Rough Old-Time Mountain Man Was A Great Fiddle Player Back In 1965

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David Hoffman

David Hoffman

3 жыл бұрын

The time was 1965 and I was making my first documentary for television. I got sent to the mountains of North Carolina. Asheville. Buncombe County. Madison County. Wilkes County.
I was on the road following and filming the great collector of music Bascom Lamar Lunsford. He was taking me to film his best of the best, the folks he was going to choose to perform at his Mountain Dance and Folk FestivalIn Asheville, North Carolina, the first festival of that type in the USA.
I was 23 years old and making my first television special. I did my best following Bascom for six weeks of recording. The finished film ran on national primeitime television in 1966 and showed Americans for the first time, what these people were like, not just their wonderful musicianship, but their storytelling and poetry and dance and culture.
One day Bascom took me to Jesse "Lost John" Ray, who he said folks in that region called their greatest fiddler. I presented this clip on my channel before and many commentators debated whether or not he was. So I decided to make this video to explain why Bascom thought Lost John was so great.
After all these years, I still remember my experience as though it was yesterday and have a deep affection and admiration for the people of the mountains of North Carolina. They treated me beautifully and gave me the opportunity to record wonderful 16mm film.
I wish that I still had the outtakes but back in those days, I was too dumb to realize that I should keep them and didn't have the room in my small Queens New York apartment.
I loved mountain music - bluegrass music - country music back then, and I still do today. Especially when played by "real folks" like Lost John.
Some commentators surprisingly have felt that I am putting down this culture which is the polar opposite of how I feel and what I am saying with his clip. Their culture was the most rich culture I have ever personally witnessed and I feel very fortunate that I was with these people when I was just 23 years old.
Some commentators have asked what happened to Lost John and the others in my film. Unfortunately in most cases, I do not know.
Bascom Lamar Lunsford died several years after the film was made but he got the chance to see the very positive reviews on national television and to see his Asheville North Carolina mountain music and dance Festival grow even more popular.
I visited the great banjo picker singer Obray Ramsey after Bascom had passed on to ask him about Bascom in his last days and you can find that by searching his name on my KZbin channel. My 1965 film had increased Obray's underground popularity and he told me that he was pleased to have been a part of it. He also was one of the most charming storyteller singer banjo pickers I encountered in my long career filming different cultures.
I would like to thank those advertisers who have supported this video. Search any if they interest you. North Carolina Appalachian bluegrass. North Carolina bluegrass. Appalachian bluegrass music. folk music in America. fiddle. bluegrass music Asheville NC. bluegrass music Asheville. Live music Winston Salem NC. music in Brevard NV. bluegrass music. Biltmore estate Asheville. Biltmore house Asheville. Folk Center Asheville. North Carolina Asheville Arboretum. Bascom. Fiddler's convention.
If this clip has meaning for you, I would appreciate your supporting my effort by clicking the Super Thanks button below the video screen. I have more clips to share and your support gets me closer to having the time to share them.
Thank you
David Hoffman filmmaker

Пікірлер: 3 000
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker 2 жыл бұрын
Here is the movie from which that scene came. Many incredible scenes in it. kzbin.info/www/bejne/oZirmH-dh56KhMU David Hoffman filmmaker
@petwog
@petwog 2 жыл бұрын
This almost brings me to tears…..
@dorenjames1739
@dorenjames1739 Жыл бұрын
I love the music, the nostalgic home scenes, and friendly, happy people!
@bluegrasshack3810
@bluegrasshack3810 Жыл бұрын
Breakin’ Up Winter is old-time all the time, demonstrating the roots of what we know today as bluegrass music. Pick away!
@bluegrasshack3810
@bluegrasshack3810 Жыл бұрын
5/13/23: Thank you, David. Come to Breakin’ Up Winter in March 2024. Pick away!
@torianholt2752
@torianholt2752 10 ай бұрын
Great Doc David, weirdly I’m decended from a very famous Cowboy by the name of Earl Bascom…out West
@timmykookoo
@timmykookoo 3 жыл бұрын
"We didn't know we were poor till the government came along and told us so."
@catwrangler7907
@catwrangler7907 3 жыл бұрын
Gave you health care so the women didn't die in child labour. But let's not care about the truth let's storm the capital and kill a cop. Qanon maga
@autumntaco8722
@autumntaco8722 3 жыл бұрын
@@catwrangler7907 What the hell's that fiasco got to do with mountain folk, you prejudiced moron? Don't act obtuse, the quote is meant to say you can be money poor and rich in spirit. Hateful folk like you are why this country is so divided. Shut your trap and enjoy the music for a spell.
@timmykookoo
@timmykookoo 3 жыл бұрын
@@catwrangler7907 Ironic thing is, bringing more children into this shit show of a world seems more amoral than your kids dying of natural causes like they did for all of history until the last 100 years. The last 100 years also happens to be exactly when the exponential curve of the world turning into a shit show really took off...
@drwhatson
@drwhatson 3 жыл бұрын
@@catwrangler7907 You call *that* "storming the Capitol"?? There were easily enough people there to tear the building down brick by brick had they wanted to! "Insurrection" my A**. It was hardly the storming of the Bastille! No fires started. No mass destruction of property (unlike the many Antifa/BLM riots.) NO "cop was killed", only an unarmed young woman shot in the face by a "security guard" who got off scott free. The dead cop you mention so casually actually died of natural causes the next day (from a stroke, his family have said.) NO firearms were found on any of the people arrested (often unneccesarily) by the Capitol police, according to the Chief of Police himself. You really need to stop believing your lying, Marxist MSM and parotting their lies.
@sir0nion
@sir0nion 3 жыл бұрын
This Cat Wrangler fella seems to be a victim of tribal thinking. He came to hate on what he believes are his enemies. I don't know about you guys, but I'm here to enjoy the music.
@oljimeagle6779
@oljimeagle6779 3 жыл бұрын
I'm a delivery driver in Virginia, and I have to say, that child gave better directions than anyone I've ever asked in that region.
@roryross3878
@roryross3878 3 жыл бұрын
Does GPS give you trouble?
@oljimeagle6779
@oljimeagle6779 3 жыл бұрын
Haha... Man there is a region between VA and West VA.. Where the roads don't have names that show up on GPS.. Or your phone and GPS lose signal... Like when you get past Buffalo Gap headed west over the Blue Ridge Mountains.. God's Country
@Ohnyet
@Ohnyet 3 жыл бұрын
@@oljimeagle6779 Here in PA, we got more roads than names.
@oljimeagle6779
@oljimeagle6779 3 жыл бұрын
@@Ohnyet I love that tri-state area.. (Maryland, Delaware,Pennsylvania)Lived in Fair Hill Md. and Id drive over into PA and let myself get lost in the country. Any place where there are more horses than people is a good place to be.That whole area is something special in the spring and early summer.
@loughmelvinmalamutes1124
@loughmelvinmalamutes1124 3 жыл бұрын
Machete Yo *x* keep her lit sir🤠
@XBKLYN
@XBKLYN 3 жыл бұрын
This film makes me realize how much I miss America while living in America.
@lindahandley5267
@lindahandley5267 3 жыл бұрын
That is so sad but so true. Makes me want to cry. I'm afraid we'll never see that wonderful America again.
@Daniel_Goddard
@Daniel_Goddard 3 жыл бұрын
Same every western country the corporations won. The way neighbours came together looked after one another, broke bread and formed a community a village is definition of socialism the heartless corporations are capatalism in a nutshell. Free yourselves
@Nobodynewduh
@Nobodynewduh 3 жыл бұрын
You got that right brother. Much of our culture of independence is lost. I'm just a millennial and even I long for a freedom that seems to have vanished from the ether of the US.
@XBKLYN
@XBKLYN 3 жыл бұрын
@@Nobodynewduh For sure....and younger folks from your generation are getting screwed-royale by corporates and so called "gig" work which amounts to indentured slavery. I feel for the youngsters trying to navigate through whatever the hell this place has turned in to.
