CUTTING A SHINE (more Mountain Talk - full bonus)

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  • Опубликовано: 26 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 282

  • @werewolflover8636
    @werewolflover8636 Год назад +29

    People often look at this like it’s odd but for me this is just my home, my people and my culture.

    • @trustworthydan
      @trustworthydan Год назад +3

      I'm from Kentucky, bout 50 miles from the Cumberland gap. I live at the end of a dead end road that leads up in the mountain. All the old heads that are like this are passing away. I miss them.

    • @danzbutrfly
      @danzbutrfly 5 месяцев назад

      why is it odd?? its not odd ....its just the way they are or lived / talked.....they look like really nice people.

    • @mississippijohnfahey7175
      @mississippijohnfahey7175 2 месяца назад

      ​@@trustworthydan shame... Where I'm at, the kids ain't forgotten a thing. If anything they're more enthusiastic than the old timers. I mean hell, Billy Strings has got to be the most well-respected musician in the world right now

  • @justinw.7045
    @justinw.7045 Год назад +8

    I am blessed to have grown up in the heart of Appalachian. No matter where I roam I can hear them calling me home.

  • @fredsalter1915
    @fredsalter1915 3 года назад +94

    Thank god these interviews are preserved for us youngin's to watch!

    • @christopherfreeman1340
      @christopherfreeman1340 2 года назад +7

      you mean young'uns

    • @peterhunt5072
      @peterhunt5072 2 года назад +1

      Near the Appalachian Trail in Maine, there are some families that are talking in a similar manner!!

  • @markfergerson2145
    @markfergerson2145 3 года назад +90

    I'm 68. My father died when I was five. He was born in Kentucky in 1896, and that's not a typo. He would listen to serious old-timey music like that in your video on 98 rpm lacquer records and that ain't a typo either. You just brought back my childhood.

    • @SaberToothGary
      @SaberToothGary 3 года назад +3

      Much respect, Mr. Mark!

    • @blackjackmusic1107
      @blackjackmusic1107 3 года назад +8

      I'm A Kentucky boy as well...I live right across the road from Bill Monroes' birth place in Rosine ...I'm 39 yrs old...My Grandmas sister was married to Bills brother and my Dad was born in Bills brothers cabin...I love these hills and I love our music and our slang/speech...I'd not want to be any where else in the world...Bless'ya Mark

    • @davidhirschv7903
      @davidhirschv7903 3 года назад +2

      Hi Mark,
      I am writing a paper on hillbilly and mountian culture and how the sterotypes that most percieve, would you be willing to be a part of a small interview? Ive done a few with other folks from kentucky but Im needing a few others to really get a picture of the culture from people within it.
      Thanks
      Dave

    • @C.O.G.
      @C.O.G. 3 года назад +1

      @Mark Ferguson, how many older siblings did you have? My dad was born in 1908 and he was 48 when I was born. I had 10 half brothers and sisters (from dad's first marriage) and five whole, younger brothers and sisters (from his and mom's marriage); sixteen of us total. I was an aunt (half aunt) before I was born and a half great-aunt at the age of 17. My dad lived to be 80 years "young". He worked on the L&N railroad for 42 years (30 or so of those years as a "Section Foreman") and was awarded many medals and commendations for his outstanding work for the L&N. My mom was the daughter of a Baptist preacher and one of the finest women who ever lived. I miss them both so much, but I treasure the memories and the values and life lessons that they taught me. My dad was also born in Kentucky; a few miles north of the the Tennessee state line, near Jellico, TN.

    • @markfergerson2145
      @markfergerson2145 3 года назад +1

      @@C.O.G. Not a very large family (that I know of!). One older half-brother, one older sister, one younger sister. But then, my parents married only a few years before I was born.
      They raised me right and I miss them too even though my father raised me with a razor strop. (I earned it fair and square though.)

