Down the Road | 2022

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BLUEGRASS & OLD-TIME MUSIC GUIDE

DOWN theROAD WOODY PLATT OF STEEP CANYON RANGERS

JACK OF THE WOOD CELEBRATES 25 YEARS EARL SCRUGGS MUSIC FESTIVAL

'BLACK BANJO'

Tray Wellington on new album, a life in bluegrass



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CONTENTS

BLUE RIDGE MUSIC TRAILS OF NORTH CAROLINA Traditional music is flourishing across many parts of America, but in the mountains and foothills of North Carolina, more so than elsewhere, the music is part of the fabric of community life. Music traditions continue to be handed down in families and communities; at the same time, musicians are moving here from other parts of the country to be at the heart of these wonderful traditions.

ON THE COVER: Ashe County native Tray Wellington discusses his path to bluegrass fame.

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You’ll find lots of folks making music —from seasoned, master musicians and enormously talented youngsters to exuberant beginners and dedicated back porch pickers.

DAN BONER COVER PHOTO ROB LAUGHTER PHOTO (RIGHT)

Most importantly, the music here is to be shared. Opportunities to listen in and to join in are plentiful.

SUPPORT THE BLUE RIDGE NATIONAL HERITAGE AREA..................13 THE

“FINE TUNED PROJECT!” ..............................................13

COMMUNITY CROSSROADS: 185 KING STREET ......................18 INSPIRING

THE NEXT GENERATION ......................................20

JACK OF THE WOOD CELEBRATES 25 YEARS ........................22 WOODY PLATT OF STEEP CANYON RANGERS..............................24 RENAISSANCE MAN:

BILLY EDD WHEELER ............................28

EARL SCRUGGS MUSIC FESTIVAL ................................................32 BLUE RIDGE MUSIC TRAILS

PODCAST ............................................36

THE PROJECT The Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina is an initiative led by the Blue Ridge National Heritage Area Partnership, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, and the North Carolina Arts Council, a division of the North Carolina Department Natural and Cultural Resources. Many, many partners across Western North Carolina — arts councils, tourism agencies, music venues, event organizers, musicians, and dancers — are participating in the effort.

The Blue Ridge National Heritage Area’s “Down the Road” magazine is produced in collaboration with The Smoky Mountain News. © 2022/23

SMOKY MOUNTAIN NEWS PUBLISHER · Scott McLeod info@smokymountainnews.com

MANGUM POTTERY: FLOWING FROM YOUR FINGERTIPS ........38

GENERAL MANAGER · Greg Boothroyd

BLUE RIDGE CRAFT TRAILS

Amanda Bradley

39 VENUES, JAM SESSIONS AND FESTIVALS . . . . . . . . . . .42 OFF AND RUNNING

.........

greg@smokymountainnews.com

ADVERTISING · Lauren Brady lauren@smliv.com c-ads@smokymountainnews.com

Sophia Burleigh sophia.b@smokymountainnews.com

ART DIRECTOR · Micah McClure micah@smokymountainnews.com

IN PARTNERSHIP WITH:

DESIGN · Jessica Murray jessica.m@smokymountainnews.com

Travis Bumgardner travis@smokymountainnews.com

WRITING · Garret K. Woodward garret@smokymountainnews.com


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October 22 • 7PM • $20

BURNSVILLE TOWN CENTER

Purchase Tickets at the door or online

Eventbrite.com

Free Seminar

“MUSIC THAT MATTERS” SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22 • 3PM BURNSVILLE TOWN CENTER

Robert Jones and his blues brother Matt Watroba will talk about the blues, its origins and influences on American music. Open to the public.

Rev. Robert B. Jones Jr.

& Matt Watroba

... an ordained minister, a longtime DJ, and a living encyclopedia of blues history, the Reverend Robert Jones is comfortable among juke-joint loud talkers, fancy-hatted church ladies, and PhDs alike. - James Fraher, photographer & author

INFORMATION: TRADITIONALVOICESGROUP.ORG Burnsville Town Center, 6 South Main Street | 828-682-7209 Sponsors Include: Produced by Traditional Voices Group

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FROM THE DIRECTOR I

t is wonderful to hear the music of our North Carolina Mountains and Foothills come alive this year! Through this 4th edition of Down the Road magazine, you can learn about old favorites and new fresh faces on the traditional music scene across our region. The roots of American music run deep here in Western North Carolina, and our area continues to be a fertile ground for European, African American and Cherokee sounds that have met and mingled for hundreds of years. In these mountain coves, among these rolling foothills come the sounds of fiddle, banjo, guitar, and mandolin — homegrown sounds that have shaped American music. Traditional mountain music features the old-time sounds of string bands and the high energy of bluegrass. Cloggers kick up their heels on mountain stages. You can follow the callers of street dances in our historic small towns. In our mountains, ballads have been passed down from generation to generation, “knee-to-knee” on front porches with haunting verses that date back centuries to Ireland and Scotland. And across the region, you can hear sacred music from shaped-note

singing to hymns sung in Cherokee to African American gospel. Music traditions continue to be handed down in families and communities; at the same time, musicians are moving here from other parts of the country to be at the heart of these wonderful traditions. You’ll find lots of folks making music — from seasoned, master musicians and enormously talented youngsters to exuberant beginners and dedicated back porch pickers. The music never stops! Just the way it’s happened throughout history, new musicians with new ideas are constantly innovating the sounds of the Blue Ridge. The music continues to grow and evolve, finding new audiences while still honoring the foundations of the past.

The Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina was launched more than eight years ago as a partnership between Blue Ridge National Heritage Area Partnership (BRNHA) and the NC Arts Council. Our goal is to guide visitors and fans to where they can hear this music for themselves. We have awarded more than 55 grants to create stages, sound systems, new venues as well as support school programs to pass on traditional music to the next generation. The Blue Ridge National Heritage Area Partnership is devoted to preserving our Appalachian culture, from traditional music to arts and crafts, our foodways and our abundant outdoors, and we honor the living legacy of Cherokee traditions across our mountains. Please join us on this musical journey “Down the Road on the Blue Ridge Music Trails,” and we hope to see you along the way. Angie Chandler

Executive Director Blue Ridge National Heritage Area

The roots of American music run deep here in Western North Carolina, and our area continues to be a fertile ground for European, African American and Cherokee sounds that have met and mingled for hundreds of years.

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N.C.’S RICH CULTURE T

his year, the North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources celebrates 50 years as a state agency. The N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources takes care of the things that people love about North Carolina, literally from A to Z. The Arts to the Zoo, and so much else — parks, aquariums, historic sites, archaeology, African American Heritage Commission, science and history museums, the state Symphony, Library, and Archives, historic preservation, land and water stewardship, and more. These places, and the ideas they represent, create a shared identity among us as North Carolinians. They provide common ground. Everyone is welcome. In addition to our 50th, all year long we are celebrating our state’s rich his-

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tory, diverse arts and culture, and spectacular natural areas. In 2023, DNCR will help celebrate the Year of the Trail and we invite you to explore our many natural and cultural trails across the state. In North Carolina, we D. Reid Wilson celebrate our traditions in music, craft, art, literature and history through our cultural trails, and our vast network of natural trails connects the mountains to the coast, providing open space for all North Carolinians.

We look forward to sharing North Carolina’s rich outdoors, culture and history with you.

I encourage you to discover the many treasures across our state and create your own path of discovery and awe, wherever you are. Sincerely, Secretary D. Reid Wilson N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources

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SUPPORT THE BLUE RIDGE NATIONAL HERITAGE AREA! Play your part in preserving the living traditions and Appalachian heritage of the North Carolina mountains and foothills — including the Blue Ridge Music Trails — with a gift today! Here are several ways you can be a part of this important work for current and future generations: • Donate at blueridgeheritage.com/about/donate.now • Follow the Blue Ridge Music Trails on Facebook • Listen to Down the Road Podcasts now featuring four seasons of traditional music profiles and history at blueridgemusicnc.com/listen-and-learn/down-the-road-podcast • Review our website and learn more about the Blue Ridge Craft Trails Program, explore itineraries that will give you all kinds of trip ideas, support our local businesses by attending events at some of our many venues and breweries, look through our online retail store, etc. And please reach out to our staff at 828.298.5330. We serve the entire region of Western North Carolina and enjoy connecting with our donors, partners and program participants. Thank you!

