Remembering Travis Stimeling And The Age Of Deer, Inside Appalachia

This week on Inside Appalachia, we remember Travis Stimeling. The author, musician and educator left a deep mark on Appalachian culture, and the people who practice and document it. And, grab your dancing shoes and learn about a movement to make square dance calling more inclusive. Plus, it’s not just you. There are more deer than ever these days. A writer explores the long, complicated entwinement of people and our wild kin.

Inside Appalachia remembers Travis Stimeling. The author, musician and educator left a deep mark on Appalachian culture, and the people who practice and document it.  

And, grab your dancing shoes and learn about a movement to make square dance calling more inclusive.

Plus, it’s not just you. There are more deer than ever these days. A writer explores the long, complicated entwinement of people and our wild kin.  

You’ll hear these stories and more this week, Inside Appalachia.

In This Episode:


Remembering Travis Stimeling, A Musician, Scholar And Mentor

Travis Stimeling, a WVU professor and noted scholar of traditional Appalachian music, died in their home on Nov. 14, 2023.

Photo Credit: Ellen Linscheid

Travis Stimeling carried the torch for bluegrass and traditional music in Appalachia.

It was a shock when the author, musician and West Virginia University (WVU) professor died abruptly in November at the age of 43. News of their passing prompted an outpouring of remembrances from colleagues, former students and friends.

Some shared their stories with Folkways Reporter Zack Harold, who brought us this remembrance.

Traditional Dance Callers Updating For Inclusivity

A multi-generational group of dancers follows Becky Hill’s calling at the Augusta Heritage Center in July 2023.

Photo Credit: Lydia Warren/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

The use of they/them pronouns signals more than a change in language; it’s also a cultural change that allows for people to be identified as they see themselves. And, it’s happening even in the region’s dance halls.

Folkways Reporter Lydia Warren brought us the story.

The Age Of Deer

Erika Howsare explores our relationship to deer, which has been long and complicated.

Courtesy Photo

Few animals are as polarizing as the white tail deer. They’re graceful and majestic — and kind of cool to see up close. But they can also ravage gardens, and drivers hit countless deer every year. 

Yet, there seem to be more deer than ever.

Erika Howsare is the author of The Age of Deer: Trouble and Kinship with Our Wild Neighbors.

Producer Bill Lynch spoke with Howsare.

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Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by Amythyst Kiah, Watchhouse, John Blissard, Yonder Mountain String Band and Larry Rader.

Bill Lynch is our producer. Zander Aloi is our associate producer. Our executive producer is Eric Douglas. Kelley Libby is our editor. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens.

You can find us on Instagram, Threads and Twitter @InAppalachia. Or here on Facebook.

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Inside Appalachia is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Hector Saldivar Brings Mexican Folk Arts to East Tennessee

Inside Appalachia Folkways reporter Katie Myers travels to Lenoir City, Tennessee to speak with award-winning artist Hector Saldivar, and his apprentice Ariel, about bringing Mexican folk art to the hills of east Tennessee.

It took me a second to find Hector Saldivar’s Lenoir City artists’ studio, but after seeing it, it couldn’t have been any other building. Surrounded by fairly average mid century homes, Saldivar’s building is painted brightly in red, festooned in hanging tropical plants and wind chimes.

Inside, two life-size sculptures rest a table by the doorway. The interior is shady and lined with leafy, tropical plants. Hector and his niece Ariel work intently at a table, dipping strips of paper in papier-mâché by the light of a single lamp. Their extended family surrounds them, some watching, others playing phone games or texting. Snacks are out at another table to the side including tortilla chips and guacamole, food that is easy to eat while they work.

When Saldivar moved to east Tennessee from Mexico City, he didn’t think of himself as an artist. Today, his work in clay, papier mache, and tile shows at galleries all over the region. Over the years, he’s found a way to bring Mexican folk arts to Appalachia. Now, he teaches them, too.

One of the first sculptures he shows me is a little fantasy creature made of papier mache. It’s bright yellow and speckled with green, sort of like a lizard and a dinosaur. Each one is different. Some are cats, some are dogs. Many have wings. Some are blue, red or green. The creatures are called alebrijes.

“This something traditional from Oaxaca, Mexico,” Saldivar says. “They’re made with a special wood in Oaxaca.”

We don’t have that wood in the states, so Hector uses his own materials.

“My alebrijes are made with papier-mâché,” Saldivar says. “I started with wire and tape and later used paper mache, like I’m using right now.”

Hector showed me around his studio, pointing out sculptures on tables, on shelves, bursting out of every corner. As he did so, he told his life story.

“I was originally from Mexico City,” Saldivar says. “And I’ve been here in the United States while living in Knoxville for almost, maybe 35 years. And I’ve been doing art, like maybe 13 years, 14 years.”

