Helping Hands
Performers
Merchandise
tickets
Helping Hands CD
sponsors
Media
location
archive
The Dismembered Tennesseans
Dismembered Tennesseans
It was back in 1945 that a group of McCallie students got together and began singing and playing a brand of Bluegrass music that has gone on now for more than 60 years. The name "Dismembered Tennesseans" seemed good enough a name for a bunch of teenagers who had no long range plans, and they sang their way through school.

But somehow the music never stopped and the band stayed together for the next 60 years, singing and laughing their way across the country - from Florida to Washington to Ohio and Colorado and points in between. They played for every local civic group in existence, every charity, and most of the conventions in town looking for cheap entertainment. They have also played at the Annual Chattanooga Riverbend Festival and at Kennedy Center.

The group has appeared on stage with many of the top bluegrass music stars and has performed in concert with the Chattanooga Symphony Orchestra and the Chattanooga Boys Choir, and more recently the Chattanooga Ballet.
They have also appeared on a segment of ABC-TV's Peter Jennings Nightly News and were featured on the NBC Sunday Today Show.

Their audiences have been composed of such celebrities as Chuch Yeager, Sam Nunn, Gerald Ford, Jack Kemp, and three Tennessee governors. Easily one of the most popular bands in hometown Chattanooga, they have made their mark singing bluegrass music for people who don't particularly like country music.

Copyright © 2010
Bluegrass Bands Helping Hands

Website created, designed and
hosted by Wyse Decisions