Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Songcatcher


Anyone who is just getting involved in mountain music, should make it a point to watch the movie "Songcatcher." Songcatcher is the story of a woman named Lilly, a music teacher from the northeast who visits her sister in rural western North Carolina. While escaping the pressures of her job as a professor, she discovers that the same old ballads she was teaching in Boston are writhing and pulsing in the mountain people's everyday life. This fairly recent film not only explains the origins and of old time music, it does it in a stunningly beautiful way. Filmed right in the southern Appalachians where the first ballads were discovered, it features several songs you'll be learning on the fiddle in no time. Songs like Pretty Saro, Old Joe Clark, and Sally Goodin. It's important to see the not only the people singing them, but the culture that surrounds it - how the hollers cooked and fermented those old Scott/Irish ballads and made them into something new.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Dulcimer too!


Above is a picture of my dulcimer taken at a streamside jam back in 2006 in the smokey mountains. Like the fiddle, dulcimers are portable, easy to play and perfect for campfires and fireplaces alike! The Green Mountain Old Time Association, has plans to not only help people get started in the fiddle but also the Dulcimer. If you or anyone you know in the area would like to learn this calming, beautiful instrument (that also has the ability to get down and dirty at a barn dance), than let them know lessons are also available at the cabin. Just like with fiddle students, I can help you get a student dulcimer to learn from.

The difference


Modern Bluegrass has nothing to do with modern country music, and the three camps seem fairly arms-crossed and certain about that. But behind both of them is Old-Time. Which, whenever I say that to people who aren’t familiar with it, seem to get this glazed-over look of arthritic sarsaparilla drinking Alzheimer patients clapping their hands at a flat picked guitar.

No.

Old Time music means exactly that. That is comes from an older time in musical history than recent acoustic mountain incarnations. Old Time is the merging of Scotch/Irish reels, jigs, hornpipes and slides and the rhythm and energy of African music. Like all great American music. Throw in some old English Ballads about murder, love and vengence and you've got it. This blending of white and African sound made mountain music what it is. Energetic and heart racing or somber and lonesome at others. It has it’s own heartbeat of deep African drums and it’s arteries and ventricles are immigrants like the Italian mandolin, the Irish fiddle, the Cuban guitar and the German dulcimer. For an “American” invention, it is completely non-native. But like most things that are great about this country, it takes the best things of so many different cultures and fuses them together to create brand new animals. Think jazz, baseball, and the south beach diet. (I kid about that last one)

So, no disrespect to Bluegrass, which I recently would happily prefer to listen too than 70% of other types of music, but it is not old-time. To us historians it’s the excessive dressing up and nickel plating of something already utilitarian in it’s perfection.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Classes Starting Soon!


People have been signing up for classes, hoping to start them next Sunday. Call or email if you would be interested in a 6pm time slot Sunday afternoons. Also, if you are brand new to fiddling and have no instrument to speak of, I found a dealer who has decent beginner outfits that include a violin, case, bow, rosin and some other extras for around $60.00. Which is what you pay to get takeout pizza three times and learning to play the fiddle is totally worth that. These fiddles are maple backed and sided and have a bear claw spruce top. The bows are real horse hair.