  • @illusionxmuta
    @illusionxmuta 2 года назад +38

    The mountain and Appalachian life is a bit of a Catch-22. Growing up in the mountains was a hard but simple life and you wish to pass some of that onto your kids. But you also want something better for your kids and have a life that you didn't have i.e. going to college, getting a better education and life experiences, etc. I am the latter. I grew up in the mountains of WV to parents with a barebones education and worked very hard. But I went away for college and now live overseas working. I miss my upbringing in the hills, but my parents are so proud that their boy "made it out." There's a lot of romanticism of isolated mountain life, but there are many hardships as well. The current opiod crisis is destroying my home state of WV.

    • @caliope6480
      @caliope6480 5 месяцев назад

      Agreed. My dad wanted us to have more opportunities as well. It is a hard life.

    • @robwalsh9843
      @robwalsh9843 5 месяцев назад +1

      Appalachians are a marvelous culture and people but they fall prey to the same types of depression, addiction and loss of self that many other groups do. I love WV(I'm a Marylander)but there exists the same crisis there and everywhere.

  • @C.O.G.
    @C.O.G. 3 года назад +43

    I love these glimpses into a kinder, gentler time. Brings back a lot of fond memories; milking cows before dawn, gathering eggs, feeding the chickens and other livestock, all before catching the "bus" (an old station wagon driven by the local grocer) to the little village and then catching the regular school bus. After school, it was dinner first then chores and homework. An hour or two of (black and white) T.V. shows then bed and the whole routine started over in the morning. I miss those days of farm life and would trade this small town living for them in a heartbeat.

    • @sandraroberts7406
      @sandraroberts7406 Год назад +1

      IT'S GOOD TO TOUCH THE GREEN GREEN GRASS OF HOME, PLAYING THE DAY LIGHTS OUT OF THAT BANGO. YOU GO FOR IT.

  • @paddlefoot5692
    @paddlefoot5692 3 года назад +23

    God Bless the Appalachian people. Pure America Keep it alive!

  • @jrivers0005
    @jrivers0005 3 года назад +150

    I'm 5 shots of authentic Tennessee moonshine (not from Gatlinburg--180 proof illegal stuff!) in and I love seeing my people represented in a positive light! Appalachian pride!

    • @brad4110
      @brad4110 3 года назад +5

      Love the Appalachian people best people ever

    • @treybarrier5574
      @treybarrier5574 3 года назад +11

      Hahaha son you don't drink 180 proof shine. 🤣

    • @jbaker4900
      @jbaker4900 3 года назад +4

      You don't know shit from apple butter

    • @christopherfreeman1340
      @christopherfreeman1340 2 года назад +1

      @@jbaker4900Apple butty teks from sunrise to sunset to mek and shit is what I do after I ait 5 gallons of it on some hot biskits. Do I know duh diffrents b'twixt duh two J baker? Applebutter takes about 12 hours make and bullshit never ceases as long as the world goes round. So many people on all the different social media,take stuff to the sleeve just have something to blart about in anger without a real cause to be angry.Does not the Bible tells us not be angry at neighbors without having a cause to be,otherwise it is to be.

    • @christopherfreeman1340
      @christopherfreeman1340 2 года назад +3

      @@treybarrier5574 that stuff must be distilled 10 times over to get that much water content out of it. 180 proof would be around 95 to 98 percent alcohol that's possible. 190 proof Everclear makes good paint and varnish stripper. Avg. untaxed home distilled is about in all reality 75 to 90 proof. Being most people jar it up after only one run through the still. I trust you make it yourself out of non-gmo corn and use clean sweet spring or branch water and not sink water or store bought. You have a good mash made from good selected yellow corn to get that sweet mellow corn taste with a slow burn. All whisky has a burn to it going down the gullet into the flew.

  • @suecastillo4056
    @suecastillo4056 3 года назад +33

    If any of them ever wonder? Someone they’ll never know just loves them SO MUCH!!! That’s me... WVa , Scots-Irish roots , Appalachia... love the people, music, love it all...♥️🙏🏻Sending it all to y’all !❣️🕊peace and joy...

    • @veyger1970
      @veyger1970 3 года назад +4

      pride is a good thing my man. Peace to all .

