Episode 43: Spencer Family and Friends (Living Links to the Source)

Welcome to Get Up in the Cool: Old Time Music with Cameron DeWhitt and Friends. This episode features a lot of my new friends! Thornton, Emily and Kilby Spencer, Kelly Brieding and Debbie Bramer. Kilby Spencer reached out to me a while back with some recommendations for guests, so I crashed at his and Kelly’s place in Crumpler, North Carolina, and he lined up some amazing guests for me, including Shohei Tsutsumi, whose episode aired last week.    Before my trip, I hadn’t heard a lot of this style of fiddling and banjo playing, so I was pretty blown away when we got started. I’m used to playing this nonspecific, northern, festival-style, so let’s just say I expended a lot effort trying to keep up with these folks. Unfortunately, because there were six of us playing in a living room, this episode was a little more difficult to mix than the average one-on-one session. You only really notice it on a couple songs were the vocals get a bit lost. I hope the energy of the jam makes up for it Tunes we’ll play: Sugar hill Johnson boys Lost Indian Eighth of January Stagger Lee John Brown’s Dream Spencer Family and Friends’ bands: http://whitetopmountainband.com/  https://crookedroadramblers.com/  https://www.facebook.com/crookedroadramblers/  http://kelleyandthecowboys.com/  https://www.facebook.com/Kelley-and-the-Cowboys-349823465031/  Field Recorders’ Collective:  http://fieldrecorder.org/  https://fieldrecorder.bandcamp.com/  Buy Get Up in the Cool vol. 1: https://camerondewhitt.bandcamp.com/  Support Get Up in the Cool on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/getupinthecoolSupport Get Up in the Cool

Om Podcasten

Get Up in the Cool features conversations and musical collaborations with some of Old Time music's heaviest hitters, like Ken Perlman, Adam Hurt, Spencer & Rains, and Jake Blount. As an interviewer, Cameron balances an effusive curiosity for the potential of traditional music with a dogged respect for its origins. Serving as audience surrogate, Cameron asks illuminating questions to Old Time's best and brightest while telling the larger story of the tradition's modern era.