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 in on the fourth Thursday of each month at 11—11:30am 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!
The book for August is The Ballad of Tom Dooley by Sharyn McCrumb, and we will be discussing this fictional re-telling of the real-life murder of Laura Foster in 1865 in North Carolina. Join us as we discuss The Ballad of Tom Dooley on August 22 at 11am on Radio Bristol – locally on 100.1 FM or via the website or app.
Upon returning home from the Civil War, Tom Dula finds himself on trial for the murder of his lover, Laura Foster. Dula is convicted and hanged for his crime, but there is much more to this story than just one of star-crossed lovers and scorned women. With this book, Sharyn McCrumb set out to write a fictionalized version of the events that were made famous by the song “Tom Dooley,” with the most well-known version by The Kingston Trio. However, her research helped to find a missing piece of the story that changed everything everyone thought they knew about Laura’s murder.
Sharyn McCrumb, who lives and writes in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, has published over 25 novels, along with short stories and contributions to non-fiction works. McCrumb’s books celebrate the beauty and tragedy of Appalachian history and culture. Her stories, particularly in her Ballad series, are rich and full of the legend and richness that we know Appalachia to have. The Ballad of Tom Dooley has all of this richness and more, and has often been called an Appalachian Wuthering Heights.
We cannot wait to share our thoughts on The Ballad of Tom Dooley with all of our listeners at Radio Bristol Book Club! We hope you can join us as we discuss this beautiful and tragic story of love and betrayal. You can pick up a copy at your favorite local bookstore or stop by the Bristol Public Library and check out a copy today! The librarians at the Bristol Public Library will be happy to help you find a copy of the book in any format that suits you best, from book to audiobook, and even e-books.
There is a book on the shelves in the museum’s Blue Stocking Club Learning Center that I come back to time and time again – Wayfaring Strangers: The Musical Voyage from Scotland and Ulster to Appalachia by Fiona Ritchie and Doug Orr. This wonderful book chronicles the history of the ballad from its origins to its place in our very own Appalachian Mountains. Beautifully written, with equally beautiful artwork and photographs, it tells the story in a meandering manner, taking the reader down old and new roads, mimicking the ballad journey itself.
The story of ballads is greater than what can be covered in a blog post, but I want to share what I have learned from Wayfaring Strangers, giving readers a small glimpse into that history in a fairly simplistic and straightforward manner. However, I encourage you to also read this book to learn more; it captured my heart – and it is sure to capture your heart too!
Ballads go further back in pre-recorded history than initially thought, to the seafaring civilizations sharing cultures via storytelling and music. There is no one single point of ballad origin; rather points as disperse as Scandinavia, Germany, Western Europe, Scotland, Ireland, England, and the Mediterranean all had a role to play. For example, there is an old-style epic narrative performed in Connemara, Ireland that is nearly identical to a Bedouin style.
Scottish poet, folklorist, and songwriter Hamish Henderson called the ballad journey the “carrying stream,” a perfect analogy for its meandering ways through ages, cultures, and configurations. Ballads were an oral tradition for disparate, often illiterate populations wherein stories, news, commerce, commentary, protest, and dance could be part of the delivery. As they traveled, ballads were subject to many influences and variations, both to their words and music, and often the same ballad may have different tunes or one tune may be associated with several different ballads. Over time and space, it was the best lyrics and tunes that continued along the carrying stream.
As to the Scots-Irish ballad tradition that is quite familiar in the Appalachians, it begins with a Nordic-Baltic influence arriving early on the Scottish shores. Northeast Aberdeenshire is considered the cradle of Scottish balladry with distinct language, customs, and folklore created out of isolation and seafaring influences. Western Scots and Irish people shared their traditions as well via the short sea route between them, and the Scottish and English border counties added further influences, all contributing to the oral-to-written evolution.
The ramifications of politics and palace intrigue over the course of the ballad history were many and varied, and the resulting diaspora impacted the story. One such dispersing was the Scots to Ulster Ireland and then on to the American colonies. It is this carrying steam that brought the ballad tradition to our mountains. The majority of these immigrants arrived at various ports northward and traveled down the Wilderness Road to the Appalachian Mountains. The pioneers settled in valleys and coves throughout the mountains, bringing their musical heritage with them – a heritage that merged with other traditions, styles, and songs found in the Appalachians including those of Native Americans, enslaved peoples from Africa, and other ethnic groups. It is this mixing that eventually evolved to be recognized as old-time country music.
As Wayfaring Strangersnotes: “Music provided the social fabric, creating a sense of community amid isolation and reinforcing identity. That said, while the Scots-Irish origin is clearly the dominant one, it is the braiding and weaving of European, African and indigenous American influences that creates the unique tapestry of Appalachian music.”
The long tradition and the evolution of ballads is further underlined by Bascom Lamar Lunsford, western North Carolina Minstrel of the Mountains, when he tells us “… that though the words changed from country to country, and generation to generation, even from valley to valley in the same range of hills, the essence of the music changed not at all. It formed a link, unbroken, back through time, tying to the past.”
Music was – and still is – reward at the end of a long day’s work, something to share in front of a winter fire or on a summer porch, and an act of community as voices are raised together at barn raisings, harvests, market days, and other events and occasions. And, of course, this included the teaching of these traditions to succeeding generations of children and grandchildren.