    • @suzybailey-koubti8342
      @suzybailey-koubti8342 3 года назад +4

      I’m right there with you! ❤️

    • @buffywinfree
      @buffywinfree Год назад +1

      Same!!! WV, Melungeon/ScotsIrish mix 🥰👏🏼

  • @vidswithshi
    @vidswithshi Год назад +8

    There’s nothing like living in the mountains ❤

  • @June0354
    @June0354 4 года назад +36

    I loved seeing my Uncle Leon and cousin Charles playing guitar and my cousin Jeremy playing banjo. So many memories. Thank you for this video.

    • @billybrumley6040
      @billybrumley6040 2 года назад +1

      Is this some of my family life .Billy Brumley.

  • @unclebaobabmusic
    @unclebaobabmusic 4 года назад +66

    Just looked up Henry Queen. He passed in February. RIP to a great sounding musician.

    • @suzanneflowers2230
      @suzanneflowers2230 3 года назад +6

      Can you imagine the good music in heaven? Blows my mind.

    • @vannah12222
      @vannah12222 3 года назад +2

      Indeed. All of the Queen family are great musicians. I hadn't realized Henry had passed. Rip.

    • @dawno5656
      @dawno5656 3 года назад +4

      I was just wondering about him. Thanks for taking the time to find out, and let people know

    • @brighterdays2come
      @brighterdays2come 3 года назад

      Ahhh. 😥

  • @MrBonners
    @MrBonners 4 года назад +30

    Western Canadian here: My father came from Scotland in 1907 at 5 years old (and twin and an older brother) There were various figures of speech and words he used that nobody else used. I heard them here. Absolutely was not expecting that.

    • @caroldenise9569
      @caroldenise9569 4 года назад

      My great grandfather came from Scotland at age 3 and lived in the Appalachian area, and used the same figures of speech. Most came from Ireland and Scotland

    • @patsavage1245
      @patsavage1245 3 года назад +1

      @@caroldenise9569 I'm Scottish. We still say a "Poke" of sweeties/biscuits etc..

  • @traceybuckley1968
    @traceybuckley1968 3 года назад +33

    Thanks so much for recording these amazing people, love the mountains, music and character.

  • @gwenniegirl50
    @gwenniegirl50 2 года назад +8

    My Graham relatives immigrated from Scotland then settled in North Carolina. Many of the expressions I’ve heard on this series remind me of the expressions my dad would use. Thank you for posting this.

  • @shookup6599
    @shookup6599 4 года назад +45

    Love the banjo playing..💓

  • @MaximumFatness
    @MaximumFatness 3 года назад +20

    I'm from that Cherokee Indian reservation Jim Tom references. We're native southerners through and through with Scots- Irish ancestry as well. I love my mountain home.

    • @duaneholcomb8408
      @duaneholcomb8408 3 года назад +3

      Me too part Cherokee. Scotts Irish. ,,

    • @jenpeace3763
      @jenpeace3763 3 года назад +1

      @@duaneholcomb8408 me three

    • @Trogers1212
      @Trogers1212 3 года назад +2

      Cherokee county girl here! Scot-Irish and Cherokee decent and been in these mountains for generations.

  • @tiffanywoods4126
    @tiffanywoods4126 4 года назад +78

    Really wish we could start something to pass along the mountain ways. We've always known how to live off the land and fish, hunt. Not for sport but just taking what we will eat and share. Growing, music, how to find water in the forest, knowing the trees. They've put a stigma to mountain people and make our kids believe they need to be like everyone on social media and reality T.V. We need to teach our youth to be proud just as any other heritage and keep it, so it will continue to be passed along. Like quilting, log homes, crops, roots, I can go on and on. Even my father will look at me crazy and say you didn't knew that. It may be common knowledge to them, but where I grew up in the city. I'm teeing to learn all I can.

    • @stephenfox3236
      @stephenfox3236 4 года назад +5

      Fox Fire book series.

