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Instrument Interview: A Guitar Built for Doc Watson

“Instrument Interview” posts are a chance to sit down with the instruments of traditional, country, bluegrass, and roots music – from different types of instruments to specific ones related to artists, luthiers, and songwriters – and learn more about them. Ten questions are posed, and the instruments answer! Today we talk with a guitar built for Doc Watson.

Tell us a little bit about yourself.

Hi! I am a handcrafted acoustic guitar based on a Martin 000 pattern. I was made by Jayne Henderson, the daughter of prominent luthier Wayne Henderson – in my opinion, she is the coolest Henderson! Being a 000 means that I am a smaller guitar, with thinner sides and a smaller body shape than the typical bluegrass Dreadnought guitar you see all the big country stars playing. My small stature doesn’t stop me in terms of volume and playability though!

I am made from white oak, which I know isn’t the typical material one would think of when it comes to guitars. However, at the time, my builder had just graduated from Vermont Law School with a degree in environmental law and policy, and therefore she wanted to try some local materials as she didn’t want to use any woods that were extinct or too hard to come by.

I was made for the incredible musician Doc Watson upon his request. He passed away about a week before I was finished, but that has not stopped me from spreading my voice loud and proud among other musicians – in fact, it has actually lead to some awesome opportunities where I have been played by all sorts of talented folks!

Wayne Henderson, Doc Watson, and Jayne Henderson posing for the camera in the Henderson workshop. Tools, instruments, and wood litter the background of the photograph.
Wayne and Jayne Henderson visiting with Doc Watson in Wayne’s workshop. Photography courtesy of Jayne Henderson

Why is oak such a strange wood to make a guitar from?

Well, while not many builders use it for a tone wood these days, it actually isn’t that strange historically. Martin, one of the best guitar manufacturers out there in my opinion, made parlor guitars from oak around the turn of the 20th century and into the 1920s and 1930s.

Jayne, my builder, found the board I am made from at a local lumber yard and chose it primarily because the board was the first one she had ever seen where she knew it was quarter-sawn, a term that refers to the grain of a tree running straight vertically for the length of the board. Boards that are quarter-sawn are the best for guitar material because they are usually the most stable pieces in terms of cracking and moving. Quarter-sawn boards are also best at allowing vibrations from plucked strings to run fastest through the board and then transmitting those vibrations into sound waves. She bought that board and took it to Virginia where her dad helped her cut it into a guitar set. The thinly sliced back and side pieces rang out loud and bright when Jayne and her dad tapped on them so they knew the pieces would make a great guitar.

What is the best part about being made from a material not typically used for guitars?

The coolest thing about being made from a piece of white oak is that it is a sustainable material that is easily available for building. A lot of historically used materials – such as Brazilian rosewood and Honduran mahogany – are becoming endangered or have even gone extinct so protecting those resources rather than using them is more important than ever. Even though there are currently some regulations monitoring the use, those types of wood won’t be around forever at the rate they are being harvested or destroyed in their countries.

I am also very proud that when you tap on a plank of oak, its tone is similar to that of Brazilian rosewood. What’s great is that oak comes from right here, in our own backyards, and it is prevalent enough that if you cut a few, or better yet, harvest a naturally felled tree, it won’t threaten the entire species or the subsequent species that rely on that tree for survival.

A tall man with Jayne Henderson in a workshop; the man holds the Doc Watson guitar, which is a pale wood with tortoise-like pick guard.
Jayne Henderson and friend holding the finished Doc Watson guitar; the simplicity of the design highlights the beautiful oak wood. Photograph courtesy of Jayne Henderson

You said you were made for Doc Watson. Who is that?

Doc Watson is a legendary musician known for his picking style and for pioneering new “licks” on old songs – licks that countless musicians following his footsteps strive to emulate, including Wayne Henderson. Doc was blind, which he once told Jayne was why he became a musician in the first place as it provided a means to express himself as well as carry a successful profession without the need to see. Jayne knew Doc Watson for her entire life because he had been friends with her dad through playing music together. Doc also has a few of Wayne’s instruments, one of which he proudly played during his last performance at Merlefest a few years back.

How did he find out about Jayne’s guitars?

The last years of Doc’s life, when he wasn’t traveling around playing as much, he would visit Wayne’s shop most Sundays. He would sit for hours and tell Jayne stories, like how he met his wife Rosalie or all the pets he has considered friends in his life, while petting her dog Harper who laid her head on his feet, oblivious to his celebrity status. Whenever Jayne finished a new guitar near one of those precious Sundays, Doc would always play it and sing a song or two.

