Ketch Secor (born May 14, 1978), is a Grammy award-winning American musician and a co-founder and current frontman for the band Old Crow Medicine Show. He is the only member of the band who has remained since its inception. Secor is a multi-instrumentalist, playing fiddle, banjo, harmonica, guitar and other instruments, and is known for infusing old-time Americana and Appalachian music with more modern punk influences.[1]
Secor's first musical instrument was a mouth harp purchased on a field trip when he was in the fourth grade.[citation needed] In the seventh grade, Secor met future bandmate Christopher "Critter" Fuqua. Secor and Fuqua began playing music together, performing open mics at the Little Grill diner in Harrisonburg, where they met Robert St. Ours, founder of The Hackensaw Boys. Secor and St. Ours joined to form the Route 11 Boys.[5]
While traveling and busking with Fuqua, Secor met Old Crow Medicine Show co-founder Willie Watson in upstate New York, and Kevin Hayes in Maine, where he worked raking blueberries.[4] The newly formed group decided to call themselves "Old Crow Medicine Show" in honor of the traveling variety shows, or medicine shows, that roamed the American West in the 1800s. In 1998, the group recorded a 10-song album called Trans:mission and went on their first tour in October 1998, performing across Canada.[6]
In 1999, Secor and bandmates moved to Boone, North Carolina, settling in a rural barn with no running water, where they worked on their music (and learned to make corn whiskey). In 2000, the group were busking outside Boone Drug downtown on King Street when the daughter of folk-country legend Doc Watson heard them playing, and brought her father back to hear them. Doc invited them to play in his annual MerleFest music festival in Wilkesboro, North Carolina.[7] The gig proved to be a big break for the band, resulting in an invitation to play at the Grand Ole Opry where they met and were mentored by Marty Stuart, and got the opportunity to open for Dolly Parton at the Ryman Auditorium.[8]
"Wagon Wheel"
Secor is known for co-writing Old Crow Medicine Show's biggest hit and signature song, "Wagon Wheel", which started as a short snippet recorded by Bob Dylan in 1973 called "Rock Me, Mama" — extended by Secor to include new verses about feeling homesick for the south and hitchhiking his way home.[4] Years later he and Dylan signed a co-writing agreement, agreeing to a 50–50 split in authorship. The final version of the song was released on their second album O.C.M.S. (2004), and was certified Gold in 2011 and Platinum in 2013 by the Recording Industry Association of America. The song has been covered many times, notably by Nathan Carter in 2012 and Darius Rucker in 2013, whose version hit #1 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart.[4]
Publisher
In May 2024 it was announced Secor had signed a "global publishing administration deal" with Sony Music Publishing Nashville.[9] CEO Rusty Gaston said of the arrangement:
Ketch Secor is more than a ‘fiddler in an old-time string band’, he’s a brilliant storyteller. He writes songs that tell the tales of the rural American spirit. A one-of-a-kind talent and a one-of-a-kind human, we couldn’t be prouder to welcome Ketch to the SMP Nashville family.
Writing
In 2018, Secor published Lorraine: The Girl Who Sang the Storm Away with illustrator Higgins Bond, a children's book inspired by Appalachian folktales about a young African-American girl and her grandfather who weather a severe storm with the help of music.[10][11][12]
Film and television
Secor appeared on three episodes of the Ken Burns documentary miniseries Country Music (2019),[13] as well as the live concert special Country Music: Live at the Ryman (2019).[14]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ketch Secor.
Secor frequently collaborates and writes music with American bluegrassguitaristMolly Tuttle who occasionally tours and appears with Old Crow Medicine Show. In early 2023, it was reported that Secor and Tuttle are in a romantic relationship.[18]
^Biese, Alex. "Exploring Old Crow Medicine Show's New Jersey roots", Daily Record, September 15, 2016. Accessed April 13, 2024. "You may not know it from the deep and easy Southern drawl in his speaking voice, but Ketch Secor is a Jersey boy. Secor — the singer/songwriter who handles fiddle, banjo and harmonica duties for acclaimed Americana roots ensemble Old Crow Medicine Show — was born in the Morris County town of Denville."