enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Blue Fugates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Fugates

    The disorder can cause heart abnormalities and seizures if the amount of methemoglobin in the blood exceeds 20 percent, but at levels between 10 and 20 percent it can cause blue skin without other symptoms. Most of the Fugates lived long and healthy lives. The "bluest" of the blue Fugates, Luna Stacy, had 13 children and lived to age 84. [6]

  3. Music of Kentucky - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Kentucky

    The Music of Kentucky is heavily centered on Appalachian folk music and its descendants, especially in eastern Kentucky. Bluegrass music is of particular regional importance; Bill Monroe, "the father of bluegrass music", was born in the Ohio County community of Rosine, and he named his band, the Blue Grass Boys, after the bluegrass state, i.e., Kentucky.

  4. Shady Grove (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shady_Grove_(song)

    Shady Grove" (Roud 4456) [1] is a traditional Appalachian folk song, [2] believed to have originated in eastern Kentucky around the beginning the 20th century. [3] The song was popular among old-time musicians of the Cumberlands before being widely adopted in the bluegrass repertoire. [ 4 ]

  5. Bluegrass music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluegrass_music

    It was just called old-time mountain hillbilly music. When they started doing the bluegrass festivals in 1965, everybody got together and wanted to know what to call the show, y'know. It was decided that since Bill was the oldest man, and was from the bluegrass state of Kentucky and he had the Blue Grass Boys, it would be called 'bluegrass.' [36]

  6. Tyler Childers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyler_Childers

    Tyler Childers was born and grew up in Lawrence County, Kentucky. [8] His father worked in the coal industry and his mother is a nurse. [9] He was born with clubfoot and had to undergo surgeries to remedy the condition when he was 18 months old, and again when he was five. [10]

  7. Cumberland Gap (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumberland_Gap_(song)

    The song's title refers to the Cumberland Gap, a mountain pass in the Appalachian Mountains at the juncture of the states of Tennessee, Virginia, and Kentucky. The gap was used in the latter half of the 18th century by westward-bound migrants travelling from the original 13 American colonies to the Trans-Appalachian frontier.

  8. Bill Clifton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Clifton

    In 1953, the band signed with Blue Ridge Records and began playing traditional bluegrass. [3] They soon appeared on the Wheeling Jamboree radio barn dance show on AM station WWVA . Clifton published a songbook in 1955 called 150 Old Time Folk and Gospel Songs, which soon became one of the most influential songbooks of its time.

  9. The McLain Family Band - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_McLain_Family_Band

    The McLain Family Band is an American bluegrass band founded in Hindman, Kentucky, in 1968. Raymond Kane McLain studied folk music at university, and began playing bluegrass music with his then-three children in the late 1950s. They formalized their group in 1968, and played for WKYH-TV before moving to Berea, Kentucky. In the years since, the ...