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Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.

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108 results for "Folk music"
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Record #:
35901
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Folk ballads served their purpose for a time before a large percentage of the general population allowed them to be superseded by more modern amusements. Ballads change over time; typically in the manner they are received.
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Record #:
35903
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Hosted by Ray Greene, a weekly event of old-time music features fiddling, bluegrass, swing, Christian music, and more.
Record #:
35904
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Abstract:
Important contributions of African banjo tradition influenced Southern music in the genre of lively lyric and rhythmically complex, banjo songs and in the old-time string band tradition—an ensemble that honors democratic interaction and the synthesis between the Celtic-American fiddle and the African American banjo traditions.
Subject(s):
Record #:
35905
Abstract:
Folk ballads have been a significant influence on British literary poetry. Thomas Hardy, a prolific literary balladist, was influenced by contemporary literary movements, but he also incorporated into his art qualities remembered from folk music and song encountered in his youth.
Record #:
35899
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Henry was a blues musician who had talent, perseverance, love of the blues, and helped preserve part of North Carolina’s musical heritage.
Record #:
35885
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By comparing multiple copies of The Wife of Bath, the author looks at its literary antecedents and other issues concerning verbal art as actually practiced, not falsely dichotomized.
Record #:
35888
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Teaching her children how to harmonize and encouraging their musical gifts, Landis contributed to musical life in churches, the black community, and the state of North Carolina.
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Record #:
16301
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Abstract:
Linn interviews Mrs. Bertie Dickens, an old time banjo player from North Carolina about her musical style, the folk revival, and her devotion to the old tunes and old ways.
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Record #:
35882
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The relationship between blues and gospel can be seen as two sides of the same coin; both blues are for despair, and gospel is for hope, relating to the same subject. The blues-gospel rap is a map for the psychologically unified view of the world. Using this dichotomy of hope-despair, the positions are either the blues are the illegitimate child of the spiritual, or that spiritual understanding is a marriage of hope and despair.
Record #:
16306
Author(s):
Abstract:
Scott Wiseman with his wife Lula Belle, shared in song the Wiseman view of life on the \"Cliffs of Linville\" with millions of Americans for well over twenty-five years, projecting an image of the region so appealing that they eventually became the most popular folk/country act on the nation's most popular country music radio program, the WLS National Barn Dance.
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Record #:
35842
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When North Carolina was still being settled by colonists, settlers in the mountain region used odd character notation for sight reading of music in Appalachia. These ‘shaped notes’ indicated the tone by their unique shape, whether written alone or placed on the lines and spaces of a musical staff.
Subject(s):
Record #:
35813
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Abstract:
Growing up between Cherokee and Anglo cultures, Manco Sneed learned to play the fiddle at a young age, and became well known for his music playing. Three transcriptions of his tunes are included.
Source:
Record #:
35814
Author(s):
Abstract:
This article focuses on the band the Roan Mountain Hilltoppers, in hopes of illustrating some of the more important qualities which characterize old-time music as they play and perceive it, not only in the terms of the music sound and techniques in producing it, but also in terms of the tradition which surrounds it.
Record #:
35816
Author(s):
Abstract:
Following the aftermath of WWI, the waltz and the blues became increasingly important and popular. Southern fiddlers began to incorporate blues elements and tunes into their music, partially in response to increased awareness of blues through recordings and radio, and partially through a growing appreciation of local black blues styles.