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Ray Alden
Excerpts from the November 2003 Banjo Newsletter
Interview with Ray Alden
BN: Did you grow up with Appalachian music?
RA: Mountain music wasn.t exactly the rage with the southern Italians
from my Bronx neighborhood. Do-wop was the music I grew up with. Just
ahead of me in school were Dion and the Belmonts. A guy in my class wrote
"Barbara Ann," later made famous by the Beach Boys.
BN: How did you discover Appalachian music and the
banjo?
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Ray Alden recording Earnest East |
RA: I heard a Weavers record the summer of 1959 at Hartley Farm, a summer
camp where I was working as a junior counselor. Hearing that high banjo
intro to "Darling Corey" played by Pete Seeger excited me as nothing else
had. The only idea I had of the instrument was the cover photo showing
Pete's long neck banjo. Around 1963, at that same camp, a gal had a banjo
and Pete Seeger.s How to Play the Five String Banjo. I was then the waterfront
director, giving me free evenings to go over to her cabin and practice
the "elementary" strum on her banjo. It never occurred to me that I would
someday play in a banjo workshop with Pete Seeger at the Clearwater Revival.
After I came home that summer, I purchased my first instrument, a Harmony
banjo.
BN: How did you get into Old Time Music?
RA: We had just moved from the Bronx down to 26th street and 9th Avenue
in Manhattan. I heard of an old-time band that practiced at the Chaleff
family apartment in my building. Bill Chaleff, a fine blues guitarist,
also played and sang in that band. Bill and his hospitable family made
me welcome during those practice sessions. Andy Stein was on fiddle; he
later played with Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen and then as
a regular on NPR.s Prairie Home Companion. Howie Krugman, another member,
would probably have been a regular on Saturday Night Live were he alive
today. This band played the New Lost City Rambler repertoire. For several
years I drifted musically, interested in bluegrass, old time and "folk"
music. But NY city bluegrass seemed more about competition than music
and urban folk music didn.t seem concerned with real folk music.
BN: How then did you become such a die-hard old time
musician?
RA: What set me on fire was going to 78 rpm collector Loy Beaver.s New
Jersey home for a small concert. Tommy Jarrell, Fred Cockerham and Oscar
Jenkins stopped over on their way back from Newport in 1967. The entire
evening they sat in the living room playing and singing, much as they
would at home. I was just a few feet away the whole night. Even though
I had previously heard Fred, Earnest East and Kyle Creed at a Friends
of Old Time Music concert, hearing it up close in a home atmosphere made
a tremendous impact. Although that night forever changed my life musically,
I was stuck with the dilemma of having scarcely any time to study their
style. I was beginning the first of three years of night courses to get
my second master.s degree.
BN: How did you resolve that dilemma?
RA: I had summers free and a few vacations as a teacher, so I headed
south. Diane (now my wife) and I went to the Union Grove Fiddler.s Convention
during my Easter Break in 1968. We arrived there late Friday night to
find a fiddler on stage showboating it up, it turned out to be Clark Kessinger.
On Saturday, I recall someone with an Orpheum banjo following Wade Ward
around, years later I realized it was Walt Koken. Neil Rossi and the Spark
Gap Wonder Boys from Boston were jamming with the New Deal String Band.
L.W. Lambert, a local banjo picker, was playing great hard driving bluegrass
with his band, the Border Mountain Boys. I recall the Buffalo Ford Boys
playing superb Charlie Poole style old-time music. I hope to release some
of my field recordings of them one day. That Union Grove Festival lasted
one remarkable weekend, then back to teaching.
BN: Was the trip to Union Grove in 1968 also the first
trip to see Fred Cockerham?
RA: No, I made my first trip to study with Fred later that August. I
wrote him asking to come down to take banjo lessons, he answered "come
on down." So, with my friend Dave Spilkia and many detours on incomplete
Interstate 81, we finally arrived in Low Gap, North Carolina to Fred and
Eva.s cabin. Their son Odell lived with them; he was incapacitated after
being hit in the back of the head with a baseball bat in a rough fight.
Eva cooked Crowder peas, potatoes and fried chicken on a wood stove while
Fred played the fretless banjo. I was in heaven.