@harvdog5669
@harvdog5669 3 жыл бұрын
Yep that's right the good old days, simpler times people don't even realize just how life is good, when you have family friends and your freedom you have everything you need. Here I am an American been denied social security when I've already put in for it, I have benefits coming but they're being jerks, the United States government is preventing me from having a plain simple cabin, and the size of that cabin will be a 16x20, a single room with four or five windows, possibly two doors. One small wood burning stove with an oven, one small bed, a composting toilet, 6 ft kitchen counter, a root cellar to keep food in, no electricity, a couple of solar panels , my banjo, my acoustic guitar, a nice comfy chair, a small radio, my bibles, no t.v. needed. A propane burner stove, a propane freezer if I want one, a 3000 gallon water tank to be filled from time to time, a 3X3 shower in the corner, a 10 gallon propane water heater, three or four windows, in a rocking chair for picking on the front porch and drinking lemonade. Now that's really not a lot to ask to be able to live a simple life, as an older retired man, and a godly Man at that, the United States government is denying lots of people a nice comfortable way to live just because of their stupid so-called rules, and all it is is about money all they want is money money it's always about money with the government, and that's local government too that's state federal and local government, if they're not getting a mighty dollar from you, you're not allowed to live a simple life, I guess they figure you're cheating that the utility companies out of utilities if you live without it, just like people live for many hundreds of thousands of years on this here Earth. I just want to live a simple life and have those people leave me alone and let me live. I worked and earned for my social security. There's no reason for it. It's a clerical error they say, meanwhile I have to try to survive in a tiny little camper in my truck with no money coming in while I try to save to do what I need to do to live a simple life, meanwhile I have to figure out everything on my own. Well you know what I have to say about that, the same as what a lot of other people would say but I have to draw back to the Lord on this one, because I'm just going to have to trust in the Lord, no matter what happens no matter what I have to do the Lord is with me. Here I am just trying to pick myself up keep myself above ground level be obedient to the Lord and live a simple life, I have a halfway decent truck, I have a halfway decent small RV, I have one acre of treed property that's real nice that's paid for, when the government of the United States gets done with me it's a good possibility that I might have to sell my property give them all the money because we know what we think of them they're bad people I might have to lose my truck lose my trailer lose my blankets lose all my personal goods lose my musical instruments all because of the government and they made a technical error in their office, while I sit by idly trying to figure out what to do next next and survive for who knows how long a year two years I just thought I'd speak out about this matter, I figure at least this way somebody else knew, it's kind of nice to let other people know how nice the government is I'm raking you over the coals and spitting yeah out. It would be real nice if everybody joined together in a group called A.F. N.G. THAT NAME is Americans for new government, join all Americans that are fun loving freedom fighters Patriots to stand up against the federal government local and state governments, we need change, we need government to stay out of our business, okay pay taxes fine, but not be over taxed and stay out of our house, and don't tell us how to raise children, give parents control over their children once again. America needs to wake up, I'm not the only one there are other people out there, and I figured that this is one way to let other people know how I feel about this garbage or should I say wrong doing, I'm tired of all the wrongdoing in this country, what I'm trying to say is I think we all need to do our part until the good Lord comes back for us, Jesus is coming for his children. I'll do what I can or things that I have to do to survive I don't have no problem with that this makes me a little angry how the government does what they do, they want to ask you questions why this and why that, but when they have a mistake that they made on their part, they won't even apologize to you, and if you don't fight for what belongs to you they'll just keep it, they won't give it to you you have to ask for it or fight for it, meanwhile if you do owe them something one way or the other, by gosh you're guilty and they want it right now, what's yours is theirs, and what's theirs is theirs. But what I say is the Earth and everything in it belongs to God, and the government's going to have to answer to God In The end. Y'all have a good day and I hope you don't have to go through anything like I'm going through. God bless all the poor people God bless all his children, father God turn all the evil people and all the sinfulness away from the devil and have them all turn to you Lord in the name of Jesus I pray amen.
@Kreb99
@Kreb99 2 жыл бұрын
City folks judge too quickly. I grew up in Chicago, but I have been in Tennessee for over 40 years. I am a Harley biker, and I ride the back roads and I am a back roads Pastor,. Let me tell you, these country folk are beautiful, hard working, God loving people, and what you see as poverty for many of them is just enough of what God has given them to be happy.
@hamilt55467
@hamilt55467 3 ай бұрын
Oh so it was decided by God, God decides fate. Same for children that have raped, God decided that?
@squigwart
@squigwart Ай бұрын
@@hamilt55467 stop baiting on a fiddle video lil bro
@sicsempertyrannis4613
@sicsempertyrannis4613 9 күн бұрын
@@hamilt55467 left wing secularist spotted… G-d gave us rules to live by and rural folk don’t need the world. They just need enough to be happy, most importantly food, family, and friends
@PF-Fly
@PF-Fly 3 жыл бұрын
I love that you captured an example of the dying art of “Appalachian Direction Giving”. I’m from West Virginia and that kid’s directions were a thing of beauty. The key to mastering it is subtle distractions. You start with the right directions but then slide in several insignificant land marks and 2-3 ways not to go, before getting back on track. You repeat this process 2-3 times times before finally saying, “And that should get you to the right spot” The true masters of the art will even slide in a random story about the time Frank’s cattle got out and caused a 6 car traffic jam. or about the drama between Anne and Sarah at the bake sale last week. That kid made me smile ear to ear, as did the rest of the movie. Thank you for sharing!
@ChansonOrpheline
@ChansonOrpheline 3 жыл бұрын
That happens in rural Pennsylvania too!
@fenderstratguy
@fenderstratguy 3 жыл бұрын
Always insert one or two colloquialisms that no outsider could possibly know ("Take a left turn as soon as you pass Ed Furnley's place") or ("Cross over the bridge that used to be painted silver"). Then, at the very end, add a shocker that will make him forget everything else you said ("look for the house with the dead cow in the driveway; it's right after that") ("then keep your eyes open for the yard where the naked girl's chained up"). -Ideas copped from the MAD Magazine Gas Station Attendant Primer
@CellarDoorWhispers
@CellarDoorWhispers 3 жыл бұрын
As a fellow Appalachian this is how I still give directions and how I heard them growing up. I've lived in the same small town almost my entire 33 years of life and I still don't know most of the street names but I can tell you how to get there and where not to go lol.
@BoopShooBee
@BoopShooBee 3 жыл бұрын
Grew up in ND and I still navigate by landmarks. Spent several years in rural Ireland and lived on a road with no name. I asked why they didn't put addresses on houses. The answer was "We wouldn't want to be doing that now.". Thing is it made perfect sense to me.
@j-jamm4969
@j-jamm4969 3 жыл бұрын
A true art
@notengobocaydebogritar9669
@notengobocaydebogritar9669 3 жыл бұрын
My grandmother grew up on a farm in North Dakota during the depression. She told me once, "We were dirt poor but we didn't know it. We had what we needed, family, friends and our freedom."
@loganmohler737
@loganmohler737 3 жыл бұрын
Thats beautiful
@AussieBrit
@AussieBrit 3 жыл бұрын
That's what I tell my millennial, young adult children. I tell them not to get involved in the social media scrum because, at the end of the day, nobody cares about you as your family and friends do. I also tell them that they have the freedom to choose to engage or not, which is a privilege that is unprecedented in history. It's not a perfect analogy but, I hope you see what I mean.
@HBC423
@HBC423 3 жыл бұрын
I didn’t know there were people in North Dakota back then
@skyjammer
@skyjammer 3 жыл бұрын
So true....gives me chills to think about that statement in the context of today’s world
@njgl2010
@njgl2010 3 жыл бұрын
Ain't that amazing? We take so much for granted nowadays.
@biggieed949
@biggieed949 2 жыл бұрын
I’m 75 years old and even though I wish I was young I would not trade anything for my memories of my early life around Copperhill,tenn. and the red clay hills bare of any green, the dirt roads, and my grandparents home with the spring at the end of the road. Uncle Eugene plowing with a mule, Grandma cooking canned sausage and gravy to go with the biscuits and eggs on a wood stove smelling of pine. The graveyard on the hill with the unmarked graves but Dad knew who was under every rock marker. The nights we spent there sleeping in the old car are something that can’t ever be again but can’t ever be forgotten. The copper mines are gone and I guess life is better, but damn the memories are good. Aunt Ada and Uncle Jimmy I miss you.
@livingintheforest3963
@livingintheforest3963 12 күн бұрын
I am with you those memories! The world is foreign today.
@dianeconnors4483
@dianeconnors4483 3 ай бұрын
Beautiful I’m not even American but I miss this America of old 😢God bless America.
@realityquotient7699
@realityquotient7699 3 жыл бұрын
This is America. It's still around, though you wouldn't know it from today's media. Trust me, it's still around...alive, kicking, and vital...it's just like it always was; humble, head down, and getting on with life.
@bustaplz
@bustaplz 2 жыл бұрын
And deeply anti-vax. Stop idolizing inbreeding and lack of education.
@godstrashman
@godstrashman 2 жыл бұрын
@@bustaplz I think Id take no education before whatever turned you into such an awful person
@huntermcneely7596
@huntermcneely7596 2 жыл бұрын
@@bustaplz say you watch too much news, without telling me you watch too much news.