    • @georgealexander8661
      @georgealexander8661 4 года назад +1

      TIFFANY McALLISTER...Amen and God bless you
      and all the REAL folks! 🤗🤗😃😃🌹🌹♥️♥️

    • @tiffanywoods4126
      @tiffanywoods4126 4 года назад +3

      @@stephenfox3236 That's so funny you said that I was trying to plan a trip to go to their homestead and my mother used to have a wealth of those books we can't find them though. Thank you Stephen!!!

    • @dindixie
      @dindixie 4 года назад +5

      I wish I'd've learned more from from my dad's family in West Virginia. So much knowledge lost... I did learn Aunt Gladys' apple butter secret, though.

    • @stephenfox3236
      @stephenfox3236 4 года назад +2

      @@dindixie do share. Aunt Gladys says it's better give than receive!

  • @shawndateague7581
    @shawndateague7581 2 года назад +4

    I relate to most all of this. Thank God. I was born n 1968 and was raised n the Missouri Ozarks. So blessed.

  • @ronniejenkins2056
    @ronniejenkins2056 3 года назад +11

    I just want to say thank God for the simple way of life this brought back memories of my grandparents and moma and daddy and the way they raised us God bless and thanks for sharing this video.

  • @eugeneconner6934
    @eugeneconner6934 3 года назад +16

    This is whats wrong with the world we live in today.....THERE'S NOT MORE PEOPLE LIKE THESE PEOPLE. ...dang good simple folks

    • @trustworthydan
      @trustworthydan Год назад

      There are still people like this, the media demonizes them for not having an education and being backwards. They're phasing out my heritage because of the negative traits, no one gets to see the good.

    • @FasterFaster196
      @FasterFaster196 Год назад

      Oh be quiet. There's people all around you living poor lives. Stop it. Sure funny how everybody wants to bless these folks with love when for far more than a hundred years they were shunned and ostracized as ignorant and backwoods. Their kids died of preventable illnesses bc of malnutrition.
      Look around. There's poor as dirt people living simple lives all around us.

  • @MrAbelone
    @MrAbelone 3 года назад +25

    That’s most awesome renditions of Foggy Mountain Breakdown I’ve ever heard.

    • @LadyOaksNZ
      @LadyOaksNZ 2 года назад +1

      Rogee that 💯💯🔥

  • @curtismoss8616
    @curtismoss8616 8 месяцев назад +1

    Something about this makes me cry

  • @chilenskbjorn8737
    @chilenskbjorn8737 3 года назад +15

    These people are so lovely, proud of who they are and the place they belong to and represent a true piece of living history, the old traditions and stories that have been passed through generations. I have always felt some kind of fascination for the ´´hillbilly´´ culture, the banjo, the lovely accent, but above everything the proud and uniqueness they carry themselves. Great vid, I enjoyed every second of it!

    • @veyger1970
      @veyger1970 3 года назад +1

      They don't want recognition .....They are a proud folk.

    • @chilenskbjorn8737
      @chilenskbjorn8737 3 года назад +1

      @@veyger1970 I think they do, specially in a country that creates stereotypes of them, sees them as weirdos with no education and even in politics use them to criticize the other side (leftist specially, the same who claim to go against discrimination and cry for everything then talk about the ´´white trash´´ that supported Trump)

    • @mistermisanthrope4106
      @mistermisanthrope4106 3 года назад +4

      @@chilenskbjorn8737 To be fair, we Mountain folk don't lose a wink of sleep worrying about what others think about us. In a way,we don't exist with everyone else, it's our own world here.

    • @roxycouch8031
      @roxycouch8031 2 года назад +2

      Thank you so much for the kind words sir. I am a proud “Hillbilly”

  • @kingks3302
    @kingks3302 4 года назад +26

    Great stuff, this is real entertainment. GOD Bless!!!

  • @kwil5379
    @kwil5379 3 года назад +35

    Jim Tom talking about the little people is simply showing his Scots Irish roots

    • @codyleslie478
      @codyleslie478 Год назад +1

      Its so cool how they have preserved their heritage and don't even know it..