However, I made a na¡¦ mistake; I had brought Fred a bottle of whiskey.
Back in New York, at their concert at Loy.s house, I noticed them proudly
showing off some bottles of fancy whiskey they bought. I didn.t realize
that if Fred got a bottle, it pretty much went that day. On all trips afterwards,
I went to the store and bought food for the family instead of bringing liquor.
On the next day, while Fred slept it off, Eva encouraged us to go to Toast,
near Mt. Airy, to visit Tommy Jarrell. Tommy played and sang his great solo
pieces, pushing the hook in my mouth further. Later that day, I brought
Fred.s banjo up to Kyle Creed to have a plastic head put on, to replace
his torn skin head. Charlie Faurot told me I.d be forever branded for making
that change, but I ended up taking care of Fred.s fretless banjo for over
ten years, changing strings for him and working on it every summer.
BN: Did you get to have a lesson with Fred that trip?
RA: Yes, just before the bottle incident. Mostly, the lesson was Fred
playing tune after tune while I recorded the session. For an hour before
the lesson, Fred talked to me about how he had repaired his chimney, but
I couldn.t understand him. It took an hour for my ear to become attuned
to his way of speaking. Later, Fred told me about the mysterious banjo
playing "Serge." It turned out to be Blanton Owen. At Clifftop this year,
I got to meet Blanton.s nephew Jake, another fine banjo player.
BN: Did Kyle Creed influence your style?
RA: Absolutely, Kyle.s style on the fretted banjo was more accessible
to me than Fred.s fretless style. Kyle had a very linear approach with
strong rhythmic elements. His style fit with the powerhouse Camp Creek
Boys band and provided a good foil to Fred.s driving fiddle technique.
Kyle.s style was for me an entry into economical and rhythmic southern
banjo playing. Kyle.s style also opened doors into Fred.s style. Fred.s
style on the fretless is looser, bluesy, with a powerful rhythm and a
speed he could notch up whenever he wanted.
BN: Fred played fiddle also?
RA: Yes, Fred was known as "Fiddling Slim" when he was on the road back
in the 1930s. In the 1960s, he alternated with Earnest East as fiddler
for the Camp Creek Boys. I recommend everyone listen to Cotton-Eyed Joe
on the Camp Creek Boys CD to hear Fred.s powerhouse fiddling, still available
on County CD.
BN: For the un-initiated, who was in the Camp Creek
Boys?
RA: Kyle Creed-banjo, Fred Cockerham-fiddle, Earnest East-fiddle, Paul
Sutphin-guitar, Ronald Collins--guitar and Verlin Clifton-mandolin, the
only member still living.
BN: What was Kyle like as a person?
RA: Kyle was certainly a character who left me with numerous stories.
One day he told his wife Percy; "Neighbor, I.m going out for a pack of
cigarettes." Six years later Kyle reappeared and took up where he left
off as if nothing had happened. In the 1940s, Kyle and Paul Sutphin were
building Quonset huts for the navy near Newport News. One morning Kyle
said "Paul, come on with me to town to get some supplies." Kyle left Paul
at a corner, saying "We.ll meet back here in an hour." Paul came back
and waited; 1 hour, 2 hours, and after 3 hours it got dark. Paul realized
Kyle wasn.t coming back. It took Paul hours to walk back to the barracks
and, arriving around 1am, found Kyle sleeping. Paul, steaming mad, grabbed
Kyle by the neck and pulled back his arm to punch him. But Kyle woke up,
snapped his fingers and said "Shoot, I knew I forgot something!"
BN: What did you do away from these characters?
RA: I taught High School math. Fred, Tommy and Kyle had become my idols,
and I focused on the drop thumb Round Peak clawhammer style. I.d play
along with tapes I had made the summer before. The little time I had for
practice was harder because I was trying to shed an urban northern approach
to banjo playing, which lacked the southern rhythmic sensibility. Some
of the time I spent writing about the marvel of southern music. I wrote
a long article in 1972 for Sing Out magazine about Round Peak musicians.
I can remember Bob Norman, then Sing Out.s editor, coming over to Stuyvesant
HS to help edit during my entry-lobby assignment. That article became
a key signal to young musicians about Tommy Jarrell; soon many began pilgrimages
to him.
