Terry Baucom heard the sound of Earl Scruggs’ banjo on the Beverly Hillbillies television show and at the age of 10. His parents gave him a banjo that year for Christmas and he was soon performing locally and regionally with his father’s band, “The Rocky River Boys.” He also started playing fiddle and got more experience from joining L.W. Lambert and The Blue River Boys, as well as, A. L. Wood and The Smokey Ridge Boys. Baucom is known as “The Duke of Drive,” a reference to his ability to “drive” a song with his steady, hard-driving banjo style. His first professional job came in 1970 with Charlie Moore and the Dixie Partners. In 1976, he joined Ricky Skaggs, Jerry Douglas and Wes Golding to form “Boone Creek”, a band based in Lexington, Kentucky. In 1979, he was a founding member of Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver. He toured and recorded with the band for the first 6 years and later returned to “Quicksilver” from 2003-2007. Baucom was the original banjo player for IIIrd Tyme Out and appeared on their first two recordings on Rebel Records. In 2011, he released his first solo project on the John Boy & Billy Label. By 2013, his second solo project was released. It featured the award winning song, “What’ll I Do”, which received the 2013 Recorded Event of the Year award from IBMA. After working in Bluegrass Music as a sideman for more than 4 decades, in the Fall of 2013, he formed his own band, “Terry Baucom’s Dukes of Drive”.
Terry Baucom, from Monroe, North Carolina, heard the sound of Earl Scruggs’ banjo on the Beverly Hillbillies television show and at the age of 10, found himself wanting to learn to play. His parents gave him a banjo that year for Christmas and he was soon performing locally and regionally with his father’s band, “The Rocky River Boys.” A few years later, he also started playing fiddle and got more experience from joining L.W. Lambert and The Blue River Boys, as well as, A.L. Wood and The Smokey Ridge Boys.
Baucom is known as “The Duke of Drive,” a reference to his ability to “drive” a song with his steady, hard-driving banjo style. His first professional job came in 1970 with Charlie Moore and the Dixie Partners. In 1976, he joined Ricky Skaggs, Jerry Douglas and Wes Golding to form “Boone Creek”, a band based in Lexington, Kentucky.
In 1979, he was a founding member of Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver. He toured and recorded with the band for the first 6 years and later returned to “Quicksilver” from 2003-2007. Baucom was the original banjo player for IIIrd Tyme Out and appeared on their first two recordings on Rebel Records.
In 2011, he released his first solo project, “In A Groove,” on the John Boy & Billy Label. By 2013, his second solo project, “Never Thought of Looking Back,” was released. It featured the award winning song, “What’ll I Do”, which received the 2013 Recorded Event of the Year award from the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA).
After working in Bluegrass Music as a sideman for more than 4 decades, in the Fall of 2013, he formed his own band, “Terry Baucom’s Dukes of Drive”.
The Lewis Family, “America’s First Family of Bluegrass Gospel Music”, musical story began with the Lewis Brothers who played string band music for local shows and square dances from 1947 to 1951. In 1951 the name was changed to The Lewis Family and the all-gospel format was adopted. Encompassing three generations, the show offered a broad appeal to all ages. Working more than 200 dates each year, the enormous popularity of the group was evidenced by the fact that it received more repeat bookings than any other band on the bluegrass festival circuit. Induction of The Lewis Family into the prestigious Georgia Music Hall of Fame in 1992 was a special highlight for the family members. The Lewis Family received its first of several coveted Dove Awards in 1999. In 2000, Pop Lewis was inducted into the Southern Gospel Music Hall of Fame. Also, in 2000, each group member received the Grand Ole Gospel Reunion’s “Living Legend Award”. The Lewis Family received the highest honor given in gospel music by begin inducted into GMA’s Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 2005 and in 2006 received bluegrass music’s highest honor by being inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame. In 2007, The Lewis Family members were recognized as lifetime members of the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA).