But Saldivar always worked with his hands, even before he considered himself an artist. For years before his move, he was making piñatas for festivals in Mexico City.

“I always enjoyed making piñatas,” Saldivar said.

Saldivar was especially busy around Christmastime, during the festival of Las Posadas. It is a nine-day festival around Christmas which combines ancient indigenous practices with Catholic ones. All week people sing carols and break open star-shaped piñatas .

“You have to make one piñata each day,” Saldivar said. “They celebrate the Virgin Mary when she was pregnant. And she was knocking on the doors.”

During Las Posadas, revelers go from door to door, knocking and asking for sweets.

Saldivar’s family, too, had to go knocking on some doors.

Like many other immigrants, they were looking for the surest foothold in the economy they could find. In this case it was restaurant work. They opened a restaurant, the second in Lenoir city. It had to close a few years later, but they held onto the building.

“The building was empty, but I was working with paper mache downstairs,” Saldivar says. “And my sister said, you know, why not put your studio upstairs?”

Over the years, Saldivar met and learned from other artists who encouraged him to explore other mediums, like his clay, papier-mâché, and tile, using his past of piñata-making as inspiration.

In Mexico, papier mache is an old tradition, called cartoneria. It originated with indigenous crafts involving leaves and plant fibers. As indigenous peoples were forcibly converted to Catholicism, paper crafts persisted – often within the framework of Catholicism. That’s why piñatas are still popular around Christmastime. Cartoneria often mixes the sacred and the profane; past artists have made papier-mâché Judases, but also piñatas shaped like members of heavy metal band Judas Priest. The playful cartoneria spirit holds true for Saldivar.

Like Saldivar’s work, crafts were often made from found materials, like newspapers and cardboard. He had some mentors, but also did a lot of self-teaching.

“You know, when I see people doing something, I can try to do it too,” Saldivar says.

Back when Saldivar started, he had trouble getting community interest in his work. People were curious, but kind of confused.

“They said oh, it’s kinda scary, my skulls,” he admitted. “But people now, is getting more interested in Latin culture.”

Saldivar attributes the growing popularity of Mexican folk art to an unexpected source – the Disney movie “Coco.” It focused on the Day of the Dead. Skeletons in dresses are a fixture of Day of the Dead, a Mexican holiday in November that invokes a sense of familiarity and humor about death with visits to family graves, bright colors, and dancing. One such character is Catrina, one of the more bedazzled skull figures of Mexican folk art.

The studio is full of Catrinas in all shapes and sizes, from life-size to the size of a child’s doll. They all grin with an unmistakeable decorated death’s head, adorned in wide-brimmed black hats and well-bustled floor-length gowns.

Saldivar tells me the history of the Catrina. The character was first sketched by the artist Guadalupe Posada to make fun of Mexico City high society, and remind them that La Muerte (Death) would come for them too.

“That’s why she’s dressed, you know, very elegant,” Saldivar says.

Catrina became an iconic figure, and people began to dress like her, make figurines of her. Now, she’s a folk tradition.

We walk past a collection of other art projects.There are little clay Catrinas, a white sculpture with a silver crown, a skull with a spiky surgical mask, representing COVID-19, lay replicas of the Tree of Life, a traditional representation of the Garden of Eden, and Paintings of the Mexican artist Frida Kahlo.

Saldivar returns to the table, where his niece Ariel is working hard at a papier-mache sculpture. Hector’s been making one too. She’s learning from him. Saldivarr’s recently taken on Ariel as an apprentice, thanks to support from the Tennessee Arts Commission.

“Right now, I’m making a heart out of newspaper,” Ariel says, lifting up her work into the light. Behind her, her cousins play video games on their phones, and Saldivar’s sister quietly listens to the conversation.

“Recycled material, two hearts with wire around,” Saldivar adds, with a hint of a proud smile.

Ariel was born right in east Tennessee. She says the apprenticeship has helped her reconnect with her heritage.

“I think it’s more like introducing like the Mexican culture to here,” Ariel says, when asked what this work means to her. “To make Appalachians more diverse and knowledgeable about Mexican culture.”

Lenoir city has changed a lot since Saldivar’s family founded the town’s second Mexican restaurant, but there’s still plenty of work to do.

Saldivar’s work looks colorful and playful, but it has serious cultural connections. I ask him and Ariel if art with deep and resonant meaning might be taken too lightly by some of the gallery viewers who don’t have cultural context for the images. They both respond that that’s what they like best; seeing how its meaning changes in the eyes of the beholder.

“The main thing about doing artwork with my uncle is you can see, like, the different ways that art can be perceived,” Ariel says, not taking her eyes off her work. “Like how subjective it actually is, because my uncle creates different meanings for them, but other people can see them as one way.”