    • @XaltaTarot-qs2hc
      @XaltaTarot-qs2hc Год назад +1

      @@codyleslie478 lol they know. they're country not stupid

    • @Robyjv8
      @Robyjv8 5 месяцев назад

      Not just Irish and Scottish but also the Cherokee believe in "little people". Lot of Native blood in the mountains..

  • @rockeerockey6941
    @rockeerockey6941 4 года назад +17

    I've really enjoyed this series! Great folks indeed

  • @maggiefisher6253
    @maggiefisher6253 3 года назад +3

    Miss the mountains of NC. My Pop used to sing these silly little diddies. One was shut the door, I'm comin thru the winder. shut the winder I'm coming thru the door. Can't remember much of anything. Wish i would have wrote them down. Its a shame but the old ways are fading fast. Im glad someone took the time to make this video. I wish there were more. Stories, songs, and jokes from Appalachian heritage.

  • @maryefromky
    @maryefromky 5 месяцев назад

    i'm from Appalachia, born n raised in the bluegrass region of KY. but i live in the mountains now and i love it so much. it's such a unique region, i can't express in words how great Appalachia is. oh man, its ole Jim Tom! awesome, he is like Appalachia personified

  • @geraldjones8925
    @geraldjones8925 3 года назад +5

    What I did not experience first hand I saw second hand in my young years. What a true showing of Appalachian life.

  • @phyllisarrington7436
    @phyllisarrington7436 3 года назад +16

    There was a man in our town that had "Little People". I stopped and gave him a ride one day (he walked ever where cause he didn't have a car).
    Well he got in my car but didn't shut the door. I said, "Hugh, shut the door so I can drive off."
    He said, "No, I got ta wait til the Little People get in."
    So I waited a bit. He got the door shut and we drove off.
    When I told people about how Hugh did they told me he went on that way all the time.

  • @osoyoosforever9643
    @osoyoosforever9643 3 года назад +6

    A friendly practical bunch of folks that would be fun to visit with.

  • @jeffnpatricia
    @jeffnpatricia 3 года назад +9

    I remember watching heehaw on tv late at night at grammas. When someone would knock on the door, well an hour later the house was full of bluegrass music and gramma would fire up the coffee pot and stove. As a kid this was like disneyland at home. Us kids would dance and laugh untill weee hours of the mornin. I rekon i miss it a bunch.

    • @petergomez6991
      @petergomez6991 2 года назад

      My Gramma loved heehaw too, especially when Minnie pearl was on

  • @2WheelsTrav
    @2WheelsTrav 4 года назад +13

    RIP Henry Queen. Pickin n Grinnin in paradise now

  • @TheBuckStopsHere480
    @TheBuckStopsHere480 4 года назад +24

    5:36 - That young man plucks a mean banjo! Old boy on guitar is no slouch either.

  • @troyalcorn1184
    @troyalcorn1184 4 года назад +33

    I am glad to be allowed to see me outside of myself.
    I am glad to know I am not alone.
    :)

  • @chucklee2995
    @chucklee2995 4 года назад +9

    I was born in raised in maggie valley North Carolina right at these folks, I'm in Alabama now have been for 10 years nom I'm 51 yo and damn I miss home some of the greatest guitar or banjo players I ever heard none that I knew could read a lick of music, but could play the damn strings off the thing,

    • @kyledeitz2760
      @kyledeitz2760 3 года назад

      I live in Cruso, right down the road from there

    • @duaneholcomb8408
      @duaneholcomb8408 3 года назад

      Me too used to live in swain now in Alabama. But I,miss home,,,,

    • @royhayes6519
      @royhayes6519 3 месяца назад

      I'm from Wilkes country foothills blue ridge in Ohio now and do miss home

  • @genegoodwin8925
    @genegoodwin8925 4 года назад +11

    I live out in the country in the hills of SE Ohio and have a friend from Tucker County WV. He is the one who taught me about cutting a shine! There are many wonderful sayings I remember from the men I worked with over the years. One was when someone wreck a car or drove off the side of the road was, "He couldn't drive a cork in a bottle." There are many wonderful people in our country, but you only see the bad people on the news. Go to the hills if you want to see GOOD people.