This ballad heritage was found at the Bristol Sessions in some of the songs, which were then shared through the recordings on a much wider scale. This music was a continuation of the carrying stream, and that musical migration continues through today’s carriers and tradition bearers – they too are immersed in the carrying steam. And old-time country music and the storytelling it is a part of, along with music festivals the world over and our museum visitors from every state and over 44 countries, all testify to that continuing journey.
Welcome to Radio Bristol Book Club! Inspired by the museum’s current special exhibit – Reading Appalachia: Voices from Children’s Literature – readers from the Birthplace of Country Music and the Bristol Public Library are coming together each month to celebrate and explore one book featured in the exhibit. We invite you to read along and then listen in on the fourth Thursday of each month at 11—11:30am 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!
The book for June is The Journal of Jesse Smoke. A Cherokee Boy by Joseph Bruchac, and we will be discussing this novel on June 27 at 11am live on Radio Bristol.
The Journal of Jesse Smoke is part of book series published by Scholastic Books, each historical novel written in the form of a diary or journal by a boy or girl during an important period of American history. Jesse Smoke is a Cherokee boy living in Tennessee who chronicles the final debate over the fate of the Cherokee nation and then their harrowing days on the Trail of Tears in 1838. The story – from the loss of their homes and land to the cruelties and the prejudice they faced, and sprinkled throughout with historical facts, Cherokee words and traditions, and the stories of other members of his tribe – is made even more real through its telling in the teenage voice of Jesse. The book serves as a poignant and powerful view into this tragic chapter in American history.
Joseph Bruchac is a member of the Nulhegan Abenaki tribe. He lives in the Adirondack Mountains of New York, where he works with other family members to preserve the native culture of the region. Bruchac has written over 120 books for both children and adults, along with hundreds of articles, poems, and stories, and he has won numerous awards including the Cherokee Nation Prose Award and a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Native Writers Circle of the Americas in 1999.
We cannot wait to bring Joseph Bruchac’s The Journal of Jesse Smoke to Radio Bristol Book Club! We hope you can join us as we discuss this wonderfully detailed historic novel. Stop by the Bristol Public Library and check out a copy today – the librarians will be happy to help you find the book!
Make plans to join us at 11am on Thursday,
June 27 for Radio Bristol Book Club! You can tune in locally at 100.1 FM or
listen via the website or app.
Our Radio Bristol DJs and related staff are a diverse bunch – and they like a huge variety of musical genres and artists. In our “Off the Record” posts, we ask one of them to tell us all about a song, record or artist they love.
On and off the record I can confidently say that “Farewell Transmission,” a song written by Jason Molina and recorded by him and his band Songs: Ohia, is one of the greatest songs of all time. There is something in both its lyrics and sound that is universal and timeless.
“The whole place is dark
Every light on this side of the town
Suddenly it all went down.”
It all went down one July day in a little studio called Electric Audio in the Avondale neighborhood of Chicago. Jason Molina gathered members of his band, along with some other musicians, to record “Farewell Transmission,” the first track on their upcoming record Magnolia Electric Co. This group of 12 musicians were quickly taught a three chord progression that would serve as the basic structure of the song, and then with little else, they hit record. As they were making their way blind through the recording, Molina’s manager was opening and closing various doors within the studio in order for the acoustics to be just right as the musicians fluctuated in intensity in their sound output. The musicians in the room played and riffed until Molina gave them a signal to end the song. You can hear his signal in the last few lines of the song as Molina repeats the word: “Listen!”
“After tonight if you don’t want us to be a secret out of the past
I will resurrect it, I’ll have a good go at it.”
Jason Molina’s past is integral to understanding “Farewell Transmission” and just how prolific of a musician Molina truly was. During his childhood, Molina spent the school year with his parents and siblings on the coast of Lake Erie and spent his summers with his grandmother in a coal mining town in West Virginia.
It was the summers in West Virginia that really influenced and molded Molina as a person and musician. As Max Blau relates in his Chicago Reader article on Molina: “His friends recall him drawing elaborate art inside the back covers of library books, playing sad Civil War-themed songs on the ukulele at house parties, and attempting to memorize the entire Carter Family songbook. He began to move away from his metal roots into the world of folk, blues, and alt-country.” It wasn’t just his personal past he was trying to resurrect within his music but our collective past, our collective history. It is this element of a shared past that really makes Molina’s music so impactful.
“I will try and know whatever I try, I will be gone but not forever”
While Jason Molina and his bands never reached commercial success, he was a legend and major influence on popular groups that came after him. Some of those musicians include the Avett Brothers, My Morning Jacket, and Glen Hansard. Molina was also one of the first artists to sign on the small, independent record label, Secretly Canadian, which would go on to sign artists like Bon Iver, Dinosaur Jr., and Sharon Van Etten. Molina really laid the foundation for indie, alt-country, and Americana artists that would see a huge rise in popularity in the early to mid-2000s.
After his death in 2013 from organ failure as a result of alcohol consumption, an outpouring of recognition came his way from all of the musicians he had influenced. Popular artists like Kevin Morby, Waxahatchee, My Morning Jacket, and Glen Hansard either recorded covers of Jason Molina songs or performed many of his songs live at concerts. Many of these artists cite Molina as one of their greatest musical influences. Molina will never truly be gone or forgotten as the legacy of his music lives on.
For more on Jason Molina and his journey, I highly recommend Blau’s article.