Ariel has presented her work at galleries with her uncle, and hopes to continue to do so in the future. Both want to see their work shown regionally, and Saldivar says he hopes to help create networks of support for other immigrant artists.

As I leave I stop by the ice cream store on the corner – they sell fruit popsicles, in the style of the Mexican state of Michoacan. The sound of children talking and laughing fills the air. The popsicles taste like home, not mine, but I can tell they taste like home to somebody.

January 27, 1933: Folk Artist Connard Wolfe Born in Kanawha County

Folk artist Connard Wolfe was born at Standard in Kanawha County on January 27, 1933. The self-taught sculptor started carving wood and stone after being discharged from the army about 1955. His first significant carvings were stones for a wall and two headstones. Other early works included a gigantic reclining nude carved from a boulder in the hills near his home and two life-sized sculptures in tree trunks: ‘‘Mountain Girl’’ and ‘‘Standing Christ.’’ Both tree sculptures were later destroyed. His most famous surviving works are a bear on the campus of the West Virginia University Institute of Technology in Montgomery, a beaver at Bluefield High School, and a madonna and child in a Kanawha Valley church.

In addition to his creative works of art, he was also known for his unusual tools, which he made from automobile leaf springs and engine valves. Wolfe played a major role in the craft revival of the 1960s and 1970s, giving demonstrations at fairs and festivals. One of his stone carvings, “The Kiss,” is on display in the West Virginia State Museum.

Connard Wolfe died in 2012 at age 79.

LISTEN: Artist Cris Jacobs Drops "Color Where You Are" Album

“I think sometimes we just look way too past the present and are sort of blinded to…our ability to create beauty in the present.” That was the meditative response from singer/songwriter Cris Jacobs when asked about the meaning of the title to his newest album “Color Where You Are”. Recently Jacob’s life has changed drastically with the birth of his child and now has been focused on creating music in the present instead of waiting for it to happen. This new lifestyle help put the impetus on Jacobs to write this new album–even between changing diapers.

Throughout the album are the influences that have always been a part of Jacobs’s repertoire since his days with his former band, the Bridge: folk, funk, blues, and bluegrass. These styles mix together in a veritable “gumbo” from songs like the grooving “Under the Big Top” to the funky “Rooster Coop”. The lyrical ballad “Painted Roads” is a bluesy meditation that provides us the title of the album in its lyrics. 

“Color Where You Are” Album Cover

Take a listen to this interview between Matt Jackfert and Cris Jacobs about this new album as they discuss everything from Jacobs’s influences to his songwriting process to his new lifestyle. 

You can find the full album here: https://open.spotify.com/album/1KDIWuNEljTyLIgeMYq0rM?si=Ag-OvfSZSbOFilcStOHcJw and you can purchase it here

If you’re looking for a chance to catch Cris play live, you can see him perform this weekend at the 4848′ Festival in Snowshoe, WV. Or if you can’t make that, you can always download the podcast of his performance on WVPB’s Mountain Stage!

Listen: Aoife O'Donovan on NPR's Mountain Stage

 

Spellbinding folk with a captivating voice. It would only make sense for such a performance by Aoife O’Donovan to be titled “Magic Hour,” one of the many songs we’ll preview on this week’s Mountain Stage broadcast.

We’ll also hear performances by Old Crow Medicine Show crooner Willie Watson, Grammy-nominated country songwriter Brandy Clark, Chicago indie rockers Frances Luke Accord, and acclaimed Irish singer-songwriter John Doyle.

Like what you hear? Subscribe to the Mountain Stage podcast to hear Aoife O’Donovan’s full set in the coming weeks.

 

If You Can't Find it, Make It: Joshua Lee on Wheeling's musical 'Promise Land'

“We need to work to retain young musicians so we can continue to grow the scene from within.”

From West Virginia Public Broadcasting and A Change of Tune, this is 30 Days of #WVmusic, the interview series celebrating the folks who make the West Virginia music scene wild and wonderful.  

And today’s interview is with a folk rock’n newcomer to the Wheeling music scene who’s sang his way through Nashville and Indiana. This… is Joshua Lee.

How did you start playing music?

I’ve played in bands as a frontman or sideman since high school in Indiana and throughout my 13-14 years in Nashville. When I relocated to Wheeling a few years ago with my family, I tried to quit playing music. After a particularly difficult first year here, I couldn’t help but write songs again. I initially had a difficult time finding like-minded musicians in the Wheeling area to work with, so I had to do it all myself for the first time in my life. I started playing out as a solo act and gradually warmed up to the idea of being a singer-songwriter instead of a member of a band.

Credit Erin Yaeger
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Joshua Lee

And your name?             