BN: How do you define "Round Peak" style?
RA: Definitions make for a slippery slope; it is tricky to find words
distinguishing that style from all others. Tricky also because, although
rarely heard, Fred also had a "thumb-cocking" two finger style and Kyle
a syncopated picking technique used on high neck chords that was distinct
from their clawhammer style. I have heard people use "Galax" and "Round
Peak" styles interchangeably, but to me there is a difference. Perhaps
the best way to understand these differences would be to hear them on
recordings. The Round Peak banjo style was brought to its pinnacle with
the playing of Charlie Lowe. Fred Cockerham abandoned his "framming" style
to play in Charlie.s fast but precise double- noting fretless banjo style.
Tommy Jarrell grew up hearing Charlie play with his father Ben. You can
hear Charlie Lowe play Ike Leonard.s Tater Patch tune on Clawhammer Banjo
Vol. 3 (County 757). Tommy, Kyle and Fred.s banjo playing is documented
on several County recordings, such as Come Go with Me, The Camp Creek
Boys, and Tommy and Fred.
Comparing the Round Peak sound with the 1937 Library of Congress Bogtrotter
recordings, the Galax sound is much more genteel and relaxed. On trips "up
the mountain" to hear music, when I visited the Kimble and Shelor families,
I heard similar "parlor" approaches. In some of the Wade Ward.s 1937 banjo
solos, I hear the speed of Round Peak, but the rhythmic syncopation is different.
The double noting style of Round Peak fills in gaps, adding a unique rhythmic
component. Within the Round Peak style you can hear differences; Fred.s
sliding microtone slurs on the fretless are distinct from Charlie Lowe.s
precise fretless style, or from Kyle.s sense of linearity on the fretted
banjo, or from Tommy.s clear-cut driving style. Yet I feel they are all
bound by an unswerving logic to a common source.
BN: Aren.t we really talking about individual styles
rather than regional ones? I mean, Tommy and Kyle were really innovators
in their time, weren.t they? I remember a Tommy Jarrell interview where
he is asked about his style being regional and him responding no; he was
the one who played that way. And Kyle Creed feeling that at one time he
was unique, but after younger folks started coming down, he was hearing
himself play everywhere.
RA: One might not be independent of the other. I think a regional style
often originates and develops from the individual style of one or more
influential local musicians. In the early days before autos and paved
roads, what a person heard came mostly from within the local community.
For example, although trips from Round Peak were made up the mountain
to Galax, many times of the year the mud was so deep that wagons couldn.t
get through. It wasn.t until radio that styles from musicians like Earl
Scruggs or Arthur Smith were able to become widespread. Both Tommy and
Fred were strongly influenced by Charlie Lowe.s local banjo style and,
though they developed their own unique approach to banjo playing, they
definitely shared a common logic with Lowe.s style. This common logic
may be partially explained by his "steady as a clock" rhythm and his extensive
use of a distinctive "double-noting" banjo style rather than the more
common brush technique used elsewhere. Tommy sometimes called the other
the "older style" found in nearby Virginia, while Fred called that style
"framming." For tablature literate Newsletter readers, I am sure the tunes
found in Brad Leftwich.s book Round Peak Style Clawhammer Banjo will reflect
the logic of this regional technique.
Kyle.s style differs somewhat from Tommy and Fred; he lived a bit further
away from Charlie Lowe in the Skull Camp region. Kyle learned much from
his uncle.s banjo playing at all night tobacco-curing vigils in Winchester,
Virginia. Yet Kyle was bound to the same rock-steady timing and rhythmic
power. It is possible some of this reflects the way music and dances evolved
in the Round Peak community. When folks danced in Round Peak homes, Tommy
told me "I mean they didn.t just stand around, they went to it with a ven."
I guess he meant with a vengeance, but I like the way he said it better.
Tommy told me when the lead couple danced and everyone else was supposed
to be inactive, no one could stand still, they all clogged in place, as
if to punish the floor. Perhaps some of the music.s rhythmic strength fed
on this fuel. Just imagine the intensity of dances in a two room cabin,
with only fiddle and banjo, jammed with people and the sound of overpowering
clogging.