BLUE RIDGE MUSIC TRAILS ANNOUNCES THE “FINE TUNED PROJECT!” This year will see the launch of an exciting NEW project, specifically designed to help emerging musicians develop professional skills and recording experience! These lesser-known artists will be paired with performers who have more experience in sharing their music with live audiences and have developed skills through the making of a recording. These selected pairings of artists will come together over a series of months, forming a musical relationship while also selecting and rehearsing TWO tracks to record. This compilation of songs will result in a most unique vinyl record — available for purchase in spring 2023. Thanks to Come Hear North Carolina for supporting this important project. Join us by following this project, visiting the Blue Ridge Music Trails website regularly, and if you don’t already receive the In Tune e-newsletter, please sign up now at blueridgemusictrailsnc.com. DOWN THE ROAD

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rowing up in the mountains of Ashe County, North Carolina, Tray Wellington started playing music in middle school. Initially, it was the electric guitar and a little bit of trombone. “But, it was in eighth grade when I first heard the banjo,” Wellington said. “Our school had a mountain music program and there were actual classes you could take. To this day, I remember that first time hearing the banjo — it was such a beautiful sound, something I’d never heard before.”

DAN BONER PHOTO

‘BLACK BANJO’ TRAY WELLINGTON ON NEW ALBUM, A LIFE IN BLUEGRASS

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“We’re all just musicians making music together.” — TRAY WELLINGTON

ROB LAUGHTER PHOTO

Being a Black student in the predominantly white academic and social environment that is Ashe County, Wellington stood out when he picked up the banjo, soon joining local jam circles and other musical gatherings. “I listen to country, rock and rap, but there was something about bluegrass that really pulled me in,” Wellington said. “And I always wanted to be different than anybody around me, I always wanted to do something different that nobody else I knew was doing.” And part of that mission of being a unique individual includes bringing more attention to the impact of Black musicians and artists on the creation and development of bluegrass and oldtime music, something sadly lost underneath the sands of time. “Most people don’t even realize that the banjo is an African instrument. And one thing that needs to change is learning the actual history of the instrument. It needs to be brought out and cele-

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brated,” Wellington said. “But, at the end of the day, I try not to pay so much attention to being the only Black musician at a lot of these jams — we’re all just musicians making music together.” Eventually, Wellington started to push out into the world amid his curiosity and quest to dive deep into the “high, lonesome sound,” with Western North Carolina the epicenter of bluegrass banjo, and the pinnacle of the instrument, the late Earl Scruggs, hailing from down the highway in Shelby. “And even before I started to play music, I knew a couple of professional musicians from my church, which were Zack Arnold and Jacob Greer of Sideline,” Wellington said. “So, they were some of my first introductions into the bluegrass world, where they would have little jams and invite me to come and play.” Now 22 years old, Wellington is already making a name for himself in the bluegrass, old-time and roots music

realms. In 2019, he was awarded “Momentum Instrumentalist of the Year” by the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA). And to that, he’s now a featured artist with the Mountain Home Music Company based out of Arden, North Carolina. Wellington’s highly-anticipated debut album for the record label, “Black Banjo,” will be released this spring — a title aimed at one foot in the storied musical past, the other in the progression of the sound itself. “There is technically a pre-defined ‘black banjo,’ which is more in the oldtime realm. It’s definitely something I’ve researched a lot and looked into,” Wellington said. “But, the idea behind the album is that I’m trying to do something new. My sound is my sound, and I don’t want to ever be put in a box, feeling like I have to play a specific style because it’s historically accurate — the thing about music is that it needs to be new and rejuvenating.”

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185 KING STREET A PLACE FOR MUSICIANS AND AUDIENCES

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t was just a couple years ago when Madeline Magin and her fiancé, Cody Noble, decided to take the plunge on a longtime dream by opening Noblebrau Brewing in Brevard. The endeavor also included taking over the storied 185 King Street music venue/restaurant housed in the building. “We began construction of the brewery in November 2019 and worked on the build-out through the early months of the pandemic,” Magin said. “We’d al-

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ready bought all the equipment and all of our plans were in the works. So, we had our fingers crossed about reopening in the fall of 2020 when live music and gatherings would be allowed again.” When the COVID mandates were lifted and folks were once again able to congregate and see live music, 185 King Street and the brewery quickly became a highly sought-after beacon of music, culinary delights and genuine connec-

tivity dearly missed during the shutdown. “Our goal is to provide an amazing experience to people — to come and play, and to come and listen,” Magin said. “We want everyone to enjoy the beautiful music of our local artists and national touring groups. We’re constantly doing our best to uphold those two goals and continue to grow in the process.” Established in 2009 by Jackson

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Wine, 185 King Street came to fruition in an area of Brevard that was once abandoned and silent. Just outside of downtown, the district was formerly a large lumberyard and railroad depot. The music venue became an anchor business, with several other companies soon calling King Street home, ultimately creating this beehive of commerce and culture. Though the music venue is wellknown for its cozy, intimate feel inside, Magin and Noble wanted to also make everyone feel safe during the ongoing pandemic. With that, they started opening up the garage door behind the stage for patrons who wanted to sit outside and still be able to enjoy the live performances. “And it’s the local people who really appreciate having that option to either be inside or outside for a show — it’s they who keep coming and supporting us, who ensure our survival as a business,” Magin said. The move proved very popular, especially with the fire pit in the backyard and the night sky above. And as live music slowly crept back onto the once blank calendar, one of the first acts was (and remains) the “Travis Book Happy Hour,” a livestreamed weekly musical showcase (with limited seating) hosted by Book, a Brevard resident and Grammy-winning bassist for The Infamous Stringdusters. “Having Travis here every week during the shutdown was a big deal for us,” Magin said. “And he’d bring in all these world-class musicians each time, where we’d have some of the finest bluegrass, Americana and folk musicians on the scene coming to play our small stage — it’s been such an honor to present.” Now that live music is back in full swing at 185 King Street, Magin and Noble are seemingly running on all cylinders, whether it’s booking nightly bands, brewing batches of craft ales or running a busy kitchen. “It been a whirlwind couple of years for us,” Magin said. “And to see the tables full and the backyard full, we’re just incredibly grateful to be able to provide this place for our community to come back together.”

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Madeline Magin and Cody Noble.

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The Burnett Sisters.

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hen Kathleen Burnett is performing, she can’t help but feel this genuine sense of gratitude for being onstage, in front of a live audience she hopes to uplift with her music. “It’s definitely this feeling of being able to inspire,” Burnett said. “Sometimes after a show, we’ll have children come up to us and ask us about our instruments. And that’s the best feeling — when you can inspire a child to want to play music.” Kathleen is part of rising bluegrass act The Burnett Sisters Band & Colin Ray, which is based out of Watauga

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County. Aside from Kathleen (guitar), there’s also Anissa (fiddle), Sophia (bass) and Anneli (mandolin), alongside Ray (guitar) and Jason Alexander (banjo). “To be honest, it’s never really been difficult to be part of a band with your sisters,” Kathleen said. “We all know our place in the group and we all take suggestions from each other because we want to sound the best that we can. The family dynamic is that we love each other and want to help each other out.” A budding bluegrass star in his own right, Ray came into the fold of the band

a couple of years ago. After crossing paths with Kathleen while both were enrolled in East Tennessee State University, the couple soon started dating and were married just last year. “After Colin and I got married, we decided to merge our two groups,” Kathleen said. “And now, he’s become such a big part of the show.” “For me, it’s such a thrilling experience to play music and have that ability to potentially inspire another person,” Ray added. “My hope is that people come in feeling one way and they leave feeling better than they did when

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INSPIRING THE NEXT GENERATION THE BURNETT SISTERS BAND & COLIN RAY Colin Ray.

they arrived. And, if we can do that, then that’s a success for us as a group.” Growing up in Boone, the sisters were handed instruments at a very young age. Eventually, their father signed them up for the Junior Appalachian Musicians (JAM) program in the community. “We’ve always loved bluegrass and old-time music,” Kathleen said. “With JAM, we learned many instruments and started several different groups throughout that time. As we got older, my sisters and I realized that we wanted our own group. So, together we

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started playing churches and festivals around the area.” For Ray, he picked up the guitar when he was six years old, which soon led to him taking personal lessons from bluegrass superstars Darin & Brooke Aldridge. “And it was those lessons that really pushed me into the bluegrass and folk scene,” Ray noted. “From there, I just started working on playing the guitar and the banjo, going around to local jam sessions and meeting up with people to play music.” So, just what is it about the “high,

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lonesome” sound that calls to these young musicians, this next generation of bluegrass singers and performers? “I think it’s about being able to put feeling into what you’re singing — that ability to channel anything you’re feeling through this unique style of music,” Ray said. “For my sisters and I, this music is part of our history” Kathleen said. “We grew up in the Blue Ridge Mountains. We’re proud of that and we want to keep this music alive. We want to pass the music along to as many people as we can each time we hit the stage.”

