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1965 Bluegrass/Mountain Music TV Special. A Beautiful Time In American Music History 

David Hoffman
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I grew up in the 1950s in blue-collar suburban Long Island. On Saturday night, I would listen to the Grand Ole Opry presented on WSM radio. The music was incredible. Sometimes they called it country music, sometimes bluegrass music, sometimes mountain music, sometimes old time music. I just knew that it was the best, happiest, wonderful to listen to music I ever heard.
At 22 years old, I became a documentary filmmaker and made several films for nonprofit organizations near my home.
A 16mm film camera with a wire that connected and audio recorder, a Nagra.
I went to National Educational Television (NET) and pitched them on my making a documentary about a fellow who I had read about in Time Magazine - Bascom Lamar Lunsford, the founder of the Asheville Mountain music and dance Festival, 81 years old, a music collector and performer and songwriter loved in the region.
The NET man in charge gave me $7000 to make a one hour television special. I had never done anything like that. I had never held a 16mm camera will long zoom lens (and you can see some of the results of my zooming and focusing in the finished film).
When the film got finished I called it music makers of the Blue Ridge. It ran in the prime time. It garnered a full page review in TV Guide and it started my career.
Bascom Lamar Lunsford was a wonderful, kind and generous man who treated me with such respect considering my age and experience and the fact that I spent just about six weeks on the road with him meeting some of the folks he was going to cast as talent for his Music Festival.
I didn't know then that I was recording American Appalachian music and dance history. Many viewers have commented on the incredible clog dancing scene presented in this film. It was incredible. We rolled up the rug and Bascom's home, added a few lights, invited a few local friends and Bascom, the great entrepreneur that he was, made it all happen. I danced with a 49 pound camera and battery not knowing that the results would be visible for more than 50 years and touch so many.
My subscribers have been asking me for some time to post the entire April 1965 film so here is most of it. The entire film is 58 minutes long.
I know that some commentators will say that this is not bluegrass but mountain or old-time music. To me, the distinction is irrelevant. Bluegrass. Country. Mountain. Old time. The creative source is all the same. The wonderfully talented people of the Appalachian Mountains.
I hope that seeing this affects you positively and if it does, I would ask you to click on the Super Thanks button below the video screen. Your support will help me to take old film from my archive and properly digitize it. It ain't cheap, but the results are wonderful.
Thank you
David Hoffman filmmaker

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26 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 1,1 тыс.   
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker Год назад
And here is another spectacular mountain, country, bluegrass, old-time music experience. Earl Scruggs: His family and friends - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-2Pa7o1A851o.html
@gurryshark6027
@gurryshark6027 Год назад
Thourougly enjoyed both videos, Scrugg's and the Mountain Special films. Both are treasures to watch! Thanks for your hard work and talent David.
@ronin_returns-jg1bp
@ronin_returns-jg1bp Год назад
Actually @David Hoffman, moonshine isn't 200 proof. Usually, it ranges, with generally a proof of 100-190 being the general levels. You probably drank something around 150-180 proof, which is still plenty strong. A brand of grain alcohol, called Everclear, reaches 95 percent alcohol content, which is 190 proof. Moonshine is Much smoother than that, if prepared properly. Either way, after a few sips, it will hit your bloodstream hard, and take your breath away at first.
@bluegrasshack3810
@bluegrasshack3810 Год назад
5/19/23: Passed along to musicians in Arkansas! Thanks, David!
@johnmiller260
@johnmiller260 8 месяцев назад
Thanks for sharing. This speaks volumes of the heart of these good and decent people.
@lesliecaudill725
@lesliecaudill725 Месяц назад
I always the dance video. And someone was commenting that wasn't. Yes, that was my childhood. Potatoes, corn, peas, apple and cherry trees, grape vines but they weren't meant for the eastern Kentucky soil. Yes, that is Appalachia before Oxytocin.
@sueb.6595
@sueb.6595 9 месяцев назад
This is one of the best American music movies I have ever seen.
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker 9 месяцев назад
Thank you. David Hoffman filmmaker
@jshelhorse
@jshelhorse 9 месяцев назад
How have I never heard about Bascom Lunsford? Thank you, David.
@FedExMan822
@FedExMan822 3 года назад
Us younger people long for this type of culture.
@kentkearney6623
@kentkearney6623 2 месяца назад
Keep it alive with supporting bluegrass music festivals. The other Most important thing is God, Family, and Friends. We need to be the example.
@jonathansallade4954
@jonathansallade4954 Месяц назад
Learn how to play the music. Keep it alive!!!!!
@DieWacht
@DieWacht 2 года назад
I am 36 years old and from Germany and since I was a kid I fell in love with country music, american folk music and Bluegrass. It triggers certain feelings no other music style is able to. One wish since I was a kid is to travel through the Appalachians and the rural eastern USA and "soak up" the impressions and get to know the culture. But I think these things I expect are over for decades. But I can still imagine and watch RU-vid to make a time travel.
