Bryan Sutton Announces From Roots to Branches, Vol. 1

Article Contributed by Mountain Home Music Company

Published on 2026-07-07

Bryan Sutton Announces From Roots to Branches, Vol. 1

“Who is the best guitar player around today?” was the question posed on-air by broadcaster Howard Stern to bluegrass phenom Billy Strings back in November of last year, and the answer came back almost instantaneously: “Well, I think Bryan Sutton is one of the best musicians that I know. I look up to him as a musician, and he’s kind of one of my mentors…he’s just a really musical cat.”

That’s high-level praise from a high-level colleague, but it’s nothing new when it comes to Sutton’s acclaimed career — and for the past year, he’s been releasing a steady stream of duet singles with a group of partners that includes, among others, a generous portion of younger talents to whom Sutton has been, as he has with Billy Strings, a mentor, model and friend. Now, those singles — along with two unreleased tracks, including a previously unheard duet with the legendary Tony Rice — have been collected into a Mountain Home Music Company release, From Roots to Branches, Vol. 1, that not only celebrates the 20th anniversary of Sutton’s 2006 all-duets release, Not Too Far From The Tree, but makes a compelling case that Strings hit the nail right on the head with his answer to Stern.

The album is now available for pre-save/add ahead of its August 28 release.

“I feel fortunate to be able to share what I've called these sort of ‘musical conversations’ with friends of mine,” Sutton says. “I am as much of a fan of any of these people as any other guitarist out there, or any music fan. And so to take the opportunity to sit more intimately, with just two guitars…what we have here in this project is kind of unique. So I'm excited to share that with people and to see people enjoy it.”

“Until I started talking to Mountain Home about what a release of all this stuff would look like,” he continues, “I never really knew exactly what I was going to do or what I wanted to happen. I knew that I wanted to try to collect a lot of duets; it sort of felt like I was just capturing things as I could and as these folks became available — and I kept on doing that even as the process of releasing the singles got under way. It’s not like I recorded a bunch of stuff and it sat in a can, or like we mixed everything all at once. And that’s kind of cool — I think that fits how I got into this in the first place: ‘let's just go and see how it may end.’ It's really more about a process than a result.”

Even so, the results have exceeded expectations, as each release found its place with eager listeners, and in the overarching scheme articulated when the series was first announced: a nod to the earlier project with previous unreleased duets from since-departed legends (Doc Watson, Tony Rice); exchanges with colleagues from beyond the bluegrass realm (Joe Bonamassa, Tommy Emmanuel); and a sizeable assortment of bluegrass colleagues ranging from his contemporary, Kenny Smith, to next generation players Trey Hensley, Sierra Hull, Jake Stargel, Chris Eldridge and Cody Kilby — and, of course, Billy Strings, whose collaboration on “The Devil Went Down to Deep Gap” features a full band backing Sutton’s and Strings’ flatpicking and heavy metal (!) exchanges that are as much duels as duets.

Watch the music video for “The Devil Went Down to Deep Gap.”

Listeners are sure to be especially excited about the collection’s focus track, a previously unreleased, early 2000s duet with Tony Rice on the venerable Carter Family song, “Storms Are on the Ocean,” which Sutton says honors the memory of Mountain Home founder Mickey Gamble, who passed away earlier this year.

“When I was leaving high school,” Sutton recalls, “I was hanging out at the Hear Here recording studio in Asheville, where Mickey Gamble would hire Tony to come in and produce records — and Tony did his great Crossings gospel record there with David Johnson and Tim Surrett. So it was a really neat place to be; I was trying to find my feet right out of high school, trying to make a career, and here’s Tony Rice hanging out. I would have coffee with him at the studio, or go to lunch and sit in his car and listen to Earl Klugh. So I see, in this new Tony Rice song, a connection both with Not Too Far From the Tree and with Mickey, who helped us meet each other so many years ago, and it feels like a cool way of bringing it all together.”

Partnered with masters long hailed as the finest exemplars of flatpicking, acclaimed contemporaries and newer players — some already renowned, others on their way — From Roots to Branches Vol. 1 places Bryan Sutton at the very center of today’s acoustic guitar scene.

Pre-save/add From Roots To Branches Vol. 1 HERE.

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