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JACK OF THE WOOD WHERE KINDRED SPIRITS GATHER

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itting at a table in the depths of the cavernous Jack of the Wood on Patton Avenue in downtown Asheville, Joan and Joe Eckert shake their heads in awe when asked about the 25th anniversary of the beloved pub and music venue. “It just seemed like the natural thing to do in this city, to open a Celtic-style pub, but to also have it be sort of an Appalachian tavern, too,” Joan said. “And live music has always been part of this business and what we want to put forth

— Celtic, Americana roots, bluegrass, old-time, folk and mountain music.” When the Eckerts arrived in Western North Carolina from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, back in the 1980s, the couple was looking to raise their family on a farm in the mountains. That soon morphed into Joan operating a small lunch counter at the local YMCA specializing in vegetarian cuisine. And with the encouragement and backing of the late Julian Price, a storied Asheville entrepreneur and philan-

thropist, Joan eventually opened The Laughing Seed on Wall Street — a pillar of the city’s bustling culinary scene to this day. Initially, the basement of the restaurant (which faces Patton Avenue) was used as a root cellar, but the Eckerts had another idea in mind for the space — a British Isles inspired pub. “We’ve spent a lot of time over there and always loved those pubs, where everyone is singing and dancing, just having a great time together in

“And live music has always been part of this business and what we want to put forth — Celtic, Americana roots, bluegrass, old-time, folk and mountain music.” — JOAN ECKERT 22

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the spirit of simply being together,” Joan said. With a sincere bond and admiration for the natural world, the name Jack of the Wood came about as an ode to Mother Nature and our place in the grand scheme of things in this universe. As soon as the pub opened its doors in 1997, stage performances became a signature facet of the business, something at the heart of the burgeoning live music scene in Asheville at the time, which is now world-renowned. “Back then, the stage was just the floor of the corner near the front door. The musicians would set up in that corner and jam out at all hours of the day,” Joe reminisced. “And when we took over the basement of the next building, we built a stage across the room where it still stands today.” Since the earliest days of its existence, the weekly jams at the Jack of the Wood have taken on legendary status over the last quarter-century. There’s the Wednesday folk jam, the Thursday bluegrass jam, and the Sunday Celtic jam — all of which attract some of the finest pickers and singers in Southern Appalachia and beyond. And in those days between the jam sessions, touring bands from around the world have stood in front of the microphone at the Jack of the Wood. Wellknown national acts like Shovels & Rope, Town Mountain, The Infamous Stringdusters, Balsam Range, and Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band have all graced the stage, with thousands of upand-coming acts continuing to roll through. “There’s a lot of professional musicians who call Asheville and Western North Carolina home,” Joan said. “And many of which come here to jam with each other when they aren’t on tour — it’s a pretty special thing to see and hear.” “I think what we’re most proud of is that our intentions have remained the same,” Joe added. “We want to nurture the smaller bands and also the fun times, to present the traditional and acoustic music of whoever wants to come and play our stage — all of this is the culture of who we are, who we’ve always been.”

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Joan and Joe Eckert.

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MUSICAL WATERS WOODY PLATT OF STEEP CANYON RANGERS

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hen he’s not traveling across the country and performing onstage with his renowned Grammy Award-winning Americana act Steep Canyon Rangers, singer/guitarist Woody Platt finds himself flyfishing in the ancient rivers and streams near his home in Western North Carolina. “Fly fishermen tend to really respect the environment and respect the game they catch. When you catch a fish, it’s

often find themselves traversing the picturesque landscape and immersing themselves in the nearby waters. “We finally found this place on the river, but the riverbanks were massively eroded from big pasture farming practices in the past, where people would actually shift the river and destroy its natural flow,” Platt said. “So, all of these switch backs and channels were created that ultimately affected the riverbanks and disrupted the

Steep Canyon Rangers.

almost always a catch-and-release situation,” Platt said. “And you learn as a fly fisherman to be in tune with the way a river moves and flows — where the water stacks up and slows down, how the fish orient themselves in the water.” With his home situated in the East Fork Valley at the headwaters of the French Broad River, Platt and his family

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ecosystem with these large sediment deposits.” Feeling a deep sense of urgency and social responsibility, Platt teamed up with Conserving Carolina, a nonprofit organization based in Hendersonville, which aims to protect land and water sources in Southern Appalachia. “With the help of Conserving Carolina,

we were able to apply for and receive a grant from the North Carolina Clean Water Management fund,” Platt said. “We used the grant to return that portion of the French Broad back to its natural state, where we can once again provide a good habitat and stable riverbanks for native fish, hellbenders and other species that live and thrive in these waters.” Alongside Conserving Carolina, Platt and his family are continuing their work on other regional river projects with the help of private donations and other local organizations. Though the work to conserve our local land and waters is seemingly never-ending, each project completed and volunteer added is another step towards the protection and preservation of our natural resources here in Western North Carolina. “We’ve learned a lot and we really enjoy being part of these projects,” Platt said. “Once you put a decent amount of money and effort into a project, it makes sense to continue to work in that area — it makes me really happy to see the positive impact we can have on these precious ecosystems.” And each time Platt finds himself thigh-deep in a river or stream somewhere, he can’t help but be truly grateful for the experience of complete immersion in the splendor of Mother Nature. “As a touring musician, I’m typically ‘on the go’ all the time. I don’t get to relax a whole lot and I don’t slow down, at least not until I get into a stream,” Platt said. “The river is a good place for me to slow down, to stand in the moving waters and simply listen to the sound of the stream pushing over the rocks — it’s the sound of beautiful music being made.”

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WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA DISTINCTIONS IN TRADITIONAL MUSIC NO OTHER PLACE HAS had more influence on the development of the banjo in America. Musicians from the western Piedmont and mountain region, including Earl Scruggs, Charlie Poole, and Snuffy Jenkins, among many, are recognized as the creators and popularizers of modern banjo styles. THE FIDDLE AND BANJO ENSEMBLE tradition that developed in Surry County’s Round Peak community is embraced and emulated by young musicians around the world. The Mount Airy Fiddlers’ Convention is now an annual gathering place for thousands of young musicians influenced by Round Peak musicians.

ONE OF THE LONGEST, unbroken ballad singing traditions in America is found in Madison County where singers were first documented by English folk song collector Cecil Sharp prior to World War I. The current generation of singers continues to perform a wide range of ballads, including some brought from the British Isles by early settlers.

MERLEFEST, presented at Wilkes Community College in Wilkesboro on the last weekend in April, is one of the nation’s largest and most influential “Americana” music events. It was founded in 1988 by Doc Watson in memory of his son Merle.

THE MOUNTAIN DANCE AND FOLK FESTIVAL, started in Asheville by Bascom Lamar Lunsford in 1928, is the oldest continuous folk festival in the United States and is the model for the National Folk Festival.

TRADITIONAL DANCE EVOLVED over generations with music traditions and flat-footing. Clogging in Western North Carolina is recognized as one of the most highly-developed vernacular dance traditions in the country. Haywood County is where team square dancing first originated in the 1930s.

KEEP IN MIND As you begin your journey, keep in mind that even though all the events listed occur on a regular basis, it is always best to verify the information before heading out. For the most up-to-date information on venues and events, please visit BlueRidgeMusicNC.com. Happy Trails! 26

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WPAQ AM 740 IN MOUNT AIRY is the oldest live radio show that continues to program regional music from the Blue Ridge. The Merry Go Round program, which is broadcast live from the Downtown Cinema Theatre every Saturday, first signed on in 1948 and presents local old-time, bluegrass and gospel performers.

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PODCAST

The “Down the Road on the Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina” podcast highlights bluegrass and old-time music stories, performers, venues, and traditions across the mountain and foothills counties of Western North Carolina. The podcast is hosted by Laura Boosinger, a celebrated musician, folklorist, and storyteller, and produced by Corrie Askew of WNCW-FM. Beginning with short and sweet three-minute episodes in seasons one and two, the popularity of the podcast warranted more content. Episodes for seasons three and four run around nineminutes long and feature multiple musical tracks. These tracks have been assembled in a Spotify playlist called “Music from Down the Road Podcast.” “Down the Road” airs on WNCW-FM (88.7) at 8:50 am on Tuesday mornings (during NPR’s Morning Edition). Recent episodes include: Lots of Great Ways to Learn Music in WNC, Traditional Artist Spotlight: David Holt, Train Songs, and Marshall’s Historic Depot. You can find and listen to all the episodes at blueridgemusicnc.com/listen-and-learn/down-the-roadpodcast DOWN THE ROAD

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BILLY EDD WHEELER APPALACHIAN RENAISSANCE MAN

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itting at a large desk in a garage studio at his home in Swannanoa, Billy Edd Wheeler is surrounded by his life’s work — photos of family and friends, musical instruments, handmade paintings, published novels and plays, and wall after wall of gold and platinum records. “Things happen in your life where you hardly realize at the time that something is happening,” the 89-yearold marveled. “I’ve just always been in-

terested in creative people and running with anything that inspires me — always pursuing any idea that pops into my head.” Born and raised in the mining town of Whitesville, West Virginia, Wheeler was surrounded by bluegrass, folk, blues and mountain music. And it wasn’t long before Wheeler himself picked up a guitar and started writing his own songs, all with hopes of someday recording and performing the material.