The Lewis Family, “America’s First Family of Bluegrass Gospel Music”, musical story began with the Lewis Brothers who played string band music for local area shows and square dances from 1947 to 1951. Made up of brothers Wallace, Esley and Talmadge, they were sometimes joined by Little Roy who was so small he played sitting on a chair. In 1951 the names was changed to The Lewis Family and the all-gospel format was adopted. Esley left early-on to take a job in private life and Pop and Miggie began with the group, followed by Polly, with Janis joining a short time later. Talmadge remained until leaving in 1972 to devote full time to his automotive and bus sales business in Augusta. Wallace’s son Travis started with the group in 1974 and Janis’ son Lewis Phillips started in 1977 with each becoming a mainstay of the group.
The early career of The Lewis Family involved years of traveling in cars with a base fiddle strapped to the top, often on dirt roads. The family acquired its first bus in 1960 and continued to traverse the interstate highways in its custom appointed motor coaches with most of the comforts of home, routinely covering 1,000 miles or more overnight between show dates when necessary. The Lewis Family has made personal appearances in all 48 contiguous states and throughout Canada as well as having played a number of ocean cruises.
From a modest but proud beginning in the members’ hometown, Lincolnton, Georgia, the group continued for most of its career as it began; made up entirely of family members, a phenomenon in the entertainment field. Encompassing three generations, the show offered a broad appeal to all ages. Patriarch Roy “Pop” Lewis, born September 22, 1905, performed along with 5 of his children and two grandsons. “Mom” Lewis traveled with the family and looked after their product sales. Ill health forced Wallace to retire in 1995 and Pop in 2000. Working more than 200 dates each year, the enormous popularity of the group was evidenced by the fact that it received more repeat bookings than any other band on the bluegrass festival circuit, where most events are held annually or semi-annually. Other venues played each year included fairs, special events, and concerts in school auditoriums, civic centers and on college campuses. The Lewis Family made appearances at New York’s Lincoln Center, The Smithsonian and the Grand Ole Opry.
For 38 years, 1954 to 1992, The Lewis Family hosted its own weekly television show on WJBF-TV, Channel 6 in Augusta, Georgia. The telecast went into syndication for a time and held a national record for longevity when discontinued, a casualty of an increasingly heavy travel schedule. The group continued to videotape Christmas Specials for Channel 6 each year. Guest appearances on broadcast and cable network television were frequent and included video tapings on the ten-volume “Grassroots to Bluegrass” series and the popular Bill Gaither shows.
The Lewis Family has received numerous awards and accolades over their career. Induction of The Lewis Family into the prestigious Georgia Music Hall of Fame in 1992 was a special highlight for the family members. The Lewis Family received its first of several coveted Dove Awards in 1999. In 2000, Pop Lewis was inducted into the Southern Gospel Music Hall of Fame. Also, in 2000, each group member received the Grand Ole Gospel Reunion’s “Living Legend Award”. In 2003, The Lewis Family was honored by the dedication of The Lewis Family Pavilion in their hometown of Lincolnton, Georgia. The Lewis Family received the highest honor given in gospel music by begin inducted into GMA’s Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 2005 and in 2006 received bluegrass music’s highest honor by being inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame. In 2007, The Lewis Family members were recognized as lifetime members of the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA). Pop Lewis was honored posthumously in 2008 as the Georgia General Assembly adopted a resolution dedicating a portion of Highway 378 where the family lives in Lincoln County, Georgia as the James Roy “Pop” Lewis Memorial Highway.
The Lewis Family retired in 2009 after 58 years as “America’s First Family of Bluegrass Gospel Music”. Their final concert was at The Lewis Family Pavilion in Lincolnton, Georgia in October 2009. In March 2010 the Georgia State Senate adopted a resolution recognizing and commending The Lewis Family, a distinguished Georgia family, for its extraordinary accomplishment and commended the group members for the exemplary musical career in The Lewis Family. Now in 2015, it gives The Lewis Family great honor to be inducted into the Blue Ridge Music Hall of Fame.
