This is the story of how the music in the Grammy Nominated Old-Time Smoky Mountain Music CD was originally recorded and includes historical insights into the language spoken in the Smoky Mountains. An excerpt from Smokies Life magazine produced by Great Smoky Mountains Association, official non-profit partner of Great Smoky Mountains National Park.https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu_books/1165/thumbnail.jp
This double-sided sheet of paper lists the words to a dozen songs, including “To Appalachian Trail” ...
Music has always been a highly valued tradition in the Appalachian region. Centuries of stories have...
This paper explores the ballad singing tradition of the Southern Appalachian mountains, with a parti...
This is the story of how the music in the Grammy Nominated Old-Time Smoky Mountain Music CD was or...
Excerpt: The 2016 album On Top of Old Smoky: New Old-Time Smoky Mountain Music paid tribute to the 4...
A stingy man “won’t drink branch water till there’s a flood,” and it is “a mighty triflin’ sort o’ m...
As a performer, teacher, and scholar, I have interpreted Appalachian music in a range of venues (cla...
This 431-page manuscript is titled “Joe Hall tapes” and covers a series of interviews made by Joseph...
[Compilation CD featuring 1950s-era field recordings] Recently recovered recordings of Haywood Count...
In the Blue Ridge Mountains along the Virginia-North Carolina border, an extraordinarily rich musica...
Old Time music has historically been associated with the Appalachian region even though many practit...
Excerpt: Visitors to the Crooked Road and the Mountains of Music Homecoming will hear both old time ...
Appalachian communities in the 1930s and 40s experienced an unprecedented displacement from the New ...
The well-known old-time tune, “Turkey in the Straw,” has its roots in Scottish fiddling and early Am...
The Johnson City Sessions were held in Johnson City, Tennessee in October 1928 and October 1929. Thi...
This double-sided sheet of paper lists the words to a dozen songs, including “To Appalachian Trail” ...
Music has always been a highly valued tradition in the Appalachian region. Centuries of stories have...
This paper explores the ballad singing tradition of the Southern Appalachian mountains, with a parti...
This is the story of how the music in the Grammy Nominated Old-Time Smoky Mountain Music CD was or...
Excerpt: The 2016 album On Top of Old Smoky: New Old-Time Smoky Mountain Music paid tribute to the 4...
A stingy man “won’t drink branch water till there’s a flood,” and it is “a mighty triflin’ sort o’ m...
As a performer, teacher, and scholar, I have interpreted Appalachian music in a range of venues (cla...
This 431-page manuscript is titled “Joe Hall tapes” and covers a series of interviews made by Joseph...
[Compilation CD featuring 1950s-era field recordings] Recently recovered recordings of Haywood Count...
In the Blue Ridge Mountains along the Virginia-North Carolina border, an extraordinarily rich musica...
Old Time music has historically been associated with the Appalachian region even though many practit...
Excerpt: Visitors to the Crooked Road and the Mountains of Music Homecoming will hear both old time ...
Appalachian communities in the 1930s and 40s experienced an unprecedented displacement from the New ...
The well-known old-time tune, “Turkey in the Straw,” has its roots in Scottish fiddling and early Am...
The Johnson City Sessions were held in Johnson City, Tennessee in October 1928 and October 1929. Thi...
This double-sided sheet of paper lists the words to a dozen songs, including “To Appalachian Trail” ...
Music has always been a highly valued tradition in the Appalachian region. Centuries of stories have...
This paper explores the ballad singing tradition of the Southern Appalachian mountains, with a parti...