Two pictures of Doc Watson in the Henderson workshop, one where he is leaning down to pet Harper, a black hound-looking dog, and the other with him playing a guitar while Harper sits at his feet.
Doc and Harper hanging out in Wayne’s shop. Dogs are music lovers too! Photograph courtesy of Jayne Henderson

And then how did you come about?

As Jayne began building, she would show Doc her new guitars. He was so kind and generous with praise for each one, even though he claimed he would be honest with his critiques. One day Jayne asked if he would like her to build him one, and he said he would love that – soon enough I was in the works. I am a simple guitar, with minimal adornment, the only flashy thing being my brass encircled fret markers which reminded Jayne of the snaps on Doc’s plaid shirts.

How did Doc feel about oak being used for his guitar?

Jayne told Doc that she wanted to use a sustainable material for his guitar. Because she had just finished her degree from one of the top environmental law programs in the country, she thought it was important to include the principles she learned in her building. She asked if the oak she had found would be OK to use and showed him the boards so he could hear them ring. He told her, “Honey, that wood sounds great. Anything you want to make for me, I am going to love it.”

Left: The full back of the guitar showing the grain of the wood and the small strip of inlay decoration up the center of the guitar's back. Right: A detail shot of the heelcap inlay, which reads "Doc" at the top.
White oak back and heelcap inlay of the guitar built by Jayne Henderson for Doc Watson. Photograph courtesy of Jayne Henderson

So what happened next?

Well, as I was getting my top braces shaved down, the shop phone rang. Someone told Wayne that Doc had passed away. Jayne decided she would never be able to sell this guitar, one that she had made for her friend, so she set about making the neck comfortable for her hand instead. Once, a few months before, while testing a guitar she had just strung up, Doc told her, “You need to keep this guitar and learn to play it as well as your dad. Learn from him everything you can.” Sometimes I think I was meant to be Jayne’s guitar all along, that Doc wanted her to have a guitar. She didn’t have a full-sized one, just the tiny one her dad made her when she was eight years old, built with such precious materials she was almost scared to play it. She shaped my neck to fit her own hand and now practices on me as often as she can.

Do you get to go anywhere else?

Jayne loves to share me with her friends, because she wants everyone to have a great guitar if they need one. When she isn’t practicing her limited skills on me, her dad plays me on the PBS show Song of the Mountains and for Doc tributes at Merlefest. I have also gotten to sit with Zac Brown of The Zac Brown Band as he did an interview for CBS Sunday Morning, and I’ve traveled to Washington, DC for the first leg of Steve Martin’s musical Bright Star.

Vince Gill, wearing mostly black, playing the Doc Watson guitar in what looks to be a studio or green room space.
Vince Gill testing out Doc’s guitar. Photograph courtesy of Jayne Henderson

Is there anything you’d like to add about yourself?

I want to be sure everyone knows that just because you may come from sustainable, even humble, beginnings doesn’t mean you will shine any less than that flashy Brazilian rosewood adorning the backs of your counterparts!

Radio Bristol Book Club: A Walk in the Woods

Welcome to Radio Bristol Book Club! Readers from BCM and the Bristol Public Library are coming together each month to celebrate and explore one book inspired by our region’s rich Appalachian cultural and musical heritage. We invite you to read along and then listen to Radio Bristol on the fourth Thursday of each month at 11:00am when we will dig deep into the feelings and questions raised by the books, learn more about the authors, and celebrate the joys of being a bookworm! Let’s jump right in…

Who wouldn’t want to go for a walk with an old friend?

Sounds like a fun time, right? What about a 2,200 mile walk?

Bill Bryson’s A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail documents just such a walk when Bryson decides to trek the entire length of the Appalachian Trail – from Springer Mountain, Georgia, to Mt. Katahdin, Maine. The trail from start to finish is a grueling 2,200 mile trip through 14 states and some of the most beautiful and treacherous terrain in the country. Every year, thousands attempt to “thru-hike” the trail from Georgia to Maine in one trip, and only about 25% will actually finish.

Three book covers for A Walk in the Woods: A bear looking out of the woods at the reader (left); A leaf and then the outline of a hiker and a bear in a circular graphic (center); Two hikers talking to each other (perhaps arguing) on a cliff edge (right).
Several versions of the cover for A Walk in the Woods, from Bryson’s obsessional focus on bears to a more graphic representation to the movie-of-the-book edition.

Seems like a worthwhile challenge for an experienced hiker to attempt, right? Except for one minor issue: Bryson has never actually hiked before. At all. Bryson and his equally unprepared friend Stephen Katz (who shows up at the airport woefully out of shape and with nothing but a duffle bag full of Snicker bars) set out to hike the entirety of the Appalachian Trail but soon discover that they might be in over their heads. What follows is a comical, yet heartfelt and sincere, memoir of the pair’s journey through portions of the Appalachian Trail and all of the adventures that go along with it. Part humorous memoir, part Appalachian Trail history, A Walk in the Woods will leave you itching to go explore the trail near and dear to everyone in Appalachia.