@randymagnum8721
@randymagnum8721 2 жыл бұрын
@@bustaplz Idiot...they haven't heard of covid, let alone covid vaccine. WTFU
@J_Alrighty
@J_Alrighty 2 жыл бұрын
unfortunately they have been nearly annihalated by an opioid epidemic :(
@deanshore2058
@deanshore2058 3 жыл бұрын
Lost John and his wife Lucille rented a house on Bootleg Alley from my grandparents in Cooleemee, NC during the mid to late 1970's. It was a small mill house but definitely an improvement from the living conditions they had when you filmed him. I would visit my cousins who lived across the street and remember listening to him play on his front porch. I do remember him being a very humble and kind man. I think he won every fiddle convention he ever entered. He was an incredible musician.
@manchu6005
@manchu6005 3 жыл бұрын
Such great memories made just from music and the circle of people you come into contact with. Thanks for the virtual visit.
@bearpawz_
@bearpawz_ 3 жыл бұрын
That is too awesome Dean! 😊🎵
@honeyfungus4774
@honeyfungus4774 3 жыл бұрын
Glad to hear that his circumstances improved.
@cruisepaige
@cruisepaige 3 жыл бұрын
Cool, thanks for sharing!
@tanyaryan4648
@tanyaryan4648 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, I'm taken aback by their talent and beautiful music. Inspiring, I'm lost for words. Thanks so much for sharing.
@Farmer_El
@Farmer_El 2 жыл бұрын
I'm not one bit embarrassed to tell you my maternal ancestors came out of the Highlands of Scotland and went right up into the Appalachian Mountains before my grandparents went to Indiana looking for work in the 1950s. My great uncle died at 94 years of age still living in a log cabin that was built before the United States came into existence. I had a great aunt who passed away in 1998 who lived in a house with no plumbing. My ancestors had little money in Scotland, less money in the colonies and even less in the USA.
@itsgettingold
@itsgettingold 2 жыл бұрын
As my Scottish mother said when my sister asked if we were poor, "Of course we're no poor! We just don't have any money. There's a difference, lass."
@jacqueslefave4296
@jacqueslefave4296 2 жыл бұрын
Nonetheless, they led good lives and I am proud to call them fellow citizens. They are the salt of the earth, and God is no respector of persons.
@franklopresti2870
@franklopresti2870 2 жыл бұрын
THANK GOD for old-time country music!!! And, many thanks to your brave, proud, and noble Scottish ancestors, who brought their music with them across the ocean for full-blooded Italian-Americans like me to enjoy and love. YEE-HAW!!!
@jacqueslefave4296
@jacqueslefave4296 2 жыл бұрын
@@franklopresti2870 French Americans, too. 🎼🇫🇷🇺🇸🎵
@papajahko7121
@papajahko7121 2 жыл бұрын
‘Saor Alba’ 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
@mcpaplus
@mcpaplus 2 жыл бұрын
Such a piece of American and human history. I descended from Kentucky Scots-Irish. Something that transcends time grabs my soul when I see scenes like this and hear this music. And another note, it seems like everyone could play some sort of instrument. No tv, probably no phone and maybe a radio. Books, music, dancing and talking together. The past was rough in many ways, but not without merits.
@roadking0073
@roadking0073 3 жыл бұрын
And the Devil bowed his head cos' he knowed that he'd been beat and laid that Golden Fiddle on the ground at Lost John's feet!
@marcussmith9804
@marcussmith9804 3 жыл бұрын
Best comment.
@tmviracocha178
@tmviracocha178 3 жыл бұрын
Best for sure
@allyshivers3082
@allyshivers3082 2 жыл бұрын
Right right
@patrickmahoney4090
@patrickmahoney4090 2 жыл бұрын
😒X-RING !😍✨
@als4179
@als4179 2 жыл бұрын
You won this. Sir.
@thejourney1369
@thejourney1369 3 жыл бұрын
I’m 63 and I’ve lived in the Blue Ridge Mountains my entire life. This is the kind of music I grew up on. I have cousins who had their own bluegrass band until one of them had such health problems they had to quit and he eventually passed away. Bluegrass is still a music staple here and the older I get, the more I appreciate it. It was so wonderful too to see Lost John as the amazing musician he was and not as a poor man or a freak of nature. Mountain people are the best.
@michellepaltinavich674
@michellepaltinavich674 3 жыл бұрын
I truly luv this kind wish there was more available to hear.
@HarryFCallahan
@HarryFCallahan 2 жыл бұрын
These films you’ve made are truly a gift. I can’t begin to thank you enough for how you’ve preserved a little piece of American history in these shorts. Just fantastic.
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your comment. If your resources allow, I would sure appreciate your using the THANKS button under any of my videos including the one you have commented on. It is something new that KZbin is beta testing and would mean a great deal for my continuing efforts. David Hoffman filmmaker
@bennoah1673
@bennoah1673 2 жыл бұрын
You say he was poor, I say he lived like a king, he saw good days, lived in his place, his wife Loved him, and enjoyed the fiddle. Brought joy and tears with his playing
@sonicruins1106
@sonicruins1106 2 жыл бұрын
Great point: limited materially ('stuff/thing-poor'), but rich in humanity and musical expressiveness. How loaded with inherent bias are the simple words rich and poor.
@latestplague3762
@latestplague3762 Жыл бұрын
Outsiders have always been fools to the real beauty of our culture. Sadly it's a culture long gone replaced by the outsiders themselves. I have not only been fortunate enough to live hard myself but to have known folks that lived like this man. Dirt floor, thin saw milled siding, no power, and some still without running water inside. I am only 40 and can recall atleast 6 kids through school who never had power growing up. It was somewhat normal to us because many in the community had or still lived the same. Technology has destroyed what was beautiful in the NC mountains. My people have been here for over 270 yrs and I can guarantee I'm the last of that line to have had a glimpse of how the people and community really was. By the time my children were born most of the remnants in my County were gone.
@bennoah1673
@bennoah1673 Жыл бұрын
@latest plague peace and blessings, what is old is new again. We will be forced to discover the old ways, or parish. Back to homesteading, raise or hunt for meat, garden, and can or dry our food, save seeds , heat and cook with wood. The last month only spent 90$ at the store for food. Back to living as we should , close to the land.
@latestplague3762
@latestplague3762 Жыл бұрын
@Ben Noah same to you and agreed, mother nature will find a way. Whether it's plague, war, or nature's fist there will be a reckoning for the way society has gone out of control. Don't know if I will live to see it. Sadly alot of the old ways have been lost, we are the dumbest smart people to ever exist when looked on as a whole.
@cadencel1582
@cadencel1582 3 жыл бұрын
The little boy's directions are right out of a Mark Twain novel
@gratefulila9980
@gratefulila9980 3 жыл бұрын
That's just how we talk round North Carolina ma'am.
@mntlblok
@mntlblok 3 жыл бұрын
Exactly. Was just thinking of the Jumping Frog. :-)
@johndodson8464
@johndodson8464 2 жыл бұрын
🤣 Just two hollars past that dead cat
@linterpretemehariste9081
@linterpretemehariste9081 2 жыл бұрын
Novel? He told them exactly, where to go and it worked! This boy knew his county!
@gregboppel2511
@gregboppel2511 2 жыл бұрын
Thought it was a little Girl...
@janicejohnson6438
@janicejohnson6438 3 жыл бұрын
I love Lost John's expression when he plays. Blissful. Money cant buy this.
@beckywelborn1379
@beckywelborn1379 3 жыл бұрын
As a little girl growing up in a small community call Windy Gap NC, Lost John and his family lived just up the road from me. I remember he was a little different than other people. His kids were like that also. I was very surprised to see this video as he must have been living in a different area when this video was made. But this is surely him, cause my mama told me about him playing the fiddle. The old house is still partially standing there, and is all grown up around it. I just wonder if this video was made before he moved to our community, cause that is def not the house he lived in in Windy Gap!
@andreegross
@andreegross 3 жыл бұрын
Becky, was he blind? He hardly opens his eyes
@beckywelborn1379
@beckywelborn1379 3 жыл бұрын
@@andreegross As far as I know he could see, he did jobs and tried to make a living. I was very small when this video was made. He lived in my community a good while after that. He made music with one of my neighbors and his boys. They were quite the thing, and did quite a bit of traveling. The neighbors wife told her son in law, who told me, that he had one good suit of clothes, I guess for making music in. She said they had to take the suit away from him because he would wear it to the garage, and to the garden. I believe he only had about 3 sets of clothes to his name! Part of the old house is still standing, I believe, I intend to go by there one day soon and see if there is any remains of it!
@andreegross
@andreegross 3 жыл бұрын
@@beckywelborn1379 thank you for taking the time to answer with so much information. I wondered because he appears to have kept his eyelids almost closed. Yet, he did seem to look right at anyone who was speaking. Thank you.