@Thoumint
@Thoumint 3 месяца назад
Appalachian culture is still strong, just day to day life is more regular I guess. The region has been neglected and left in poverty for so long and most inhabitants are either poor or on drugs. There is many mansions and massive houses up on some of the mountains, but most are owned by rich folk from florida and other states and they use them as summer homes or something. So the people that actually live here dont get many pieces of the pie usually. Politics has went and screwed with a lot of people here as well. I see more stuff online about our region than I ever did growing up. And if you know where the gatherings are, you can probably find a good time anywhere. Just dont expect to walk up to someones house and see them playing the banjo. Might get shot lol.
@liammckeogh
@liammckeogh 3 года назад
That is an amazing window on life in that part of the USA. It was not easy living and the man half way through looked a broken man. Thank you for this documentary.
@michaelhill56
@michaelhill56 3 года назад
Thank you for shining the light on my mountain people and our music. I grew up just east of Asheville and was 12 years old when this was filmed. I remember going to the Bascomb Lamar Lunsford Folk Festivals at the old Asheville Auditorium and watching my brothers clog dancing teams. Sadly, I have 2 left feet and could never get the hang of it. But I do play a pretty mean guitar and know a lot of old timey songs! Thanks for making this old man smile and even shed a tear for days gone by...
@kentkearney6623
@kentkearney6623 2 месяца назад
Ain't we lucky we got em.....GOOD TIMES
@katsujinkin60
@katsujinkin60 3 года назад
This is REAL music by REAL people! There was a time when people made music just for the pure joy of it, Oh Yea!
@Southernguitar74
@Southernguitar74 3 года назад
North Georgia here. All of us southern Appalachian hillbilly descendants can remember and soak up the nostalgia here, and try to fight back the tears. This is a beautiful film...A treasure. My Grandad and all 4 of his brothers played together as a mountain music band and would cover all the old time songs. I would give any Earthly possession I have for 5 minutes of film of them playing. Thank you so much for sharing this.
@curiousworld7912
@curiousworld7912 4 года назад
My family has lived in the Ozarks since the 1840's, and I can say that 'mountain music', 'bluegrass', 'old time' - whatever you want to call it - is one of the most beautiful and evocative art forms in America. Thank you, for posting this lovely tribute.
@curiousworld7912
@curiousworld7912 4 года назад
@no name Ha! I've had some 'home brew', and it liked to take my head off. But, after the first drink, it was smooth sailing. :) My father's family landed in Virginia in the late 17th cent., and worked its way west to the Ozarks and has stayed, ever since. I've lived other places, but these hills will always be 'home'.
@MrGitpicker
@MrGitpicker 4 года назад
Im from Eureka Springs and play old time music for a living.
@curiousworld7912
@curiousworld7912 4 года назад
@@MrGitpicker Oh, I love Eureka Springs! I've not been able to go for quite awhile, but some of my best times were there. Where do you play - at what venue?
@unclepacky3926
@unclepacky3926 4 года назад
My family to is from the Ozarks they made their own cabin and farmed to survive. They were from the Camdenton area. Proud of my heritage too.
@curiousworld7912
@curiousworld7912 4 года назад
@@unclepacky3926 I know Camdenton, well. :)
@kylegriffin7872
@kylegriffin7872 4 года назад
That guy playing the harmonica in his mouth and singing at the same time is a legend
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker 4 года назад
Red Parham. David Hoffman - filmmaker
@YouT00ber
@YouT00ber 4 года назад
Can’t believe I just saw a guy do that!
@21847835g
@21847835g 4 года назад
at 34:00
@rezdog2672
@rezdog2672 3 года назад
Super glad I got to see this.Thank you!
@markmeyer3448
@markmeyer3448 3 года назад
They call that cigar style. Another Legend that does this wonderfully is a man named Harmonica Frank Floyd.
@alanhillier1033
@alanhillier1033 2 года назад
Wow…this blew me away.The youngsters dancing in the house was amazing,the young girl in the checked dress and short hair had the most beautiful and spontaneous smile I think I’ve ever seen,wonder if she’s still with us,would love to find out.All the best from the UK 🇬🇧
@johnmarcinko2484
@johnmarcinko2484 Год назад
Second that...she lovely, and now, immortalized..
@michaellomax2
@michaellomax2 Год назад
I reckon she was about 13 or 14 then, so she'd be about 71 now.
@johnathanwindham4509
@johnathanwindham4509 Год назад
Her smile was the first thing I noticed in that clip also. Beautiful!
@Betcsbirds
@Betcsbirds 9 месяцев назад
I could not agree more.. her deep dimples and amazing smile has drawn me back to watch that clip 5 times in the past week! Wish i knew her name and whatever happened to her.
