has said that he's the youngest old-timer around, and the self-description is an apt one. Emerging from
carried on with the sounds created by bluegrass music's first generation. His style was no knockoff, however; it had a distinctively bluesy tinge anchored by
' own guitar, a comparatively unusual lead instrument in bluegrass, where the triad of mandolin, banjo, and fiddle had defined the musical texture since the genre's early days.
Sparks grew up in Lebanon, OH, in the southwestern part of the state that has produced several other top bluegrass artists. His parents came from Appalachian Kentucky, and one of his grandfathers was a fiddle contest champion.
Sparks heard Cincinnati country star
Wayne Raney on the radio when he was young and learned to play the guitar. His skills put him in demand not only for bluegrass but also for country and rock bands while he was in high school, but after sitting in as lead guitarist with
the Stanley Brothers as they toured Ohio in 1964, bluegrass took first place among his musical interests.
Sparks played increasingly often with
the Stanley Brothers and made his recording debut in 1965 on a small Dayton, OH label. He spent three years as lead vocalist with
Ralph Stanley & the Clinch Mountain Boys after
Carter Stanley's death at age 41 in December 1966.
Around 1970,
Sparks formed his own band,
the Lonesome Ramblers, and it's a rare bluegrass festival or concert series that hasn't played host to
Sparks multiple times in the years since. Numerous younger bluegrass players have passed through
the Lonesome Ramblers or appeared on
Sparks' many recordings,
Ricky Skaggs and fiddler
Stuart Duncan being only two of the best-known examples.
Sparks recorded for various labels in the '70s and early '80s, moving to Rebel in 1982 for the
Dark Hollow LP. It was the first in a long string of recordings that sold steadily and won critical acclaim; most of
Sparks' Rebel catalog remained in print in the early 2000s.
Along the way,
Sparks made several songs into bluegrass standards. He unearthed an obscure folk-rock composition by
Lawrence Hammond entitled "John Deere Tractor" and turned it into a perennial anthem of discontented rural folk adrift in the big city; the cover of the song by
the Judds on their
Love Can Build a Bridge album of 1990 was likely traceable to
Sparks' own numerous performances.
The Stanley Brothers' "Goin' Up Home (To Live in Green Pastures)" was one of several gospel pieces that every parking-lot pickup band wanted to learn after hearing
Sparks sing it, and
Sparks tended to focus on gospel in his own numerous compositions as well.
Sparks and
the Lonesome Ramblers barely slowed down in the 1990s, releasing several albums over the course of the decade, and 2003's
The Coldest Part of Winter showed him in undiminished form.
Sparks released
Last Suit You Wear in 2007. Recorded primarily with his road band,
the Lonesome Ramblers, Almost Home appeared in 2011.
–
James Manheim, Rovi