@beckywelborn1379
@beckywelborn1379 3 жыл бұрын
@@andreegross you are very welcome!
@larrygrant-hy8sk
@larrygrant-hy8sk 9 ай бұрын
I grew up in Appalachia surrounded by this culture and music. A great time and place to become a man.
@donwade3801
@donwade3801 3 жыл бұрын
To us people who live in Tennessee, North Carolina , Virginia, etc., music is and has been a very vital part of Our Lives. We play, our parents played, our grandparents played, our great-grandparents played, you get the picture. We love our music and we are so glad people all over the world love it too. We consider it a gift of God and we want to share it with everyone. Especially in these troubled times.
@jasonc8058
@jasonc8058 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, this is worthy to be in the national archives. Outstanding.
@iccionesosnowitz356
@iccionesosnowitz356 3 жыл бұрын
It's on the trail of the Alan Lomax Archive. Why wouldn't we have... let's say... David Hoffman Archive, too?!?;-)
@kengibson2605
@kengibson2605 3 жыл бұрын
Great stuff reminds me of growing up in north ga mountains
@rashoietolan3047
@rashoietolan3047 3 жыл бұрын
Although I am an outsider I do so stand with you upon this risen conviction
@wesleyjohnson597
@wesleyjohnson597 3 жыл бұрын
Best comment ive seen in a while
@goldencalf13
@goldencalf13 3 жыл бұрын
@@kengibson2605 I grew up in the county that Bascom Lamar lunsford grew up in and, while most of the people he learned from, knew of, glorified for being better than him; because in most cases they were, his knowledge of everything/one is still praised and taught about. It doesn't hurt that he is essentially the only famous person to have come from our county. Sadly he's not even considered famous anymore.
@mountainliving514
@mountainliving514 3 жыл бұрын
These musicians had a light heart and could handle a heavy wheelbarrow. The opposite of today.
@Deschain-um7jz
@Deschain-um7jz 3 жыл бұрын
Heavy hearts and light wheelbarrows?
@Deschain-um7jz
@Deschain-um7jz 3 жыл бұрын
@doctordonuthin I sure hope so.
@jimroushing7534
@jimroushing7534 3 жыл бұрын
All of these Old Folks from the 50's are long gone now, but although they were without the Luxuries of the outside world even at that time, they didn't know it. They were happy. Most living over a Hill or Holler from each other, but the word got out after Winter & they would meet up to play in someone's barn & they would eat, dance, & drink. This Film Producer found out just how poor they looked to him, as even his Host were getting on in Age & were having trouble with where Lost John lived. It comes with age, but did you see how quickly that driver... through directions from that Youngster brought back exactly where to go & what turns & roads he spoke of immediately. Recall!! Even the wife stated that to her husband that I don't believe you ever brought me over here to Johns. He said Noooo, I never did. But instantly they knew each other. Make No mistake word traveled when someone was in trouble or someone in a family passed, within a 5-10 mile radius. And you didn't just go into the Hills & Hollers to cause trouble. Most thought them Dumb. But make No Mistake, within a few words & them being Cordial to you, word would be out & passed along within the day. These people could read you like a book. They were the Ultimate at surviving and all before getting Older in life were Buckboard Strong. In older age, You didn't push them Oldtimers as they were still very dangerous. It was best if you were to get lost in those mountains to be Friendly & certainly Not ask the Wrong Questions. These people are all gone now, but think of hard these Folks Parents & Grandparents were who came before them. Most of these in the Mid 50's living in the tiny Homes in Hollers & Hills that were passed down to them. Any normal (what we called normal say from a city), wouldn't have lasted a Year in the Mountains. They lived there lives like we all should, & that's to enjoy each & every day you have on this earth. We are now fighting Covid here in 2020 but worse, although Technology & Advancement is Great, how often and everyday are you stressed from the rush of always seeming behind. Not enough hours in a 24 hr day. Simply exhausted from the Rush of life in a day that we've created ourselves. I love my simple life. I make a point Not to get involved in to many things or projects in my life. I have learned not to be on FB, Intsta, etc, & 3 years ago got rid of Cable Tv. I bought a simple Antenna, & get about 20 channels & get local News. I now watch the morning News & then turn off that Tube, that I used to have access to 500 channels or so too. I go for walks & get out in nature more to see the Beauty as I did as a Child. Hit a few parks & enjoy fawn & fauna. You will find less is more, & more is less, & for certain, much more healthy for your body & mind! Merry Christmas to All and I pray these Vaccines are the Miracle we all need right now, so that 2021 will be a New Year of healing. God Bless Everyone 🙏🎄💕
@bigdaddya735
@bigdaddya735 3 жыл бұрын
@@jimroushing7534 well said
@AtacamaHumanoid
@AtacamaHumanoid 3 жыл бұрын
If they lived today, they'd have just as low energy and heavy hearts as everyone else.
@CRuf-qw4yv
@CRuf-qw4yv 2 жыл бұрын
I swear I met the Dr. Lunsford and his wife while on a family trip towing a camper thru western NC in 1965. My father knew him since the old WW2 Arrmy days. We were invited in and shared a terrific southern dinner just like we were long time family. These people appreciated what they had and made up the core spirit of America without complaining, feeling entitled or woke..
@jeffandersen7397
@jeffandersen7397 3 жыл бұрын
when Lost John handed the fiddle over it lost all it's Mojo. I'm glad you caught that moment on film because it demonstrates how his sound was much more rich and full when compared to the other fiddle player. Thanks for yet another amazing moment in History, perfectly captured and preserved
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you Jeff.
@stephenkevindoss1474
@stephenkevindoss1474 8 ай бұрын
dear sir that “other” fiddler is a legend and I was shocked to hear that famous melody…
@BloomGlare
@BloomGlare 3 жыл бұрын
As much as I love this video, I want to take a second to appreciate David. This man has given us so much. Thank you David. I've spent hours and hours watching your content. Whether working, studying, or just wanting to learn from history - your videos are treasures. Thanks mate, for all you've done and all you do.
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your kind thoughts. I feel fortunate to have done what I have done and be able to share it. David Hoffman filmmaker
@murielcastellanos7209
@murielcastellanos7209 2 жыл бұрын
To
@Mickybear89
@Mickybear89 3 жыл бұрын
There's something so rugged, yet beautifully authentic about this coming together of true talent. In Ireland we call a gathering like this a Céilí 🇮🇪
@j-jamm4969
@j-jamm4969 3 жыл бұрын
Most people from these mountains are of Irish decent. As are we.
@melissagannon5711
@melissagannon5711 3 жыл бұрын
They're Irish most likely
@dukadarodear2176
@dukadarodear2176 3 жыл бұрын
I'm from Ireland but I would have to add that this music is rooted in the Irish and the Scots, especially the Scots-Irish. Traditional Irish dancing is almost exactly the same as Appalacian mountain dancing.
@campbellmccreedy6519
@campbellmccreedy6519 3 жыл бұрын
Ulster Scots
@brucecollins4729
@brucecollins4729 3 жыл бұрын
@@melissagannon5711 the scots have been in and around the apallachians since the 1500s. many a scottish sang and fiddle tune there. a few scots words also
@donaldfoltz4649
@donaldfoltz4649 3 ай бұрын
Amazing video and more so with the music. The mountain people are truly some of the most resilient and beautiful souls of this country.
@dreamsideout7831
@dreamsideout7831 6 ай бұрын
I keep coming back to this one. It always puts a smile on my face.
@blortmeister
@blortmeister 3 жыл бұрын
There's poor, and from the look of his place Lost John and his family were poor. But then there's poverty--when all hope, all joy, everything worthwhile has just been kicked out of you. Lost John did not live in poverty; there was art in his life, and joy. This is a man surrounded by a community that respects him and his abilities. This man lived poor, but he did not live in poverty.
@terryfinley7760
@terryfinley7760 3 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I was thinking! 👍
@miriambucholtz9315
@miriambucholtz9315 3 жыл бұрын
This is the sort of thing I mean when I say that there's poor and there's broke. Both mean little to no material wealth. The dividing line is despair.
@PeacefulPeteable
@PeacefulPeteable 3 жыл бұрын
He may have been one of the richest men alive. Wealth should never be measured by money.
@ouimetco
@ouimetco 3 жыл бұрын
Well put. Interestingly I know dozens of Cubans in Cuba that are poor but very very far from poverty with rich full lives. I also know several wealth Canadians that live in abject poverty. Interesting your statement. Causing thought.
@CBCycles
@CBCycles 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for that perspective, he was rich indeed
@randyporter3491
@randyporter3491 3 жыл бұрын
What they play, is exactly what you hear. No electronics, no auto-tune, no enhancements. Just self cultivated talent and a living version of "The Darlings" on Andy Griffith. Thank you for preserving this treasure of mountain music and the people that made it.
