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Rebel Records, which operated in Asbury, Greenbrier County, from 1974 through 1979, developed into a major force in bluegrass music. The company had been founded in 1959 at Mt. Rainier, Maryland, by Bill Carroll and Richard Freeland, the latter soon becoming the sole owner. In its early years the firm recorded several country and bluegrass singles, primarily by artists in the Baltimore-Washington area, but by the 1970s concentrated on the bluegrass album market. The Country Gentleman, the Seldom Scene, and Ralph Stanley's Clinch Mountain Boys, among the largest names in the music, constituted Rebel's principal acts. In 1974, Freeland moved his operation to Asbury, where it remained until he sold the firm to David Freeman of Roanoke, Virginia, who already owned County Records. Freeman’s son now operates Rebel Records from Charlottesville, Virginia. Expatriate West Virginians who have recorded for Rebel include fiddler Curly Ray Cline, the Goins Brothers, Cliff Waldron, and Wilma Lee Cooper.

— Authored by Ivan M. Tribe

Sources

Rebel Records: 1960-1995. Roanoke, VA: Rebel Records, 1997.

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Tribe, Ivan M. "Rebel Records." e-WV: The West Virginia Encyclopedia. 08 February 2024. Web. Accessed: 08 December 2024.

08 Feb 2024