Down the Road on the Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina show

Down the Road on the Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina

Summary: Down the Road on the Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina features Laura Boosinger, celebrated musician, folklorist and storyteller, as host. In each segment, she highlights bluegrass and old-time music stories, performers and musical traditions across the 29 mountain and foothills counties included in the Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina footprint. Learn more at BlueRidgeMusicNC.com .

Podcasts:

 Down The Road BRMT | PODCAST: GLENN and LULA BOLICK Carry On Music - Craft Traditions | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

Glenn and Lula Bolick of Caldwell County are 2018 winners of the N.C. Heritage Award, the state’s highest honor for traditional artists. Lula is a member of the Owens family of Piedmont potters. Glenn grew up in a family whose heritage of music-making, sawmilling, and storytelling goes back generations. He carries on all three arts today, in addition to the pottery-making that he learned from Lula and her family. The "Down the Road on the Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina" podcast

 Down The Road BRMT | PODCAST: GLENN and LULA BOLICK Carry On Music - Craft Traditions | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

Glenn and Lula Bolick of Caldwell County are 2018 winners of the N.C. Heritage Award, the state’s highest honor for traditional artists. Lula is a member of the Owens family of Piedmont potters. Glenn grew up in a family whose heritage of music-making, sawmilling, and storytelling goes back generations. He carries on all three arts today, in addition to the pottery-making that he learned from Lula and her family. The "Down the Road on the Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina" podcast

 Down The Road BRMT | Marsha Bowman Todd Makes Her Mark In The Mountains | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

Many of today’s outstanding old-time and bluegrass musicians carry on longstanding family traditions. One such artist is multi-instrumentalist and flatfoot dancer Marsha Bowman Todd . A musician all her life, Marsha is one of the leading lights of the legendary musical community of Mount Airy, North Carolina. The "Down the Road on the Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina" podcast highlights bluegrass and old-time music stories, performers, and traditions across the mountain and foothills

 Down The Road BRMT | Marsha Bowman Todd Makes Her Mark In The Mountains | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

Many of today’s outstanding old-time and bluegrass musicians carry on longstanding family traditions. One such artist is multi-instrumentalist and flatfoot dancer Marsha Bowman Todd . A musician all her life, Marsha is one of the leading lights of the legendary musical community of Mount Airy, North Carolina. The "Down the Road on the Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina" podcast highlights bluegrass and old-time music stories, performers, and traditions across the mountain and foothills

 Down the Road BRMT | Ep. 36: Doc Watson Recalls Mountain Childhood | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

Arthel Lane Watson , better known as "Doc," grew up on Osborne Mountain in Watauga County, NC. Doc lost his sight to an eye infection before the age of one but he would grow up to become the most celebrated Appalachian musician ever. Doc talked about his childhood in an interview with David Holt , included on the 2001 Legacy box set.

 Down the Road BRMT | Ep. 36: Doc Watson Recalls Mountain Childhood | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

Arthel Lane Watson , better known as "Doc," grew up on Osborne Mountain in Watauga County, NC. Doc lost his sight to an eye infection before the age of one but he would grow up to become the most celebrated Appalachian musician ever. Doc talked about his childhood in an interview with David Holt , included on the 2001 Legacy box set.

 Down the Road BRMT | Ep. 35: Clarence Ashley Rediscovered in Folk Revival | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

Clarence “Tom” Ashley , a banjo player and guitarist from Mountain City, Tennessee, got his start in the medicine show circuit in the late 20s and 30s, but was “rediscovered” in the Folk Revival of the 1960s. Ashley’s famous solo recordings are probably “Dark Holler Blues” and its flip-side, “The Coo-Coo Bird,” both eerie clawhammer banjo performances recorded in late October of 1929. In the 1960s Ashley and his friends began to record with the addition of Doc Watson, then at the beginning of

 Down the Road BRMT | Ep. 35: Clarence Ashley Rediscovered in Folk Revival | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