@theronb1177
@theronb1177 2 жыл бұрын
The Darlings were not something concocted for the TV show, they were a real bluegrass band, actually called The Dillards. Led by brothers Doug (a great banjo player!) and Rodney Dillard from Missouri, they were a bit younger than the old folks in this video but still the real deal.
@governmentchihuahua4132
@governmentchihuahua4132 2 жыл бұрын
@@theronb1177 That's so cool. I never knew that. Thanks for the info.
@timdixon3391
@timdixon3391 3 жыл бұрын
And these people had no idea they would be playing together that day. Master musicians
@EMJE272
@EMJE272 2 жыл бұрын
These folks are all long gone, yet their music lives on forever. They were not famous, just a bunch of the "un-famous" talented people that no one would have never heard of except for this chance meeting
@andymelendez9757
@andymelendez9757 3 жыл бұрын
From the hearts of the humble come the loftiest things. Can you imagine walking thru the hollers and hearing music like this
@deewaddellinstudio_1886
@deewaddellinstudio_1886 3 жыл бұрын
Andy, as long as what you’re hearing ain’t Dueling Banjos 😮😄
@loganmohler737
@loganmohler737 3 жыл бұрын
@@deewaddellinstudio_1886 paddle faster!
@jacobheeringa6469
@jacobheeringa6469 3 жыл бұрын
I love this music so much, and i am from the Netherlands but i feel very comfortable when i hear this kind of music
@ProfileP246
@ProfileP246 3 жыл бұрын
They are your people my friend!
@paulkuijer8129
@paulkuijer8129 3 жыл бұрын
They are your people!! Klopt. Zit ook bijna elke dag te zoeken naar deze fantastische muziek. Bijzonder...
@ProfileP246
@ProfileP246 3 жыл бұрын
@@paulkuijer8129 Me too.
@hereigoagain5050
@hereigoagain5050 3 жыл бұрын
Truly universal music. Bluegrass has origins in northern Europe folk music and resonates over time. Just like when I visit the Netherlands and hear Dutch. I think, "The Dutch can't wait to go home and to relax with English." (Apologies to my Dutch friends and Garrison Keillor of "Prairie Home Companion" for stealing his joke. :)
@aldousorwell3807
@aldousorwell3807 3 жыл бұрын
My mother was from Middlesborough Kentucky, and was half Dutch and half Cherokee. Her mother's maiden name was Holland. There were a lot of settlers from the Netherlands in the Cumberland Gap region of the Appalachian Mountain range. You may be distantly related to some. .....HELL, .....maybe even ME!😂
@jimwatson4513
@jimwatson4513 2 жыл бұрын
In the smokies ,of western Carolina, my folks settled there ,long before the Civil War. Folks back then made their oun musical instruments !! Bango ,out of barrel tops , goat hide , wire of any kind , hickory long arm stems ! We then , had to make what we wanted ! That's what makes mountain music so special to me !! l'm 73 , now , never let our heritage be forgotten!! 🇺🇲🇺🇲
@ethansams883
@ethansams883 6 ай бұрын
I am a native mountain folk, now living away from the mountains of my birth. I just wanted to give you a sincere thanks, this made me smile deeply. I am only 25, but this, even today, sounds and feels so much like home that I nearly cry seeing and hearing it.
@mladenstankovic3148
@mladenstankovic3148 2 жыл бұрын
Their faces, especially the banjo player's, radiate warmth only seen from those that have been through and a lot, but always smiled. You can see it from the grooves on their skin.
@mikebarnes2746
@mikebarnes2746 9 ай бұрын
You got that right ! These folks radiate happiness,they will enjoy and be grateful. Thank you your all the best .
@eldenrivas7842
@eldenrivas7842 3 жыл бұрын
The humility in Lost John's face brings me to tears.
@imaginarycanary9956
@imaginarycanary9956 2 жыл бұрын
Me too and then I had tears of anger when someone mocked him in the comment section.
@eldenrivas7842
@eldenrivas7842 2 жыл бұрын
@@imaginarycanary9956 I can't believe people make fun of such a kind hearted individual.
@michaelbarnett2527
@michaelbarnett2527 2 жыл бұрын
I agree. He reminds me a lot of a friend that died last year.
@eldenrivas7842
@eldenrivas7842 2 жыл бұрын
@@michaelbarnett2527 so sorry to hear that.
@lamadrina5384
@lamadrina5384 2 жыл бұрын
@@eldenrivas7842 They are what Hell is for. They don't see, they don't hear, they are idiots.
@stevenwilson9579
@stevenwilson9579 5 ай бұрын
I am from Scotland with a heartfelt connection to this music. All my days my ears prick up when I hear the Appalachians playing. Thank you for bringing this to us all.
@kathyleicester7306
@kathyleicester7306 2 жыл бұрын
Mountain people have a sweetness that makes my heart ache with love and pride. I'm not mountain, but I'm American, and this the heart of the Republic.
@buckbuchanan4902
@buckbuchanan4902 Жыл бұрын
I can only imagine how awesome it would be to sit for a couple of hours with these interesting people and listen to their incredible music and stories. So glad these amazing moments were preserved on film.
@alipainting
@alipainting 7 ай бұрын
There are old-time festivals out there, you can sit around and listen
@buzzcagney8096
@buzzcagney8096 3 жыл бұрын
I heard an Appalachian in a documentary say "We didnt know we were poor until the government came in and told us" I've been poor, and i was a lot happier then, than i am now in my gold cage.
@Smurf431
@Smurf431 2 жыл бұрын
I am a retired pro drummer of 40+ years, and had the great pleasure of being taken to jams & hollers in west-by-god virginia MANY a summer....I THOUGHT I appreciated it then, but now at 60+ I can see what I REALLY appreciated.....down home folks that would welcome you with open arms, give you the ONLY shirt they had off their back, and never ask for anything.....farmers than came in from the fields after 12 hours, eat dinner, and then played till 1-3am, got up at 6am, and did it all again. Real Americans.....Lord I miss those times......
@tierratrails9554
@tierratrails9554 2 жыл бұрын
This is just what I needed to feed my soul today, hillbilly and Cajun roots
@howchristianalwaysreal9531
@howchristianalwaysreal9531 3 жыл бұрын
Oh my I am seeing this on Christmas day- what a present. I grew up knowing many people like this from back in the hollers, so poor they hardly had two pennies yet they would share whatever they had with you. Treat you like you were king of Egypt. They would be hard core, uneducated but yet the best people you could ever meet and be around. For anyone watching this who never experienced that I am so sorry for all the money in the world could not buy those kind of times. Thank you David for sharing. I'm also a Hoffman-my family all but lost in the Holocaust.
@encoreunefois1X
@encoreunefois1X 3 жыл бұрын
This is bloody marvellous A real historical document.
@encoreunefois1X
@encoreunefois1X 3 жыл бұрын
​@@cam_webb Got me bang to rights, it's a fair cop!. I hail from the Lea Valley Delta, just south of Enfield!
@whitetroutchannel
@whitetroutchannel 3 жыл бұрын
@@cam_webb i can do better than both i live in ulster were its that bad these folks in the video had to run away from it nr 300 years ago 😂😂
@MJ-ix7wm
@MJ-ix7wm 3 жыл бұрын
@@whitetroutchannel Is that why I'm in N.C. as I type this now?, born here infact. I've crossed the big pond & found y'all to be real pleasant folks!!!! Cheers mates. Well their was that lady who looked at me like I was an arse-face. To be real I wasn't use to being told to, "cue up" so I was thrown off & confused. I can only guess my face resembled a bum to her & possiblely the whole of England. But now I get it. "Mind the Gap" fellows.
@CBCycles
@CBCycles 3 жыл бұрын
I totally agree!
@carolinechamberlain5707
@carolinechamberlain5707 3 жыл бұрын
David, thank you for sharing mate! Brilliant 💜🙏🏽
@nightlife7231
@nightlife7231 Жыл бұрын
Had to come back and watch lost jhon again wish they were so much more
@Allymountain
@Allymountain 2 жыл бұрын
When i was a kid I remember walking around to different caravans and trailers with my dad. They would sit around play, share a drink sing a few songs. One of my favorite memories as a child.
@ThatJetstream
@ThatJetstream 3 жыл бұрын
Mountain music is the grandfather of our modern stuff, respect our history!
@rileymcintosh4852
@rileymcintosh4852 3 жыл бұрын
Amen
@brianpeters7847
@brianpeters7847 3 жыл бұрын
Right on Otto.. I'm from Maritime Canada and we have the music that came over with the first settlers.. I imagine mountain music and our music are very close because at one time they were the same... The music could bring a simile to the races of hard working women and men.. that kind of Music will always be with us thank God ...
