN.com 
		FAITH, FAMILY, AND  MUSIC
		Country legend Ricky Skaggs shows no  signs of stopping with his music career that has spanned over 50 years and  counting.  Always growing and innovating as  an artist, he has often said that he is "just trying to make a  living" playing the music he loves.   Currently, he is performing regularly with his band Kentucky Thunder and  has several music projects in progress.   Ricky says the key elements in his life have always been faith, family  and music.  He grew up in the hills of  Kentucky which shaped his faith and music.   There was a lot of music and a lot of preaching.  His mother nurtured his faith.  She taught him to pray and read the Bible and  she would always have scriptures and Bible references for him.  Ricky's father nurtured him in music.  
		When Ricky was five, his father gave him his  first mandolin after hearing Ricky harmonizing with his mother.  Ricky proved to be a child prodigy.  Two weeks after his father taught him three  chords, Ricky already showed musical aptitude and soon earned a reputation  among the locals in his community.  The  following year Ricky had a life defining moment.  Bluegrass patriarch Bill Monroe came to town  to perform.  He called six-year-old Ricky  up on the stage to play with him and he placed his own mandolin around his neck  and adjusted the strap to fit Ricky.  By  age seven, Ricky had made his Grand Old Opry debut and earned his first  paycheck for a musical performance when he performed with bluegrass legends  Flatt & Scruggs on their popular syndicated television show.  
        EARLY  COMMITMENT TO CHRIST
  Another life-changing event happened  to Ricky in 1967 when he was thirteen – he got saved at a revival meeting.  Though he had heard the Gospel throughout his  life, this time it was different.   He  felt a conviction and urge from the Holy Spirit to go forward during the altar  call.  He was afraid to go up but when he  saw his father go forward that gave Ricky the courage to.   When he went down the aisle, he kneeled in  front of the altar and repented to God then sobbed and cried.  Ricky describes it as not a “Paul on the road  to Damascus experience” where there was a marked difference in his life but he  knew he made a commitment to Jesus.  However  not long after that, a seed of doubt was planted that questioned if he really  did get saved.  Ricky says for years  Satan used that against him.  He wasn’t  sure of his salvation and it haunted him.   Ricky felt he never really grew in his faith.  He says it took a long while to go back and  realize that Christ did not change or forget Ricky’s prayer of commitment to  Him.   For Ricky, his Christianity was  more religious than a relationship with Jesus until later in his life.
        A  YOUNG BLUEGRASS MASTER
        His family moved for a short while to Columbus, OH when  Ricky was a teenager, where in his loneliness he mastered the fiddle before  moving back to Kentucky.   In 1970 when  Ricky was 16, his big break came when he and his friend (the late) Keith  Whitley filled in for bluegrass patriarch Ralph Stanley after Ralph’s bus broke  down in Ft. Gay, WV and they were called on stage to fill in until repairs were  made.  Ricky soon began to build a  reputation for creativity and excitement through live appearances and recordings  with acts such as J. D. Crowe & the New South.  He performed on the band's 1975 debut album  for Rounder Records, which is widely regarded as one of the most influential  bluegrass albums ever made.   After this  Ricky was a bandleader with Boone Creek which brought him the challenges of  leadership while giving him further recording and performing experience.  At this early point in his career at age 21,  Ricky was already considered a “recognized master” of bluegrass.  He achieved great success early, singing as a  member of Emmylou Harris’ Hot Band and then as an individual recording artist  on his own. With the release of Waitin’  for the Sun to Shine  in 1981, Ricky reached the top of the country  charts and remained there throughout the 1980s with twelve #1 hits. In 1982 he  became the youngest member of The Grand Ole Opry to be inducted at the  time.  Many awards followed and he trail  blazed a new breed of bluegrass.