BN: This whole cycle of events put you onto a mission
of meeting, preserving and respecting the folks we call "the old guys."
Could you elaborate on that a bit?
RA: I was taken not only with the music, but as I came to know more about
Southern culture and hospitality, I appreciated the warmth and acceptance
of the people I encountered. I often felt it easier to communicate with
many Southerners, almost a counter balance some of the aloofness I felt
in the north. In a sense, I felt like a musical orphan who had been adopted
by a wonderful group of people, not just musicians. If it started as a
mission, it soon became more personal. I certainly did not fit into the
role of an "objective folklorist."
BN: What about singing? On Mt. Airy USA, and other
recordings of the older folks, they seem to sing a lot. BUT the younger
folks seemed to be only interested in the instrumental tunes. How did
this happen?
RA: The New Lost City Ramblers started and continue as a singing band.
A change occurred when Alan Jabbour and the Hollow Rock String Band began
their playing and research, the music became all instrumental. The neighboring
Fuzzy Mountain String Band continued the Hollow Rock tradition, issuing
two influential all-instrumental LPs on Rounder. Although the Highwoods
String Band sang, the lion's share of old time revival musicians, who
I suspect didn.t grow up in a singing environment, remained rooted within
the instrumental faction. For myself, I love to hear the human voice and
enjoy tremendously playing in that situation.
BN: Let.s get back to the time spent home up north.
Were you able to have any involvement with the southern music during the
school year?
RA: In the late 60s while advisor to the school.s folk club, I meet Dave
Spilkia, who quickly became a fellow old time aficionado. Dave came on
many trips south with me thereafter; visits to the Kimble family, the
Shelor family, Melvin Wine, Buddy Thomas, JP Fraley, the Hammons family,
Delmar Pendleton, Roscoe Parish, and so on. However we always returned,
over and over, to the Mount Airy -Round Peak section of North Carolina
to visit Tommy and Fred. We both had Revox tape recorders and made many
reel to reel tapes of our visits. In the early 1970s in NYC there were
bands like the Wretched Refuse and the Delaware Water Gap, featuring Hank
Sapoznick and Bob Carlin. Both Bob and Hank later came south with me to
meet Tommy Jarrell. However, other NYC old time musicians at that time
were more insular, they didn.t seem to have much interest in traveling
south. One asked me; "you can learn everything you need from records,
why do you bother going south?" My explanations to him just drew a quizzical
look. Things began to change as new musicians entered the New York scene.
I can remember the night in January 1975 when Bruce Molsky walked into the
Galway Bay Pub Irish, where old time sessions were held every Tuesday night,
and asked me "is this session closed or can anyone play here?" I remember
thinking "wow, this guy is intense and really interesting." We became fast
friends and played in a band called Ben Steel and his Bare Hands with Dave
Spilkia. I had just met James Leva in New Jersey and asked him to come in
and join the band. My old friend Bill Chaleff joined us. Then Paul Brown
moved to the city after finishing at Oberlin College, and he joined up.
After graduating from Hampshire College, Jim Miller and Woody Woodring moved
to NYC and joined us. It would have been one amazing group if we had then
the knowledge and technique later acquired over the years. Almost everyone
went on to become deeply involved with old time music.
BN: What happened to the musicians from the NYC scene?
RA: In 1972, Bill Chaleff moved out to Easthampton, NY to practice architecture.
In March 1976, Bruce Molsky and James Leva moved to a cabin outside Lexington,
Virginia, and became part of a scene that included Odell McQuire, Al Tharp,
Brad Leftwich, Dave Winston, Chad Crumm and a slew of other musicians.
In 1979, Dave Spilkia went to the University of Pennsylvania Dental school.
Jim Miller went to Ithaca, got his PhD at Cornell, and Woody moved to
Pennsylvania. Jim later married Tara Nevins and now plays with her in
Donna the Buffalo. As I had done for Hank Sapoznick several years earlier,
I introduced Paul Brown to Tommy Jarrell. This influenced Hank and Paul
in diverse ways. Tommy asked Hank "don.t your own people play music?"
