Showing posts with label Mark Crabtree. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Crabtree. Show all posts

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Elmer Rich and His Old Time Music Time Machine

    In Morgantown West Virginia, Elmer Rich is a legend.  Elmer comes from a musical family you now.  Elmer's Uncle Sanford Rich wrote a popular song called Colored Aristocracy, which was famously played when First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt came to Arthurdale WV circa 1936. Arthurdale was a resettlement community for persons displaced during the Great  Depression, a project that the First Lady promoted.  Musicologist Charles Seeger (father of Pete, Peggy and Mike Seeger) recorded the Rich Family for the Library of Congress (AFS 3306 B2).    I had heard this story several times,and in fact you can here old Elmer tell this story himself, at the 2008 Fiddler's Contest in Morgantown....


          Other comments are from Tom O'Brien. 

Amazingly enough, the event was caught on an old newsreel, and you can see Elmer and his fmaily playing the same song for the First Lady. According to notes from Centrum.org ( http://centrum.org/2012/06/elmer-rich-plays-for-eleanor-roosevelt/),  Elmer is playing the mandolin rather than the fiddle.  Elmer's Dad Harry is fiddling, and Elmer's brothers are on banjo and guitar. 




Elmer told me that the title Colored Aristocracy is a tribute to the old Ragtimers that inspired and influenced the tune.  It derives from a book, The Colored Aristocracy of St Louis, by Cyprian Clamorgan.  Also, the term "colored" is perhaps derogatory today, but 100 years ago or so, it was the most polite term possible to refer to African Americans.  

In a way, this song underscores the Ragtime influence on Old Time music and Appalachia.  You will definitely hear echoes of this in the Brew Pub Jam, with songs like "Ragtime Annie," "Tear it Down" or "Raise a Rough House Tonight." 

When you stop and think about it, it's really incredible.  Elmer's musical family reaches way back into the 19th century in terms of their repetoire, and Elmer is still going strong.  He really does represent a time machine.  If I want to find out how West Viriginia fiddlers treated a particular song in the 1930's, I am not limited to library references.  I can just ask Elmer, because he's still doing it!  Elmer's friends, like Tom O'Brien and Mark Crabtree and others, also know an incredible amount about the songs in general and about local West Virginia music history.

And you can play with Elmer, also.  Since I've moved away from Morgantown, I no longer see Elmer and his friends very often, but he hosts a jam at the Senior Center in Westover, across the river from Morgantown. I believe that it's only 3 Fridays per month, so call to make sure the jam is on before you go. Like most Old Time musicians, Elmer is just as relaxed and friendly as he could be, not stuck up in any way, and you would never guess that he is a world renowned fiddler.  Some of the other regulars are also very talented peformers, but newcomers are very welcome as well. You really can sit down and play with a legend if you want.  And no, you do not have to be a senior to attend. 


Elmer and Tom Gibson lead Hanging On to Glory at the Senior Center Jam.  Check out other videos from YewPiney as well.