MURFREESBORO,
Tenn. — MTSU will ring with the rhythms of traditional string music Monday,
March 27, when old-time American music masters and scholars Ken Perlman and Bobby Taylor bring their talents to a free public concert.
Perlman, who plays the banjo, and Taylor, who plays
the fiddle, will share music and stories about America’s Appalachian music traditions
at the 8 p.m. event in MTSU’s State Farm Lecture Hall, Room S-102, in the Business and Aerospace Building.
MTSU's Center for Popular Music is presenting the event. A campus map with parking
notes is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParkingMap.
Perlman is a pioneer of the five-string banjo style
known as “melodic clawhammer” and a master of fingerstyle guitar. He is
considered one of the top clawhammer players in the world, known in particular
for his adaptations of Celtic tunes to the style, and his guitar specialties
include finger-picked renditions of traditional fiddle tunes.
Along with his music teaching, banjo-camp
instruction, performances and recordings, Perlman is an active folklorist and
author who collected tunes and oral histories for “The Fiddle Music of Prince
Edward Island,” a two-CD anthology called “The Prince Edward Island Style of
Fiddling,” and an ethnography, “Couldn’t Have a Wedding Without the Fiddler:
the Story of Traditional Fiddling on Prince Edward Island.”
Taylor is a fourth-generation West Virginia fiddler
who learned from some of that region’s legendary masters. He’s won many awards
for his fiddle playing and received his home state’s highest folk life honor,
the Vandalia Award, from the West Virginia Division of Culture and History.
He coordinates contests at renowned events
including the Appalachian String Band Music Festival and also serves as contest
judge for multiple state and national championships, teaches fiddle workshops
and presents historical showcases on fiddle styles with his band, “Kanawha
Tradition.”
You can get a preview of the pair’s performance at http://youtu.be/3sTgklB45K8.
The Center for Popular Music, one of the nation’s
largest and richest repositories of research materials related to American
vernacular music, is part of MTSU’s College of Media and Entertainment. For more information on the Center
for Popular Music and its projects and special events, visit http://www.mtsu.edu/popmusic.
This program is part of MTSU’s annual Scholars Week
celebration of student research, scholarship and creative projects. For more
information, visit http://www.mtsu.edu/scholarsweek.
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