Hank thought about this and became a founder of the Klezmer music scene
in NY. On the other hand Paul was influenced to move the south, became
an announcer for Mt. Airy.s WPAQ station and now works for NPR in Washington,
DC. Andy Cahan, who was a regular at the NYC pub sessions, moved south
and played with Earnest East.s Pine Ridge Boys, as I had done the summer
of 1974. Things were changing; it was a fluid time for the younger musicians
and old time music in general. Unfortunate for me then but fortunate for
me now, I had on the golden handcuffs of a retirement system and continued
teaching in NYC.
BN: How did you keep track of those folks?
RA: I.d see them at Festivals such as Brandywine, Galax or on other trips
south. I recall many stays with Al Tharp at the original "Chicken Farm"
between Natural Bridge and Lexington, Virginia. Al got free rent in return
for cleaning the place, which had been used to roost chickens for many
years. I don.t think you can ever get the "chicken" out of a place once
that has happened, but it was fun staying there. Back then, Al was the
banjo player for Plank Road, now he.s the bass player in Beausoliel.
In 1984, I got a spring term sabbatical from teaching and used the time
to travel around and record young musicians. This project resulted in a
double-LP called The Young Fogies, now on a Rounder CD. In 1994, on a two
month cross-country trip with Bill Dillof, I recorded Volume 2 in that series
along with a broader series of traditional music called The American Fogies.
The "American" series has Cajun, blues, bluegrass, old time, Tex-Mex, Latino,
ballads, Texas-Polish music and even some Klezmer tracks with banjoist Hank
Sapoznick and mandolinist Andy Statman.
BN: Were there any commercial recordings released
of the old timers you recorded?
RA: The first work in the 1970s was to record the old timers. I issued
three LPs on Heritage; Music from Round Peak, Eight Miles Apart and Visits,
a double-LP one half old-timers, the other half young musicians. These
recordings documented people including: Tommy Jarrell, Fred Cockerham,
Jesse and Clarice Shelor, Taylor and Stella Kimble, Fiddling Doc Roberts,
Dan Tate, Buddy Thomas, Fiddling Doc Roberts, Forrest Pick, JP Fraley,
and many others.
BN: What recordings do you appear on?
RA: Of all people to start with, Tommy Jarrell and Fred Cockerham on
a 1974 LP called Music from Round Peak. In retrospect, I wish I hadn.t
done that, I wasn.t ready to play in their league. But Fred encouraged
it, and I was young and enthusiastic. One great thing that happened at
that recording session was when I ushered Verlin Clifton and Ronald Collins
into the studio to record Logan County Blues with Fred. Now that I feel
comfortable in that style, many musicians in the old time scene treat
the Round Peak style as pass¡©
On Young Fogies Volume one, I wrote a song called Visits where I play mandolin
to Al Tharp.s old time clawhammer banjo and Bobby Patterson.s bluegrass
picking. Tommy Jarrell sang some verses that I wrote that went; "I watched
my Daddy like a hawk and I learned to rock that bow, playing all them Round
Peak tunes, all night with Charlie Lowe." From 1988 to 1990, I played banjo
on three cassettes on Larry MacBride.s Marimac label, first Old Time Friends,
later with the Kimble Family on Pine Knot School Rowdies, and finally with
Mac Snow, Scotty East and Richard Bowman on "The Round Peak Band." Recently,
we recorded Mountairy.USA. This CD paired the great singers Mac Snow and
Scotty East with fiddlers Brad Leftwich and Bruce Molsky and Meredith McIntosh
on bass. On some tunes, Bruce fingerpicks the banjo in old time chord-style
while I clawhammer the fretless, giving a sound somewhat reminiscent of
DaCosta Woltz.s Southern Broadcasters.
BN: In a way, "MountAiry.USA" brings it full circle
AND ties it together?
RA: Yes, it did for me. It is wonderful that musicians Brad Leftwich,
Bruce Molsky, Tom Sauber and Andy Cahan became comfortable enough to join
with musicians from the South, and Southerners in turn with them. Years
earlier, John Cohen, Mike Seeger and Tracy Schwarz backed up many old
time musicians like Cousin Emmy, Roscoe Holcomb, and Dewey Balfa. This
helped fill a gap, since most children of old timers who continued with
music usually did so with the currently more fashionable forms of bluegrass,
country and rock.
