2024 SamJam Bluegrass Festival

August 28 - September 1, 2024

Pike County Fairgrounds

Piketon, OH

The award-winning SamJam Bluegrass Festival is a five-day event in the days leading up to Labor Day in Piketon, Ohio. The festival features the most recognizable names in bluegrass music. SamJam also includes a youth music camp, the Pinecastle Records National Band Competition and a cornhole tournament, among other features.

 

The SamJam Hop kicks off the 2024 festival on Wednesday, August 28 with fans getting a taste of southern Ohio at local music venues before the festival shifts to the Pike County Fairgrounds, a picturesque setting in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains with accommodations for more than 300 electric and water hookups for campers. Primitive camping is also available.

 

For more information on the festival contact Sam Karr at (812) 699-0962 or Rick Greene at (740) 547-9059.

2024 SAMJAM BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL LINEUP

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28

SamJam Hop (Locations/Bands TBD)

THURSDAY, AUGUST 29

1 & *4 p.m. - David Mayfield Parade

2 & 6 p.m. - Dave Adkins Band

3 & 7 p.m. - Lonesome River Band

8 p.m. - The Grascals

Close - Gary Nichols Band

FRIDAY, AUGUST 30

1 & *4 p.m. - Tidalwave Road

2 & 6 p.m. - Turning Ground

3 p.m. - Tim Shelton Syndicate

7 p.m. - Tim Shelton Syndicate (with Ronnie Bowman)

8 p.m. - Balsam Range

Close - Scythian

SATURDAY, AUGUST 31

1 & *4 p.m. - Drivin' 23

2 & 6 p.m. - Blue Mafia

3 p.m. - Amanda Cook Band

7 p.m. - The Goodwin Brothers

8 p.m. - The Steeldrivers

Close - Sideline Revisited

(Featuring Steve Dilling, Skip Cherryholmes,

Troy Boone, Bailey Coe, and Daniel Greeson)

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1

*1 p.m. - Wild Son

(Other performances TBD)

Note: All performances identified with an asterisk (*) will be part of the Budweiser Showcase and will occur in the Budweiser Beer Garden. On Sunday, the popular SamJam After Party will also include a DJ and karoake, along with a cornhole tournament.


HOME OF THE RAGHEADS

Sometimes great things start from simple beginnings.

In the early 1970s, Al Taylor and his best friend Sam Karr strolled into a Holiday Inn in Lexington, Kentucky. A bluegrass band was playing there, one with a phenomenal guitar player with a smooth voice, a riveting mandolin player who would later become a household name in country music, a hard-driving banjo player who reinvented the instrument, a dobro player who changed the way bluegrass music would be performed, and a bass player who brought a deepness to the sound that was part of the reason the band became one of the most recognizable groups in the genre’s history.

The band was J.D. Crowe and the New South, and the banjo player was joined by Tony Rice, Ricky Skaggs, Jerry Douglas and Bobby Slone. The two men were so taken with the sound of the band that they made routine trips to that location from their northern Kentucky homes. But that is just the beginning of the story.

In 1974, they attended the inaugural Festival of the Bluegrass at Lexington’s Masterson Station Park. Joining them there, were two little boys – 10-year-old Sammy Karr and 8-year-old Robby Taylor. The two sons were in the process of beginning a bluegrass phenomenon without their late fathers even knowing it.

After the boys got lost at the festival, the two worried fathers decided the boys had to wear full-sized, white towels on their heads so they were easy to locate. The boys grew tired of the cumbersome towels and later decided to tear off strips and tie them around their heads, something their fathers later imitated. A lady at one festival announced loudly, “There go them ol’ Ragheads.”

The towel strips stuck, the name stuck and now, some 40 years later, the Ragheads have stuck as the original community of bluegrass music followers with international representation and thousands of members from every walk of life.

They are young and old, rich and poor, men and women, but mostly fans of a music that has in some way shaped their lives and told relatable stories that celebrate humanity with songs about love, sorrow, struggle, spirit, perseverance and maybe a little moonshine.

So at many bluegrass festivals, Ragheads are in attendance and easily recognizable with a strip of a white towel wrapped around their heads. But the towel represents more than just a fan, it is a symbol of family, a bluegrass family that is always growing and welcoming of others who respect bluegrass music and its rich history.