@PartTimeJedi
@PartTimeJedi 6 месяцев назад
She made me smile. What a beautiful soul
@ScotchIrishHoundsman
@ScotchIrishHoundsman Год назад
Though I'm from Texas and only 25 years old, this brings me back to my own childhood. I grew up with my grandfather and around all his buddies. He was born in '49 but died in 2015 at 65 years old. The best man I'll ever know. There are aspects of this culture I dearly miss. It's been tough on me because I was raised as if it was the 50's and caught it on the tail end. They're all dead now. And I haven't been lucky enough to even meet anybody my age who speaks like I do, let alone someone who enjoys our own culture. Public schools and social media have changed it for the worse. They'll likely want to put my ass in the Smithsonian by the time I'm old enough to have grandchildren. I already feel like a dinosaur. And the worst part about it is knowing my people's culture was morally superior than the one today. I'm not ashamed of it, nor am I afraid to say it. I look out at the world today and want to throw up. "Progress"... I tell ya I've never heard of a bigger oxymoron in my life. We eat shitty food, we die shitty diseases, we have shitty doctors who get shitty degrees and know fk all about curing anything. We have a shitty political system that divides people and pins them against each other, getting people to form opinions when they otherwise would have no opinion either way. a shitty press who creates stories and stereotypes, pinning people on one another, everything we consume is geared to make us utterly materialistic and self gratifying. We permanently changed the landscape, displaced and suppressed native people, dried up springs, creeks, rivers, and lakes. we pollute the earth for our lust for money and power. And we allowed our government to put a cap on the amount of representatives. We are so grossly underrepresented it's laughable. Politicians were never originally intended to be career politicians. It was something you did for the duty of your country. If you got rich doing it, you were corrupt. That hasn't changed and people would be wise to see that. But who ever said my generation was wise in a damn thing?
@chinchilla2971
@chinchilla2971 Год назад
Try a billy strings concert.
@therealhousewifeofballtown
@therealhousewifeofballtown 10 месяцев назад
My husband and I butcher all our own meat , garden and can the vegetables for winter , we make sorghum, eat free range eggs . Our food is clean . We have non gmo seeds and grow organic . We have a clean water source and are in the process of hooking up solar . We all need to learn to provide for our families .
@ariellejade25
@ariellejade25 4 месяца назад
@ScotchIrishHoundsman I appreciate you writing all of this and I’m right there with you. The state of the world depresses me so and you perfectly described it. I’m 25 years old and from western Canada. This music deeply affects me even though I have literally no ties or anything that would connect me to this culture. But I think that speaks to just how transcendental this music is. I feel this way about old country/mountain/Appalachian music and also the blues that came out of the Deep South. I could just bawl thinking about the immense pain and suffering and just hard lives these people experienced that we could not even imagine-and then it all came out through this medium. It’s so beautiful. I’ve also never met anyone my age that feels this way or cares about the things I care about, so it’s comforting to know people like you do exist. Maybe we’ll cross paths one day ha ha. Godspeed.
@kentkearney6623
@kentkearney6623 2 месяца назад
Well spoken young man.
@Crinkle65
@Crinkle65 3 года назад
Legitimate treasure.
@sumerwhittington3836
@sumerwhittington3836 3 года назад
This was a great documentary. My foot was a'tappin.
@lmf0114
@lmf0114 3 года назад
I feel like this is where I was supposed to grow up. My soul is a peace listening to this music! Absolutely wonderful film!
@flautalee3090
@flautalee3090 3 года назад
I hear you! This is extraordinary!
@centerice
@centerice 4 года назад
Thumbs up if at some point, all the memories rushed back and tears came...
@tilemason1366
@tilemason1366 3 года назад
I’m in Western North Carolina and I can tell ya there are still some damn fine Ol pickers in these hills... also I love that they opened with Ground Hog...
@randomvintagefilm273
@randomvintagefilm273 2 года назад
You should make your own film of them!
@williamcutting5224
@williamcutting5224 4 года назад
My daughters, 8 and 12, love sitting down and watch your documentaries. Thank you so much
@WendyLynnMartin
@WendyLynnMartin 3 года назад
Say a prayer too for this culture, because of the new mining methods, many have lost their jobs and livelihoods and also had to deal with tainted water coming down from the mountains that have been blown up. This is soooo sad, say a prayer for them as they try to find a way to carry on in the world. They may have to give up their mountain hideaways and this is sooo sad. Thank you, David Hoffman, really appreciate your filming this.
@dhop2821
@dhop2821 2 года назад
Mr. Hoffman, you are a National Treasure. 💖Thank You for sharing your life's work with us.
@abelincoln95
@abelincoln95 4 года назад
Brother- This brought tears to my eyes, in a good way! I grew up a (small) town boy, but my folks were all hillbillies. Grew up in the Square Dance every Saturday night. My sister danced for Ralph Sloan & The Tennessee Travelers! AND, we even have the Scottish/Irish roots that drive the sounds of the Mountain Music....
@urienrheged7614
@urienrheged7614 4 года назад
I have heard that players from this part of the States were still playing English medieval ballads into the 1930s. Fascinating.
@cruzcontrol1303
@cruzcontrol1303 2 года назад
Thats insane, do you have anything more on it?
@kayceegreer4418
@kayceegreer4418 2 года назад
@@cruzcontrol1303 not only that but the dancing is ancient as well. Whatever they call it hoofing or clogging, it's roots are in Riverdance, Ceilli dance, Stepdancing, and even French Quadrille. As see a little bit of the Flamenco and some Tap dancing, too. Native Americans were always certainly doing their thing. Stumping the ground in time to the beat of drums, flutes and piping instruments. Meanwhile Aboriginal Africans, Polynesians (wherever they canoeed to), such as Hawaii, New Zealand (Māori), Asians... were doing their own kind of "stepping to the beat of their own drummers". Natives of many lands don noise-making accoutrements such as leather straps with shells or stones tied on, or, castiñets, or gourds filled with pebbles as used in the Carib and Latin lands. We still have all the old kinds of dance just modernized and done it different speeds. From these ancient dances we get clogging, square dances, hoedowns, and the Soul Train Stroll - which is way too reminiscent of the history I've researched on the "cake walk" that slaves were forced to do for the masters' entertainments, while dressed in dirty torn discarded finery and made to strut, often mimicking what they had seen of the dances at the parties - of course they did their own mimickry in private which may just have been Witnessed, and so...well, it's probably one of those chicken or the egg things. Anyway, we also have teams of black men and now women performing what is called "Stomp/Step".
