The People and
Their Music
from Musical Instruments of the Southern Appalachian Mountains by John Rice Irwin, founder of the Museum of Appalachia
Music has always played an important
part in the lives of the people of this
Appalachian region. Even in the most remote
mountain cabin, shy of furniture and cooking
utensils, one often finds two or three musical
instruments. Folks valued their music and
the took it quite seriously, although they may
never have played outside the confines of their
homes.
This attitude is illustrated by the
following anecdote: My longtime friend,
Jacob, one of twenty-six children, was talking to
me in his tiny three-room house in confidential
tones while his wife was out back chopping wood.
Jake played the fiddle a little for himself, his
brothers, and his neighbors. He had a cow
and a garden and otherwise just loafed around
while his wife worked in town. And in the
most serious manner he looked over his glasses at
me and said, "the old woman complains to me
because I don't keep the firewood cut, but every
time I start choppin' wood, my hands git stiff and
sore and hit makes it hard fer me to play the
fiddle."
And so Jake sat in a broken down old
chair before the fire and patted his big foot as
he wailed out an old tune called "Cumberland Gap"
on the fiddle. And as he did so, we could
hear the ringing of the axe as his good wife
buried it deep in the green hickory outside in the
cold.
______________________
The Museum of Appalachia has supported traditional
music for over a quarter of a century, both in its
preservation of physical
artifacts that relate the story of a region's
music, and in its efforts to provide performance
venues for artists who preserve the old musical
styles.
In addition to the popular
Tennessee Fall Homecoming,
our
Porch Musician Project (funded in part by the
Tennessee Arts Commission's Art Builds Communities
program) provides live, daily performance of
authentic old-time music to the thousands of
people who tour the Museum each year, often
introducing visitors for the first time to a type
of music they have never heard before. We
are proud of our Porch Musician Project and
believe that it makes a valuable contribution to
the preservation of our State's tradition and
history.
|
The Museum of Appalachia is open during daylight hours
year-round, except Christmas Day. Closing times
vary with the seasons, depending upon daylight hours.
Please telephone for exact hours of closing. Folk Art
| Mountain Music | Gardens
| Collections Restaurant
| Tennessee Fall Homecoming | July 4th & Anvil Shoot | Christmas in Old Appalachia
privacy
policy
Museum of Appalachia
P.O. Box 1189; Norris, TN 37828 (865)
494-7680 E-mail us at:
museumappalachia@bellsouth.net
Please send comments concerning this website to: janicemcclelland@bellsouth.net
|