  • @elizabethschreffler9182
    @elizabethschreffler9182 4 года назад +5

    Thank you for sharing your way of life. I really miss the mountains.

  • @shalynn2577
    @shalynn2577 2 года назад +3

    My daddy was from west Virginia and he sure knew how to play that harmonica! I miss hearing him play and sing those little songs.

  • @elizabethfreshour4828
    @elizabethfreshour4828 2 года назад +3

    that banjo playing young man is a musical genius!!!!!

  • @walterclements1612
    @walterclements1612 4 года назад +9

    all of your documentaries are super relaxing

  • @freeworld5773
    @freeworld5773 4 года назад +11

    Loved indulging in yall culture....banjo was awesome.... 😉 the ghetto boy in me says hi to the hillbillie in you, God bless

  • @jonellvincent8441
    @jonellvincent8441 3 года назад +2

    Love the music, and the singing, nothing like it, 💙❤️🙏🙏🙏

  • @troyalcorn1184
    @troyalcorn1184 4 года назад +10

    I don't shine much today.
    This video made me shine :)

  • @OrangeySky11
    @OrangeySky11 4 года назад +8

    Nice guitar playing, love that G run!

  • @peterhunt5072
    @peterhunt5072 2 года назад +2

    April 17, 2022
    Thanks a million for this very interesting Documentary!!

  • @SmokyMountainBlessed
    @SmokyMountainBlessed 2 года назад +3

    love listening to the history

  • @rtod4
    @rtod4 3 года назад +4

    As a native North Carolinian, and a NCSU alum, I approve!

  • @barbarahagofsky1191
    @barbarahagofsky1191 2 года назад +1

    I enjoyed this video a lot. Thank you for sharing this part of your life!

  • @Marimarr59
    @Marimarr59 4 года назад +20

    I'm an old Hillbilly from the Ramapough Mts of Jersey and proud of it

    • @user-pq6mr6op3p
      @user-pq6mr6op3p 3 года назад

      Jersey? Son you must of bumped your head.

  • @christinasweetheart2810
    @christinasweetheart2810 3 года назад +7

    That dude Bryan must be on that mountain magic weed.😂

  • @XaltaTarot-qs2hc
    @XaltaTarot-qs2hc Год назад

    oh I love the songs and the stories so much!

  • @dozensides
    @dozensides Год назад +1

    My Grandma was born in 1896, "Cuttin' A Shine" is when they would sprinkle corn meal out on a wood floor and then dance on it. Their leather- sole shoes would shine the floor with a golden glaze of corn meal. Reminds me of the old song, "Golden Slippers."

  • @Shane-pn9ht
    @Shane-pn9ht 3 года назад +6

    I could listen to Jim Tom talk for days 😂

    • @duaneholcomb8408
      @duaneholcomb8408 3 года назад +1

      And you might have too cause he will plum talk your ear off. Mightvas well set a spell. Cause you ain't going no where soon.

  • @thetruth1862
    @thetruth1862 3 года назад +4

    East Tennessee here feels like home

  • @alodia8447
    @alodia8447 4 года назад +11

    i literally downloaded the audio and listen to it as a song

  • @Firekeeper61
    @Firekeeper61 4 месяца назад

    We love you Henry and the whole family. Your hard work is a huge part of our mountain traditions much love to you all. God bless, Oldfirekeeper Great Smokey Mountains N.C

  • @jonwanrocks
    @jonwanrocks Год назад

    mercy this here makes me feel like im at home again thank you

  • @dannyblack3814
    @dannyblack3814 3 года назад +1

    Very nice , thank you for sharing

  • @buffywinfree
    @buffywinfree Год назад +1

    Honey, we said cuttin' a shine when someone was being very extra, or acting out of pocket!! ... or maybe drunk and busted their ass 🤣👏🏼

  • @adriverster3507
    @adriverster3507 2 года назад +2

    I love these people!

