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This is a biography of Dan Levenson, an old-time banjo and fiddle
player from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Between 1987 and 1991, Dan
worked for Goose Acres Folk Music Center in Cleveland, Ohio, where
he dove deeply into old-time music. In the late 1980s, he formed
the Boiled Buzzards; they recorded four albums between 1989 and
1994 and were a consistently active presence at old-time music
festivals. During that time, he also played with Bob Frank as
one-half of the Hotfoot Duo. In 1995, he teamed up with Kim Murley
and recorded New Frontier: Instrumentals from China and America.
Levenson undertook his first cross-country trip as a solo performer
in 1996. His traveling program, "Meet the Banjo," ran as a workshop
with the sponsorship of Deering Banjos from the late 1990s to the
early 2000s. Dan recorded three projects in the first five years of
the 2000s and began editing the quarterly "Old Time Way" section
for Banjo Newsletter in 2005. He continues performing old-time
music, teaching fiddle and banjo, writing instructional and
repertoire books featuring banjo and fiddle tunes for Mel Bay, and
making plans for more old-time music projects.
Adopted as a child from the Masonic Home for Children at Oxford,
Tommy Malboeuf grew up in Troutman, North Carolina before enlisting
in the Navy in the early 1950s. After his military service, Tommy
found occasional work surveying and operating heavy equipment, and
he also found a personal passion in bluegrass fiddling. He
performed and recorded with A.L. Wood and the Smokey Ridge Boys,
Roy McMillan's High Country Boys, the Border Mountain Boys, L.W.
Lambert and the Blue River Boys, C.E. Ward and his band, Garland
Shuping, and Wild Country, among others. In the late 1990s, Tommy
began teaching fiddle, maintaining a steady stream of students
until at least the early 2000s. He continued to perform as a
fiddler, filling in for a variety of local bands and recording cuts
on records for bands such as Big Country Bluegrass. This text
documents Tommy's life, from his humble beginnings to his lengthy
fiddle career. Contextualizing Tommy's work within the
Statesville-Troutman bluegrass "scene," chapters also explore the
local bluegrass culture of the time. Tommy's extensive repertoire
is also listed, including his spectacular fiddle contest wins, band
recordings, local jam field recordings, and songs recorded for
students, all of which highlight his talent and expertise as a
fiddler.
North Carolina fiddler and banjo player Jim Scancarelli's extensive
career as a string band musician began in the early 1960s. A
founding member of the Kilocycle Kowboys, one of Charlotte's
longest-lived bluegrass bands, he played banjo with the Mole Hill
Highlanders, and in the 1980s formed Sanitary Cafe with fiddler
Tommy Malboeuf. Through the 1970s, his annual recordings at the
Union Grove Fiddlers Convention captured superlative music and
performer interviews. Scancarelli also had a successful career as a
freelance magazine artist and collaborated on the syndicated comic
strips "Mutt and Jeff" and "Gasoline Alley," eventually taking over
authorship of the latter in 1986. This biography traces his
creative trajectory in music, art, radio and television, and the
cartooning industry.
From his birth in Owensboro, Kentucky, in 1947, to his 2020 album
featuring the music of Lee Hammons, Wayne Howard has lived an
exceptionally creative life. Howard seems to be eternally present
at fiddle festivals, on the margins of old-time music gatherings,
and ensconced in the circles of creative forces working to preserve
and disseminate this archaic southern mountain music. In 1969, he
relocated to West Virginia and, after being introduced to the
Hammons family by Dwight Diller, Howard befriended the family and
recorded Lee, Sherman, Burl, and Maggie Hammons playing music and
telling stories. From there, Howard carved out a place for himself
as a professional computer programmer, a vintage book collector and
seller, and woodworker before turning his attention to writing
about the Hammons family, and producing CDs from his reel-to-reel
tapes of their stories and music for the Field Recorders'
Collective. This biography follows the threads of music and
folklore through Howard's life, celebrating his profound knowledge
of the songs and songsters that does much to sustain the interest
of those who seek out Appalachian tunes, songs, and stories.
Dwight Hamilton Diller is a musician from West Virginia devoted to
traditional Appalachian fiddle and banjo music, and a
seminary-trained minister steeped in local Christian traditions.
For the past 40 years, he has worked to preserve archaic fiddle and
banjo tunes, teaching his percussive, primitively rhythmic style to
small groups in marathon banjo workshops. This book tells of
Diller's life and music, his personal challenges and his decades of
teaching an elusive musical form.
Although the hostilities of the Vietnam War ended in 1975, the
diplomatic repercussions lasted for several more decades.
Eventually, however, the dedicated perseverance of diplomats on
both sides paid off. In November 2003, Major General Pham Van Tra,
defense minister of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, met with
U.S. defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld in the halls of the
Pentagon, signaling a new era in U.S.?Vietnamese defense relations.
This book traces the development of that relationship in the years
since the Vietnam War. It focuses especially on the 1990s, a decade
in which the author served as country director for Indochina,
Thailand and Burma in the Office of the Assistant U.S. Secretary of
Defense for International Security Affairs. His experience adds a
personal perspective to the historical and political record.
Multiple facets of the relationship between the two countries are
addressed, including trade, immigration of Amerasian children, and
POW-MIA concerns. Through this honest depiction of the sometimes
fractious and confusing policy-making process, Stern shows how both
parties came to agree, in the words of Major General Tra, that we
?should not allow the future to repeat the past.?
Despite their insistence that the complete withdrawal of U.S.
troops was the condition for the release of prisoners of war, the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam took little action to account for
American POWs at the end of the Vietnam War. Almost two decades
would pass following the end of the war before significant internal
political changes, shifting regional alignments, changing Western
interests, Sino-Soviet rapprochement, a nonmilitary settlement of
the Cambodian conflict, and the collapse of the Soviet Union would
bring Hanoi to the point of recognizing the importance of mending
its relationship with the West. From the Paris peace talks to the
U.S. government's decision in 1994 to lift the trade embargo
against Vietnam, Hanoi's policy on American MIAs and POWs is
examined, with particular focus on the influence of individual
decision-makers on the process and the ways the Vietnamese
leadership arrived at their negotiating strategies.
Tommy Thompson was a banjo player, writer, actor, teacher and
thinker. He arrived in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, in the early
1960s smitten by folk and traditional Appalachian music. In 1972,
he teamed up with Bill Hicks and Jim Watson to form the
nontraditional string band the Red Clay Ramblers. Mike Craver, Jack
Herrick, Clay Buckner, Bland Simpson and Chris Frank would
eventually join them. Using interviews and writings from Thompson
and his loved ones, the author presents to us a life that revolved
around music and creativity. Included are appendices on Thompson's
banjos, a discography and notes on his collaborative lyric writing.
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