Author Archives
Breaking Up Christmas
When Christmas is over, the fun is just getting started for many in Southern Appalachia.
The tradition of “Breaking Up Christmas” is a week-long series of gatherings, where people get together in each other’s homes and jam until the wee hours of the morning. Many generations participate, and it’s a really wonderful way for the community to come together and wind down the holiday season.
The Spencer Family — who form the core members of the Whitetop Mountain Band — and Wayne Henderson — legendary luthier — both regularly hold “Breaking Up Christmas” jam sessions in their homes. Here’s a video of a jam session in Wayne’s home, featuring the Wilkesboro, NC-based band, the Kruger Brothers.
These celebrations are rooted in the old mumming traditions from Ireland, Scotland and the old world. These are essentially visitations – a group of men would bust into a house and perform plays and other festive performances in homes. Back then they would wear masks and do it for little bits of money and gifts. But now, they do it for what they love best, which is music.
This isn’t just for professional musicians or folks who are real virtuosos of their instruments. It’s also beginners, folks who just picked up a fiddle or guitar for the first time. That’s one of the great aspects of this tradition. It’s what keeps it strong and will into the future.
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The Paschall Brothers and Tidewater Gospel Quartets
A Virginia-based a cappella quartet earned the “gospel album of the year” award at the 2009 Independent Music Awards. The Paschall Brothers of Chesapeake sing four-part harmony in a style with a storied tradition. Virginia State Folklorist Jon Lohman has more.
See video of the Paschall Brothers performing as part of the 2009 Richmond Folklife Festival’s “Sacred Sounds, Sacred Spaces” area.
On the Right Road Now, a CD co-produced by the Virginia Folklife Program and Smithsonian Folkways Recordings, won the IMA 2009 “Gospel Album of the Year” award.
Learn about the Paschall Brothers’ first cd, Songs for our Father, produced by the Virginia Folklife Program.
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Acoustic Youth
Many of the musicians who perform at fiddler’s conventions and music festivals throughout southern Appalachia are, in fact, young kids.
Late in the night, long past their bedtimes, children and teenagers can be found jamming alongside seasoned musicians at festivals. Sometimes, it’s the youngest in the circle that is leading with a solo and pushing the pace. In this month’s “Folklife FieldNote,” I share cuts from my archive recordings of remarkable young musicians who are keeping bluegrass and old time musical traditions vibrant.
See video of Will Jones jamming at age 14 and at age 18
Website of Will Jones’s family band – the Cana Ramblers
Adam Larkey and Mountain Time homepage
Fiddlin’ Carson Peters on MySpace
Wondering who that was at the end of the piece singing the Beatles’ tune? That was Avery Deacons, 14, of Johnson City, TN.
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Flory Jagoda
“Don’t open your mouth. Just sit and play. Keep on playing.”
Flory Jagoda (photo right) sings songs she learned from her nona (grandmother) as a child in pre-WWII Sarajevo – songs which have been passed down in her family since they fled the Spanish Inquisition in 1492. All of her ballads are sung in Ladino, a Judeo-Spanish language dating back centuries. Today, Flory is known as “the keeper of the flame” of the once rich Saphardic Jewish song tradition. In 2002, Flory received a National Heritage Fellowship, a remarkable honor bestowed upon only four other Virginians in the past.
I visited with Flory at her home in Northern Virginia and she told me the remarkable role her accordion played as she escaped the holocaust as a young girl.
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Old Jimmy Sutton Full Recordings
Retired tobacco farmer and songster Spencer Moore performs Old Jimmy Sutton for Jon Lohman.
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The Old Jimmy Sutton
A masterful songster recorded by two folklorists, fifty years apart.
When the late folklorist Alan Lomax set out on his now infamous “Southern Journey” in 1959, he stopped in Chilhowie, Virginia to record a tobacco farmer named Spencer Moore. Spencer was quite well known locally for his weekly appearances on the “Farm Fun Time” radio program out of Bristol, and for his spirited singing and guitar playing. Spencer enthralled Lomax with his playing, and with the sheer breadth of his repertoire. Spencer still lives in Chilhowie, and while he no longer farms tobacco, he plays regularly at weekly jams and dances throughout the region. No one can say for sure how many songs Spencer Moore knows, but suffice it to say that it is well into the thousands.
One of my greatest thrills as a folklorist was pulling up to Spencer’s house some fifty years after he was visited by Lomax. I recorded Spencer playing numerous songs from his vast repertoire, including Lomax’s favorite “Old Jimmy Sutton.”
In this tune, Spencer is essentially calling a dance. The tune is for dancing, for people enjoying each other and entertaining each other. And Spencer’s still doing that. At 88 years old, he’s going to fiddlers’ conventions and jam sessions all over southwest Virginia.
- Jon Lohman’s full recording of Old Jimmy Sutton
- Alan Lomax Collection at the Library of Congress
- Spencer Moore participated in an Alan Lomax tribute concert
Music Credits
Tracks:“Jimmy Sutton”
Artist: Spencer Moore
Album: AFC 2004/004, tape T857, tracks 3-5
Label: Alan Lomax Collection at the Library of Congress
Release: 1959
Tracks: “Jimmy Sutton”
Artist: Spencer Moore
Album: Unpublished recording
Label: Virginia Folklife Program at the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities
Release: n/a
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A Capoiera Master in Richmond
At a recent Richmond block party, Main Street looked like a scene from Sao Paolo, Brazil. Inside a circle of onlookers, two men played a Brazilian marshall art called Capoeira – a blend of theatre, dance, folklore and self-defense. Peter Solomon reports.
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Next Steps at Ferry Farm
Last month, archaeologists discovered the remains of George Washington’s Boyhood home. They also uncovered truckloads of artifacts—half-a-million and counting. Reporter Danielle Karson recently visited the lab where these pieces of history are being studied.
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Appalachian Reality
The Barter Theatre in Abingdon Virginia is nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains, hours from cities usually considered meccas of the arts. But each year the theatre proves the quality of locally produced work through the “Appalachian Festival of Plays and Playwrights.” Nancy King dropped in on a rehersal and filed this report.
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Ashley Bryan: A Life Celebrated
85 year-old Ashley Bryan, as a person of color, had to charge through a lot of racial barriers to become a published illustrator of children’s books. Bryan, who’s always creating something, was in Warm Springs last week to help a huge crowd of fans open a rare exhibition of his paintings at the Warm Springs Gallery. Reporter Martha Woodroof was there.
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