@YorkyOne
@YorkyOne 3 жыл бұрын
@Otto Scorzany And English folk music. Or doesn't that count?
@YorkyOne
@YorkyOne 3 жыл бұрын
@Otto Scorzany A staggeringly ill informed not to say utterly bizarre comment - your grasp of the history of the British Isles and its folk traditions is wanting to say the least. 'There is no English folk music'. So what were the English farm labourers, cowherds, shepherds, blacksmiths, weavers, millhands etc etc singing and playing in the years up to the First World War and modern mass entertainment? Of course they sang Irish, Scots and 'Welch' songs but predominantly their own English folk songs. Do you just make this stuff up?
@YorkyOne
@YorkyOne 3 жыл бұрын
@Otto Scorzany Again, but this time in English.
@catdaddy3302
@catdaddy3302 3 жыл бұрын
There were a few old people like that in the Ozarks of Arkansas when I first moved here. They’d have “singings”: at a church or wherever they felt like it. I met a couple who were married when he was 15 and she was 13. Had been married over 70 years. The man said the only time he ever left the county was when he tried to join the Army. He was rejected. And some didn’t have many branches on their family tree. They weren’t ashamed of it either. I saw a wonderful old mandolin player. His daughter had to practically hold him up. And I wonder why most bass players were women. I love Ozarks folk culture. Pure music from pure hearts. ❤️
@sint5990
@sint5990 5 ай бұрын
I came around this rock a few generations late. This is the time I belonged.
@oklahomaisok
@oklahomaisok 2 жыл бұрын
People knew how to entertain themselves back then. I think we need to get back to that again.
@hetjamesfield4473
@hetjamesfield4473 3 жыл бұрын
I play Blues and Metal. As a musician, all i can say is, if you do not appreciate and value this music and its history, you should start. Blues and this kind of Country mountain music was the start and gave "birth" to RocknRoll. You know it all from there on...
@Mistwalker67
@Mistwalker67 3 жыл бұрын
You're spot on.
@inthemaze7441
@inthemaze7441 3 жыл бұрын
M y sons are Smokestack Relics. They started blues. Love it!
@hetjamesfield4473
@hetjamesfield4473 3 жыл бұрын
@Lord Of The World Agreed!
@hetjamesfield4473
@hetjamesfield4473 3 жыл бұрын
@@inthemaze7441 That is awesome, You must be very proud :) 👍
@meekinheritor2171
@meekinheritor2171 3 жыл бұрын
I am from mountain folk in Poland and their music is quite unique. Polish Highlanders or Goralska Muzyka...check it out. Thanks for another history lesson.
@sublime835
@sublime835 2 жыл бұрын
I am so proud to be from Kentucky and those beautiful Appalachian mountains.
@nicocrestmere9688
@nicocrestmere9688 2 жыл бұрын
Every now and then KZbins algorithm delivers random gold. This was definitely one of those times.
@theinkbrain
@theinkbrain 3 жыл бұрын
I just want to cry. God keep all these gentle people in his tender care. I am glad they did not have to live through the world we have today.
@echoromeo384
@echoromeo384 3 жыл бұрын
People nowadays talk about poverty and discrimination yet have no idea what real poverty and discrimination actually is. People just have no clue how poor these folks actually are. Salt of the earth.
@werewolf4358
@werewolf4358 3 жыл бұрын
When misery comes knocking it's not any less miserable just because it doesn't look the same as it once did. If you're stuck day in and out wondering whether you should put off rent or food this week, that doesn't make it any more or less terrible because you have a toilet with running water instead of an outhouse. Isn't that the point of these little videos? To show that you can empathize with others, regardless of if they're familiar to you or not?
@nikkijo9999
@nikkijo9999 3 жыл бұрын
@@werewolf4358 no. The point of the videos is the music
@werewolf4358
@werewolf4358 3 жыл бұрын
@@nikkijo9999 I think that's a rather simplistic approach to this. If it were *just* about the music, why would more than half the video be introducing the lives of the people who made it? It would make much more sense to just say "yeah, I went to such and such area at this period of time and here's the music I found." But instead of that, we're really introduced to these people. Told about their lives, their problems and somewhat about how they deal with it all. To me, that's setting the viewer up for a good old fashioned dose of connection with strangers.
@nikkijo9999
@nikkijo9999 3 жыл бұрын
@@werewolf4358 the man that made the fill said that it was about th music
@bradcarroll3719
@bradcarroll3719 3 жыл бұрын
They were poor in the true meaning, because they worked as hard as work gets and still didnt have enough to eat. Nowadays you get a check while sitting on your ass, and inventing every reason in the world for you're disadvantaged. Get off your ass. There are many jos. Btw, I am as liberal as they come with the exception of my strong belief in the 2nd Amendment. Cheers all!
@johnderekmitchell1510
@johnderekmitchell1510 3 жыл бұрын
God I miss growing up listening to this music at my Family Reunions. We are from the Hills of VA. Down Home Folks who'd give you the shirt off our backs if you needed. Didn't give a damn what color your skin happened to be.
@loserwinner2654
@loserwinner2654 Ай бұрын
Lost John has an inexplicable sweet beauty to him which comes across, unspoilt, in this remarkable footage. His fiddle-playing is simply from another world.
@cliffkammerdiener8103
@cliffkammerdiener8103 5 ай бұрын
Thank you for collecting this treasure and sharing it with us!!! I love this music.
@veteangesiale9619
@veteangesiale9619 2 жыл бұрын
The soulful momentum that I feel ❤️. This is music. Music has evolved. However, it should still be called music in it's fine unique soulful sound. This kinda music makes me cry and happy at the same times. You still talk about life, real life situations, still talks about love. But it sounds soulful. It's not boast. That's why it's soulful. I would love to just go up and stay with the mountain people because I don't see poverty. I just see amazing free spirited people who doesnt boast. Music makes them happy. Work hard and thank the Lord. I mean what more can you ask. Nobody should be seeking out to change these people's reality to be like the outside world. The outside world needs to go up and see what life is really about. You can find happiness in the little things. Money isn't the happy ending.
@Wolfy-fz5xr
@Wolfy-fz5xr 3 жыл бұрын
If the devil went down to Georgia. God went to ole lost johns . Beautiful clip
@addiec.7334
@addiec.7334 2 жыл бұрын
Thank GOD and thank you David Hoffman for showing me a picture of my heritage.
@terrisheppard7546
@terrisheppard7546 3 жыл бұрын
God i miss these days I grew up in the 70 s but here in the mountains it was the same It was like the times didn’t change but there gone now but not forgotten!!!!
@michaelwebster8389
@michaelwebster8389 Жыл бұрын
I need to see more of this. This is fantastic - just one of my most favourite styles of music. Deep, and filled with sadness and joy, and most of all community - a tremendous culture to make the tribulations of a hard life bearable.
@fasfan
@fasfan 9 ай бұрын
Real people who play because they have almost nothing else. Real people living Real life with Real struggles. That all comes through in their relationships and their music. Beautiful.
@judyingram4846
@judyingram4846 2 жыл бұрын
Love this music. My Dad, God Rest his soul. We are from Notherneaster Okla. Rose, Okla. 10 miles from Cherokee County. Talequah My Daddy could play all of these instruments fiddle, banjos, guitar. Just this good. Loved this brought back sweet memories.❤️😪❤️😪❤️😪❤️❤️
@bazzinbulgaria4826
@bazzinbulgaria4826 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this great video David...I was born and raised in a country a very long way from where this was filmed but the culture, lifestyle and kindness was very similar. I well remember working in the fields alongside my Grandpa and Daddy and having my Grandma and Mom bringing us a bite to eat and some cold tea around midday, every day...it was a 5 mile walk from the house. We didn't have much and needed even less...I was born with nothing and still have more than half of that left...I'm a little over 73 years old now. I really would love to visit with folk like Lost John, set a while and just listen.
@jeffhensley9988
@jeffhensley9988 3 жыл бұрын
These are my kind of people. I'm from the hills of Tennessee. Sweet kind God fearing people, but that being said, we don't take no bs from anyone. A lotta Love but tough as nails.
@jcp012000
@jcp012000 3 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately with non of the grit and quiet strength these people had. Too soft these days
@jeffhensley9988
@jeffhensley9988 3 жыл бұрын
@@jcp012000 Not everyone. The deep country and mountain people, now those are some people that's not to be messed with. 😏
@thornyturtleranch6152
@thornyturtleranch6152 3 жыл бұрын
@@randyboring9089 where did you go instead and what happened in life that you are not happy with, if you dont mind sharing more? And what town in Tennessee? I've been driving through tennesse lots over last year going to ohio for medical appointments. Nice state. As a teenager I traveled a few times to Dunlap area down from Chattanooga for canoeing on the Sequatchie river.