Si Kahn, born April 23, 1944, is an American singer-songwriter, activist, and founder and former executive director of Grassroots Leadership. Most of the profits from Kahn's musical performances benefit this group. His grandfather, mother, and his father instilled a strong sense of the family's Jewish heritage as well as teaching him the rudiments of rhythm and harmony as a child. Kahn earned a bachelor's degree from Harvard University. In 1995 he completed a Ph.D. in American Studies from the Union Institute. Kahn moved to the south as an activist in the Civil Rights Movement, and he now lives in Charlotte, North Carolina. Though Kahn writes songs about a variety of topics, he is especially known for songs about workers and their families, like "Aragon Mill" (1974). He frequently writes songs, and occasionally performs, with singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist John McCutcheon. Kahn usually accompanies himself on a steel-string acoustic guitar, played with brass fingerpicks.
Si Kahn, born April 23, 1944, is an American singer-songwriter, activist, and founder and former executive director of Grassroots Leadership. Kahn grew up in State College, Pennsylvania. When he was 15, his family moved to the Washington, DC area, where he graduated from Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School. His grandfather Gabriel Kahn, his mother Rosalind Kahn, and his father Benjamin Kahn, a rabbi, instilled a strong sense of the family's Jewish heritage as well as teaching him the rudiments of rhythm and harmony as a child. His uncle, Arnold Aronson, executive secretary of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, helped inspire and shape Kahn's career. Kahn earned a bachelor's degree from Harvard University. In 1995 he completed a Ph.D. in American Studies from the Union Institute.
Kahn moved to the south as an activist in the Civil Rights Movement, and he now lives in Charlotte, North Carolina. Kahn is the founder and former director of Grassroots Leadership, a non-profit organization that advocates for several causes, including prison reform, improved immigration detention policies, and violence prevention. He retired May 1, 2010. Most of the profits from Kahn's musical performances benefit this group. He has also been involved with Save Our Cumberland Mountains, an environmentalist group opposed to strip mining in Appalachia.
Though Kahn writes songs about a variety of topics, he is especially known for songs about workers and their families, like "Aragon Mill" (1974). He frequently writes songs, and occasionally performs, with singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist John McCutcheon. Kahn usually accompanies himself on a steel-string acoustic guitar, played with brass fingerpicks.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Si_Kahn
Bobby Patterson was born in Carroll County, Virginia, into a musical family. Bobby started playing the guitar at age 6 and attended his first live bluegrass show at the local Coleman School in 1948. In 1969 with the help of his father and Kyle Creed, he built his first recording studio on Coal Creek. In 1974 Bobby decided to start his own record label “Heritage Records” and Kyle kept the Mountain Label and produced about 8 more albums on Mountain Records until his health began to fail and he sold the Mountain Label back to Bobby. In 1976 Bobby recorded Wayne Henderson, Ray Cline and Herb Key’s first album which is considered by many to be the ultimate guitar album. Bobby has been producing recordings of the Galax Old Fiddlers’ Conventions since 1974, including the 39th annual convention. On November 2007 he received the Life-Time Achievement Award in Recognition of Outstanding Contributions Made to the Spiritual Heritage of the Blue Ridge and in July 2009 at the Richmond Virginia Folk Festival, received the Virginia Heritage Award for Preservation of Traditional Music. The Appalachian Cultural Music Association presented him with the Bluegrass Award in 2014.
Bobby Patterson was born in Carroll County, Virginia, into a musical family. His mother, Ruby Bryant Patterson, and his father, John Patterson, were also from musical families. His older sister, Virginia, sang and played guitar. In fact Bobby was delivered by Doctor W.P. Davis, one of the original members of the Ballard Branch Bogtrotters Band that won first at the Galax Old Fiddlers’ Convention in 1935. Bobby started playing the guitar at age 6 and attended his first live bluegrass show at the local Coleman School in 1948. The band was The Blue Ridge Mountain Boys who had just won 1st place at the Galax Old Fiddlers’ Convention that year.