@justaguy2365
@justaguy2365 Год назад
Yep. Irish and English folk music evolved into old timey and then to bluegrass.
@brucecollins641
@brucecollins641 Год назад
@@justaguy2365 irish folk music was'nt around then.it would be scottish fiddle reel music and english or welsh clogdance. irish stepdance only started in 1894 when two irishmen got invited to a scottish ceilidth in london(ceilidths being traditional to scotland). fiddle reel music is also indigenous to scotland.(100s of these fiddle reel tunes made their way to ireland. irish music you see today only started in the late 1950s. many irish sangs are scottish or english adopted by the fledgling irish bands in the late 50s/early 60s. fiddle reel music would have reached amerikay with the earlier scots settlers. clogdance from english or welsh settlers.
@laredawilder2806
@laredawilder2806 2 года назад
With all that's going on these days I would turn back the hands of time if I could and go back and spend some time with my grandparents,great food,music and fellowship
@propstick
@propstick 3 года назад
This was the only type of music my grandmother enjoyed, now I find myself simply enthralled by the music and the people that make it.
@oxanalim8819
@oxanalim8819 4 года назад
I think what I love and miss most, is that these people weren't part of a band who practised every Friday night for a show or hit it big.... They were neighbours, the music is so sweet and genuine, something we're missing nowadays
@indridcold8433
@indridcold8433 4 года назад
Today, your neighbour will sooner kill you than bond with you like family. Humanity has de-evolved almost back to animalistic tendancies. Technolgy goes up because of the few intelligent people left. But society is decaying into levels below the hunter gatherer stages.
@indridcold8433
@indridcold8433 4 года назад
@@matthewgovig I stopped to change a tyre for a woman that had no jack in her car. I used my jack and my lug wrench and changed her tyre. I was only expecting a small thank you. She then held a twenty dollar bill as far as she could from her and said, "Take it, please. I don't want trouble. Just take it." I just threw the jack and wrech in my truck and said, "Your Welcome," and took off in the opposite direction, though I had to go in the direction her car was pointing. I did not want her to be any more scared than what she was. I guess this is the way you have to be today. I waited down the road at a service station for about a half hour so she could get on her way and not feel followed. I might as well have pulled up with a hunting rifle and masked and said, "Your money or your life!" She was terrified. I just wonder what would have happened if I did not stop. She had no jack.
@WoutervanTiel
@WoutervanTiel 3 года назад
well not quite, we often play in the kitchen and enjoy every bit of it. Greatests of friends and a splendid time laughing and grinning and picking . It's still happening.
@dwriemer
@dwriemer 3 года назад
Indrid Cold lunch 6’’’’
@lawrencerussell2492
@lawrencerussell2492 3 года назад
@@matthewgovig Not all us Yankees are like that. Of course I'm getting to be one of the old timers now. However, I was raised to be grateful for hospitality & help. I grew up in a small city but most of Maine is very rural & it could be quite a distance to a neighbor in most areas. Even if you didn't particularly like a neighbor you had better get along because, you never knew when you might need their help & it could be along ways to the next neighbor. It is a shame that our technology is canceling out our humanity.
@DENAY1968
@DENAY1968 4 года назад
I'd take that way of life all day long over this society we have today. God bless you sir.
@JoeSmith-gw6hc
@JoeSmith-gw6hc 3 года назад
This makes me so proud of my family and my ancestors going back to Scotland and Ireland and my family still in NC and SW Virginia. I'll never forget my roots, this made me the man, father, son and husband I am today.
@larrygarrett724
@larrygarrett724 3 года назад
Still love watching this for years now!
@ptcypress
@ptcypress 3 года назад
Americana at it's absolute finest David - you captured a piece of history here in it's most genuine form - much respect. Leaves you with a longing for simpler times.
@TM-rc3ck
@TM-rc3ck 4 года назад
The stone home with the man dancing in front of it is beautiful.
@tomlamiam
@tomlamiam 2 года назад
new to bluegrass - this is GOLD. thank you Mr David Hoffman.
@johnpaterson2386
@johnpaterson2386 4 года назад
Outstanding sir, lm a sixty year old Scots man here in Glasgow Scotland and these days we know all about blue grass, or so we thought xx
@jimreid6370
@jimreid6370 3 года назад
When I was young all the Scots came to England with Hugh success 😅 what happened???? Every football without exception??
@doniellestenson3502
@doniellestenson3502 3 года назад
@@jimreid6370My Mc Murchy family arrived in North Carolina in 1820.Generations strong now
@johnpaterson2386
@johnpaterson2386 3 года назад
I’m so confused
@doniellestenson3502
@doniellestenson3502 3 года назад
@@johnpaterson2386 Why Johnnie???Are you not Scottish?
