Experience Life Again, For The First Time

Links
 Weather
 Just 4 Kids
 Picture Album
 Discussion Board
 Links
 Downloads
 Business Listings
 Obituaries
 

Attractions
 The Crooked Road
 Breaks Park
 Flannagan Dam
 Birch Knob Tower
 Cumberland Mountain  View Drive
 Pine Mountain Trail
 Cranesnest Trail
 Russel Fork

Places To Visit
 Ralph Stanley Museum
 Mountain Art Work
 Coal & RR Museum
 Arts/Gallery Center
 Jettie Baker Center
 Historical Markers
 Historical Places
 Coal Miners Memorial
 Veterans Memorial

Military History
Battle of Kings Mtn.
Civil War Veterans
Cranesnest Btlfld.
Kentucky 39th.
War Rations

Lodging / Dining
 Campgrounds
 Lodging
 Dining

Towns / Communities
(History & Photos)
 Clintwood
 Haysi
 Clinchco
 Ervinton
 Sandlick
 Other Communities
 Name origins

Other
 Florists
 Funeral Homes
 Medical
 Ariel Maps & Photos

Navagation
 HOME


 


The Crooked Road

Multimedia tour of The Crooked Road

“The Crooked Road” is Virginia’s Heritage Music Trail, a driving route through the Appalachian Mountains from the western slopes of the Blue Ridge to the Coalfields region of the state. The trail connects major heritage music venues in the Appalachian region such as the Blue Ridge Music Center, Birthplace of Country Music Alliance, and the Carter Family Fold. The traditional gospel, bluegrass, and mountain music heard today was passed down from generation to generation and lives on through a wealth of musicians and instrument makers along the trail. Annual festivals, weekly concerts, live radio shows, and informal jam sessions abound throughout the region. In addition, this region is also rich in other cultural and natural assets, particularly crafts and outdoor recreation. A wide variety of traditional handcrafted woodwork, weaving, and pottery can be found along the trail in country stores and small workshops. The lush valleys and rugged mountains offer numerous opportunities for outdoor activities, from hiking and biking to fishing and boating.

Crooked Road Sign

The sounds of country music beat strong and pure in Virginia, especially in the Southwest Blue Ridge Highlands and Heart of Appalachia regions, connected by The Crooked Road — Virginia's Heritage Music Trail

Day and night, the plaintive strains of the mountain ballads and toe-tapping, old-timey dance music echo across this region's sharp ridges and deep valleys.

Look for this sign along the Trail as you explore the musical soul of Virginia's country connections and experience a unique and unforgettable experience!


 

Take The Crooked Road— Virginia's Heritage Music Trail

This hauntingly beautiful area bounded by the Blue Ridge, Allegheny and Cumberland mountains nurtured the musical sounds and sensibilities of country and mountain music for decades.

The Blue Ridge Highlands city of Bristol — as the location of the first country music recordings made for national distribution — has been called the "Birthplace of Country Music." And in 1998, Congress made it official!


Bristol's State Street

Bristol sign at night

Today, country music murals and monuments line Bristol's State Street. The new Birthplace of Country Music Alliance Museum provides a forum for live performances and also features collections of musical instruments and memorabilia from country music legends Lester Flatt, Earl Scruggs and Tennessee Ernie Ford, born on the Tennessee side of the street!

Bristol's State Street is home to its annual Bristol Rhythm and Roots Reunion, which celebrates the region's rich musical heritage every September!

Also, Bristol's downtown offers live music Monday-Saturday at numerous venues!

Every Saturday night enjoy the bluegrass at the Family Bluegrass Barn in nearby Hansonville!


The Carter Family

audience at Carter Family Fold's Saturday nights
Carter Family Fold is the place to be every Saturday night!


Credited with popularizing traditional Appalachian music, Virginia natives A.P., Sara and "Mother" Maybelle Carter, known as the Carter Family, recorded their first song in Bristol in 1927.

The Carter Family Fold, which includes a museum of Carter memorabilia and a performance hall, is about 20 miles northwest of Bristol in Hiltons.

Every Saturday night, visitors are invited to hear local bluegrass talent as well as an occasional appearance by nationally known country stars. The Carter Family Traditional Music Festival also takes place every August!


O' Brother's Dr. Ralph Stanley

Dr. Ralph Stanley playing his banjo

When not touring with the Clinch Mountain Boys, nationally celebrated banjo player, singer and Grammy Award winner, Dr. Ralph Stanley, makes his home northwest of Hiltons near Wise.

Every Memorial Day Weekend people from around the world come to hear Stanley and his friends play mountain music at the Ralph Stanley Music Festival!

And be sure to visit the Ralph Stanley Museum and Traditional Music Center in Clintwood, which is the newest site on the

Crooked Road.

In Coeburn, enjoy Purely Appalachian Music every Friday night at the Historical Lay's Hardware Building!



Wise and Norton

Wise is home to the annual Dock Boggs Memorial Festival in September, named for the banjo virtuoso famous for his two-finger, one-thumb style of playing!

Visitors can hop nextdoor to the town of Norton to experience the lively Saturday night performances at the Country Cabin II of Josephine, a renovated community center, where Dock Boggs taught and played.

Also, while in Norton, visitors can enjoy WAXM's Saturday night broadcasts of the Virginia-Kentucky Opry in person!

North of Ralph Stanley's home is Breaks Interstate Park, the site of Bluegrass in the Park every Saturday during the summer and the everpopular Memorial Day Gospel Sing, the Bluegrass Extravaganza in July and their Tri-State Gospel Singing event at the end of the summer.


Virgina's Outdoor Fiddlers Conventions

dobro and fiddle players
Musicians love to get together
and jam at the campsites.

East of Bristol is Mouth of Wilson, where guitarist Wayne C. Henderson lives. Every June, Henderson and his friends present the Wayne C. Henderson Music Festival & Guitar Competition at Grayson Highlands State Park.

Heading northeast from Mouth of Wilson, but still in the Blue Ridge Highlands is Galax, known worldwide for its Old Fiddlers Convention, which draws tens of thousands of musicians and onlookers every August.

Rex Theatre in Galax

While in Galax, try the weekly live broadcast in the renovated Rex Theater, or better yet, stroll down Main Street and drop by Barr's Fiddle Shop. Proprietor Tommy Barr designs and makes musical instruments, plus he loves company and can often be found at the center of an impromptu jam session!

 




Floyd Bursts at the Seams

Floyd Country Store dancers

To the north in Floyd, catch the Friday Night Jamboree and a Saturday Night Concert series at the Floyd Country Store.

Every weekend is like a "mini fiddlers convention" with folks drifting in and out of the store, music's everywhere, cloggin' and stompin' — it's a hoot! If you can't fit indoors, catch an impromptu session on the street!

 



Blue Ridge Music Center

Blue Ridge Music Center

Located at milepost 213 off the Blue Ridge Parkway, the Blue Ridge Music Center is an outdoor amphitheater where weekly concerts by local and nationally known traditional musicians are presented from June through September.

An indoor center, including an exhibit gallery, music sales and information area, library and classroom, is almost completed.