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......................Al Tsacle................................Corey Welch..................Rachel Bennett.............Chuck Hurd.........................Ross Redding

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Ross Redding grew up in Concord and quickly developed his love and talent for singing and playing the guitar. When Ross joined the band in 1999 he knew very little about Bluegrass music but he learned to apply his country blues and swing jazz influences to this style of music. What he likes best about the bluegrass idiom is the variety of acoustic instruments all playing together with no room for timing or intonation mistakes. Ross now lives in Modesto with his wife and two daughters.
Chuck Hurd’s family settled in the Long Beach area when he was a young teen. He started playing the banjo at 13 and got hooked on bluegrass banjo when he heard the “Ballad of Jed Clampett” on TV. Chuck taught himself to play the banjo by listening to Flatt and Scruggs and Dillards records and continued to play during his high school and college years. He took a long break from the banjo when he began a career in the Army and then started playing again in 1996. Chuck joined the band in 2003.
Rachel Bennett showed exceptional talent in music when she was a young student in Monterey. She mastered both the guitar and the mandolin at an early age. Rachel is also an outstanding singer and composer. The band regularly performs her original compositions and has included some of her work in the latest Fog Valley Drifters CD - Old Songs For New Times.
Cory has been making music since age 10, starting with a cheap guitar and a transistor radio for a teacher. Over the ensuing 50 (almost) years, Cory has dabbled in nearly all the bluegrass instruments but now focuses on bass and dobro. He's also a bi-lingual guitar player, with one foot in bluegrass and another in celtic, serving as the drop-D rhythm section in a Salinas area celtic ensemble.

Al Tsacle is a founding member of the band. He hails from San Francisco, where he began his musical career with classical training at the Ghiel Irving Parsons violin school. He played in the San Francisco youth symphony orchestra and was a member of the Beethoven Trio. In the late 1960s Al switched from classical to folk music and played for many years with the popular bay area Balkan folk band, The Merakledes. He began to play Bluegrass music in 1996 when the Fog Valley Drifters band was formed by a group of professors at California State University Stanislaus.