Saturday, February 13, 2016

Echoes of Appalachia: MSU Artist in Residence Elizabeth LaPrelle brings music of the mountains to Michigan


The gales of November may be whistling winter tunes in your ear, but there’s a perfect antidote.
Elizabeth LaPrelle (photo by Mike Melnyk)
Riding on the winds of Appalachia, the sweet sounds of Elizabeth LaPrelle’s mountain music -- ballads of the Blue Ridge -- are floating through the breeze in East Lansing, Michigan this week.
As artist in residence Nov. 12-18 at Michigan State University Residential College in the Arts and Humanities, the young singer will perform at several venues, including:
At 3 p.m. on Wednesday, November 14, A Conversation with Elizabeth LaPrelle in C303 Snyder-Phillips Hall:
“LaPrelle will give an afternoon talk about Crankies, or scrolls that she hand makes with her friend, Anna Roberts-Gevalt. They sew, papercut, or print the scrolls with  illustrations of stories and ballads. When a crank is turned as you sing or speak, the pictures advance with the narrative. LaPrelle will talk about the process of making Crankies, how the visuals aid in storytelling, and answer questions.”
At 7 p.m. on Wednesday, November 14, Elizabeth LaPrelle will perform in the RCAH Theater  for The Center for Poetry Fall Series.
Double your pleasure, when  Elizabeth will be joined by her mom, Sandy LaPrelle, at  two weekend concerts.   
Sandy and Elizabeth LaPrelle
At Noon Friday, November 16 a concert (Free) in the showroom at Elderly Instruments , 1100 North Washington, Lansing, MI
On 7 p.m on Saturday, Nov. 17 at the Hannah Community Center at 819 Abbot Rd. in East Lansing (suggested donation $10, $5/students) for an Evening of Appalachian Music and Poetry, a benefit concert.
On Sunday Nov. 18 - Elizabeth will conduct "A Musical Workshop" from 2-4 in room C-204 at Snyder Hall on the MSU campus.
It’s a rare opportunity to hear authentic mountain music, sung as it was a hundred years ago, with many familiar folk songs that have stood the test of time.
Here’s a blog I wrote after meeting Elizabeth and Sandy LaPrelle in 2008. The duo enjoy coming up to Michigan for the summertime Great Lakes Folk Festivals, held in East Lansing.

Songs of Appalachia: Elizabeth LaPrelle and the Crooked Road Revue bring mountain ballads to the Great Lakes Folk Festival
By Susan Parcheta (for MichiganCountry.com  2008 and livingstontalk.com, now archived at  thelivingstonpost.com)
Elizabeth LaPrelle sings ballads of The Blue Ridge

Imagine a pleasant  summertime journey…walking winding crooked roads,  exploring the nooks and crannies of the glorious Blue Ridge Mountains of southwestern Virginia.
Think of music in the air…music that  travelers of the beautiful crooked roads might be singing. Songs like: Fly Around My Blue-Eyed Gal or  Over the River Charlie . Or maybe join in on a favorite childhood lullaby, Whole Heap A Little Horses, as you stroll along … or  Sweet Roseanne. Then pick up the pace a bit with Sail Away Ladies, Sail Away.
Think Appalachian mountain tunes…authentic to the sonorous voices of a hundred years ago.
Wind down that lovely road with  Elizabeth LaPrelle and the Crooked Road Revue, one of a select number of groups being highlighted at the East  Lansing, Michigan Great Lakes Folk Festival this weekend August 8-10.
Enjoy foot stompin’… banjo strummin’ … acapella singin’ in the traditional mountain way…the way the songs were sung in old-time mountain style. The Crooked Road Revue spans the generations, from 61-year old guitarist Wayne Henderson to 20-year-old LaPrelle.
As Henderson told Mike Hughes of the Lansing State Journal, “For a young person to sing those old songs so beautifully is really surprising.”
Old-time ballad singer Sheila Kay Adams says, “Anyone can learn the old ballads. There are numerous collections in libraries and books that are available on-line.”
“But,” she comments, in describing LaPrelle’s enchanting touch to the music, “Elizabeth is interested in the feel, the sound, the ornamentation of these songs. She is, in my opinion, one of maybe a handful of young singers able to capture the rhythm, the intensity, the breaks and sighs, that make this style of singing authentic.”
“The only problem I have while listening to Elizabeth,” she adds, “is that I’m always listening through tears. She reminds me so much of my older relatives – the same profound feeling for the ballad, yet with such a clear voice.”
Say’s Elizabeth ,  “I grew up surrounded with all kinds of music. We had lots of singing around the house, children’s songs, folk songs, ballads, popular songs, silly songs that we made up, anything that we wanted to do. My mother came from a musical family and was a little more serious about her singing. She loved singing with us, but she also performed with concert choruses and traditional groups.”
Elizabeth’s mom, Sandy, sometimes accompanies her daughter in concert. And, often, she’ll find herself being called up on the stage…like the time Elizabeth sang with Garrison Keeler when Prairie Home Companion radio show did a show in Virginia.
Elizabeth and Sandy carry on the legacy of the authentic mountain tunes. “At the time they were recorded,” Elizabeth explains, “most folks singing the old songs in the traditional way were very old, and the voices that could reputedly sing to be heard from ridge to ridge had lost some of their power. I try to sing ballads the way these folks and their ancestors might have sung when they were my age. I also try to sing with the emotion that I feel when I listen to the stories and poetry in the songs.”
“Right now I am balancing my performance schedule and my classes at the College of William and Mary,” she says. She manages a few concerts and appearances throughout the year.
Last year she traveled on the West coast tour with the Crooked Road Revue. This assembly of artists, organized by the National Council for the Traditional Arts, represents musicians from the real Crooked Road…a stretch of US Highway 58 winding 200 miles through the mountains and valleys of LaPrelle’s  home corner of Southwest Virginia.
In any case, there’s magic in the air there…musical magic from down the generations of rural Appalachia.  Elizabeth LaPrelle captures that tuneful mountain magic, now available on her CDs  Rain and Snow and Lizard in the Spring.
Listen awhile, and you’ll find yourself whooping it up along with her, as she  trips along with finger shappin’ Liza Up a Simmon Tree: You know, the one that goes….
Whoopty Liza pretty little gal.
Whoopty Liza Jane.
Whoopty Liza pretty little gal
A’ridin’ on that train.
Links:
Elizabeth LaPrelle at Old97Records.com
Clip of LaPrelle’s “East Virginia”
Elizabeth’s Great Lake Folk Festival Venue and Schedule
Elizabeth LaPrelle in her own words
New Notes and Links:
MSU Residential College of Arts and Humanities Center for Poetry Fall Series Elizabeth LaPrelle
A Conversation with Elizabeth LaPrelle  at MSU
Elizabeth LaPrelle website
Read all about the Crankies at Anna and Elizabeth’s website
My blogspace at The Livingston Post (Yesterday’s Coffee, Tomorrow’s Muse) with my original article about Elizabeth LaPrelle and the sweet songs from the Blue Ridge Mountains
For a beautiful article about Elizabeth and her music in the William &Mary AlumNews, read the words of  Alexandra Hart.
Author's Note: Elizabeth LaPrelle was interviewed by Noah Adams of National Public Radio on Sunday, Dec. 2, 2012. It's a wonderful interview. Once you hear her sing the original mountain tunes of the Blue Ridge, the way they're meant to be sung, you'll be tapping your feet away and quite addicted to the beautiful music of Appalachia. 
NPR Interview: 'Elizabeth LaPrelle: Carrying On The Appalachian Tradition

(Published Nov. 13, 2012 in The Livingston Post)



No comments:

Post a Comment