In August 1925, two years before the famed Bristol Sessions, Ralph Peer and Okeh Records set up a temporary studio on the rooftop of Asheville’s brand-new Vanderbilt Hotel.
Over ten sweltering days, local musicians cut sixty test records, capturing the raw sounds of traditional Appalachian ballads, banjo tunes, and old songs. Though often overlooked, these Asheville sessions lit the spark that would explode two years later in Bristol, igniting the Big Bang of country music.
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Wonderful episode……..
Another take: If Bristol was the Big Bang of Country Music, Asheville lit the fuse……………….
. . . which is exactly the image I offer in my essay on the sessions accompanying the “Land of the Sky” CD/LP.
. . . which is precisely the image I used in my essay accompanying the reissue CD/LP “Music from the Land of the Sky.”