W.Va. Musician Gets 'Mountain Stage' Break

John Inghram, along with The John Inghram Band, made his Mountain Stage debut on May 1st, fulfilling a year’s long dream for the bassist and song writer.

May of 2022 will likely be etched in John Inghram’s memory forever.

Inghram, along with The John Inghram Band, made his Mountain Stage debut on May 1st, fulfilling a year’s long dream for the bassist and song writer.

Inghram grew up in Putnam County and has become a familiar face on the Kanawha Valley and regional music scene over the last two decades. Certainly, no stranger to Mountain Stage, Inghram is currently an associate producer on the show. He has filled in on occasion with the show’s stage band, providing the back beat with his bass guitar.

But just a few days before Mountain Stages’ first show of May, one of the scheduled performers was forced to cancel his appearance and Inghram and his band mates, literally got the call.

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West Virginia musician John Inghram.

“The last 20 years I’ve been a fan of this show and just always known what a big deal it is,” Inghram said. “Not only to the state, but nationally and globally, even. It’s such a calling card for our state because it reaches such a wide audience and it’s so well respected in the music business and among musicians and agents and managers, just across the board in the industry. It’s a very, very well respected, legendary program.

“So three and a half years ago, I started working for the show as assistant producer and was always hopeful that I might get a shot. Knowing that I’m capable, and that when the time is right, the time will be right, and I’ll jump on that opportunity. So, unfortunately, David Bromberg had to drop out due to a COVID case in his band, and the opportunity came up about 72 hours before the show and I said ‘Hey, let’s do this.’

“This is what we trained for our whole life for, those moments were when the rubber meets the road you gotta go, so I took I took the opportunity and May 1, 2022, that was my opportunity to get front and center on the Mountain Stage.”

Inghram’s interest in music started early on with a strong influence from his family, first it was in church when he got a real taste of southern gospel. It then progressed into bluegrass, country, rock and jazz.

“My mom’s side of the family’s is musical,” he said. “Church, Southern gospel, bluegrass, country, old time kind of stuff. My grandfather was constantly playing pedal steel in the back room, and flat top guitar. My uncle’s a great banjo player, my other uncle is a great guitar player. My Mamaw, my grandmother, was a really fantastic singer and was well known for her singing in her little community up in Campbells Creek, my other aunt is a singer and we’re all a very close family. Just a really musical family.

“So I was around it and exposed to it at an early age. I started picking around and plunking around on stuff, but didn’t really get serious until well, it wasn’t even serious yet, but in middle school, I joined the band, and I was playing a little trumpet and a little baritone,” Inghram said. “And then I finally realized, well, I might want to get a guitar and I liked electric guitars. So, I talked to my mom about it, and my dad, and said, ‘I think I’d like to have an electric guitar and start learning how to play some of this rock and roll that I’m getting into.’

“I then went to my two best friends; one was a drummer and the other was a guitar player. I told them ‘Hey, my folks said I can get an electric guitar.’ And they said, ‘Well, why don’t you get a bass because then we can start a band. And I said, ‘well, that’s an idea.’ So the bass kind of chose me, that’s my primary instrument, which tends to happen. It’s not the sexiest instrument in the world to some, but anyway, it kind of found me and then I fell in love with it.

“I got really serious about it, stopped playing sports, and just really went headfirst into the music thing. And then at Winfield High School, I got with Scott Woodard, who’s the band director, and he was a phenomenal band director, musician and mentor. The fire was just fully lit at that point.”

When asked about what genre or category he falls in now, Inghram simply calls it his own “unique mantra.”

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Cover art for The John Inghram Band’s debut album.

Now, almost three years after going into the studio, The John Inghram Band released its debut album, entitled John Inghram.

On Friday, the May 1st Mountain Stage show airs nationally across 283 radio stations. “A promotional coup,” Inghram says.

“You couldn’t have planned this any better,” Inghram said. “I mean, it’s kind of is one of those self-actualization things where all that work you put in for the 10,000 hours plus and these things kind of just click sometimes. It’s like we were in the right place at the right time. And you’re ready for the opportunity, right? That’s the whole thing, you never know when those opportunities are gonna come up. But when they do, you gotta be ready for them.”

W.Va. Hoops Legend Talks 50 Years Of Memories

Jim Hamric is a legend when it comes to West Virginia high school athletics. The longtime coach, administrator and conference commissioner sat down with West Virginia Public Broadcasting's interim executive director Butch Antolini, courtside during the recent state basketball tournament, to reflect on basketball history in the Mountain State.

Jim Hamric is a legend when it comes to West Virginia high school athletics. The longtime coach, administrator and conference commissioner sat down with West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s interim executive director Butch Antolini, courtside during the recent state basketball tournament, to reflect on basketball history in the Mountain State.

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity. 

Antolini: How many years have you been coming to the state basketball tournament?

Hamric: I think I started when I was about a junior in high school because I lived in Spencer and a guy named Estes Barker, really one of my best friends ever, took me when I was either a sophomore or junior when it was at Huntington. And then I started going to Morgantown and Charleston. And I think it’s about 54, 55 years that I’ve been. There were about four years there I was in Oklahoma going to college when I didn’t go. As soon as I got back and started coaching in West Virginia, I’ve been pretty much consecutively since the winter of 1978. So quite a few.

Antolini: What are some of the best memories you have of the state basketball tournaments? 

Hamric: Maybe one of the best is when they got this building finished right here. And they finally had room for everyone to come and that was a big deal. Because of the civic center, they built all these hotels and motels. I remember talking to a guy that was at a prep school down in Virginia.

Antolini: Fork Union?  

Hamric: That’s it. That’s it. It was Fletcher Arritt. We talked right over there one day. He said he’d been to a lot of state tournaments in the south like Virginia, North and South Carolina and Georgia and all them. Even Florida. He said there’s nothing like the West Virginia state high school basketball tournament.

Antolini: Do you remember any particular games that you think about?  

Hamric: Yes, there is. When Randy Moss played Beckley about 11 o’clock, right here. And the place was jam packed, and Randy Moss jumped over the moon. And he had Jason Williams — he had two other professional athletes. Four guys, professional athletes on the same team. And they didn’t win the state championship. But boy, that game was just phenomenal. I really thought Randy Moss would be an NBA player. I really did.

Antolini: He was just a pure athlete.

Hamric: I watched him in high school football too. And, you know, he wasn’t real keen about going over the middle, he would do that. But he really liked going deep. And he’s still going deep.

Antolini: He made a career out of it didn’t he?

Hamric: He made a wonderful career. And now he’s a broadcaster. I am so proud of him. I really don’t know him, but I know that he’s come along. He was a wonderful ambassador for our state.

Antolini: Any others?

Hamric: Well, there’s lots. Now that I’ve been commissioner of the conference, I really support my teams. And it’s always nice for our teams out of the conference, to make it to the semis or especially make it to the finals. Sometimes we win, sometimes, not many times, we lose. I’m just tickled to death that I am a part of that and can support those teams. I’m a lucky, lucky individual.

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