Wheeler was also a burgeoning playwright, but just barely scratching the surface of his many lyrical and literary talents in those early years. After graduating from Warren Wilson College in Swannanoa in 1953 and Berea College (Kentucky) in 1955, he then served in the Navy and started working at Berea. And yet, it was a chance encounter around this time with legendary Pulitzer Prize-winning American playwright/novelist Thornton Wilder

Billy Edd Wheeler and Chet Atkins.

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“While at Yale, I would often wander down to Greenwich Village in New York City and immerse myself in the folk music scene — it was there where I really felt inspired to write songs.” — BILLY EDD WHEELER which ultimately shifted the trajectory of Wheeler’s life and aspirations. “I told him I wanted to write plays and he told me to go to Yale School of Drama in New Haven, Connecticut, and that they gave out scholarships. So, I did just that in the early 1960s,” Wheeler said. “While at Yale, I would often wander down to Greenwich Village in New York City and immerse myself in the folk music scene — it was there where I really felt inspired to write songs.” By 1961, Wheeler had made his first album. His 1964 release, “Memories of America,” hit number six on the nationwide country charts and included the number three country hit “Ode to the Little Brown Shack Out Back.” In 1967, Wheeler’s melody “Jackson” rose to number two on the Billboard Country chart when it was covered by Johnny & June Carter Cash. The song would go on to take home the Grammy Award for “Best Country & Western Per-

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formance Duet, Trio or Group” in 1968. “My mind is constantly working, always thinking and being inspired by something, whether in my daily life or from a dream I had — and I have such insane dreams,” Wheeler chuckled. “And you just never know where an idea for a song or a play will come from, but there’s always these little pieces of information here and there that will spark something for me to write down and work on.” As time went along, Wheeler returned to Western North Carolina, where he met and married the love of his life, Mary, who’s still by his side to this day. In 2001, Wheeler was inducted in the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, with a recognition from the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame coming in 2011. In his decades as a successful songwriter, Wheeler’s work has been recorded by dozens and dozens of

acclaimed artists, including Elvis Presley, Kenny Rogers, Neil Young, Florence and the Machine, Nancy Sinatra, Judy Collins, Jefferson Airplane, and Bobby Darin. Wheeler has also written and published eight plays/musicals, several dramas and numerous acclaimed books of prose and poetry. He is also an abstract painter. In 2018, he finally penned his highly-anticipated memoir, “Hotter Than a Pepper Sprout: A Hillbilly Poet’s Journey from Appalachia to Yale to Writing Hits for Elvis, Johnny Cash & More.” His latest novel, “The Boston Cowgirl,” was released in 2021. “Everything that has happened in my life has led to something else wonderful happening,” Wheeler marveled. “There are lots of things that happen in life that you think may happen and they don’t, and vice versa — the beauty of life is that you never know what’s going to happen.”

BLUE RIDGE MUSIC TRAILS


(Just not the one you’ve been in for a year)

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Earl Scruggs. WWW.NASHVILLEPORTRAITS.COM PHOTO

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BLUE RIDGE MUSIC TRAILS


CELEBRATING AN ICONIC INNOVATOR EARL SCRUGGS MUSIC FESTIVAL

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musical legend in his own right, Grammy Award-winning dobro player Jerry Douglas can sum up the late banjo great Earl Scruggs in one word.

DOWN THE ROAD

WWW.BLUERIDGEMUSICNC.COM

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Earl Scruggs (left) and Doc Watson.

A concert at the Earl Scruggs Center in downtown Shelby.

A young Earl Scruggs.

“Originator,” Douglas said. “I don’t think there would be bluegrass music as we know it if it hadn’t been for Earl Scruggs. If he hadn’t been there in the beginning, bluegrass would have never gotten off the ground — Earl was the catalyst, he was the one that made it all work, made people want to see and hear it.” With the inaugural Earl Scruggs Music Festival coming to the massive Tryon International Equestrian Center on Sept. 2-4, Douglas will be the master of cere-

the “Father of Bluegrass” Bill Monroe to join his band, the Blue Grass Boys. In December 1945, the group made its debut on the Grand Ole Opry — a groundbreaking moment that forever changed American music. “He was in total command of his instrument — Earl knew it, and so did the audience,” Douglas noted. “And he found out how to get the best tone out of his instrument, by not slamming on the banjo, where it’s not too hard and not too soft — this place where you’re

34

monies in honoring the banjo giant in Scruggs’ native Western North Carolina. “Earl is to bluegrass musicians the same way Django Reinhardt is to jazz,” Douglas said. “There’s just so much foundational information about this music in what Earl played, whether it was when he was with Bill Monroe or with Flatt & Scruggs.” Scruggs was born in 1924 in Cleveland County, and after spending his youth there his professional career took flight when, at age 21, he was hired by

BLUE RIDGE MUSIC TRAILS


sailing along smoothly in the midst of performance.” The festival will also feature performances by Douglas and his storied group The Earl of Leicester, Balsam Range, Acoustic Syndicate, Molly Tuttle & Golden Highway, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Sam Bush, Dom Flemons, Rob Ickes & Trey Hensley, and many more. “We couldn’t think of a better way to honor Earl, his legacy and continued influence, than to launch a music festival in his memory,” said Mary Beth Martin, executive director of the Earl Scruggs Center in Shelby. Jerry Douglas.

The idea for the event was hatched as a partnership between the center, Isothermal Community College, WNCW radio and the equestrian center. The initial plans were put on hold for the last two years due to the pandemic and shutdown of the live music industry. But, for 2022, the show will finally hit the stage in Tryon. “And this festival will ideally complement our museum in Shelby. The Earl Scruggs Center has attracted visitors from all 50 states and 20 countries, with thousands of people coming in each year wanting to learn more about this musical legend,” Martin said. “Earl was a wonderful person, a very humble person who was this incredible artist and innovator. He was always willing to embrace change and embrace creativity — something that still resonates deeply with today’s musicians.” That attitude of inclusivity and breaking down musical barriers harbored by Scruggs is something of a kindred spirit to Douglas, another iconic musician always down to try something new or jump into another genre of music — all for the pure and simple sake of making a melodic connection with another human being. “I mean, there Earl was [in the early 1970s] playing Bob Dylan songs with The Byrds,” Douglas marveled. “He was always trying new things, always opening his mind to different types of music — he wanted to meet all of these people, and they all wanted to meet him.”

DOWN THE ROAD

WWW.BLUERIDGEMUSICNC.COM

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The mural of Nina Simone in Tryon.

DOWN THE ROAD BLUE RIDGE MUSIC TRAILS OF NORTH CAROLINA PODCAST

T

he Blue Ridge National Heritage Area has launched Season 4 of the Down the Road on the Blue Ridge Music Trails podcast on WNCW-FM (88.7). This podcast highlights bluegrass and old-time music stories, performers, venues, and traditions across the mountain and foothills counties of Western North Carolina. These traditions and stories are the soul and spirit of the Blue Ridge Music Trails of North Carolina. Coming up in Season 4, we’ll spend time with ballad singers, historic venues, musical communities, legendary instruments, and more! The podcasts are hosted by Laura

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Boosinger, musician, folklorist, and storyteller; scripted by Blue Ridge National Heritage Area Program Manager, musician, and luthier Brandon Johnson; and produced by Corrie Askew and Joe Kendrick of WNCW-FM. Episodes from Seasons 1 and 2 ran approximately three minutes. Starting with Season 3, episodes were expanded to 9 minutes to feature more content and music highlighting the musicians and stories being told. The episodes from Season 3 covered a wide range of topics including Dinner on the Grounds, the NC Musician Murals Project, the legend of Tom Dula, music camps across Western North Carolina, and more. The

last two episodes of Season 3, focused on Arvil Freeman, a legendary fiddler and teacher who passed away in 2021 and celebrated David Holt, who received the North Carolina Award in 2021. Another episode explored the history of the song “The Cuckoo,” which dates from 12th Century England but gained prominence in old-time music through the recording of Clarence Ashely. You can listen-in to the podcast every other week on WNCW-FM (88.7) at about 8:50 a.m. on Tuesday mornings (at the end of NPR’s Morning Edition). Episodes from all four seasons can be found at blueridgemusicnc.com/listenand-learn/down-the-road-podcast.

