Us & Them: Music With A Message

Music can entertain and inspire and serve as a way to share another person’s truth. This episode, Us & Them talks with two musicians, each with roots in Appalachia, whose work offers their view of the world.

Some of it carries a political message. One takes his music to places where people struggle with war and disasters, as an offer of healing. The other uses his string band heritage to write songs that sound familiar but carry a message of change.

Joe Troop, leader of the Argentinean bluegrass band Che Apalache, talks about his experience of being in a Latino band singing songs of love and inclusion at a time when the President and other Americans call for deporting DACA dreamers and the building of a wall on the southern border. Che Apalache’s album “Rearrange My Heart” is nominated for a Grammy for Best Folk Album.

Stephen Said also spent his boyhood in Appalachia and grew up playing fiddle with old timers in the hills of West Virginia. But as he pursued a music career, he hit some barriers. Major label record execs told him there’s no way he could have a career in America with an Arabic name. Now he travels the world making music that reaches across borders. His music isn’t folk, hip-hop or country music – it’s ‘everybody’ music.

You can listen to Us & Them on WVPB Radio. Tune in on the fourth Thursday of every month at 8 PM, with an encore presentation on the fourth Saturday at 3 PM.

Listen: Kim Richey On Mountain Stage

Our Song of the Week comes from acclaimed Nashville singer and songwriter Kim Richey, along with her band and San Francisco’s Chuck Prophet, who was a guest on this episode and also appears on Richey’s new album “Edgeland.” Here’s their duet, “Whistle On Occasion.”

We also shot a video of Kim and Chuck performing “Whistle On Occasion” on location at the state capitol grounds in Charleston, WV. You can see the video below via VuHaus.com.

(Cameras: Josh Edwards, Josh McComas, Courtney Holschuh, Edited by: Michael Valentine)

Hear Kim Richey‘s entire set on this week’s broadcast, a set from Chuck Prophet featuring the Mountain Stage Band, plus a blend of Latin and Appalachian with Che Apalache, West Virginia indie-rockers Ona, and West Africa’s Sidi Toure.

Find a station in your area, and be sure to subscribe to the podcast so you don’t miss a song.

Credit Brian Blauser/ Mountain Stage
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A photo of this week’s finale song, lead by Larry Groce, featuring Kim Richey, Chuck Prophet, members of Ona, Sidi Toure and Che Apalache.
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