W.Va.’s First Lady Of Gospel Dies At 75

Mount Hope native Ethel Caffie-Austin died on Dec. 11 

She started playing the piano when she was six years old and by nine was accompanying her minister father during his services. While studying at the West Virginia Institute of Technology, she formed an “underground gospel” group, as she called it, which, at one point, had about 40 student members.

She worked for 20 years as an English teacher in public schools, but her music, both as a solo performer and with the various gospel choirs she created, led to performances around the world. Caffie-Austin performed with her group Christ Inspiration Delegation at the Port Townsend Folk Festival in Washington state and toured several times in Europe, and later in Zimbabwe. She also performed at renowned venues in the U.S., including DAR Constitution Hall, Wolf Trap and the Kennedy Center. 

Caffie-Austin became a fixture at Charleston’s Vandalia Gathering, and founded the Black Sacred Music Festival at West Virginia State University.

In 2006, the state Department of Arts, Culture & History bestowed upon her the Vandalia Award, West Virginia’s highest folklife honor, and she was inducted into the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame in 2020.
Celebrations of Caffie-Austin’s life will be held Friday and Saturday, before she is laid to rest Monday in South Charleston.

LISTEN: Appalachian Children's Chorus In-Studio Performance + Interview

A few weeks ago, the students of the Appalachian Children’s Chorus and their founding director, Selina Midkiff, stopped by our studios at West Virginia Public Broadcasting. They graced us with their youthful energy and a true dedication to music-making. 

The ACC is an organization that has children kindergarten through 12th grade in 6 choirs — four in Kanawha, one in Putnam County and one in Harrison County. The group recently had their 25th anniversary and kicked it off with a tour of Italy, which included a stop to sing at the Vatican and to see the Pope, no less. 

They have a concert coming up on Sunday, December 4th at 3:00 PM at the Clay Center in Charleston called “Feel the Love of Christmas,” which will honor the memory of the late B.E. Taylor. For us, they performed selections from that concert in our studios, and three students gave us informative interviews. You can listen to the entire special by clicking the audio file below.

If you’d like to purchase tickets to the ACC’s upcoming concert click here.   

If you’d like more information on the ACC and how to join, click here

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