His first inspiration to recording came when he was ten years old. A next-door neighbor, Willard Sexton, bought a Wilcox-Gay reel to reel recorder and disc cutting machine. Mr. Sexton started recording Bobby’s family including, his grandfather and uncles, cutting 7 inch vinyl records which are still playable today. When his grandfather, Virgil Bryant, who played clawhammer banjo, passed away in 1958 and his beloved Uncle Tyra Cook, who played bluegrass banjo, passed away, he saw the need of preserving this type of mountain music that had been in people’s homes and only experienced by family and friends. He bought his first recorder around 1965 and the rest is history.
In 1969 with the help of his father and Kyle Creed, (who had moved into the community) he built his first recording studio on Coal Creek. He and Kyle became very close friends and Bobby describes Kyle as a 2nd father figure and together they started a studio and record label called Mountain Records. Visitors and musicians who came into the studio were from around the world. They were also known as Kyle Creed - Bobby Patterson and the Camp Creek Boys and was recorded by Leader Records in London, England on an album.
They recorded and produced several albums on the Mountain Label, one being the now famous old-time recording, “June Apple” with Tommy Jarrell, Kyle Creed, Bobby Patterson and Audine Lineberry. In 1974 Bobby decided to start his own record label “Heritage Records” and Kyle kept the Mountain Label and produced about 8 more albums on Mountain Records until his health began to fail and he sold the Mountain Label back to Bobby.
In 1976 Bobby recorded Wayne Henderson, Ray Cline and Herb Key’s first album which is considered by many to be the ultimate guitar album. Bobby has been producing recordings of the Galax Old Fiddlers’ Conventions since 1974, including the 39th annual convention. He has been doing live recordings of the convention for 30 years. He is past governor (2006-2008) of Galax Moose Lodge #733, sponsors of the Old Fiddlers’ Convention.
He joined the Highlanders Bluegrass Band in 1973, singing and playing mandolin. In 2009 after 38 years, The Highlanders quit traveling, but still get together occasionally for a show. He has produced over 200 albums during his 50 plus years of recording including 5 albums by the late Jim Shumate (one of Bill Monroe’s Bluegrass Boys and one of the original Foggy Mountain Boys and the one responsible for getting Earl Scruggs with bill Monroe). He also plays bluegrass and clawhammer banjo and has played on several other project recordings. He is president and founding member of The Blue Ridge Music Makers Guild, which provides an instrument lending library for children and adults who want to learn to play acoustic music. The Guild also provides an instrument petting zoo for kids at different festivals and county fairs.
On November 2007 he received the Life-Time Achievement Award in Recognition of Outstanding Contributions Made to the Spiritual Heritage of the Blue Ridge and in July 2009 at the Richmond Virginia Folk Festival, received the Virginia Heritage Award for Preservation of Traditional Music. The Appalachian Cultural Music Association presented him with the Bluegrass Award in 2014. He has been a member of several gospel groups including a gospel quartet called Heritage IV.
In past summers, from May thru October, you could find Bobby and his long time music partner, Willard Gayheart, performing on Tuesdays at the Blue Ridge Music Center on the Blue Ridge Parkway.
Bobby Patterson passed away September 24, 2017.
Dr. T. R. Bryan Wilkes Heritage Music Award: Keith Watts
The first stringed instrument Keith Watts ever touched was a ukulele his folks gave him for Christmas at the age of 8, and he still has the ukulele. His parents noticed every time a guitar player was on TV, Keith would be glued to the set. One day around 1970, his father brought home a Silvertone electric guitar that he bought from a young musician leaving for Viet Nam. It was for sale because the young man said he would probably never come home. Mr. Watts said he knew a young fellow that would play it for him while he was away.