@gigiwills7851
@gigiwills7851 3 года назад
THE ScotsIrish settled this area and the Mountain Music comes from us--so it *should* strike a chord in Scotland. imo
@TheJahsoldier1
@TheJahsoldier1 3 года назад
loved this, was dancing with them..i feel the spirit
@bluehighways3441
@bluehighways3441 2 года назад
I am 57 years old, I listen a lot to rock, also metal, but apart from that my heart has always been set on mountain music. I used to be mocked for it, but nowadays, here too, this music is getting the appreciation it deserves. What is it that makes a 57-year-old woman from the flatlands of the Netherlands, Europe, homesick and nostalgic when she hears this music? Enchanting. Thank you.
@floydfanboy2948
@floydfanboy2948 Год назад
There is a kind of purity, simplicity, honesty about this. It resonates. Simpler days.
@lesallison9047
@lesallison9047 Год назад
I find myself having to send you ✌♥️🙏 from England. Hope you are good 🙂
@maxuli21
@maxuli21 6 месяцев назад
I'm 27 and finnish, but there's some aspect of this that is very similar to finnish folk music. The music speaks for itself, and is very pleasant to listen to. No excess bravado or unnecessary showmanship, just good music.
@billwhite7099
@billwhite7099 3 года назад
You can't help but move when you hear mountain music.
@savinarodriguez4519
@savinarodriguez4519 3 года назад
I am so blessed to have seen this.
@celticnightstar
@celticnightstar 4 года назад
Cried for joy while I watched this. I call it Mountain Music, a term which most people these days aren't familiar with. So pure and beautiful. And the dancing. Oh my. Did my heart good to hear and see this again.
@kathifirns-hubert7120
@kathifirns-hubert7120 3 года назад
Wonderful film & great to see that these times won't be forgotten. They've carried on in different ways & been inspired by not only the old musicians, but also videos such as this.
@ronaldford5172
@ronaldford5172 10 месяцев назад
Eastern KY Great music.
@zz-ps6ph
@zz-ps6ph 4 года назад
Came here after watching Ken Burns’ Country Music. Needed more bluegrass. This is so pure.
@maxrussell7364
@maxrussell7364 Год назад
I am Australian and I love this type of music.I also love Appalachian music.
@moonstar2335
@moonstar2335 Год назад
Thank ya for the Amazing singing and stringing from the Beautiful people on the mountains ❤️👏❤️👏❤️👏❤️👏
@swain99
@swain99 4 года назад
Long before mobile phones and Wi-Fi.... looks like much happier times . People talk to each other and sing, , now days all people do is stare at their phones and their iPads and see and hear nothing around them .... thanks for posting this 👍👍👍
@qhfilms7334
@qhfilms7334 3 года назад
You are 110% correct my friend.
@CASLUICEBOX
@CASLUICEBOX 4 года назад
Thank you Mr. Hoffman , You gave these folks, their art and yourself immortality. many generations to come may look back a big part of American culture and our roots..
@DENAY1968
@DENAY1968 4 года назад
I really enjoyed this video. I wasn't born until 1968 but I've been in those West Virginia mountains in my youth and enjoyed those hill folk and even stayed in a log cabin with an outhouse and no power or running water. Just a water trough and a wood burning stove for bathing.
@frankscarborough1428
@frankscarborough1428 3 года назад
Absolutely love the square dancing think it’s the best I’ve seen
@robcrawford9657
@robcrawford9657 4 года назад
Ulster Scot myself from Northern Ireland and i belong to these folk!
@johnforeman634
@johnforeman634 3 года назад
The scene in the home with the older guys playing and all the kids dancing so spontaneously just blew me away. Where or how would that ever happen nowadays? Incredible
@randomvintagefilm273
@randomvintagefilm273 2 года назад
Seriously? Appalachia is alive and well just like this still.
@linterpretemehariste9081
@linterpretemehariste9081 2 года назад
Well, if you got enough time, try to cruise up at an old Saloon somewhere in the smokey or blue ridges on a sunday afternoon. When you find one with the horses attached outside tapping the rhythms with their hoofs, you have found the place you are looking for... ;-) You'll have a marvellous afternoon!
@dinklehimerschlitz9111
@dinklehimerschlitz9111 3 года назад
Thank god this is preserved for all time..
@cchaffincc
@cchaffincc 3 года назад
From the NC mountains, thank you with my whole heart ❤️
@vinceyorston1019
@vinceyorston1019 4 года назад
My wife is a daughter of Dean Stoneman. His father Pop Stoneman and all his children played Bluegrass music. When I was first dating my future wife, I would come to pick her up and Dean and some friends would be in circle in their living room playing this wonderful music. She wanted to go but I didn't. We still live in the same town in Maryland. I loved this historic film. Thanks
@Gilstrap2009
@Gilstrap2009 3 года назад
Five Little Johson Girls - one of my all time faves!!
@blackpagan100
@blackpagan100 3 года назад
I’m 44 and been a metal head since I was 12 but really enjoyed this. The musical skill/ability of these people is very impressive. Thanks for posting.
@tilemason1366
@tilemason1366 3 года назад
I know it seems it but it’s not that big a leap to take...