  • @thetruth1862
    @thetruth1862 3 года назад +2

    My grandmother and grandfather where born in 1920's in Russel County Virgina moved to Kingsport Tennessee, they new the Carters in poor valley and any of these people could be my relatives

  • @harolddenton6031
    @harolddenton6031 3 года назад +5

    I could listen to jim tom talk for hours. Would love to taste some of the moonshine that he makes.

  • @jeffnpatricia
    @jeffnpatricia 3 года назад +4

    My pops said id never be accepted being from california. But i will retire in those mountains going back to where gramma and granpa came from before leadin the horse team to calif for a better life. I suspect they were leaving a life i will someday seek.

  • @jamartin1
    @jamartin1 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for sharing!!💜

  • @veteangesiale9619
    @veteangesiale9619 3 года назад +2

    I love, Love this. This people make me rethink life choice. MAtter fact, it makes me wiser and knowledgeable in a that's it's not boast. If their ancestors moved to get freedom. WHy on earth would spoiled lil ole hacker's be looking for trouble from these humble souls? My childhood was literally like this. And the outside world were like the neighbourhood kids cause daddy wasn't too worried about money etc. Lil hard work, God, family that's all that it matters. I miss ma daddy! We moved to city life although I don't live inside the city. it's still the country side but it's not farm from the big city. Simple life can still make you happy. Music entertain them and it's not boast ❤️

  • @dennman6
    @dennman6 4 года назад +3

    I'm wondering what's on them cassette tapes on Guilford Williams' table thar at 4:35 minutes?

  • @therandoms.enoughsaid.1662
    @therandoms.enoughsaid.1662 Год назад +1

    i would have loved to have stayed there, nice & peaceful.

  • @slm3913
    @slm3913 3 года назад +3

    Thank you for keeping this music alive. Simple life is the best.

  • @bkjustice9390
    @bkjustice9390 4 года назад +10

    My family always used the term "cuttin a shine" to refer to someone pitching a fit or causing a disturbance. Like an unruly child for example.

    • @surgeongeneralsmokes
      @surgeongeneralsmokes 4 года назад +2

      Same here, and I was born and raised in the Blue Ridge Mtns. of Northwestern NC.....

    • @bkjustice9390
      @bkjustice9390 4 года назад +2

      @@surgeongeneralsmokes half of my family is from Asheville but it was the other half that was from eastern Ky. that used that term in my family.

    • @sunflowerlady1810
      @sunflowerlady1810 3 года назад +1

      @@bkjustice9390 Me and mine use it that way here in KY . Best banjo and guitar picking I've heard ever heard, by the way.

  • @spinblackcircles
    @spinblackcircles 3 года назад +2

    Ok when I watched the documentary at first I thought the old lady in the red sweater (Mary queen) had an annoying singing voice. At this point though it’s one of the most memorable and fascinating voices I’ve ever heard she’s just hypnotic with that unique sound

  • @randlerichardson5826
    @randlerichardson5826 3 года назад +4

    Granny would say fetch go fetch me this or fetch me that.

  • @Th3Watch3r
    @Th3Watch3r 2 года назад +1

    I love this. Mark Laita brought me here. My entire family is from the mountains. Unfortunately over the last two generations the entire clan moved north for work, Ending up in Detroit. One full generation and besides stuff like this, the culture has been completely erased in my family

  • @jimtruscott5670
    @jimtruscott5670 4 года назад +5

    The banjo seems like the perfect instrument of the South.

    • @mistermisanthrope4106
      @mistermisanthrope4106 3 года назад

      We play the mountain dulcimer too.

    • @jimtruscott5670
      @jimtruscott5670 3 года назад

      @@mistermisanthrope4106 ...and ?

    • @mistermisanthrope4106
      @mistermisanthrope4106 3 года назад +2

      @@jimtruscott5670 What do you mean "and?", there's a lot of different instruments that are popular here. The dulcimer & banjo are amongst the traditional instruments.

  • @veyger1970
    @veyger1970 3 года назад +2

    101 comments. and 52, 394 views.........Seems you hit a spot on a soul. well done.