BLUE RIDGE MUSIC TRAILS


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MANGUM POTTERY FLOWING FROM YOUR FINGERTIPS

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hen Beth Mangum reflects on the 25 years that Mangum Pottery has been in downtown Weaverville, she can’t help but feel a deep sense of pride — at not only the artistic beehive at the heart of the community, but also the sincere importance of this collective in her backyard. “We have so much local support here for artists, and that’s really a wonderful thing — this is a community that comes together,” Beth said. “Even through the obstacles and challenges we’ve faced over the years, it’s been such a rewarding lifestyle to be a working artist in this town.” Alongside her husband and fellow potter, Rob, the couple have made a name for themselves in the rich, vibrant artistic realm at the heart of the creativity and culture of Western North

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Carolina. Both Beth and Rob have a lifelong love of pottery, each with a different road to what ultimately became their passion and career. For Beth, it was playing in the clay of her backyard in Virginia as a young kid, digging out chunks of earth and pretending to make pots. On the other hand, Rob was raised in a pottery household, with his parents’ artisan crafters at their home studio outside of Sparta. Meeting at the North Carolina State University School of Design, Beth was studying fibers and surface design, while Rob was working in graphics and illustration. “He was pursuing other ideas and thinking about being an illustrator,” Beth said. “But, he then began to think about becoming a potter. It was some-

thing he had done all of his life and enjoyed doing. And while we were dating, I sort of jumped in and helped cut out pieces of clay for him, mixing glazes. Next thing I knew, I was actually making pots.” The Mangums eventually found themselves in these mountains in the mid-1980s, which included Beth taking pottery and fiber classes at the storied Penland School of Craft. “And I began to realize this area is where I wanted to live. People thought I was crazy when I said I was moving here, saying there was nothing here for me,” Beth reminisced with a laugh. “Downtown Asheville was pretty quiet at the time, and I had other artist friends moving here to open studios in the rundown buildings in the city. There really was a lot of opportu-

BLUE RIDGE MUSIC TRAILS


nity here, and it’s crazy to see how much everything has changed.” By 1997, the Mangums opened the pottery studio in Weaverville, a small town just north of Asheville, a place where they could create and nurture their own respective creative environment. “We like being on Main Street because it makes us easy to find,” Beth said. “And now, there’s so many other studios and artists in our community, all of these festivals and craft markets where we gather and support each other.” Beth and Rob Mangum. Aside from pottery, Rob is also an acclaimed luthier who specializes in constructing banjos made of wire, wood and pottery. To that point, the Mangums are longtime musicians around the area, with Rob a member of oldtime/folk group The Barsters. “And every now and again, we’ll get an amazing banjo player coming into the studio, who’ll sit and play one of Rob’s clay banjos,” Beth said. Now a pillar of the artist community in Weaverville and Western North Carolina, the Mangums are grateful for the life they’ve created for themselves, especially the interactions with the countless people who have stepped inside their studio over the years and for all those they’ve befriended. “Pottery is our life’s work,” Beth said. “It means everything to us to be able to make a living from clay, to be doing something we love to do. We both continue to grow as artists and still find creative fulfillment each time we sit at the wheel with a fresh chunk of clay.”

DOWN THE ROAD

WWW.BLUERIDGEMUSICNC.COM

BLUE RIDGE CRAFT TRAILS After several years of development, the highly-anticipated launch of the Blue Ridge Craft Trails is now a reality, with over 325 locations covering 25 counties and the Qualla Boundary in Western North Carolina. "While the American Craft Council defines craft by five media — clay, fiber, wood, metal, and glass — at the Blue Ridge Craft Trails, we take a broader view,” said Anna Fariello, curator of the BRCT. “We focus on the handmade experience and appreciate WNC craft makers for their innovative approaches to materials and technique, while sharing in their tactile experience." The BRCT will further complement the already large success of the Blue Ridge Music Trails, which are both part of the Blue Ridge National Heritage Area. Federally designated as a National Heritage Area in 2003, the BRNHA is one of 55 heritage areas across the United States. "I see the Blue Ridge Craft Trails and the Blue Ridge Music Trails as two sides of the same coin. Music and craft have been central pieces of the fabric of life in the Blue Ridge Mountains for centuries,” said Brandon Johnson, project manager for the BRNHA. “Today, these two trails help people find and experience authentic traditional music and handmade craft and help direct audiences and customers to musicians and makers.” As long as human beings have inhabited the mountains of Western North Carolina and greater Southern Appalachia, there has been the sacred art and practice of passing down these ancient techniques of craft mediums in the vast, vibrant culture of this region. "Western North Carolina in particular is rich in craft, having a long history of appreciation for the handmade,” Fariello said. “Today’s makers have the advantage of building on a legacy that produced a wealth of heritage objects and a number of longlasting educational institutions that have helped sustain these traditions.” With an array of storied institutions preserving and perpetuating craft skillsets and knowledge through the generations, these places include the John C. Campbell Folk School, Penland School of Craft, Southern Highland Craft Guild, and Qualla Arts and Crafts Mutual. "There is such a wide variety of quality work and artists to be found on the Blue Ridge Craft Trail, from young artists just opening their first studio to celebrated veterans in the craft field,” said Robin Johnston, a weaver and the coordinator for the BRCT, who has also been an “Artist-in-Residence” at Penland School of Craft. “Every artist has a fascinating story. Experiencing where they work, hearing about their lives and what inspires them, seeing the raw materials and how things are made, will resonate with each visitor — and may even light a spark for future makers.” For more information about the Blue Ridge Craft Trails, visit BlueRidgeCraftTrails.com. 39


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BLUE RIDGE MUSIC TRAILS


DOWN THE ROAD

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41


HAPPENINGS FESTIVALS, CONCERT SERIES, JAM SESSIONS, MUSIC CAMPS, EXHIBITS AND MORE

YEAR ROUND

6

Alleghany Jubilee

Concerts at 185 King Street 185kingst.com Concerts year round, visit website

Concerts at Asheville Music Hall ASHEVILLE

ashevillemusichall.com

SPARTA

Concerts year round, visit website

alleghanyjubilee.com

Concerts at Black Mountain Center for the Arts

Monday 6-8 pm, Tuesdays 7-9:30pm, Saturdays 7-10 pm

BLACK MOUNTAIN

Blue Ridge & Beyond Concert Series

blackmountainarts.org

MOUNT AIRY

Concerts at Burnsville Town Center

surryarts.org

Concerts year round, visit website

BURNSVILLE

Concerts year round, visit website

burnsvilletowncenter.com

Bluegrass & Old-Time at Jack of the Wood

Concerts year round, visit website

ASHEVILLE

jackofthewood.com Wednesdays 7 pm Old-Time Jam, Thursdays 7 pm Bluegrass Jam, Friday-Saturday evening bands (visit website), Sunday 12-3 pm Bluegrass Brunch

Bluegrass & Old-Time Community Jam

PLEASE CHECK

BREVARD

Concerts at City of Morganton Municipal Auditorium

The Down the Road events calendar was published when some venues and events were closed or canceled because of COVID-19. Please check with event organizers and venue contacts to confirm details prior to attending. Concerts at Silverados