@maskandvaccinefreeandproud2110
@maskandvaccinefreeandproud2110 3 года назад
I’ve met many bluegrass musical acquaintances that grew up right in the centre of the punk music movement here in the West (myself incl.). Don’t know what the connection is but I always found it interesting. Maybe it’s due to the constant search for something different or roots based.
@inCRVSTweRVST666
@inCRVSTweRVST666 2 года назад
Same here I grew up into punk then gradually grew into a crust punk and listen to everything in between from DSBM to hip hop and i found my self getting into old country and then into old rag timey stuff as i began to travel via freight train
@clungebucket23
@clungebucket23 2 года назад
There's quite a few metal heads appreciate this genre... Have you checked out Clifton Hicks channel?
@blackpagan100
@blackpagan100 2 года назад
@@clungebucket23 I have, his stuff is good especially Old Leather Stocking. His version of O Death, with his unique look works so well.
@0321MrsJones
@0321MrsJones 4 года назад
That group dance was incredible. What a workout.
@MommaLousKitchen
@MommaLousKitchen Год назад
The more, colorful, sings are amazing. I can only imagine the emotions they invoked back then.
@stevenmurray6346
@stevenmurray6346 4 года назад
Harold Winters was my moms cousin. It was amazing to find this video and share with family. I was able to share this with his 92 year old sister before her death in 2017. Thank you!!!
@OdinMan64
@OdinMan64 Год назад
I loved reading your comment im very happy for you
@lesallison9047
@lesallison9047 Год назад
That's fantastic, so pleased for you. Very special folks. ✌♥️🇬🇧
@billderinbaja3883
@billderinbaja3883 4 года назад
I grew up in a military family, travelling from base to base. There was no music in our house, but I always admired the ability of musicians. It wasn't until I was 52 yrs old that I started to play guitar and sing... first the music I knew best (classic rock), but my tastes evolved to bluegrass, old tyme, mountain, country. Music has changed my life for the better. I would have loved to have known the talented folks in this movie. Thank you for sharing.
@suleskos.2743
@suleskos.2743 4 года назад
Gosh I grew up with a bit of music, my late dad played guitar. I remember as a small kid he was jamming with a friend who played the banjo and I was fascinated! I never learned to play anything unfortunately. But you say you started at 52, well I'll be 51 in two days, and I still have my dad's guitar. Maybe it's time to dust it off...
@billderinbaja3883
@billderinbaja3883 4 года назад
@@suleskos.2743: That's a nice story Shaun. It sounds like you are a basic beginner, so I will give you the same advice I give to the many people who I know who have started playing music. 1) Don't bounce around from thing to thing on the internet... you will not get anywhere with that approach 2) Find a "Guru" who is an excellent teacher, and who has a very well structured system 3) The very best beginner-teacher is Justin Sandercoe... go to his website and start with the Beginner program... it will take you 6-12 months to get thru it, and it is FREE (though I have donated plenty to Justin over the years)... www.justinguitar.com/
@factsoverfiction7826
@factsoverfiction7826 3 года назад
Also finding RJ Ronquillo a great teacher.
@Mandyjane1980
@Mandyjane1980 3 года назад
I was a navy brat also lived base to base but when my dad was in desert storm him and his banjo player started a band called taken by storm and I grew up with bluegrass roots in me but wasn’t till after my dad passed that I took to learning the fiddle... i will post my fathers last band he played in.. it was not that long ago
@Mandyjane1980
@Mandyjane1980 3 года назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-gzYAvoyoip8.html
@bradjunes1610
@bradjunes1610 3 года назад
Backwoods of Mn Grandpa played all instruments. Piano, banjos, guitars and especially accordions in the local backwoods bars. Got to see him back in 1959 he led a band that played all the old songs of the time. Wish someone had film like this one. Much thanks from now Oregon born and old.
@bradjunes1610
@bradjunes1610 3 года назад
Dad entertained personal in wwII with harmonica as a pilot of p48 and everything else, but with harmonica he could play harmonies on that thing with two tunes going at once.
@bradjunes1610
@bradjunes1610 3 года назад
wow at 42:00 they cut loose good. (like my grandpa could do)
@linterpretemehariste9081
@linterpretemehariste9081 2 года назад
Step dancing that sound like galopping horses... Awesome! These guys are sooo talented! Marvellous! They made the whole saloon vibrating! A real delight! Probably even the horses attached outside were tapping the rhythm with their hoofs! LOL!
@Linda204
@Linda204 3 года назад
The most beautiful music ever made I love these people they are my people
@PrismRisen
@PrismRisen Год назад
David Hoffman - This film is a cultural and entertainment gem. You captured a precious time capsule. The combination of the self-taught music and dancing is distinctive. The house where 5 couples were clog/square dancing was surely sturdily built, as were the people. Resonates to the core.
@Marwe
@Marwe Месяц назад
From this sand hills daughter, a million thanks for your labor and love. It’s like having my musical backwoods uncles back again… ❤
@marioortiz7953
@marioortiz7953 Год назад
The Lord hasn't abandoned us, I love this music
@joymayo3422
@joymayo3422 3 года назад
This is real life in the mountains back when life was good
@linterpretemehariste9081
@linterpretemehariste9081 2 года назад
This uncle playing the harmonica without using his hands is a miracle! Prizeworthy! Hope he's doing well!