BN: You mention "new" old time musicians, what impact
did they have?
RA: Their fresh approach to the music helped draw new young people into
the old time community. Young people seem to need to feel something is
"cool" to do it, and seeing a peer doing it helps with the transition.
I.m sure that Ritchie Stearns and Jeb Puryear had that influence around
Ithaca. Good this has happened, because many of us are getting to be old
geezers fast. It is also wonderful to see Southerners like Kirk Sutphin,
Riley Baugus, Jimmy Costa, Richard Hartness, Scotty East, Mac Snow and
Kinney Rorrer influence other young Southern musicians to join in.
BN: You now have your own CD label?
RA: Yes, Chubby Dragon, a name suggested by Jim Garber after the Bacon
banjo peghead inlay. Previously, I had done work for Heritage and licensed
recordings to Rounder. If you work for other companies, every year you
typically get a royalty statement that says "negative $2,000." So I figured,
what the heck, I can easily compete head-to-head losing money with the
best of them. I now have ten CDs on the Chubby Dragon label and, to my
surprise, I occasionally break even. Some CDs featured festivals such
as the Appalachian String Band Festival at Clifftop or the Brandywine
Mountain Music Convention, others featured groups such as the Primitive
Characters, Palmer and Greg Loux, Vulcan.s Britches and the Mountairy.USA
band. Other CDs feature ethnic music of the metro NY area. I even recorded
a Zydeco CD featuring Roy Carrier and his Night Rockers.
BN: You also worked with Larry MacBride of Marimac
recordings. "Old Time Friends" is one of my all time favorites. What led
you two to work together?
RA: Larry initially formed Marimac to re-issue old time 78rpm records,
mostly from Frank Mare.s collection. When I was recording the Young Fogies
in 1984, I invited Larry to join me on the Midwest segment of my recording
schedule. Larry was with me when I recorded Garry Harrison.s Indian Creek
Delta Boys in Illinois, Jeff Goehring.s Red Mules in Ohio and Dan Gellert
in Indiana. Dan.s daughter Rayna, now a fiddler of some renown, was then
a young girl in pigtails. That trip encouraged Larry to go beyond issuing
78rpm recordings and record contemporary old time musicians. In fact,
Larry used some of my recordings from that trip on his first cassette
issues of young musicians. In 1988, we worked on Old Time Friends together.
In 1990, Larry joined with me to record Doris and Ivery Kimble in Virginia,
and stayed to record the Round Peak Band in North Carolina. Larry passed
away from cancer several years later. The label is languishing despite
a Marimac anthology I later helped put together for Rounder.
BN: What are you currently involved in Ray?
RA: Recently, several big projects have come about. I am currently finishing
a book for Audio Amateur Press to be called "Speaker Building 201" to
help enthusiasts design and build speaker systems. Also, I try to play
with friends whenever possible. I sometimes find myself in a band with
two fine vocalists; Gil Sayre, from West Virginia and Dave Howard from
Connecticut. Ambrose Verdibello, a fine fiddler, plays with me in this
band. A CD with this band is in the works with Tim Brown's Five String
productions scheduled for a Fall 2005 release.
I am also in the beginning stages of a huge mastering-CD project involving
several field collections that we hope to issue later this year. I have
been in touch with other collectors and musicians who recorded in the field
collectors such as Peter Hoover, The Brandywine Friends of Old Time Music,
and Susie Goehring about releasing material recorded from the 1950s to the
1990s. Tim Brown, a Pennsylvania banjo-guitar playing computer whiz, helped
to secure a website URL called www.traditional-music.net. In the spring
of 2004, we hope to have about 5 CDs from each collector available as a
beginning. Musicians entering the scene today will never get to spend time
with the older musicians; they are now almost all gone. If you ask musicians
new to old time music "where did you learn that tune?" many will say "from
so-and-so at such-and-such a festival." If you are familiar with the source,
often their version seems completely removed from the source, often watered
down and homogenized. John Cohen once told me that sometimes the most radical
thing you can do to move ahead is to go backwards. I hope that the field
collectors group can leave a legacy for future travelers repaving the old
time highway to reconstruct this music with the old timers as guides. In
the end, I can only say it was a treasure for me to be shown this direction
by them.
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