Skaggs’ first foray as a musician began at the tender age of five, when he played alongside his father at church and in other neighborhood performances.
In the years since, Skaggs has played with Bill Monroe, Emmylou Harris, The Country Gentleman, Phish and Bruce Hornsby, and is also the youngest person to be inducted into the Grand Ole Opry. For Skaggs, it is his realization that his talent could serve as a gift for others that has enabled him to have a successful and rewarding career.
“One of the things that I try to tell young musicians and singers is that their gifts were given to them for a purpose,” he says. “I tell them to let the music flow through them and out to others. That they get to enjoy playing it and singing it, but that the listener out there is the one that’s going to get the best part of it. They’re going to get the blessing of the song. They’re going to get the blessing of the music.”
In order to best share his talents with others, Skaggs, who still performs with the mandolin his father gifted to him as a child, relies on classic instruments and equipment. “My mics of choice have always been Neumann,” he says. “I started buying ‘em early, when I came to Nashville. CBS was going out of the studio business, so I got my first 47 there. I love that vocal mic, I used it so much on my early records and on so many people, so I got another one.”
After that Skaggs continued to seek out Neumann microphones, including the U 67, U 64 and KM 64.