@mrmike2119
@mrmike2119 4 года назад
Classic bluegrass, folk and country music was great because it told real stories about real life. I think I remember this film. Definitely most of the tunes. Now, I'll just turn up the music and enjoy s cigar. Thank you.
@gmrick1412
@gmrick1412 3 года назад
What great music and dance, treasure captured on film.
@jennifercarr7351
@jennifercarr7351 4 года назад
So hard to watch this without waxing poetic and nostalgic. This is not part of my family story but their pride makes me wish it were.
@naaaaaaaaaa3549
@naaaaaaaaaa3549 4 года назад
I may be a youngin, but having been born and raised right outside of Asheville, this music is what I grew up on. I love seeing the oldest earliest renditions. Thank you.
@OscarHedden-eh4xk
@OscarHedden-eh4xk 5 месяцев назад
I was in the 5th grade when this was filmed. Our teacher brought a record of "Down Yonder" and we'd spend at least an hour clogging and/or square dancing to it. Western North Carolina.
@rockyperez2828
@rockyperez2828 7 месяцев назад
I love classic country been listening to it all 63 years of my life but howdy de didn't know there was anything better till I watched this video, them folks got real talents everyone of them could put Bill Monroe to shame that is in my eyes they could of
@user-if1ln3ed6q
@user-if1ln3ed6q 2 года назад
Thanks for the journey to people's music. When music was made from people and belong to them. The feeling out of it was joy and euphoria.
@rtgray7
@rtgray7 4 года назад
Lived in the beautiful NC mountains for 30 years now! Talent everywhere that only a handful will ever discover...
@30fold
@30fold 3 года назад
My dad grew up in that area in the early 19-teens-1920s. I grew up hearing these sounds.
@carltownson2551
@carltownson2551 3 года назад
My Home, was born and reared on this kind of music and square dancing. Sure do miss the old times.....70, and still going.....time to get the old banjo out.
@bacheshiraz5211
@bacheshiraz5211 4 года назад
The people of mountain play from heart to heart. They are feeding your soul.🙏🏻 Thanks a lot
@EddieWinebauer
@EddieWinebauer 4 года назад
Your channel has revitalized my view of RU-vid. Such great original content. Very well produced.
@victormorgado5318
@victormorgado5318 4 года назад
Hell yeah!...
@joecurmaci5880
@joecurmaci5880 Год назад
I was 5 years old and 1965 what a beautiful time to grow up in it's sad to see it go
@kerbygator
@kerbygator Год назад
I lived in Kentucky and Arkansas and everyone I met for the most part were bluegrass musicians....
@HollywoodGraham
@HollywoodGraham 4 года назад
Those people had/have a rough existence but they make the best of it and it seems to me they are better off then us city folks...Thanks for making that documentary for posterity.
@suleskos.2743
@suleskos.2743 4 года назад
I recently got my son into bluegrass. He wants to learn the fiddle now. Recently as we were sitting by candlelight in another power outage, I was telling him about the hard life mountain people had and I told my mom, (who was born into a coal mining camp in WV), that "bluegrass" are the saddest songs set to the happiest tunes. That right there explains a lot about "mountain" people, and being one of the kindest persons who has gone through some terrible times, my mom wholeheartedly agreed.
@proudamerican7662
@proudamerican7662 3 года назад
It's rough everywhere, not to minimize their challenges. But there is something about challenges and our upbringing, they are what shspe us, we would not have it any other way. How could we? We would not be who we are. They seem FREE happy and selfsufficient. We all deal with what God sends us.
@willanicole6356
@willanicole6356 4 года назад
All the ICONS of BLUEGRASS MUSIC carried it on from there... BILL Monroe/ Lester Flatt / Earl Scruggs/ Jimmy Martin/ Ralph and Carter Stanley/ Osborne Bros/ JIM AND JESSE Mcreynolds/ Don Reno and Red Smiley/ many many more and now there is so many Bluegrass musicians that are so talented and well known❤🎶
@KathySexton-dl2sx
@KathySexton-dl2sx 3 года назад
Such a simpler way of living even though it was hard...so connected to everything and everyone...
@ravkesef
@ravkesef 3 года назад
And the number of naysayers has swelled to 161 as of this writing, and a more mean-spirited lot there never did live. The people in this film are truly some of the most beautiful I ever saw-hard-working, pious, people with their feet in the soil, who could nonetheless make beautiful music. Thank you, David, for bringing this piece of America to us.
@shanebouton45
@shanebouton45 4 года назад
David, you are welcome for the spirits. And thank you for the exposure you gave my people just a few years before I was born. I cannot attest to what things were like in '65, but in 1985 it hadn't changed at all. At least it hadn't in Sullivan County, TN. Though far removed, I remember these people like it was yesterday. They were my parents and grandparents, and I miss them terribly. Southern Appalachia is a great place now, but it would be far more grand if we still had old mountain folk like the ones you've shown here. That same talent is still here. It's abundant! If you ever find yourself in the Bristol, TN area, you look me up. I will provide room and board, and we will go out and find the talent.
@MartinSolomon
@MartinSolomon 3 года назад
20 minutes in and I've GOT to find some recording of Margaret Winters. What a voice. What a face!
@oldbaldwiseone
@oldbaldwiseone 3 года назад
I was born and raised on the West Coast, I have always been drawn to true mountain music...
