Shenandoah (band)
Shenandoah is an American
country music band founded in
Muscle Shoals, Alabama, in 1984 by
Marty Raybon (lead vocals,
acoustic guitar), Ralph Ezell (
bass guitar, backing vocals), Stan Thorn (
keyboards, backing vocals), Jim Seales (
lead guitar, backing vocals), and Mike McGuire (
drums, background vocals). Thorn and Ezell left the band in the mid-1990s, with Rocky Thacker taking over on bass guitar; Keyboardist
Stan Munsey joined the line up in 1995, until his departure in 2018. The band split up in 1997 after Raybon left. Seales and McGuire reformed the band in 2000 with lead singer Brent Lamb, who was in turn replaced by
Curtis Wright and then by
Jimmy Yeary. Ezell rejoined in the early 2000s, and after his 2007 death, he was replaced by Mike Folsom. Raybon returned to the band in 2014. That same year, Jamie Michael replaced the retiring Jim Seales on lead guitar.
Shenandoah has released nine
studio albums, of which two have been certified gold by the
Recording Industry Association of America. The band has also charted twenty-six
singles on the ''
Billboard''
Hot Country Songs charts, including the Number One hits "
The Church on Cumberland Road," "
Sunday in the South" and "
Two Dozen Roses" from 1989, "
Next to You, Next to Me" from 1990, and "
If Bubba Can Dance (I Can Too)" from 1994. The late 1994-early 1995 single "
Somewhere in the Vicinity of the Heart," which featured guest vocals from
Alison Krauss, won both artists a
Grammy Award for
Best Country Collaboration with Vocals.
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