Pictures and Words

Friday, March 30, 2007

Appalachian Music

I will always enjoy music (no, love music!) and so I have decided today's video will be one I just saw on AppalShop's YouTube page. The text below the video is by the musician. I will let it all speak for itself.

"My name is Michael Garvin, I'm twenty-two years old. I live in Greenup County, Kentucky, in Flatwoods, and I've been playing fiddle for four, going on five years—learning a lot of old-time fiddling from my local area, part of Eastern Kentucky. There's a lot of musicians in my family. My grandparents played music. There's a lot of instruments around the house, so I picked 'em up when I was young. Started playing guitar when I was about ten years old, learned many different guitar styles—loved the Earl Travis, thumb-picking Kentucky style of music, there. That was my first love. I liked promoting that kind of guitar playing, too. Here in the past few years, I've really been obsessed with learning fiddle tunes.The music up around that area, there's a lot more bluegrass, there's a lot less old-time. Though there is a lot of bluegrassers up in that area, I enjoy that kind of music, too. But there's not many programs for traditional music in my area, and really I think down here in Whitesburg, they've got the biggest old-time thing in Eastern Kentucky. It's a small community. You know, Flatwoods is not highly populated. Still out in the country—kind of grabbed up a bit of country and city. I've experienced a little bit of both. That's kind of a privilege—I've been on a farm and I know what it be like, but I never had to do it, never had to be a farmhand, so it's good.It's great to have a tradition to hold on to, and I'm glad that there is a lot of kids interested in that nowadays. There'd been a generation gap of fiddlers for a long time, and I think it seems like in this new millennium, or something, all these traditions are being revived. And fiddling is one of them. I've seen a lot of good fiddlers, it impresses me a lot, makes me want to keep trying harder, to keep the old-time in its place, too. I try to keep on these old-time tunes so I can show them to another generation. It's hard to keep 'em all in your head, though. "
Appalachian Artist: Michael Garvin

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