Concerts at The Grey Eagle

BLACK MOUNTAIN

thegreyeagle.com

silveradoswnc.com

Concerts year round, visit website

Concerts year round, visit website

Concerts at The Orange Peel

Concerts at Smoky Mountain Center for the Performing Arts

ASHEVILLE Concerts year round, visit website

greatmountainmusic.com

Concerts at the Reeves Theater

Concerts year round, visit website

MORGANTON

CoMMAOnline.org

BOONE

Concerts year round, visit website

apptheatre.org

ASHEVILLE

blueridgemusicnc.com

Concerts year round, visit website

artsplaceofstokes.org

Monthly, 3rd Monday 6:30 - 8:30pm

Concerts at Isis Music Hall & Tuesday Bluegrass Sessions

BLACK MOUNTAIN

whitehorseblackmountain.com Concerts year round, visit website

Crouse House Pickers (Jam Session) SPARTA

townofsparta.org

Concerts at the Don Gibson Theatre

ASHEVILLE

cccra-nc.org

isisasheville.com

SHELBY

Daily, sunrise to sunset

Concerts year round, visit website, Bluegrass Tuesdays 7:30-9:30 pm

dongibsontheater.com

Concerts at J.E. Broyhill Civic Center

Concerts at The Foundation Performing Arts Center

BLOWING ROCK

Concerts year round, visit website

Concerts at White Horse Black Mountain

Concerts year round, visit website

HAYESVILLE

Concerts & Events at Blowing Rock Art & History Museum

ReevesTheater.com

Concerts at The Arts Place of Stokes DANBURY

Cherokee Homestead Exhibit

ELKIN

Concerts year round, visit website

highlandbrewing.com

BANNER ELK

Mondays 6 pm

Earl Scruggs Center: Music & Stories from the American South

Concerts year round, visit website

SHELBY

earlscruggscenter.org Tuesday-Saturday 10 am-4 pm

blowingrockmuseum.org

LENOIR

SPINDALE

Concerts, lectures, and installations, visit website

broyhillcenter.com

foundationshows.org

Concerts year round, visit website

Concerts year round, visit website

Concerts Ashe Civic Center

Concerts at Muddy Creek Café & Music Hall

Concerts at The Gem at Boojum Taproom

WEST JEFFERSON

theorangepeel.net

FRANKLIN

Concerts at The Appalachian Theatre of the High Country

Concerts at Highland Brewing Company

ASHEVILLE

Feed & Seed FLETCHER

feedandseednc.com Friday-Saturday 7:30-9:30 pm

Jackson Arts Market

SPARTA

WAYNESVILLE

ashecivic.com

muddycreekcafeandmusichall.com

boojumbrewing.com

jacksonartsmarket.com

Concerts year round, visit website

Concerts year round, visit website

Friday & Saturday evenings, visit website

Saturday & Sunday 1 pm-5 pm

42

SYLVA

BLUE RIDGE MUSIC TRAILS


Jam Sessions at the Barber Shop

Music N'All at the Barn

Tom Dooley Museum

EDEN

FERGUSON

DREXEL

whippoorwillacademy.com

blueridgemusicnc.com

exploreedennc.com/item/music-nallat-the-barn/

Saturdays 11 am

Tuesdays 7-9 pm

Tours Wednesday & Saturday, 1-5 pm or by appointment

Jimmy's Pick n Grin

Old-Time Jam at the Reeves

Tuesday Casual Collaborations

ANDREWS

ELKIN

BREVARD

blueridgemusicnc.com

ReevesTheater.com

185kingst.com

Saturdays 7-11 pm

Fourth Thursdays, except major holidays, 5:30 pm

Jones House - Weekly Jam Session

Old-Time Music Heritage Hall

Tuesdays 6pm

WPAQ Saturday Morning MerryGo Round

BOONE

MOUNT AIRY

MOUNT AIRY

joneshouse.org

surryarts.org

wpaq740.com

Thursday 7:30-10 pm

Monday-Friday 11 am-3 pm, Saturday 1:30 pm-3:30 pm, Sunday 1-3:30 pm

Saturdays 11 am-1:30pm

Open Mic Night at the Reeves

Yadkin Cultural Arts Center Concert Series

ELKIN

YADKINVILLE

madisoncountyarts.com

ReevesTheater.com

yadkinarts.org

Concerts year round, visit website

Tuesdays 6:30 pm, except major holidays

Concerts year round, visit website

Meadowlark Smoky Mountain Heritage Center Concerts & Events

Phipps General Store Jam

Zuma Coffee Bluegrass Jam Session

Madison County Arts Council Concerts Series MARSHALL

LANSING

MARSHALL

meadowlarkmotel.com

blueridgemusicnc.com

zumascoffee.com

Events year round, visit website

Fridays 7-11 pm

Thursdays 7-9 pm

Micaville Music Jam

Sandy Ridge Music Association Bluegrass & Gospel Concerts

MAGGIE VALLEY

MICAVILLE

ooakartgallery.com

SANDY RIDGE

Saturdays 10 am-12 noon

blueridgemusicnc.com

Mount Airy Museum of Regional History MOUNT AIRY

2nd Saturday monthly 6-8 pm

6

Saturday Bluegrass Jam – Weekly at the Earl Scruggs Center

northcarolinamuseum.org

MILL SPRING

Tuesday-Sunday 10 am-5 pm, visit website

earlscruggsmusicfestival.com

Mountain Gateway Museum and Sunday Afternoon Jam

6 SEASONAL

Friday 2 pm-1am, Saturday 10:15 am-midnight

Red, White & Bluegrass Jam Session BOONE

blueridgemusicnc.com April-November, 1st & 3rd Tuesdays 7 pm

mgmnc.org

Saturday Jam at the Todd Mercantile

Tuesday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm, Sunday 2 pm-5 pm, Sunday Jam Session 2 pm

toddmercantile.com

blueridgemusicnc.com

Saturdays 1-3 pm

April - December, first friday of each month

OLD FORT

Mountain Music Jam at Oklawaha Brewing Company HENDERSONVILLE

TODD

Saturday Morning Gospel Jam

Music at the Mills UNION MILLS

oklawahabrewing.com

MARION

Brasstown Community Civic Center Summer Concerts

Wednesdays 6:30-8:30 pm

blueridgemusicnc.com

BRASSTOWN

Saturdays 10 am-12 noon

brasstowncommunitycenter.org

Mountain Music Monday’s at the Tasty Weasel Taproom

SEBA 3rd Saturday Jam

May-August, 2nd & 4th Saturdays 7 pm

BREVARD

FRANKLIN

Backstreet Park Summer Concerts

oskarblues.com

coweeschool.org

WEST JEFFERSON

Mondays, June-September 6-8 pm, October-May 5:30-7:30 pm

3rd Saturday monthly, 12-3 pm

visitwestjefferson.org

Sims Country Bar-B-Que - Food, Music & Dancing

Fridays in the Park

Music & History at Wilkes Heritage Museum

May-August. Fridays 5:30 pm

GRANITE FALLS

JEFFERSON

WILKESBORO

simscountrybbq.com

ashecountyarts.org

wilkesheritagemuseum.com

Friday and Saturday 5-9 pm

May 20, June 17, August 19, Fridays 7pm

Monday-Friday 10 am-4 pm

Music at the Depot

Thursday Night Jam at the Silvermont Mansion

Summer Concert Series On the Historic Hayesville Square

MARSHALL

BREVARD

HAYESVILLE

visitmadisoncounty.com

silvermont.org

cccra-nc.org

Fridays 7 pm

Thursday 7 pm

May 24-September 2, most Fridays 7 pm

DOWN THE ROAD

WWW.BLUERIDGEMUSICNC.COM

RADIO SHOWS

Enjoy the sounds of mountain music from the comfort of your home, cabin, or car by dialing in (or streaming) a radio show. Here’s a sampling: • BLUEGRASS REVIEW, 3-5 pm Sundays, WSQL 102.1 FM • CLOSE TO HOME (old-time music), 8-10 pm Saturdays, WCQS 88.1 FM • COUNTRY ROOTS, 7-9 pm Sundays, WCQS 88.1 FM • GOIN’ ACROSS THE MOUNTAIN (bluegrass), 11am-7 pm Saturdays, WNCW 88.7 FM • GOSPEL TRUTH (bluegrass gospel), 7-9 am Sundays, WNCW 88.7 FM • MOUNTAIN MORNINGS (bluegrass), Sunday through Friday, 6-7 am, WNCW 88.7 FM • THE TALL GRASS (bluegrass and roots music), 6-7 pm Sundays, WNCW 88.7 FM • THIS OLD PORCH (old-time music), 3-6 pm Sundays, WNCW 88.7 FM • WPAQ 740 AM – bluegrass and old-time music Check out our Down the Road Magazine 2022 Spotify Playlist to enjoy music from the stories you’re reading.

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Saturday Bluegrass Jam Weekly at the Earl Scruggs Center.

Concerts on the Creek at Bridge Park

Music & Dance at the Stompin' Ground

Shindig on the Green ASHEVILLE

Music on the Courthouse Square in Robbinsville

SYLVA

MAGGIE VALLEY

folkheritage.org

ROBBINSVILLE

mountainlovers.com

blueridgemusicnc.com

townofrobbinsville.com

May 27-September 2, Fridays, and July 4th, 7 pm

May-October, Saturdays 8 pm-10:30 pm

Jun 25, Jul 2, 9, 16, 23, 30. Aug 13 2022, Saturdays 7 pm

Live Mountain Music at the Orchard at Altapass

Hendersonville Street Dances

Music on Main in Sparta

June through mid-September, Fridays 810:30 pm

SPRUCE PINE

HENDERSONVILLE

Historic Cowee School Concert Series

blueridgemusicnc.com

altapassorchard.org

visithendersonvillenc.org

FRANKLIN

May-September, 1st Fridays 8 pm

May-October, Thursday-Sunday 1-5 pm, visit website

June 13, 27, July 18, August 1, 15, Mondays 7pm

coweeschool.org

Concerts at the Blue Ridge Music Center

Waynesville Street Dance

Saturdays in the Park

WEST JEFFERSON

ashehistory.org

BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY MILEPOST 213

downtownwaynesville.com

alleghanyartscouncil.org

May-September, Sundays 3 pm, visit website

blueridgemusiccenter.org

June 24, July 8 and 22, August 5, 6:30-9 pm

June-September, 4th Saturday each month 6 pm-9 pm

Micaville Music Concert Series

Blue Ridge Music Center Roots of American Music Exhibition

An Appalachian Evening Summer Concert Series

BMC Presents at Brevard Music Center Festival

SPARTA

Concerts at Museum of Ashe County History

MICAVILLE

ooakartgallery.com May-September, Thursdays 6:30 pm

Songwriter Showcase HAYESVILLE

thepeacocknc.org May 7, June 11, July 16, August 27, September 10, October 22, 7 pm

