And he’s not a bad younger sibling either. “Hell, I used to change his diapers,” says Rhonda Vincent, 60, with a laugh during a new interview with Individuals.

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“Right from the beginning, Darrin had a natural talent that I’ve not really found in anyone else.”

Indeed, the talented brother and sister are only two individuals from the multi-generational, Missouri-reared Vincent family who have practically spent their whole lives making music.

“I recall that we were playing Silver Dollar City [amusement par] and Darrin wasn’t exceptionally old, yet he went to my dad and said, ‘I’m going to do the fiddle break,’” Rhonda Vincent recollects of her days growing up in Missouri. “My dad diverted to him and said from the side of his mouth, ‘You don’t play the fiddle.’

However when the performance came up, Darrin just ran up, took the fiddle, and started playing. It was incredible.”

What may be much more incredible is that now, years later, Vincent has made history alongside her brother as the main brother and sister to have separate Grand Ole Opry participations. “I think it’s a real testament to our parents,” explains Rhonda Vincent, who was inducted into the Grand Ole Opry earlier this year.

“They raised us. We were playing music consistently. And I’m so thankful.

Presently we can pause for a minute or two and say, ‘Man, our parents really prepared us for what we’re doing these days.’”

Vincent is also feeling very thankful these days for the potential chance to sing alongside her brother on Dailey and Vincent’s brand-new album How about we Sing Some Country.

“Getting to sing with my brothers (Vincent’s brother Brian also occasionally sings with the family bunch) resembles finding the final piece of the riddle,” says Vincent, who is featured singing alongside her brother Darrin and Dailey and Vincent’s Jamie Dailey on songs like the touching “Those Recollections.”

“We sing with other individuals all the time, however at that point when we get together and sing together, that piece of that puzzle simply fits in there impeccably.”

“We finally picked songs that really accommodated our voices,” adds Darrin Vincent of the two collaborations with his sister on the new album We should Sing Some Country, which fills in as Dailey and Vincent’s initial official endeavor into the down home music space, despite the fact that the pair has long performed various sorts of music for their loyal fans.

“Individuals started coming to our concerts over the last five or six years asking for the bluegrass songs and the gospel songs, yet they were also asking for the down home songs,” says Jamie Dailey of the inspiration behind the Paul Worley-delivered album that also includes collaborations with Vince Gill, Jimmy Fortune, and Alison Krauss.

“We had to expand our band to have the option to accommodate the music that they wanted to hear on the road.

In this way, it just became kind of natural for us to do a nation record in our style of country.” And it probably won’t be the last time they check blue grass music out.

“On the off chance that everything lines up right, we’ll probably follow [this album] up with a second, maybe even a third one not too far off,” says Darrin Vincent.

“And obviously, later on, we want to do another gospel record and we want to do another bluegrass record.”

All in all, might Rhonda Vincent at any point be the close to check down home music out? “I love the music and I love traditional down home music and getting to sing that on occasion, yet I probably wouldn’t,” she admits with a laugh. “I cannot envision myself doing that!”

— Winter Village Music (@IthacaBluegrass) February 20, 2022