@thornyturtleranch6152
@thornyturtleranch6152 3 жыл бұрын
@@randyboring9089 oh okay. My dad and my brothers are in Washington state. My step mothers family was first to homestead on vashon island in Puget sound seattle/tacoma. I'll have to look up turtle town tennessee, interesting.
@tonydanis1480
@tonydanis1480 3 жыл бұрын
These are fine people, they humble me with their decency and goodness. As a child, I remember folks like this in the backwoods and swamps of Florida. Somehow, people aren't as epic niwadays.
@jdheatmag
@jdheatmag 2 жыл бұрын
My grandma was 94 when she passed away this past February and my fondest memories of her will always be talking about the old days here in the lowcountry of SC. Life without electricity and running water. Growing and hunting your own food. Pickin and grinnin is what they call those impromptu music sessions around here and she spoke of them a lot. My great grandaddy (her daddy) was one of the best guitar pickers around she said. I sure would've loved to sit in on one of those pickin and grinnin sit downs with him, but never had the chance. This is about as close as I think I'll ever get. Thank you Mr Hoffman. Much appreciated.
@John-rr9nq
@John-rr9nq 5 ай бұрын
You can feel the Irish/Scottish connection in this music Great documentary 👍👍👍
@DV-ol7vt
@DV-ol7vt 3 жыл бұрын
I grew up with all my family getting together every Friday and Saturday night playing Bluegrass and us kids would run around in the yard until we fell asleep. We would sleep wherever we fell. The good old days!
@PenitentHollow
@PenitentHollow 3 жыл бұрын
I think the way that you can observe people without judgment and look at every new situation as a an opportunity to learn is beautiful and a part of what has made you a great documentary film maker.
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much. That is quite a compliment. And, I guess I can say this because I am nearly 80 years old, it's true. David Hoffman filmmaker
@claytonatkinson865
@claytonatkinson865 3 жыл бұрын
@@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker could you make a video or a video series on how to make the most of a documentary? Pardon my ignorance if’n you already have sir.
@randomvintagefilm273
@randomvintagefilm273 3 жыл бұрын
@@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker what, 80? Are you kidding me? You look amazing
@ReichardtHelmut
@ReichardtHelmut 3 жыл бұрын
@Penitent Hollow: you really found beautiful words of appreciation for David Hoffmann. What a beautiful documentary about wonderful musicians !
@hummingbird275
@hummingbird275 3 жыл бұрын
David Hoffman Thank you for this heart touching video. I am 79, and grew up with country “”fiddlins””, as they were referred to. My dad played guitar, one neighbor played “fiddle”, another played mandolin, several others played guitar. They gathered at my parents house most of the time, I think it was because my mom would fry doughnuts all afternoon, and make the “pressure canner” full of hot chocolate enriched with fresh country cream added to farm fresh milk. The pressure canner would hold about 5 gallons of hot chocolate. As the old saying goes, “you can take the kid out of the country, but you can’t take the country out of the kid”. That is a very true statement! I REALLY enjoyed hearing the music on your video. Thank you so very much.
@kevincrain7499
@kevincrain7499 7 ай бұрын
A true moment in American, musical history, this video captures forgotten smiles from the past that reminded me of the simple things in life. Heart felt moment in time. Thank you
@nunyabiznez6381
@nunyabiznez6381 2 жыл бұрын
It's a pity all the music that's been lost over the years because no one thought to record it or if they did they didn't save it. Blessed are those that remember the ones that came before.
@normanmiller9372
@normanmiller9372 3 жыл бұрын
Wow!!! My grandparents used to have " pickins " once a week at their home in the Blue Ridge mountains. Wonderful simple times that molded me into what I am today. Never ever not listen to or enjoy the old ones, they are a fountain of knowledge, friendship and love!!!
@the_original_Bilb_Ono
@the_original_Bilb_Ono 3 жыл бұрын
Im born and raised in Appalachia, come from a long line of muscians, and im sitting here at 12:30am alone playing southern blues and bluegrass stuff on my acoustic guitar on a chilly night in the mountains. THANK YOU David for all the media that you have posted and been apart of creating which represents my culture. We are often thought of as ignorant hillbillies (granted, we aint done the best job to represent our good side either) but what you see on movies is NOT how we really are. We are struggling to stay alive, we would give you the clothes off our back, if we cooking then we will give you food if youre hungry. Black and white Appalachian people have the best food. I was raised like this, although by my time in the early 90s things was changing. Me. Th. and cra... ack was ravaging my family and friends, the poverty grew even more. .... my main point, is us "red" ...%$& necks" aint always hate filled people, certainly many are, but i feel like we get a bad wrap. One day people will realize that our culture was so unique and it was such a tragedy how we ended up. [Note: KZbin is automatically deleting my comment for some reason. I assume its because i mentioned something which youtube believes is worth stepping on the Constitution for. So i have heavily edited this comment. 6th tine trying to post this.]
@AS-zd9my
@AS-zd9my 3 жыл бұрын
Your comment. Beautiful and sad.✌ i.e struggles/survival.
@unncommonsense
@unncommonsense 3 жыл бұрын
John Prine wrote about chalking it all up to the progress of man in his sardonic way. What have we lost when we progress? God bless you from another Appalachian brother.
@whitetroutchannel
@whitetroutchannel 3 жыл бұрын
hey mate im from the old province of ulster, its great the spirit endures much respect from northern ireland
@MJ-ix7wm
@MJ-ix7wm 3 жыл бұрын
@@whitetroutchannel I'm sitting in good old Caroilna right now. Just sayin hello.
@whitetroutchannel
@whitetroutchannel 3 жыл бұрын
@@MJ-ix7wm are you of dutch decent? im just assuming because of your surname, i know the dutch and german settlers gave huge help to the ulster scotch when they arrived in the americas, anywho no matter greetings from n.ireland 👍👍👍
@wheredidthetimego8087
@wheredidthetimego8087 6 ай бұрын
Real down to earth people. Love listening to music like this. My mom and brother and I would get together at the piano with mom playing my brother on his guitar and I on my violin. Loved and miss those days. 😊
@kourtnilackes7086
@kourtnilackes7086 2 жыл бұрын
Now that's music!! They're the kind of folks we need to be
@helenvanpatterson-patton
@helenvanpatterson-patton 3 жыл бұрын
Brought me to tears. My grandfather who was born and raised in Monroe County, Mississippi could play any song he heard. Watching these people gather round one another was amazing. Pickin' and grinin'. Grandpaw died when I was 4. I am 46 now and this transported me back to standing on the chair rung beside him holding onto his overalls while he played. Thank you so much for work.
@rearea6409
@rearea6409 2 жыл бұрын
Same as my family back in the days ( Jasper co.... Mississippi)💖💖
@thejoshwardchannel
@thejoshwardchannel 2 жыл бұрын
😳 Monroe County MS representing here too!!! Used to go to Pickin’ & Grinnin’ on Main St. Amory!! Wonder if you were there! Haha! Small world!
@helenvanpatterson-patton
@helenvanpatterson-patton 2 жыл бұрын
@@thejoshwardchannel I have family strung from Bartahatchie to Hamilton to 45 in Columbus:). We lived in Hamilton and my Grandpaw was in the sticks in Bartahatchie. I dont know if that was even happening in the early 70s. It is a small world:)noce to meet ya Josh
@jimmilucky4679
@jimmilucky4679 2 жыл бұрын
@@thejoshwardchannel Pickin and Grinnin at Carolina Community Center, Monday nights, 6pm pot luck, 7pm music. Bring your voice/instrument
@maxcorder2211
@maxcorder2211 8 ай бұрын
My father was born in 1882 in NE Mississippi. My grandfather fought in the Civil War. My father was a very good fiddler and played many a Sunday at “all-day singings and dinner on the ground” in Pontotoc County, Mississippi. I remember the food and the ladies fanning themselves in the church with fan’s advertising the funeral home. A wonderful time that will never be relived, and I miss it so.
@benjammin8240
@benjammin8240 3 жыл бұрын
One of my father’s sayings I heard several times was “you cannot become a true musician until you appreciate and respect all genres of the art” 😎👍🏻👍🏻
@deloreshendershot2348
@deloreshendershot2348 3 жыл бұрын
so true
@fredgarvinMP
@fredgarvinMP 3 жыл бұрын
All genres except modern country.
@blazerwilliams2260
@blazerwilliams2260 3 жыл бұрын
@@fredgarvinMP you got that right.