Tucker's Barn Singer & Songwriters Series LENOIR

blueridgemusicnc.com May-October, 1st Thursday 7-9 pm

May-October, visit website

BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY MILEPOST 213

blueridgemusiccenter.org May (Thursday-Monday), June-October (daily), 10 am-5 pm

Pickin' on the Square

June-September, 3rd Saturday 7 pm

WAYNESVILLE

SPARTA

ROBBINSVILLE

BREVARD

stecoahvalleycenter.com

brevardmusic.org

June 29-August 31, Saturdays 7:30

June-September, multiple concerts, visit website

Summer Concerts at the Jones House

Songcatchers Music Series

BOONE

BREVARD

joneshouse.org

cradleofforestry.com

franklinnc.com

June-August, Fridays 5:30 pm

July Sundays, 2-5 pm

May 28-October 22, Saturdays 7-9 pm

Unto These Hills

Summer Concerts in the Park

CHEROKEE

BANNER ELK

cherokeehistorical.org

bannerelk.org

FRANKLIN

Jam Sessions at the T.M. Rickman Store

June-August, Monday-Saturday, 8 pm

July 1 - August 26, Thursday 6:30 pm

rickmanstore.com

Todd Summer Concert Series

Brevard's Old-Time Street Dance

May 4-December 14, Saturdays 12 noon-4 pm

TODD

BREVARD

toddnc.org

brevardnc.org July-August, 1st Tuesday, 6:30pm

May-October, daily 12 noon-4 pm

And the Beat Goes On Music Series

June-August, Saturdays 6 pm

Friday Night Live

SPARTA

Summer Tracks Concert Series

Joe Shannon's Mountain Home Music Concert Series

HIGHLANDS

alleghanyartscouncil.org

TRYON

BOONE & BLOWING ROCK

highlandschamber.org

May, June, July, August, September, November, December, one concert a month, 8 pm

summertracks.com

mountainhomemusic.com

June-August, two concerts a month, visit website

July-December, multiple concerts, visit website

Mid-Day Mountain Muisc at the Blue Ridge Music Center BLUE RIDGE PARKWAY MILEPOST 213

BlueRidgeMusicCenter.org

Mid-May through mid-October, Fridays 6 pm

44

FRANKLIN

BLUE RIDGE MUSIC TRAILS


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JUNE 25 Art of Sound Festival

Mountain Heritage Day.

SHELBY

ccartscouncil.org Saturday 10 am-10 pm

JUNE 26 Singing on the Mountain at MacRae Meadows LINVILLE

singingonthemountain.org Sunday 9 am-2 pm

JUNE 26-JULY 2 Swannanoa Gathering Mando & Banjo Week ASHEVILLE

swangathering.com Sunday-Saturday, week-long session

JUNE 26-JULY 2 Swannanoa Gathering Fiddle Week Indoor Concerts at the Jones House

APRIL 29-MAY 2, 2021 MerleFest

JUNE 4 Cold Mountain Music Festival

BOONE

WILKESBORO

CANTON

joneshouse.org

merlefest.org

coldmountainmusic.org

September-May 7:30 pm, one to three concerts each month, visit website

Thursday 2:30-11 pm, Friday & Saturday 9 am-11 pm, Sunday 9 am-7 pm

Friday 1-10 pm, Saturday 12 noon-11 pm

Sacred Harp Singing SWANNANOA

christianharmony.org September-May, 3rd Sunday each month, 1 pm-3 pm

Concerts at the Rock VALDESE

6 MAY 6

October 2022-March 2023, one Saturday a month 7 pm

MAY 27-28 Swain County Heritage Festival

The Original Pickin at Priddy's

BRYSON CITY

DANBURY

greatsmokies.com

priddysgeneralstore.com

Friday 5-10 pm, Saturday 9 am-9 pm, visit website

townofvaldese.com

October, 1st Saturday plus the next four, 3-5 pm

6 APRIL 6

APRIL 8-10 Ola Belle Reed: A Songwriting Retreat WEST JEFFERSON

ashecountyarts.org Friday-Sunday, visit website

APRIL 28-MAY 1 The Way of the Dulcimer Spring & Fall Retreat

MAY 30 Carl Sandburg Folk Music Festival FLAT ROCK

nps.gov/carl Monday 10 am-4 pm

6 JUNE 6

JUNE 3-4 Mount Airy Bluegrass and Old Time Fiddlers Convention

JUNE 5-11 Blue Ridge Old-Time Music Week

ASHEVILLE

swangathering.com Sunday-Saturday, week-long session

JUNE 27 Annual Heritage Day and Wood Kiln Opening LENOIR

traditionspottery.com Saturday 9 am-4 pm

MARS HILL

mhu.edu/conferences Sunday-Saturday, week-long session

JUNE 9-11 Cherokee Bluegrass Festival CHEROKEE

evansmediasource.com Thursday 12 noon-Saturday 10 pm

6 JULY 6

JULY 1-2 Christmas in July Festival

JUNE 11 Bluff Mountain Festival HOT SPRINGS

WEST JEFFERSON

madisoncountyarts.com

ChristmasinJuly.info

Saturday 10 am-5 pm

Friday 3-10 pm, Saturday 9 am-7 pm

JUNE 17 Annual Doc Watson Day Celebration Friday

JULY 1-2 Graham County Heritage Festival

BOONE

ROBBINSVILLE

joneshouse.org

grahamcountytravel.com

Friday 4 pm

JUNE 18-19 Blue Ridge Heritage Weekend WAYNESVILLE

sheltonhouse.org Saturday 9:30 am-4 pm, Sunday 1-5 pm

JUNE 24-25 Backwoods Beat Music & Art Festival

Friday 5 10:30 pm, Saturday 9 am 11:30 pm

JULY 3-9 Swannanoa Gathering Traditional Song Week ASHEVILLE

swangathering.com Sunday-Saturday, week-long session

JULY 9 Coon Dog Day

LITTLE SWITZERLAND

MOUNT AIRY

donpedi.com

mountairyfiddlersconvention.com

alleghanyartscouncil.org

SALUDA

Thursday 3-9 pm, Friday & Saturday 8 am10 pm, Sunday 8-11 am

Friday 2:00-11:00 pm, Saturday 9:30 am11:00 pm

Friday-Saturday evening concerts, Saturday Festival 10 am-5 pm

cityofsaludanc.com

46

SPARTA

Saturday 9 am-11 pm

BLUE RIDGE MUSIC TRAILS


Every heart craves a path... seek yours in the towns and on the trails of the NC Blue Ridge Mountains! or a half century, FIND Outdoors has provided visitors with exceptional outdoor experiences and forest-related information throughout North Carolina, Georgia, Indiana and Kentucky. We’re proud to encourage everyone to go FIND Outdoors and look forward to seeing visitors this season!

828.883.FIND (3463)

We provide the playlist. You control the volume.

@FINDOUTDOORS

4 9 P I S G A H H W Y, S U I T E 4 | P I S G A H F O R E S T, N C 2 8 7 6 8

ROAD TRIP! Put on your favorite

tunes and let our scenic mountain vistas create nature’s playlist. Turn up the volume with mountainous zip lines and whitewater adventures. Or wind down with waterfall hikes and wine tastings. Choose a mountain inn or a log cabin that’s just right. Enjoy the twists and turns around Historic Saluda, Tryon, and Columbus just 90 minutes west of Charlotte.

First Peak Visitor Center, Columbus, NC firstpeaknc.com • 800-440-7848

PHOTO BY: Halley Burleson/Appalachian Exposures

www.NCBlueRidge.com Providing the finest in tourist recommendations since 1996


AUGUST 19-20 LEAF Downtown

SEPTEMBER 17 Mountain Heritage Festival

ASHEVILLE

SPARTA

theleaf.org

alleghanycountychamber.com

Friday-Saturday 12 pm-11 pm

Saturday 10 am-4:30 pm

AUGUST 20 Franklin Area Folk Festival FRANKLIN

SEPTEMBER 17 Cherokee Heritage Festival in Hayesville

FranklinFolkFestival.com

HAYESVILLE

Saturday 10 am-4 pm

cccra-nc.org

6 SEPTEMBER 6

Saturday 10 am-3 pm

SEPTEMBER 2-4 Happy Valley Fiddlers Convention LENOIR

happyvalleyfiddlers.org Friday 7-11 pm, Saturday 11 am-11 pm, Sunday 10 am-6 pm

JULY 24-30 Swannanoa Gathering Guitar Week

SPARTA

ASHEVILLE

blueridgemusicnc.com

swangathering.com

Friday 5-10 pm, Saturday 11 am-11 pm

Sunday-Saturday, week-long session

JULY 15-16 Annual NC Blackberry Festival

JULY 28-31 Folkmoot Summerfest 2022

LENOIR

WAYNESVILLE & WNC

ncblackberryfestival.com

folkmootusa.org

Thursday 6-9 pm, Friday 5-9 pm, Saturday 9 am-9 pm

Daily performances and events, visit website

JULY 17-23 Swannanoa Gathering Old-Time Week ASHEVILLE

swangathering.com Sunday-Saturday week-long session

JULY 22-23 Ashe County Bluegrass and Old Time Fiddlers Convention WEST JEFFERSON

6 AUGUST 6

AUGUST 4-6 Mountain Dance and Folk Festival

southernhighlandguild.org Saturday 10 am-4 pm, Sunday 12 noon-5 pm

SEPTEMBER 17 Music in the Mountains Folk Festival BURNSVILLE

toeriverarts.org

TRYON

SEPTEMBER 17 Yadkin Valley Harvest Festival

Saturday 5:30-8:30 pm

Friday & Saturday, All Day

JULY 15-16 Alleghany County Fiddlers Convention

ASHEVILLE

SEPTEMBER 2-4 Earl Scruggs Music Festival earlscruggsmusicfestival.com LEAF Festival.