@combatveteran738
@combatveteran738 3 года назад
I had a SMILE ON MY FACE The whole time 😎🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
@TheMopangbend
@TheMopangbend 4 года назад
Mr. Hoffman.... did I hear that correctly........ Thank you people for watching? ..... Humble.... is all I can think of at the moment > Thank you sir, what a wonderful documentary, I grew up listening to these tunes played by my dad and his brother, I play banjo and hope to keep this going........ Meats in the kitchen and butters in the churn X2 if that ain’t groundhog I’ll be dern..... old ground hog. :-)
@brooks2010video
@brooks2010video 4 года назад
This is a great video my family comes from the Scots Irish Share cropper Family Blacksburg Virginia .... My sister continues the tradition Grandfather Who was Rutherford Hayes McDaniel ... An old time mountain fiddler ... She is over 200 songs On RU-vid And Facebook ....Gloria 265 ... She now lives in Utah is over 70 years old ... I kid her and call her the Joan Baez of Utah ... She plays all the instruments .... Primarily auto harp And dulcimer...
@HeardFromMeFirst
@HeardFromMeFirst 3 года назад
Here I am again Mr Hoffman...somehow I keep ending back watching your lovely film,. It's not only the music, but the character in the faces, It's not just a film, it truly is a work of art.
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker 3 года назад
Thank you for your comment. David Hoffman - filmmaker
@georgebethos7890
@georgebethos7890 3 года назад
This film is a treasure. Thank you David Hoffman
@kevernepointon4033
@kevernepointon4033 4 года назад
thank you for putting this excellent vid on youtube i love bluegrass music ,here in doncaster United kingdom there is nothing like this, the Pits are now all gone factories shutting, the country music scene is also on a decline , as a banjo player myself i would have loved to have met these wonderful people they had it really hard back then it makes you realize what we have today
@lisalindsey277
@lisalindsey277 4 года назад
Mr. Hoffman, I saw 2 quick snippets of your "cloggers" on Ken Burn's Country Music documentary, night before last. It was on Episode 6 titled "Will the Circle Be Unbroken" - about 5 to 7 minutes in. If you blink, you'll miss it. But I didn't miss it. :)
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker 4 года назад
Thank you for pointing it out, Lisa. I have been watching the series but I am several days behind. What a wonderful series it is. Yes. Ken Burns licensed several snippets from my films. David Hoffman-filmmaker
@jonathansallade4954
@jonathansallade4954 Месяц назад
My Mom was from Scott county Virginia and was raised in Kingsport Tennessee. I was born in 1964. I remember going "down home" and we weny to Bluegrass concerts in Kingsport.
@toddsmemory1499
@toddsmemory1499 3 года назад
Thanks- I could watch that for days...bascar lamar is such a great man... and a great film. People seemed happy, when they made their own music.
@rachelginter3616
@rachelginter3616 3 года назад
Mr. Hoffman I surely do love your videos of the people of Appalachia..I'm from Eastern Kentucky and I've watched this one and several other's of yours..thank you sir for all the hard work and passion that you put into your videos..I pray you and your family stay safe and blessed
@BirdYoumans
@BirdYoumans 4 года назад
To the trained ear, some might think it a bit out of tune, but to the soul, dead on the mark! Just pure and care free music. And to think these people worked the land with their hands and then played this music on the side so to speak with those same rough calloused hands. Wonderful stuff!
@rufuscollins5140
@rufuscollins5140 3 года назад
I wish I knew how to play a banjo and I sure would love to have a jug of that corn liquor
@donutbrain
@donutbrain 3 года назад
@@rufuscollins5140 😁✨😹⚡️👍❗️
@jeffreycollins7297
@jeffreycollins7297 3 года назад
@@rufuscollins5140 My Dad used to play Banjo, when he passed I mistakenly sold his Banjo. I kick myself everytime I hear a banjo player. Have a wonderful week cus!
@HenJack-vl5cb
@HenJack-vl5cb 3 года назад
I am professional musician and firmly believe that tuning is a specific colour and expressive tool in the music world. The film is priceless-a Gem!Thank you for uploading it !
@solarpanel8195
@solarpanel8195 3 года назад
Exactly. FEEL music with the SOUL. I love all knids of music from rap to bluegrass and I always listen with my SOUL which is why I never really cared for ANYTHING "Mainstream" . Gotta have that underground soulful vibe!
@spacemissing
@spacemissing 4 года назад
Superb record of important musical history.
@mycolorfulcottage
@mycolorfulcottage 3 года назад
Absolutely magic!! Thankful for my roots!
@wallacetosh2839
@wallacetosh2839 3 года назад
I can't believe what I've just seen.Absolutely fabulous! Wow! An experience. What talented folks.
@terryterry3951
@terryterry3951 4 года назад
Hi from Ireland lovely music and friendly people thanks you
@michaelthornton8000
@michaelthornton8000 4 года назад
If our Mountain music and Bluegrass music genres were branches of the same tree, most of the roots reach 3000 miles back across the sea to where you're standing.
@kevinhonaker9468
@kevinhonaker9468 Год назад
I live in the Mountains of Southern WV, I grew up on that type of Music and I play Bluegrass myself which has its roots in the old Mountain Folk Music
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