The
Inbread Brothers

Ingber, Dingus and
Rebus

dulcimer, guitar, mandolin,
national guitar, fiddle

Folk Music from the Appalachians
and the Ozarks




Back in them good ol' days!
left to right:
Dingus, Ma Inbread, Ingber and Rebus with puppydog

 

zur Deutschen Version

 

They’re a treasury of authentic American Folkmusic, as it has been played for the last 200 years and still is played in some remote trailer parks of the southeast of the United States on weddings, beddings, bar mitzwahs and burials.

Born in one of these remote trailer parks in East Tokio, Arkansas, Ingber, Dingus and Rebus Inbread have been used to hardship and misery from an early age. Says Ingber:"Back in them Old Days, when we were little Boys, oftentimes there wusn’t as much food fer us toddlers as a little bit of cornbread an‘ a lump of gravy. Had to wrassle the houn’dawgs fer it, too.

That’s when pa was mindin‘ the stills an‘ ma was goin‘ wild with the girls in town or with that dentist from Illinois. So sumtimes our uncle Fester would watch out after me an‘ Dingus an‘ our little brother Rebus an‘ learn us how to sing them old songs, how to pick an old guitar, strum a dulcimer or slide on the steelguitar while he was manhandlin the little handmandolin. He was a great musicianer, was uncle Fester. An‘ playin‘ music was all he could do since he went blind; some say from drinkin‘ his own moonshine whiskey, others say from when his whiskey still blew up in his face."

So enjoy the real hillbilly style balladeering with the Inbread Brothers.

 

 

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