Clarence “Tom” Ashley , a banjo player and guitarist from Mountain City, Tennessee, got his start in the medicine show circuit in the late 20s and 30s, but was “rediscovered” in the Folk Revival of the 1960s. Ashley’s famous solo recordings are probably “Dark Holler Blues” and its flip-side, “The Coo-Coo Bird,” both eerie clawhammer banjo performances recorded in late October of 1929. In the 1960s Ashley and his friends began to record with the addition of Doc Watson, then at the beginning of

 Down the Road BRMT | Ep. 34: Ray Hicks Made Folktales Come Alive | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

Ray Hicks grew up on a hardscrabble mountain farm on Beech Mountain. From his grandfather, young Hicks learned a dozen Jack tales, part of the rich storytelling tradition of the Appalachians. Standing nearly seven feet tall and illustrating his stories with animated expressions and gestures, Hicks was naturally engaging teller of tales. Alan Lomax once called him “the greatest of all American folktale tellers.” Ray Hicks received the National Heritage Award in 1983.

 Down the Road BRMT | Ep. 34: Ray Hicks Made Folktales Come Alive | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

Ray Hicks grew up on a hardscrabble mountain farm on Beech Mountain. From his grandfather, young Hicks learned a dozen Jack tales, part of the rich storytelling tradition of the Appalachians. Standing nearly seven feet tall and illustrating his stories with animated expressions and gestures, Hicks was naturally engaging teller of tales. Alan Lomax once called him “the greatest of all American folktale tellers.” Ray Hicks received the National Heritage Award in 1983.

 Down the Road BRMT | Ep. 33: Frank Proffitt Sang the Murder Ballad "Tom Dooley" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

In 1938, Frank Proffitt of Beech Mountain recorded the song “Tom Dooley.” The murder ballad tells the true-life tale of a Civil War love triangle that ended in the death of a young Wilkes County, N.C., woman named Laura Foster, and the hanging of Tom Dula for her murder. Twenty years later, the Kingston Trio recorded their own version, helping launch the Folk Revival of the 1960s. The album sold more than 3 million copies. Soon people all across the country were singing this song from the North

 Down the Road BRMT | Ep. 33: Frank Proffitt Sang the Murder Ballad "Tom Dooley" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

In 1938, Frank Proffitt of Beech Mountain recorded the song “Tom Dooley.” The murder ballad tells the true-life tale of a Civil War love triangle that ended in the death of a young Wilkes County, N.C., woman named Laura Foster, and the hanging of Tom Dula for her murder. Twenty years later, the Kingston Trio recorded their own version, helping launch the Folk Revival of the 1960s. The album sold more than 3 million copies. Soon people all across the country were singing this song from the North

 Down the Road BRMT | Ep. 32: Charlie Poole Pioneered Piedmont Banjo Style | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

One of the pioneers of country music, Charlie Poole was born in 1892 in Franklinville, a small town in Randolph County, NC. He played the banjo from an early age, and developed a distinctive three-finger style to compensate for a baseball injury. Poole was famous for his rough and rowdy ways, and you can hear the voice of experience when he sings songs of drinking and rambling. With his band the North Carolina Ramblers he made dozens of records between 1925 and 1930, mostly for Columbia Records.

 Down the Road BRMT | Ep. 32: Charlie Poole Pioneered Piedmont Banjo Style | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

One of the pioneers of country music, Charlie Poole was born in 1892 in Franklinville, a small town in Randolph County, NC. He played the banjo from an early age, and developed a distinctive three-finger style to compensate for a baseball injury. Poole was famous for his rough and rowdy ways, and you can hear the voice of experience when he sings songs of drinking and rambling. With his band the North Carolina Ramblers he made dozens of records between 1925 and 1930, mostly for Columbia Records.

 Down the Road BRMT | Ep. 31: Round Peak Artists Shaped Old-Time Style | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 180

Surry County’s Round Peak area, and the surrounding communities between Mount Airy, N.C., and Galax, Va., have shaped the sound of Old-Time music heard across the nation and around the world. Two of the best-known members of this tradition were Tommy Jarrell and Fred Cockerham . During the old-time music revival of the late 1960s to the mid-1980s, young musicians from all over visited Tommy and Fred and their fellow Round Peak artists, learning their tunes and enjoying their warm welcome.

Comments

Login or signup comment.