  • @_spicypainliquor
    @_spicypainliquor 4 года назад +5

    Yo that's Jim Tom master moonshiner! He was on that show on discovery 😃

  • @sharidezern8459
    @sharidezern8459 2 года назад

    My father was born in Robbinsville, NC... my great grandparents and all my heritage in Murphy, NC

  • @randlerichardson5826
    @randlerichardson5826 3 года назад

    Great video thanks for sharing GOD BLESS

  • @bellesparks4374
    @bellesparks4374 4 года назад +1

    I really enjoy these:)!!! We had a second cousin that used to come visit and play the guitar and sing and that was also, so much fun:)! My first cousins, a set of cousins sang and one played the guitar it was so fun, too:)! We always had so much fun with music in our family:)! Good times:)!!!

    • @chucklee2995
      @chucklee2995 4 года назад +1

      Belle it's not guitar in them thar hills it's Geetar,😁

  • @craigenputtock
    @craigenputtock 2 года назад +1

    What a great accent. I would love to live there for a while, just to see how life really is.

  • @Italy-k4h
    @Italy-k4h Год назад +1

    I’m Mexicajun I speak Spanish but I do have a Southern Accent and I am Cajun from the south state of Louisiana speaking French combined with a southern Accent Louisiana has a southern accent occurring with Cajun

  • @Anvilshock
    @Anvilshock Год назад +1

    Damn, subtitle autogeneration has become seriously good if it can get even mountain talk right with so few errors. As the fella in the main video said, it's not an easy language, and it's not. Yet it managed to get even Jim Tom's rapid-fire drawl mostly right. I wish TL&LP would do a proofread and provide revised subtitles, though.

  • @djolivierastro
    @djolivierastro Год назад

    Just love these folks !

  • @deloreswatkins9844
    @deloreswatkins9844 2 года назад

    I enjoyed this article

  • @johnny25lisa
    @johnny25lisa 4 года назад +4

    God bless em

  • @impromptumelody
    @impromptumelody 2 года назад +1

    The married couple at 24:07...I'm crying.

  • @theweakestlink2278
    @theweakestlink2278 10 месяцев назад

    Love Jim Tom. He was a character.
    R.I.P. 😔

  • @tiffanywoods4126
    @tiffanywoods4126 4 года назад +1

    Glad to see many or most all my neighbors know how Ann's are willing to teach

  • @newfic2290
    @newfic2290 Год назад

    Прекрасные люди! 👍💖 Привет из Сибири!💖

  • @SJ-ni6iy
    @SJ-ni6iy 3 года назад +2

    Is that old man on the moonshiners show the one that Popcorn Sutton used to be on.

  • @fredandkell
    @fredandkell 2 года назад +1

    Oh, bless RUclips's heart for the attempt at the auto-captions on this video! :) (I'm a proud western North Carolinian. Let's just say that the auto-captioning "don't speak Southern.")

  • @jonwanrocks
    @jonwanrocks Год назад

    that ole foggy mtn breakdown sounds GOOD i love hearin them old timers gettin after it

  • @ElasticGiraffe
    @ElasticGiraffe 3 года назад +1

    Guilford Williams is some top-shelf unintentional ASMR.

  • @valeriejean72
    @valeriejean72 2 года назад

    If anyone can reply with some of the song titles that would be amazing, I love good bluegrass

  • @alexdavie9611
    @alexdavie9611 4 года назад +10

    Real Americans, salt of the earth.

  • @mountain7102
    @mountain7102 Год назад

    Anyone know the song the Bolton’s are playing?

  • @georgealexander8661
    @georgealexander8661 4 года назад +13

    Be peert now and teyull me..what's the diffrence a'tween a violin and a fiddle? A violin has strings
    and a fiddle has straaangs.

  • @clintkile3470
    @clintkile3470 3 года назад +1

    20:33 what a beautiful violin.

  • @Marleena133
    @Marleena133 Месяц назад

    The houses and land may be shifted and gone but we have this video for the people and their songs and stories