MURFREESBORO — At
the tender age of 19, MTSU sophomore Lucas White already is an accomplished
professional musician with talent and experience that impress even seasoned
veterans.
The recording industry major and 25 others will take part in
Leadership Bluegrass, a three-day program of interactive learning experiences,
March 21-23 at the office of the International Bluegrass Music Association in
Nashville.
“I’m looking for questions and I’m looking for networking
opportunities at Leadership Bluegrass that I might not have known,” White said
in an interview for an upcoming edition of the “MTSU On the Record” radio
program.
Host Gina Logue’s interview with White, including his
performance of “Lonesome Reuben,” will air from 5:30 to 6 p.m. Monday, March 14,
and from 8 to 8:30 a.m. Sunday, March 20, on WMOT-FM (89.5 and www.wmot.org).
The winner of the 2011 Texas State Guitar Championship
started out as a fiddler at age 11 after his grandfather took him to a jam
session in Pearl, Texas. Unfortunately, after breaking his wrist playing football,
he found it impossible to hold the bow properly. That’s when he switched to the
guitar.
By the time White was 14, he was performing in a band called
Highland Crossing, receiving the acceptance and tutelage of musicians who had
been playing bluegrass for decades. However, his contemporaries, who were more
conversant with rock and rap music, were not so welcoming.
“I’ve had a lot of flak from peers, mainly in school,
though, not really among musicians,” said White. “I don’t know if it was
jealousy. I don’t know what it was.”
When he was 15, the Bluegrass Heritage Foundation chose the
Corsicana, Texas, native to be the centerpiece of the documentary “Fanning the
Fire: Bluegrass for a New Generation,” which was released in 2011. A trailer
promoting the film can be seen at http://tinyurl.com/grbkp28.
The musicians with whom White has performed might not all be household names nationwide, but they are considered the cream of the bluegrass world. They include his flatpicking guitar hero, Tony Rice, along with Clay Jones, Wayne Henderson, Dan Tyminski, country star Zac Brown, and multi-Grammy Award winner Alison Krauss.
“You can go to North Carolina or California and know you
have family there because bluegrass is that close,” White said. “And I think
it’s because of that nostalgic, traditional value that you have for bluegrass.
That’s what makes everybody have that common love.”
To hear previous “MTSU On the Record” programs, go to http://bit.ly/mtsu-otr.
For more information, contact Logue at 615-898-5081 or
WMOT-FM at 615-898-2800.
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