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In 1967 The Byrds rented a studio in Nashville and hired local musicians, including John Hartford and Clarence White, to record an album about American musical history, based on hillbilly, country and bluegrass. Directed by producer Pete Asher, the Byrds recorded the album InchSweetheart Of The RodeoInch. John Hartford's influence as guitarist and banjo player on this production has been considered enormous. The album is seen as a milestone in rock history, it was the birth of the new genre country rock, nowadays also called Americana.But there was no room in John Hartford's life to submit himself artistically to a band structure. He preferred to record solo albums and toured with them worldwide. In the same year that saw the of InchSweetheart Of The RodeoInch, the American country star Glen Campbell covered the John Hartford composition InchGentle On My MindInch. The song conquered the world in the Campbell version and earned Hartford two Grammys in that same year. John Hartford once said InchThe success with InchGentle On My MindInch brought me my freedomInch.Which allowed him to fulfill a dream, working several years as helmsman on a paddle steamer on his beloved Mississippi.In February 1977, during one of his rare tours of Europe, John Hartford also had a gig in Bremen, which was recorded by Radio Bremen. A great recording, entertaining, exciting, multifarious.Many years later, in 2000, shortly before his death, John Hartford topped his extraordinary life's work once again with contributions to the soundtrack of the Mississippi odyssey InchO Brother, Where Art Thou?Inch by the Coen Brothers, starring George Clooney. In 2001 he received another Grammy for this work. This is a further recognition of John's life's work, the preservation of traditional American music to ensure it does not disappear in the short-lived mainstream, losing it's significance. On June 4,