Bill Bryson, who has written such works as The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid and The Lost Continent, is an esteemed travel writer and memoirist who often uses a humorous tone to tell his stories. A Walk in the Woods is a wonderful story of the Appalachian Trail and those who have hiked it. Bryson’s adventures will leave you in awe, and often laughing, as he encounters the eccentric hikers, imposing wildlife, and difficult terrain, all while learning the art of hiking as he goes.

One of Bill Bryson’s Facebook profile pictures shows that the love he found for hiking on the Appalachian Trail has continued to take him onto other paths.

Make plans to join us on October 24 at 11:00am on the dial at 100.1 FM, streaming live on Radio Bristol, or via the Radio Bristol app – and be sure to read the book ahead of time and listen in as we discuss A Walk in the Woods! Many of the Radio Bristol Book Club books will be available at the Bristol Public Library or The Museum Store at the Birthplace of Country Music Museum so stop by to borrow or buy a copy! The librarians or our frontline staff will be happy to help you find the book.

And plan ahead: Future Radio Bristol Book Club picks include Ralph Peer and the Making of Popular Roots Music by Barry Mazor (November 21) and Serena by Ron Rash (December 19).

Radio Bristol Book Club: Lakota Woman

Welcome to Radio Bristol Book Club – and welcome to a very appropriate day for talking books: National Read a Book Day! Readers from BCM and the Bristol Public Library are coming together each month to celebrate and explore one book inspired by our region’s rich Appalachian cultural and musical heritage. We invite you to read along and then listen in on the fourth Thursday of each month at 11:00am when we will dig deep into the feelings and questions raised by the books, learn more about the authors, and celebrate the joys of being a bookworm!

Our September book – Lakota Woman by Mary Crow Dog with Richard Erdoes – is inspired by our current special exhibit, American Ballads: The Photographs of Marty Stuart. Stuart’s photographs in American Ballads range from intimate behind-the-scenes depictions of legendary musicians, to images of eccentric characters from the back roads of America, to dignified portraits of members of the Lakota tribe in South Dakota, a people he was introduced to by his former father-in-law, Johnny Cash. We will be discussing Lakota Woman on Thursday, September 26 at 11:00am live on Radio Bristol.

Several of the photographs from American Ballads: The Photographs of Marty Stuart, all taken on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Top left: Marty Stuart. Sadie and Zona, 2000. Archival pigment print, 20 x 16in. Courtesy of the artist. © Marty Stuart; Top right: Marty Stuart. Millie Black Bear, 2000. Archival pigment print, 16 x 20in. Courtesy of the artist. © Marty Stuart; Bottom right: Marty Stuart. Orville Looking Horse, 2004. Archival pigment print, 16 x 20in. Courtesy of the artist. © Marty Stuart; Bottom left: Marty Stuart. Noah by the Sundance Tree, 2004. Archival pigment print, 20 x 16in. Courtesy of the artist. © Marty Stuart

Lakota Woman was originally published in 1990 – it became a national bestseller and won the American Book Award in 1991. This unique book is both memoir and social justice history, tracing Mary Crow Dog’s life on the Rosebud Indian Reservation, the cruelties perpetuated against American Indians, and her dogged determination and action in the Native American struggle for rights. Working with Richard Erdoes, one of the 20th century’s leading writers on Native American affairs, Mary recounts her difficult but fascinating life, one where she made a direct impact on an important cause. The book was later adapted as a TV movie called Lakota Woman – Siege at Wounded Knee.

Mary Brave Bird (later Crow Dog) grew up in poverty in South Dakota, and her white father abandoned the family when she was young. Believing in possibilities outside her everyday reality, Mary rebelled against the aimless drinking, violence, and hopelessness she encountered on the reservation, and rose above her experiences at the punishing missionary school and the narrow strictures placed on the lives of women, eventually joining the new movement of tribal pride sweeping Native American communities in the 1960s and 1970s. She later married Leonard Crow Dog, the American Indian Movement’s chief medicine man, who revived the sacred but outlawed Ghost Dance. Lakota Woman covered her life up to 1977; a second book, Ohitika Woman, was a memoir of her life after 1977. Mary Crow Dog died in February 2013 at the age of 58.

The cover of Mary Crow Dog’s Lakota Woman.