Keith would get together with cousins to learn to read music, identify notes on the fret board, and make chords. A friend, Tom Goins taught him a lot of “musical things”. Watts loved Johnny Cash, so Tom showed him techniques like how to muffle the strings with the heel of his hand to get Luther Perkins’ bassy thump. I learned how to “walk the bass strings” on I Walk the Line. The old Silvertone was traded for a Gibson ES120; Dad surprised him again!
In his St. Stephens High School years, Keith and his friend Michael Fox formed a band – or one could say they played music every chance they possibly could. Social Studies and English teachers would have them perform folk and heritage music in class. A little later, teachers would come sign them out of class to play for other classes – the catch was that they were expected to convey facts about the history and cultural aspects of their music. This led them to study the musical heritage of many genres.
Michael Fox introduced Watts to an “ole timer” Jacob Hart. Jake was a story teller, luthier, a left handed fiddle player, and just a down to earth ole troubadour. Keith gives ole Jake credit for truly sparking his interest in old time folk music and ways of the Appalachian area.
If you ask Watts to write down his musical influences, there would be pages. The one true singer-songwriter-actor at the top of the list would be Kris Kristofferson. The Beatles, Credence Clearwater, Allman Brothers, rock-lord Robert Plant and Led Zeppelin, Leslie West, but the list goes much deeper. Throw in Charlie Poole, Jimmie Rodgers, The Carter Family, Skillet Lickers, Riley Puckett, Doc Watson, Gram Parsons, James Taylor, and Emmylou Harris and you have a good start. All these folks do music and music is our universal language.
Watts met Dudley Culp, founder of the Green Grass Cloggers in 1977, began attending Dudley’s folk-dance workshops and fell in love with traditional dance and the music. Watts and several friends formed Uncle Waldoes Free Lunch Old Time String Band from 1977 until 1984 to play at just such dances. He played with Possum Hollar Ole Time String Band (formed by Michael Fox) from 1975 and still plays with them today.
In 1985, Watts left Hickory, NC and moved to Wilkesboro, NC and married his wife Debbie. Watts is a graduate of Catawba Valley Technical (Community) College in Hickory, NC and Gardner-Webb University in Boiling Springs, NC. He has been an instructor at Wilkes Community College since 1999.
In 2000, Watts along with the late Dr. Steven Duncan founded Wilkes Acoustic Folk Society Inc., a 501(c) 3 not for profit organization. WAFS continues today with monthly meetings and major fundraisers to support music scholarships for deserving youths in Wilkes and surrounding foothills of NC. In 2002, Watts and the Folk Society were honored with North Carolina’s Outstanding Volunteer award. Since 2004, eighteen scholarships have been awarded to The Swannanoa Gathering in Asheville, NC and Pete Wernick’s MerleFest Jam Camp at YMCA Camp Harrison in Wilkes County. Each year Watts schedules and coordinates musician volunteers for the MerleFest Pickin’ Place for the entire week of MerleFest. The Pickin’ Place is a venue of its own for all music lovers to visit during MerleFest. Watts is quick to point out that one does not have to play an instrument to be a music lover!
Throughout all these years and all his love for music, this little known amateur musician has enjoyed the pickin’ in churches, retirement homes, “laundry-matts”, libraries, streets, sidewalks, weddings, Civil War skits, funerals, anniversaries, Mint-Museum teas, book excerpt readings, radio program, fiddlers conventions, and festivals just about everywhere in the mountains of North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and Tennessee for the pure-tee fun of it. He has judged musical competitions and even built instruments. Watts has cut several CD’s and was part of the award winning Tom Dooley; A Wilkes County Legend soundtrack.
Watts says, “The best and most important musical influences have been my friends and the sharing that takes place in informal jam sessions. There is nothing or any artist that can take the place of my wife and my musical friends. They are forever in my heart.”