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Making Music: The Banjo in a Southern Appalachian County with Author Dr. William Allsbrook
May 16 @ 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
FREEJoin Dr. William Allsbrook, author of Making Music: The Banjo in a Southern Appalachian County, as he explores the way in which the art of banjo playing grew in the mountains of Western North Carolina. The program will feature a selection of the 32 interviews that Dr. Allsbrook conducted with Banjo players from Haywood County, NC in order to help create his book.
The Following is a description of Making Music: The Banjo in a Southern Appalachian County written by the University of Mississippi Press:
“The banjo has been emblematic of the Southern Appalachian Mountains since the late twentieth century. Making Music: The Banjo in a Southern Appalachian County takes a close look at the instrument and banjo players in Haywood County, North Carolina. Author William C. Allsbrook Jr., MD, presents the oral histories of thirty-two banjo players, all but two of whom were born in Haywood County. These talented musicians recount, in their own words, their earliest memories of music, and of the banjo, as well as the appeal of the banjo. They also discuss learning to play the instrument, including what it “feels like” playing the banjo, many describing occasional “flow states.”
In the book, Allsbrook explores an in-home musical folkway that developed along the colonial frontier. By the mid-1800s, frontier expansion had ceased in Haywood County due to geographic barriers, but the in-home musical tradition, including the banjo, survived in largely isolated areas. Vestiges of that tradition remain to this day, although the region has undergone significant changes over the lifetimes of the musicians interviewed. As a result, the survival of the in-home tradition is not guaranteed. Readers are invited into the private lives of the banjo players and asked to consider the future of the banjo in the face of contemporary trends. The future will be shaped by how this remarkable mountain culture continues to adapt to these challenges. Still, this thriving community of banjo players represents the vibrant legacy of the banjo in Haywood County and the persistence of tradition in the twenty-first century.”
The program will begin at 6pm and is free to the public. Please click here to register in advance.