SEPTEMBER 17 Heritage Weekend at the Folk Art Center

SEPTEMBER 3 Fall Etowah Christian Harmony Singing

YADKINVILLE

ETOWAH

SEPTEMBER 23-24 Carolina in the Fall Music & Food Festival

etowahshapenote.org Saturday 10 am-3 pm

yadkinarts.org Saturday, 10 am-3:30 pm

SEPTEMBER 4 New River Blues Festival

WILKESBORO

GRASSY CREEK

Friday-Saturday 10 am-10 pm

NewRiverBluesFestival.info

SEPTEMBER 24 Mountain Heritage Day

carolinainthefall.org

Sunday 2-5 pm

SEPTEMBER 9-10 Mountain Song Festival

CULLOWHEE

mountainheritageday.com

BREVARD

Saturday 10 am-5 pm

mountainsongfestival.com Friday 4-10 pm, Saturday 12 noon-10 pm

SEPTEMBER 9-18 Mountain Music Festival at the Mountain State Fair FLETCHER

wncagcenter.org Performances throughout the 10-day event

SEPTEMBER 10 Music at the Mill

6 OCTOBER 6

OCTOBER 1 Spruce Pine BBQ Championship & Bluegrass Festival

ashefiddlersconvention.org

ASHEVILLE

WAYNESVILLE

SPRUCE PINE

Thursday 7-9 pm, Friday-Saturday 10 am10 pm

folkheritage.org

francismill.org

sprucepinebbqbluegrass.org

Thursday-Saturday 6:30-9:30 pm

Saturday 10 am-4 pm

Saturday 10 am-10 pm

JULY 23 Annual Swannanoa Shaped Note Singing

AUGUST 18-20 Annual North Carolina State Bluegrass Festival

SEPTEMBER 11 Annual Old Folks Day ShapedNote Singing

OCTOBER 1 Bascom Lamar Lunsford "Minstrel of Appalachia" Festival

ASHEVILLE

MARION

CANTON

MARS HILL

christianharmony.org

evansmediasource.com

qssingingschool.org

lunsfordfestival.com

Saturday 10 am-3 pm

Thursday 12 noon-Saturday 10 pm

Sunday 12 noon-3 pm

Saturday 10 am-7 pm

48

BLUE RIDGE MUSIC TRAILS


Carolina in the Fall Food and Music Festival.

6 DECEMBER 6

DECEMBER 3 Annual Singing on the French Broad River MARSHALL

madisoncountyarts.com Saturday 9:30 am-3 pm

DECEMBER 31 & JANUARY 7, 2023 Breaking Up Christmas Dance MOUNT AIRY

surryarts.org Saturday 7-9:30pm

6 2023 6

FEBRUARY 2023 Appalachian State Old-Time Fiddler’s Convention

OCTOBER 1-2 John C. Campbell Folk School Fall Festival

OCTOBER 15 Apple Harvest Festival

OCTOBER 22 Riddlefest

BRASSTOWN

WAYNESVILLE

TraditionalVoicesGroup.com

fiddle.appstate.edu

folkschool.org

haywoodchamber.com

Saturday-Sunday 10 am-5 pm

Saturday 10 am-5 pm

Saturday 3-4 pm (seminar), 7-9 pm (concert)

Friday-Saturday, visit website for 2023 dates

OCTOBER 7-9 Cashiers Valley Leaf Festival

OCTOBER 15 Valle Country Fair

OCTOBER 29 Smoky Mountains Bluegrass Festival

FEBRUARY 2023 Bluegrass First Class

MAGGIE VALLEY

bluegrassfirstclass.com

CASHIERS

villagegreencashiersnc.com Friday-Saturday 10 am-5 pm, Sunday 10 am-3 pm

OCTOBER 8 Annual Church Street Art & Craft Show WAYNESVILLE

downtownwaynesville.com Saturday 10 am-5 pm

OCTOBER 14-15 Stecoah's Harvest Festival ROBBINSVILLE

stecoahvalleycenter.com Friday 6-8 pm, Saturday 11 am-5 pm

OCTOBER 14-16 Autumn Leaves Festival MOUNT AIRY

autumnleavesfestival.com Friday-Saturday 9 am-9 pm, Sunday 12 noon-6 pm

OCTOBER 15 The Official Fall Liver Mush Festival of North Carolina, Mush, Music and Mutts

VALLE CRUCIS

vallecountryfair.org Saturday 9 am-4 pm

BURNSVILLE

Haywoodarts.org Saturday 1-6 pm

OCTOBER 15-16 Woolly Worm Festival BANNER ELK

WoollyWorm.com Saturday 9 am-5 pm, Sunday 9 am-4 pm

OCTOBER 15-16 Punkin' Chunkin' Festival HAYESVILLE

claychambernc.com

6 NOVEMBER 6

NOVEMBER 12 Swannanoa Valley Shape Note Singing

Friday 6-9 pm, Saturday-Sunday 10 am-5 pm

BLACK MOUNTAIN

OCTOBER 20-23 LEAF Festival

Saturday 10 am-3 pm

BLACK MOUNTAIN

theleaf.org

christianharmony.org NOVEMBER 19 Ellenboro Fiddlers and Bluegrass Convention

BOONE

ASHEVILLE Friday-Sunday, visit website for 2023 dates

FEBRUARY 2023 Mount Airy Old-Time Retreat MOUNT AIRY

surryarts.org Thursday - Saturday session, visit website for 2023 dates

FEBRUARY 2023 Tommy Jarrell Festival MOUNT AIRY

surryarts.org Last Thursday-Saturday, visit website for 2023 dates

MARCH 2023 Caldwell Traditional Musicians Showcase LENOIR

Thursday 4:30-10 pm, Friday-Saturday 9 am-11 pm, Sunday 9 am-3 pm

ELLENBORO

broyhillcenter.com

blueridgemusicnc.com

Visit website for 2023 dates

OCTOBER 22 North Carolina Ceramic Arts Festival

Saturday 6:30 pm-10 pm

NOVEMBER 26 Annual Thanksgiving Kiln Opening

MARCH 2023 Annual Sandy Ridge School Bluegrass Show

SHELBY

ASHEVILLE

LENOIR

SANDY RIDGE

tourclevelandcounty.com

northcarolinaceramicartsfestival.com

traditionspottery.com

blueridgemusicnc.com

Saturday 10 am-4 pm

Saturday 10 am-5 pm

Saturday 10 am-4 pm

Visit website for 2023 dates

DOWN THE ROAD

WWW.BLUERIDGEMUSICNC.COM

49



Cowee School Arts & Heritage Center Built of local stone in 1943 on the site of a former Civilian Conservation Corps camp, the Cowee School educated area youth for nearly seven decades. The historic structure, in the heart of the Cowee-Wests Mills Historic District, is now an arts and heritage center serving Western North Carolina residents and visitors. Within a half mile of thousands of years of history, from the ancient Cowee Mound to the Rickman Store, the Cowee School Arts and Heritage Center is the hub of the Nikwasi-Cherokee Cultural Corridor. The center offers classes in the arts, pottery, weaving, shape-note singing, clogging, and mountain music among others. Rental space offers families and groups a place for weddings, reunions, and meetings. Cowee School is known for its events. The Annual Franklin Area Folk Festival, held on the third Saturday in August and organized through a partnership with the Folk Heritage Association of Macon County, draws thousands of visitors from all over to enjoy cultural arts,

music, folk demonstrations, and food. The Cowee School Summer Concert Series, beginning in May and running through October, offers high quality entertainment from several genres of music, with an emphasis on traditional styles such as bluegrass, Americana, and folk. Except for one up-and-coming band each year, the series includes award-winning nationally and internationally touring bands and musicians.

C owee School Arts & Heritage Center • Painting lessons • Toy Museum • Art Galleries • Textiles and Weaving • Alarka Expeditions

• Concerts • Eastern Band of Cherokee display • Pottery School • Mountaineer Handcrafts

Cowee Pottery School Classes Available Year-round

22 Summer Concert g Off the 20 Series Kickin

Franklin Area Folk Festival Saturday, August 20

Mountain Heart Saturday, May 21

Cowee Christmas Saturday, December 3

51 Cowee School Drive, Franklin | CoweeSchool.org | 828.369.4080



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