@NoLefTurnUnStoned.
@NoLefTurnUnStoned. 3 жыл бұрын
@@fredgarvinMP That’s about right...and German Techno!
@fredgarvinMP
@fredgarvinMP 3 жыл бұрын
@@NoLefTurnUnStoned. I do like Kraftwerk though...
@colleenford5398
@colleenford5398 8 ай бұрын
This is the music I gew up listening to. We lived in Northern Virginia, but my Dad loved bluegrass....he played the Dobro. When I hear it, it takes me back...a house full of people, a cookout and my Dad and his friends playing music. What alot of people don't or can't appreciate is had the Sotch/Irish had not brought their music here...the African Americans not brought their music, we'd not have the music we have today. Nashville is the home of country music but Bristol, TN/VA is the birthplace of country music.
@ABLE2OVER
@ABLE2OVER 2 жыл бұрын
That's back when we had everything in the world... And always had a dream to look too 😢😢
@nightcoregremlin
@nightcoregremlin 2 жыл бұрын
I was raised in Wilkes county, grew up clogging in the 2000s. I moved halfway across the world to Asia, and I haven’t been home in 3 years thanks to covid. Thank you for these videos, when the homesickness gets too strong I come back to them. I moved to get out of the generational poverty and all that it comes with, and how constrained I felt growing up in a place where I was the black sheep. No matter all of this, the mountains will always be home. Thinking about picking up the banjo so I can connect to my roots from thousands of miles away
@bluegrassman3040
@bluegrassman3040 Жыл бұрын
My pastor is from Wilkes county.
@Deerhunter4life
@Deerhunter4life 5 ай бұрын
Beautiful country up there
@mayatodd8342
@mayatodd8342 3 жыл бұрын
I’m a generation removed from my KY mountain relatives. They lived in very poor conditions, but the music was and always has been very much alive. (Not too far removed, I suppose. My father had rickets as a child. Lack of vitamin D.) He carried the music forward and onward when he left KY. Got a college education, and traveled the world as a military officer. I swear, the music speaks to my soul. I embrace this part of my heritage.
@linterpretemehariste9081
@linterpretemehariste9081 2 жыл бұрын
Howdy Maya! I'm sure you'll highly appreciate some of the Bluegrass that the band named "Six String Soldiers" perform on KZbin. They have a sergeant playing fiddle and a guy playing banjo too... You will like it, for sure
@jgdooley2003
@jgdooley2003 2 жыл бұрын
I recall my first job as a milk delivery man in the west of Ireland. Some people used to get free milk,about a pint or two per day depending on the number of children in the family and the income they had ( mostly low) in order to build up the vitamin D in their systems and prevent Rickets which led to brittle bones and bad walking posture if not prevented in time. The funding was through the regional health boards at that time. Our local school briefly had a breakfast scheme, milk and bread, to accommodate pupils who did not get a breakfast through parental neglect or poverty. The scheme lasted 2 or 3 years and was badly needed at the time. The compassionate thing about the scheme was the every child got the breakfast so that the poor kids did not stand out among the rich and get teased which could happen if it was only confined to the poor kids. The school I went to was unusual in that the free book scheme was done with great care to keep the recipients confidential so as to avoid the inevitable teasing that would happen if the recipients were made public, some schools were not so understanding.
@mayatodd8342
@mayatodd8342 2 жыл бұрын
@@jgdooley2003 Thank you for sharing this. Whoever was in charge of that school program had a great deal of compassion. Many Irish crossed the pond to Appalachia and brought their music and their resilience with them.
@lavonnekelly9173
@lavonnekelly9173 3 жыл бұрын
I will never forget the first time my grand daughter heard bluegrass music(she s married now with two children ),We were at a theme park and as she was a kid we were going from one ride to another when she heard a small band playing bluegrass and it stopped her in her tracks and she said,Grandma lets sit here and listen for awhile...I wish I could describe the awesome look on her face as she listened...It was one of those beautiful moments in your life you never forget...,
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker 3 жыл бұрын
A beautiful reflection and remembrance, Lavonne. I can remember dancing around my bedroom when at 16, I heard the music on my radio from the grand ole Opry. Pure joy. David Hoffman filmmaker
@jagitlittlepill5863
@jagitlittlepill5863 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you Sir. This was the land of my father. Im cajan kon my mother's side and Scochs Irish withe a bit of Weals on my fathers side. I was brought up with my father playing his ole guitar an singing bluegrass an folk songs. While my mothersang an played her guitar singing cajan songs. Some much love was given to us kids growing up this way. You made me long for my father heari g these songs. Thank you.
@rustykilt
@rustykilt 3 жыл бұрын
I’ve lost control of my foot...it’s tappin its heart out.
@glorirasawtell8208
@glorirasawtell8208 3 жыл бұрын
Lol
@yvonnecormier13
@yvonnecormier13 2 жыл бұрын
Makes you smile, and cry at the same time
@texasturner2313
@texasturner2313 2 жыл бұрын
It always amazes me how uneducated and poverty stricken people can be so talented. These people aren’t few and far between. Many of these Mountain Folk can play. It’s a natural God given talent.
@kickchick1974
@kickchick1974 2 жыл бұрын
@2:15 Bless that lovely boy giving directions - little did he know he'd be charming people all over the world 56+ years later, with his delightful conversation with a stranger!
@phononut
@phononut 3 жыл бұрын
When my Father first heard this he almost burst into tears saying that's the way Twinkle little star was played when he was a boy. Thank you for sharing this.
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker 3 жыл бұрын
Beautiful. Thank you. David Hoffman filmmaker
@loriwilliams2632
@loriwilliams2632 3 жыл бұрын
It brought tears to my eyes too!
@loriwilliams2632
@loriwilliams2632 3 жыл бұрын
@@pashadyne it's a different version altogether, common in the South
@chrisridley1750
@chrisridley1750 3 жыл бұрын
I wish that I'd been able to meet Lost John. He was not only a great fiddler but he was able to step back and enjoy listening to another fiddlier without finding fault.
@livingintheforest3963
@livingintheforest3963 12 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for this beautiful piece of Appalachian history. I’m really enjoying all this. This was the early days before the soft white underbelly covered the Whitakers and people got on drugs and the coal mines closed. This was the good old days.🙏🏻🙏🏻
@YARNBARF
@YARNBARF 2 жыл бұрын
I just adore this music!! True Americana!! Thank you for posting this!!
@howardmolton9171
@howardmolton9171 3 жыл бұрын
This takes me back to my childhood. My great grandpa looked just like the banjo player. We called him Ratpaw. This is how they lived. Work hard and play music. Thanks for this!
@starjunkie2804
@starjunkie2804 3 жыл бұрын
I've always thought that the best part of being human is music and the ability to make it. I may have said this before, but my Polish aunt, Pauline, married a man down Appalachia. My uncle Johnny (Segna), taught me to play the guitar in the summers when I'd go to visit them beginning at 6 or 7 years old. They lived about 15-20 miles from Asheville, NC. I learned on an old 1920's Martin & Co. Guitar. My uncle gave it to me before he passed and if I had a penny for every offer from someone to buy it, I'd be a Gazillionaire. Time. Learning to play well takes time, the right mindset and a good ear. You know that as well as I do David. Some of us just have it and others really have to work at it. Although, I still really worked at it and still do. I've played every single day for the past 50 years. Beginning at a young age is crucial as well. No dolls for me, just a nice guitar and books. I'd play at home the remaining three seasons and uncle John would mail me lessons written out in longhand. Neither of us read music. I only read Tabliture, but it does not matter, because all I need is the key any song is in and I'm as good as locked in. I never play the same lead twice and that is the fun of it for me. Throwing the curveball in. These gentlemen here know all of this. It is a gift, but you still need to take the time, these guys have/had a lot of time on their hands. This is also the area where I realized that you don't need much money to live and have a good time. As poor as they are, people still do for each other down there. I miss that. Those were the best days of my life. I've known and played with many fine ladies and gentlemen down there. I love those people and I have wet cheeks right now just remembering it all. Nice work David.
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you. David
@hummingbird275
@hummingbird275 3 жыл бұрын
Srar, thank you so very much for your heart warming story. You definitely have a treasure, in the 1920’s Martin guitar, not only the guitar, but the beautiful memories.♥️
@gregoryb2999
@gregoryb2999 2 жыл бұрын
Proud to be from the mountains. They are so many people who so far more talented than what's in Nashville and ect. Just hard working poor folk. Comes from the heart and about life.
@Suggestion_Box_Full
@Suggestion_Box_Full 2 жыл бұрын
Reminds me of my grandma...she just passed this summer ...she was from cabin creek,she love God,her family and gospel.
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