We cannot wait to bring this inspirational story of Mary Crow Dog to Radio Bristol Book Club! We hope you can join us as we discuss Lakota Woman for Radio Bristol Book Club! You can tune in locally at 100.1 FM or listen via the website or app. Many of the Radio Bristol Book Club books will be available at the Bristol Public Library or The Museum Store at the Birthplace of Country Music Museum so stop by to borrow or buy a copy! The librarians or our frontline staff will be happy to help you find the book.

Make plans to join us at 11am on Thursday, September 26 for Radio Bristol Book Club!

And plan ahead: Future Radio Bristol Book Club picks include A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail by Bill Bryson (October 24), Ralph Peer and the Making of Popular Roots Music by Barry Mazor (November 21), and Serena by Ron Rash (December 19).

A Hot Summer Night in the City of Bristol at August’s Farm and Fun Time

August’s Farm and Fun Time showcased some of the best in contemporary bluegrass! Thanks to our sponsor Eastman Credit Union, Radio Bristol was able to bring Farm and Fun Time to not only those in the audience or tuned in to WBCM-LP, but to viewers far and wide via Facebook Live. Be sure to like WBCM – Radio Bristol on Facebook to tune in every month!

Host band Bill and the Belles started the show on this summer evening with the sunny Roger Miller classic, “Walking in the Sunshine.” Following their always fun and lighthearted performance, things got corny – cream corny that is! – as Charles Parker shared an old family recipe for cream corn for Farm and Fun Time’s “Heirloom Recipe.” A champion of local Southwest Virginia food and the chef at Abingdon’s Southwest Virginia Cultural Center & Marketplace, Parker learned to love local produce and utilize it in his dishes from his grandma. An important part of Appalachian foodways is canning, and Parker recalls preparing cream corn to can. In honor of the labor that goes into this recipe, Bill and the Belles sang a new song: “The Corn Shuckin’ Song.”

Left: Bill and the Belles -- Andrew Small on bass, Kalie Yeagle on fiddle, Kris Truelsen on guitar, and Helena Hunt on banjo -- gather round the mic. Right: Charlie Parker telling the story of his family's cream corn recipe with the audience.
Bill and the Belles welcomed the Farm and Fun Time crowd with a sunny tune, while Charles Parker’s cream corn recipe got people’s mouths watering! © Birthplace of Country Music; photographer: Billie Wheeler

Our evening’s first musical guest was Irene Kelley. With a songwriting career that spans the past three decades, she’s had songs recorded by Alan Jackson, Loretta Lynn, Ricky Skaggs, and a score of other Nashville stars. However, Irene has maintained a strong following in her own right, and for August’s Farm and Fun Time, she performed songs off her recent project, Benny’s TV Repair. Singing about trains and home and even paying homage to Native Americans, Kelley’s strong songwriting captivated our audience, and her capable band brought these timeless stories to life.

Left: Close up of Irene Kelley singing with her eyes closed and playing the guitar at the mic. Center: Irene Kelley with the bass player in the background and the mandolin player to her side. Right: Irene Kelley's banjo player in a red shirt.
Irene Kelley and her band performed songs filled with storytelling and nostalgia from her recent album. © Birthplace of Country Music; photographer: Billie Wheeler

This month’s “Radio Bristol Farm Report” showcased Chuckey, Tennessee’s own Greene Hemp Company. Our visit to the Ole Appalachian Hemp Farm was an informative experience where we learned about this sustainable and versatile product! Here’s a video from our visit:

For the Farm and Fun Time team and our live and on-air audiences, it was a great pleasure to have the Lonesome River Band, one of the longest running and most influential bluegrass bands on the scene today. Founded 37 years ago, Lonesome River Band has been bringing a fresh take on the traditions of bluegrass music with their distinct drive and high-energy performances. Performing a mix of original songs and classics, the Southwest Virginia- based group brought down the house with soulful singings and hard-driving playing. In the 1940s, the bluegrass bands that performed on WCYB’s original Farm and Fun Time were pushing the boundaries of what was then simply country music. With Lonesome River Band as a group that has perpetuated the innovation of those groups, it was a full circle moment to have them on the stage for our continuation of the WCYB show’s legacy.

Left: Close up of the banjo and guitar players singing and playing at the mic; Top right: The full band on the Farm and Fun Time stage; Middle right: Close up of the bass player; Bottom right: Close up of the fiddle player.
The musicians from the Lonesome River Band brought a great mix of bluegrass tunes to the Farm and Fun Time audience. © Birthplace of Country Music; photographer: Billie Wheeler

Thanks to everyone who came and helped make August’s Farm and Fun Time another successful evening of fun and music! September’s show will be part of Bristol Rhythm & Roots Reunion, so stayed tuned for a special announcement. Tickets are on sale for October’s Farm and Fun Time featuring Chatham County Line, Jeff Scroggins & Colorado, and host band Bill and the Belles. We hope to see you there!