COALTON —
The first question musicians had to answer after their opening number for a school group concerned the difference between a violin and a fiddle.
Structurally they are the same instrument, said Jesse Wells, education director at the Kentucky Center for Traditional Music at Morehead State University.
The difference is more a matter of musical tradition, he explained. Put shortly, violinists learn by the book where fiddlers learn from each other.
While sheet music has its place, fiddlers, especially in the heart of Appalachia, listen to one another and try to replicate what they hear.
You could say that about all the musicians in the Old Time String Band, which played a morning concert at Ashland Community and Technical College’s EastPark campus Monday.
It was one in a series of performances in the Smithsonian Institution’s “New Harmonies: Celebrating American Roots Music” exhibit.
The musicians are Morehead State students who are steeping themselves in Appalachia’s traditional tunes.
They started their performance with a fiddle piece, “Angeline the Baker, played by Linda Stokley.
A bit later, Ellen Kearney played “Juliana Johnson” on her mandolin. “You can clap along if you’d like,” she invited the children. They would like, it turned out, and clapped enthusiastically.
Kearney, who is from Nova Scotia, came to Morehead for two years after meeting Wells at a workshop. She came to her interest in Appalachian traditional music by way of the Celtic music tradition in her native land.
A professional session musician in her youth, Kearney played behind Maria Muldaur and other artists in the 1970s.
She found fertile musical ground in Morehead.
“I learned more about music and old-time music in the first two weeks of school than in 30 years,” she said. “There’s so much music here and so many people who play and play well.”
The Old Time String Band brings new blood into the Appalachian musical tradition, and that is important, Wells said. Their inheritance comes from generations of singers, songwriters, fiddlers, guitarists and banjo players.
The academic world is beginning to take traditional music seriously, said KCTM director Raymond McLain. The genre is following the same path as did jazz in the first part of the 20th century.
At first dismissed as insignificant popular tunes, jazz now is recognized for unique contributions to the world of music and the study of jazz is indispensible.
The same thing will happen with traditional music, McLain believes, and Morehead State is leading the way with a new traditional music major.
“There will be more and more programs and schools of higher education focused on traditional music,” he said.
MIKE JAMES can be reached at mjames@dailyindependent.com or
(606) 326-2652.
Local News
Playing their music from the Appalachian roots
- Local News
-
-
West Virginia man arrested for bank robbery
A West Virginia man has been arrested and charged with the robbery at the PNC Bank here on Tuesday afternoon.
- Secretary of Education coming to Louisville
-
New laws go into effect next week
New laws approved during the Kentucky General Assembly’s 2013 regular session go into effect on Tuesday.
-
Local in brief: 6/19/13
Southland Bible Institute’s training for high school students continues through Friday at the school at 238 W. Southland Drive.
-
Saturday's Flatwoods Music Festival will include tributes to Mike Murphy
The songs of Mike Murphy and Zachariah will be remembered and performed Saturday amid an afternoon and evening of free music at the annual Flatwoods Music Festival.
-
Local WinShape camp gaining steam
The WinShape Camps for Communities at Bridges Christian Church the first week of July are starting to draw considerable buzz.
-
Camp Invention full of science-based discovery
The formula for inventing a new machine, according to 9-year-old Hayden Wheeler, goes something like this: “First, I run it through my mind and plan it out, and then I make adjustments in my mind, and then I try it out.”
-
Boyd staying with same health plan
Boyd County officials heard pitches Tuesday for two new health care plans — one for employees, the other for inmates. Both claimed they could save taxpayers thousands of dollars in medical expenses over the coming year.
-
Sentencing in Carter drug trafficking case
Five people were sentenced to prison terms last week in a federal drug-trafficking case that involved selling cocaine and pills in Carter County, according to court documents.
-
19-year-old launching one-man food drive, ‘Cans for a Cause’
Never accuse Aaron Hannah of not being ambitious and failing to set high goals for himself.
Later this month, Hannah, a 19-year-old 2012 graduate of Raceland-Worthington High School, will launch what is essentially a one-man food drive. His goal: to collect at least 10,000 pounds of canned food for River Cities Harvest to distribute to local nonprofits and churches that help feed the hungry.
Hannah, who just completed his freshman year as a Bonner Scholar at Berea College, said scholars are encouraged, but not required, to do community projects designed to help the needy. - More Local News Headlines
-
West Virginia man arrested for bank robbery