It’s mine! I just left off my last name, mostly because there’s a soap opera star and a British Bieber-wannabe who already have my name locked down in internet-land.

How has your sound changed over time (if at all)?          

I’m thrilled with how this first EP Promise Land has turned out and feel like it does establish this sort of ambient folk rock as a foundation. That said, since this is still a newish project, the biggest change has been moving from a sort of shapeless, undefined mess of acoustic guitar chords and melody to a pretty clear full-band approach. I love ambient guitars and textures. I love careful arrangements. I love rock and roll energy. I love great melody. I think that’s really starting to come out.

What’s it like performing in West Virginia? Where have you played?

As of yet, I’ve been working primarily in the Wheeling area. We have a dearth of legitimate venues in Wheeling, so I’ve been working with some other local artists (Michael Iafrate and members of Mr. Fancy Pants) to build a local original music scene through our collective, The Bridge+Tunnel Collective. I’ve just recently started to try to get out of Wheeling a bit. I actually just opened for Hello June at their CD Release Party in June at Joe N’ Throw in Fairmont, and I was very excited about that!

Now that you mention it, what is The Bridge+Tunnel Collective? And what do you hope to achieve with it?

Bridge+Tunnel was born out of dozens of conversations with other bands and artists in the Wheeling area who were all frustrated that there weren’t many real mid-sized venues that promoted local, original music. We felt like we needed a hub for musicians to get together and help promote each other, trade tips and ideas and especially try to find spaces willing to partner with us to host shows.

Our first partnership was with Artworks Around Town (in Wheeling’s Centre Market). They have a gallery space that has been hosting original music the 3rd Friday of every month. We’ve taken over booking and now help run those events.

Ultimately, we want to act as a sort of virtual music venue. We feel like every scene needs that space that acts as a hub. You can meet every type of artist there: photographers, videographers, graphic designers, engineers, producers, songwriters, guitar players, etc… Since Wheeling doesn’t have that space yet, we’re trying to be that through the events we put on around town and through our online community.

Credit Sarah Taylor
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Joshua Lee

What’s been the highlight of your musical journey thus far?      

I’ve had a lot of great experiences on the road when I toured with bands and artists out of Nashville. I got the opportunity to tour with some of my best friends, and that’s really hard to beat. But, so far, it’s the making and releasing of this new EP. I have been a part of several projects in the past that I’ve been really proud of. This record has surpassed anything I could of imagined. I really think this record says what I set out to say.

What’s your advice to anyone starting to make music? 

Just do it! Take some chances and introduce yourself to other musicians that you like, even if you’re awkward (trust me, I can be pretty awkward). Don’t worry about getting things perfect yet; just get out there and publish your tunes, play some open mics, get feedback and just keep making more music!

What’s it like making music in West Virginia?

At first it was frustrating. I had been a band guy my entire life, as I’ve always preferred to collaborate, but I couldn’t find anyone that I thought I could work with. It seemed like an entire generation of musicians fled the Ohio Valley for music hubs like Nashville or New York. After searching around for a while, I found 3rd Friday at Artworks and discovered a number of interesting bands and artists. Gradually over the last couple years, I’ve met more and more musicians who are interested in working to rebuild a thriving scene in Wheeling.

Credit Sarah Taylor
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Joshua Lee performing at 3rd Friday at Artworks in Wheeling.

Do you feel held back by being in West Virginia? Or does it feel like a musically-supportive place?

As a relative newcomer, I’ve been blown away by what I’ve found in West Virginia. I hadn’t realized what great music was happening in places like Huntington, Morgantown, etc… I didn’t know about how supportive West Virginia Public Broadcasting was of homegrown artists. I’ve been impressed and inspired by the work of people like Ian Thornton. I feel inspired to help grow the original music scene in Wheeling and for us to be able to help contribute to growing the scene statewide.

What, in your opinion, needs to happen in the West Virginia music scene for it to move forward?           

We need to continue to spread the word that there is good music here and there is a scene. We need to continue the work of connecting the dots, so to speak. Also, in Wheeling, one of our primary interests is trying to show younger musicians that they don’t need to leave town to be a part of something great. We need to work to retain young musicians so we can continue to grow the scene from within.

Joshua Lee’s debut EP is Promise Land. Hear more #WVmusic on A Change of Tune, airing Saturday nights at 10 on West Virginia Public Broadcasting. Connect with A Change of Tune on FacebookTwitter and Instagram. And for more #WVmusic chats, make sure to go to wvpublic.org/wvmusic and subscribe to our RSS / podcast feeds.

Support for 30 Days of #WVmusic is provided by Kin Ship Goods, proud supporter of DIY music and the arts. Locally shipped worldwide at kinshipgoods.com.

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