Use BBC.com or the new BBC App to listen to BBC podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Find out how to listen to other BBC stations

Episode details

Radio 3,27 Feb 2010,60 mins

SeriesAn Appalachian Road Trip

Music from Georgia

World Routes

Available for over a year

Musician and writer Banning Eyre heads to the American state of Georgia, gateway to the Deep South, and southern end of the Appalachian Mountains, to record some of the unique vocal music that has been preserved in the area, and meet the personalities who have kept the traditions alive. He meets 92 year old blind gospel legend Sister Fleeta Mitchell, who still sings and plays the piano alongside her musical companion the Revd Willie Mae Eberhardt, herself in her late 70s. Together they recall disturbing tales of life in the south, and the songs that gave people hope. Banning drops in to the converted chicken shack that is home to Phil Tanner and the Skillet Lickers, to hear them in their weekly session. Phil is the grandson of chicken farmer Gid Tanner who in 1924, with the original Skillet Lickers, became the first southern rural artist to record for the Columbia record label, and whose blend of music and comedy sold millions. The Myers Family and Friends, a singing family of guitar playing ladies, recall the songs they sang as children for corn shuckings and bean stringings, and local artist and folk song collector Art Rosenbaum talks about the unique character of North Georgia, and picks a tune on one of his many banjos. As well as the banjos and the ballads, Banning also attends the 141st Annual Alpharetta June Singing, and discovers that the 19th Century tradition of congregational 'shape note' singing still lives on in the south.

Programme Website
More episodes

Tracklist

  1. Track
    Artist
  2. 1.
    "A Corn Liquor Still in Georgia" (Excerpt)
    "A Corn Liquor Still in Georgia" (Excerpt)
    Gid Tanner & His Skillet Lickers
  3. 2.
    The Drowsy Sleeper
    The Drowsy Sleeper
    Mary Lomax
  4. 3.
    The Wayfaring Stranger
    The Wayfaring Stranger
    Mary Lomax