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Doc Watson: Traditional PlusOlson, Ted S. 01 January 2019 (has links) (PDF)
Excerpt: Blind from infancy, Arthel “Doc” Watson (1923-2012) was among the most acclaimed American roots musicians active during the second half of the 20th Century, and he remains influential and legendary in the 21st Century. A master of two acoustic guitar styles (flat-picking and finger-style) and highly skilled at playing old-time banjo and harmonica, Watson was also an expressive singer who possessed a resonant baritone voice and an extensive repertoire of traditional and contemporary songs.
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Introductory Essay on Charles A. Asbury's Life and Career [with Richard Martin]Martin, Richard, Olson, Ted S. 04 May 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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"Foreword"Olson, Ted S. 01 December 2018 (has links)
Book Summary: The Fellowship Independent Baptist Church near Stanley, Virginia, was a group of fundamental Christian believers broadly representative of southern Appalachian belief and practice. Jeff Todd Titon worked with this Baptist community for more than ten years in his attempt to determine the nature of language in the practice of their religion. He traces specialized vocabulary and its applications through the acts of being saved, praying, preaching, teaching, and in particular singing. Titon argues that religious language is performed and the context of its occurrence is crucial to our understanding and to a holistic view of not only religious practice but of folklife and ethnomusicology. Titon’s monumental study of The Fellowship Independent Baptist Church produced not only the first edition book but also an album and documentary film.
In this second edition of Powerhouse for God, Titon revisits The Fellowship Independent Baptist Church nearly four decades later. Brother John Sherfey, the charismatic preacher steeped in Appalachian tradition has passed away and left his congregation to his son, Donnie, to lead. While Appalachian Virginia has changed markedly over the decades, the town of Stanley and the Fellowship Church have not. Titon relates this rarity in his new Afterword: a church founded on Biblical literalism and untouched by modern progressivism in an area of Appalachia that has seen an evolution in population, industry, and immigration.
Titon’s unforgettable study of folklife, musicology, and Appalachian religion is available for a new generation of scholars to build upon.
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Keeping It Real in the Hills: Representing Appalachia in Americana MusicOlson, Ted S. 11 September 2018 (has links)
KEEPING IT REAL IN THE HILLS: REPRESENTING APPALACHIA IN AMERICANA was led by leading author, journalist and media personality Craig Havighurst and panelists radio producer Kris Truelsen, artist Kathy Mattea, artist Amythyst Kiah, and music educator Ted Olson. The topic of discussion was the state of old-time and Appalachian folk music and its sounds today, and the making of Kathy Mattea’s album Calling Me Home.
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On Top of Old Smoky, Then and Now: Paying Tribute to Those Who Gave Us Their Homes and Their MusicOlson, Ted S. 01 January 2017 (has links)
Excerpt: The 2016 album On Top of Old Smoky: New Old-Time Smoky Mountain Music paid tribute to the 4,250 people from 700 families who gave—or, depending on one’s perspective, surrendered—their ancestral homes to create Great Smoky Mountains National Park, the most ecologically diverse area in the Appalachian region and the most popular national park in the US. Its ecosystems having recovered from extensive early-twentieth-century logging, this park simultaneously possesses a reconstructed wilderness and preserves a compelling cultural heritage story; indeed, Great Smoky Mountains National Park has been declared an International Biosphere Reserve and UNESCO World Heritage Site. Despite such official acknowledgement of the park’s significance, one story has rarely been told: the true story of those who sacrificed the most to make the park possible.
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Balladry and Ballad-Collecting in Appalachia: An IntroductionOlson, Ted S. 01 January 2019 (has links)
Excerpt: Among the most enduring artifacts (along with certain lined-out hymns that are traceable back to sixteenth-century British churches) from the early days of European settlement in Appalachia, ballads are still in everyday use in some regional households and among certain performers, if largely outside the purview of the popular music industry. Even if reduced in range and frequency of performance from their heyday during the preindustrial and early industrial eras, ballads remain relevant today, as they are gems of compact storytelling that communicate thematically timeless narratives.
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Ballad Folks, Then and NowOlson, Ted S. 01 January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Traditional Plus: A Journey through Doc Watson's Recording CareerOlson, Ted S. 25 April 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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The Resilient Appalachian Woman: Lessons from Life and FictionKridler, Jamie Branam, Daughtery, Linda M., Holley, Terry L. 08 February 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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Reassessing James Still’s WorkOlson, Ted S. 01 January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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