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Doc Watson, David Holt and Riley
Baugus perform Friday

Doc Watson and David Holt
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Deep Gaps own Doc Watson will appear with two of North
Carolinas other musical treasures, David Holt and special
guest Riley Baugus, at Farthing Auditorium on Friday, October
24 at 8pm in a special performance entitled Hills of Home.
Hills of Home is an evening of story and song that
chronicles the remarkable life of local musician Doc Watson,
the powerful singer and tremendously influential picker who
virtually invented the art of playing mountain fiddle tunes
on the flattop guitar. Joined by accomplished storyteller
and acclaimed multi-instrumentalist David Holt, and accompanied
by singer and old-time musician Riley Baugus, Doc includes the
audience in a front-porch style, conversational show as he tells
stories while singing and picking with his friends.
Born into a family already rich in musical tradition, Arthel
Doc Watsons love affair with music began at
age 13, when he picked up a guitar and taught himself the chords
to When the Roses Bloom in Dixieland. Blinded during infancy,
Doc would listen to vinyl records of other artists songs
and, after learning them, would put his own original spin on
them.
A recipient of countless awards, including the National Medal
of Arts, the National Heritage Fellowship and eight Grammys,
Doc gave his first solo performance in 1962 at Gerdes
Folk City in Greenwich Village. From then on, he was a
full-time professional, playing a wide range of concerts, clubs,
colleges and festivals, including the Newport Folk Festival
and Carnegie Hall. As the late sixties brought a waning
of the folk revival, Docs son Merle Watson provided the
musical and emotional companionship that he needed to continue
touring. With Merle playing guitar and banjo and serving
as partner and driver, the father-son team expanded their audience
nationwide.
Today, it is a mark of achievement for musicians to say they
have played with Doc Watson. He has played and recorded
with countless artists, including Flatt & Scruggs, Chet
Atkins, Ricky Skaggs and the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band.
Although he briefly stopped performing after Merle died in a
1985 tractor accident, Doc now accepts a limited number of engagements.
While two recent, major surgeries have diminished his stamina
from what it was a year ago, musically he remains the same old
Doc. He gives full breadth to his musical expression, sleeping
in his own house in Deep Gap, on land homesteaded by his great-great-grandfather.
For almost 30 years, Doc Watson has known and recorded with
David Holt, four-time Grammy Award-winning musician, storyteller,
historian, television host, and entertainer. Holt plays ten
acoustic instruments and has released numerous recordings of
traditional mountain music and southern folktales. He tours
the country playing with his friend and mentor Doc Watson, as
well as his band The Lightning Bolts. Since 1981, David
Holt has made entertaining his career. He has appeared
as a guest on the Grand Ol Opry, numerous television shows,
and performed in the popular film O Brother, Where Art Thou. His
well-known television series Folkways airs regularly on PBS.
In 2002, David Holt and Doc Watson received a Grammy for their
title recording together, Legacy.
Complimenting the rich mountain folk tunes of Doc Watson and
storytelling of David Holt is the serious banjo picking of North
Carolina native Riley Baugus. Raised by a family that often
played recordings of old-time music, he developed a love and
appreciation for traditional, Southern Appalachian music.
He began playing fiddle at age 10, built his first banjo with
his father and began playing it at age 12, and built his skills
playing with elder, traditional musicians. Baugus has played
with numerous old-time string bands, and has just released his
new Sugar Hill recording Long Steel Rail. His singing
is featured on the soundtrack to the recent Academy Award-winning
film Cold Mountain.
The 2008-09 Performing Arts Series is a presentation of Appalachian
State Universitys Office of Arts and Cultural Programs. The
mission of the series is to support the teaching mission of
Appalachian State University by presenting a diverse array of
music, dance and theatre events designed to enrich the cultural
landscape of the campus and surrounding region. By creating
memorable performance experiences and related educational and
outreach activities, the series promotes the power and excitement
of the live performance experience; provides a window
on the world through the artistry of nationally and internationally
renowned artists; and showcases some of the finest artists of
Appalachian State Universitys campus community and the
surrounding region.
Appalachians Performing Arts Series presents events through
April, including: Teatro Lirico DEuropa performing Bizets
Carmen (Friday, November 14); Blind Boys of Alabama
(Saturday, December 6); African Childrens Choir (Tuesday,
January 27); LA Theatre Works: The Great Tennessee Monkey Trials
(Wednesday, February 11); Blue Note Records 70th Anniversary
Tour (Tuesday, February 17); and North Carolina Dance Theatres
American Masterpieces (Thursday, April 2).
Performance tickets make great gifts that last throughout the
year. A new Flex 4 pass offers a 10% discount
and allows its holder to use four tickets in any combination
at any time throughout the series. Tickets may be purchased
by calling the Box Office at 800-841-ARTS or 828-262-4046 or
online at www.pas.appstate.edu.
The Performing Arts Series would be unable to present and publicize
its wide range of extraordinary programming without critical
support from a group of outstanding sponsors that are dedicated
to promoting the arts in our region, including: McDonalds
of Boone, Charter Media, The Mountain Times, All About Women
magazine, the Winston-Salem Journal, 100.7 MacFM, Mix 102.3,
Mountain Television Network, WDAV 89.9, WFDD 88.5, WETS 89.5,
WNCW-FM Spindale 92.9.
Tickets to the October 24 Hills of Home performance
are $18 for the general public, $16 for seniors, ASU faculty
and staff and $10 for students and children. Ticket prices
increase at the door on show nights. For tickets or information,
call the Farthing Auditorium Box Office at
800-841-ARTS (2787) or (828) 262-4046, or visit www.pas.appstate.edu.
Farthing Auditorium is located at 733 Rivers Street, and box
office hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.
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