        A NEW COURSE
          In 1997, after Ricky's then-current recording contract  was coming to an end, he decided to establish his own record label - Skaggs  Family Records.   This way, he could make  the music he wanted to make when he wanted to make it.  Not only was Ricky returning to his musical  roots, he was returning to his commitment to God.  He rededicated his life to the Lord and was  fully committed.  Though it took some  time, Ricky realized who he was in Christ.   His second wife, Sharon White of the famed country group The Whites, and  her mother helped him on this journey.  He  also formed a new group, Kentucky Thunder.   Ricky's first release for Skaggs Family Records, Bluegrass Rules!,  set a new standard for bluegrass, breaking new sales records in the genre,  winning Skaggs his sixth Grammy Award, and earning the International Bluegrass  Music Association's (IBMA) Album of the Year Award. In 1999, his second  all-bluegrass album, Ancient Tones, won a Grammy Award for Best  Bluegrass Album - his second consecutive Grammy in that same category. Just one  year later, Ricky won his eighth Grammy Award in the Best Southern, Country, or  Bluegrass Gospel Album category for Soldier of the Cross, his first  all-gospel recording project.
        Since then, Skaggs and Kentucky Thunder have released an  amazing 12 consecutive Grammy-nominated classics, (8 of which went on to earn  the revered award) while also opening the label to a variety of other musical  artists, all the time keeping emphasis on bluegrass and other forms of roots  music.
        SOME  MUSICAL HIGHLIGHTS OF 2000 AND BEYOND
          Ricky made further progress with the release of his  fourth bluegrass album in 2000, Big Mon: The Songs of Bill Monroe, a  project which featured an all-star cast of musicians ranging from Dolly Parton  and Bruce Hornsby and celebrated the music and the life of Ricky's mentor, Bill  Monroe. Big Mon received much critical acclaim, including a Grammy  nomination for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals.   Ricky’s first all-live album with Kentucky  Thunder, Live at the Charleston Music Hall (2003), led to an IBMA Award  for Instrumental Group of the Year - an award Skaggs and Kentucky Thunder has  taken home 8 times in the last decade.   
        By the middle of In 2005, Ricky earned his 10th career  Grammy (Best Bluegrass Album) for Brand New Strings - a beautiful collection  of music featuring four Skaggs originals as well as several tunes by some of  his most admired contemporaries.   In  2006, Skaggs was honored with a Grammy Award - this time in the Best Musical  Album for Children category - for his contribution to Songs from the  Neighborhood: the Music of Mister Rogers. Greater success followed with the  release of Ricky Skaggs and Kentucky Thunder Instrumentals, an album of  all-original, all-instrumental material in Fall 2006. Praised by fans and  critics alike as a landmark album for Skaggs, Instrumentals debuted at  No. 1 on Billboard's bluegrass album chart and earned Ricky his 12th  career Grammy Award (Best Bluegrass Album).   In September of 2007 on Skaggs Family  Records, was a literal family affair. After years of blending their voices from  the living room to the stage, Ricky and The Whites teamed up for their first  collaborative gospel album, Salt of the Earth, which resulted in a 13th  career Grammy Award for Best Southern, Country or Bluegrass Gospel Album and  other numerous awards.  In 2008, Skaggs  paid tribute to the man he has often referred to as his "musical father,"  Bill Monroe, and the original lineup of the Bluegrass Boys (Earl Scruggs,  Lester Flatt, Chubby Wise and Howard Watts) with the release of Honoring the  Fathers of Bluegrass: Tribute to 1946 and 1947, earning a 14th  career Grammy Award for Best Bluegrass Album.   Ricky’s first-ever solo album, Ricky Skaggs Solo: Songs My Dad Loved (2009) celebrated the man that caused him to fall in love with music - his  father, Hobert Skaggs.   
        At the beginning of this decade Ricky's album, Mosaic (2010), marked a return to a full band sound that mixed elements of Country  music with Beatles-esque melody and lyrics that spoke to Skaggs' faith, making  "music that is in my head and in my heart," as Ricky said. The song,  "Return to Sender" from Mosaic was nominated for a Grammy for  Best Gospel Song, and the album was a contender for Best Pop/Contemporary  Gospel Album at the 53rd Grammy Awards, receiving major critical acclaim.  Marking Ricky's 50thyear in music  was the release of Country Hits Bluegrass Style (2011), a compilation of  many of Skaggs' #1 country hits and fan favorites, played in a bluegrass style. 
		
		
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