This Bluegrass Session will be a Celebration of Jim Rollins’ life.  Jim was a well loved member of our bluegrass community who’s life tragically ended on Thursday, September 7th by a drunk driver.  Jim will be missed by all in our community. We invite friends of Jim to come join with us as we celebrate Jim’s life and the music he so loved.

Every Tuesday evening Isis presents our Tuesday Bluegrass Sessions. The sessions are hosted each week by a local bluegrass musician with friends or a band. Following the host band, Bluegrass musicians from the Asheville area gather on stage to jam in an open session. Occasionally, we feature a touring band that will perform prior to the open session and help co-host the jam. It’s always a great evening of music and community.

 

 

Celebrating Jim Rollins

7:30PM

Jim Rollins, life long banjo picker and friend to everyone in bluegrass, died Sept 7th in Greenville County, SC after his car was struck by another vehicle. He was 54 years of age.

According to the Greenville County Coroner, Jim was heading south on Interstate 385 when his car was struck by another driving at a high rate of speed traveling in the same direction. When Jim’s car was hit in the rear, it spun off the road and he was thrown from the vehicle. His death was ruled as caused by blunt force trauma to the head.

In addition to being a fine banjo player, who worked with Jimmy Martin & The Sunny Mountain Boys in his youth, Jim was an avid student of prewar Gibson flathead banjos. He felt himself honored to own one himself, an RB-75 built between 1937 and 1940, known colloquially as the Reverend Odell banjo. Jim was always quick to share its history with anyone who asked.

Rollins worked as an engineer for General Electric and lived in Simpsonville, SC. In recent years, he had performed as a member of the West End String Band, based in South Carolina.

Known to some in the banjo world as Jimmy, he was a fixture at banjo contests and conventions, like the annual Banjothon in Knoxville, the Galax fiddlers convention, and RenoFest. Soft spoken and friendly, a chance encounter could lead to a quick friendship, and most every professional banjo player or prewar enthusiast will recall meeting and talking with him at some point.

Another Simpsonville man has been charged with felony DUI in Rollins’ death.

R.I.P., Jim Rollins.

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