Rising Appalachia
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Rising Appalachia

New Orleans, Louisiana, United States | SELF

New Orleans, Louisiana, United States | SELF
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"Creative Loafing"

Talk about defying the stereotype – sisters Chloe and Leah Smith are far from your typical hillbillies. As RISING APPALACHIA, the Atlanta-bred, Grady High graduates redefine mountain music with their urbanized folk. The sisters play a mean banjo and fiddle, but they don't stop there. On their new sophomore release, Scale Down, conga drums and other percussives fill out the fare thanks to new addition Forrest Kelly. The group's CD release party on Sun., MARCH 18, at Eyedrum features performances by members of Atlanta nonprofits, in addition to trapeze artists, stilt walkers and fire spinners. $8. 8:30 p.m. 290 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive. 404-522-0655. www.eyedrum.org. - Rodney Carmichael


"Creative Loafing"

Talk about defying the stereotype – sisters Chloe and Leah Smith are far from your typical hillbillies. As RISING APPALACHIA, the Atlanta-bred, Grady High graduates redefine mountain music with their urbanized folk. The sisters play a mean banjo and fiddle, but they don't stop there. On their new sophomore release, Scale Down, conga drums and other percussives fill out the fare thanks to new addition Forrest Kelly. The group's CD release party on Sun., MARCH 18, at Eyedrum features performances by members of Atlanta nonprofits, in addition to trapeze artists, stilt walkers and fire spinners. $8. 8:30 p.m. 290 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive. 404-522-0655. www.eyedrum.org. - Rodney Carmichael


"Rising Appalachia: Flipping the Script"



Music CD Release

Rising Appalachia: Flipping the script

City sisters reclaim their mountain traditions

By Mosi Reeves

Published 03.28.2007
http://atlanta.creativeloafing.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=220974
Creative Loafing Atlanta

The March 18 release party for Rising Appalachia's new disc, Scale Down, at Eyedrum was an unusually esoteric experience. A masked girl in roller skates wandered around, handing out Hershey's Kisses. Leah and Chloe Smith and frequent collaborator Forrest Kelly plucked violins, strummed washboards and toyed with weird, made-up instruments. (One looked like a piece of plywood with beer bottles glued on it.) After the set, a pair of trapeze artists performed on a swing, and the Smith sisters did some fire dancing.

"It was very freakish," Leah Smith says of that night. "There were costumes everywhere. There was an edge of art, and an edge of poetry as well as a focus on nonprofits and community involvement. Just standing on stage and looking at that audience, I smiled so much."

You could categorize Rising Appalachia as a pair of eccentric neofolkies. But doing so would leave out the jazz, bluegrass, Afro-Caribbean and even hip-hop forms the Smith sisters explore on Scale Down. At the very least, Scale Down is an expression of their urbane yet traditionally Southern personalities.

"I think Appalachian culture has been misrepresented as this very ignorant and uneducated culture," continues Leah, referring to cinematic potboilers such as Deliverance. "It's where the African slave community escaped and was able to do a lot of their music. Appalachian music is the music that was brought over from Africa and the music that was brought over from the Scotch and Irish immigrants."

The Smith sisters themselves were born and raised in Little Five Points. Their parents, however, are traditional Appalachian musicians who often took the girls to bluegrass and country music festivals around the Southeast. Years later, the Smith sisters are buskers themselves, releasing two CDs in two years – a self-titled disc in December 2005 and Scale Down this month. They use their income to launch international tours, and will head to Slovenia, Italy and Ireland this spring.

"Last June, we moved out of our apartment here in Atlanta. We figured we needed to save all of our pennies. We've been staying with friends and family and touring as much as we can," Leah says. "We don't make a lot of money, but we don't have a lot of bills. So it's a nice kind of living."
©1996-2006 Creative Loafing Media - All Rights Reserved - the Creative Loafing. Atlanta


"Leah and Chloe. Rising Appalachia"

Leah and Chloe: Rising Appalachia

Sing Out! The Folk Song Magazine,
Summer, 2006
by Tom Druckenmiller
Rising Appalachia: Chloe and Leah Smith
It’s finally starting to happen. A new generation of traditional players is beginning to emerge
from families that played or simply enjoyed old-time country music. Leah and Chloe Smith were
raised by a fiddling mother and guitar-picking father and were introduced to traditional music from
Appalachia at a very young age. Both sisters sing and play fiddle and banjo. From the sound of this,
their recording debut, they absorbed the music very well indeed.
Rising Appalachia opens with “Greasy Coat� a vocal duet with dual banjo accompaniment.
The seldom-heard lyrics are a great addition and the simple banjo arrangement is quite effective.
“Camp Meeting on the Fourth of July� follows with a Georgia melody that seems unfamiliar to my
ears. Chloe’s fiddling has just the right to drive this gentle tune along.
“Nobody’s Fault ...� features the vocals of the sisters along with friends Jan and Barbara and
the bass vocals of Maurice Turner. “Say Darlin’ Say� is a tune frequently heard on contemporary old-
time recordings. The fact that their dad used to sing it to them as a lullaby further reinforces the
idea of a seed introduced at a young age that grows to become a lovely flower.
“Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss� is an often played jam tune but I betcha you never heard it
with a trumpet! Maurice returns and echoes the melody with an unexbrass surprise. Henry Reed’s
classic “Ducks on the Millpond� is further expanded by Leah’s percussive support to Chloe’s banjo.
Leah’s solo banjo is highlighted on “Lonesome John� and the recording concludes with “Tuli Tuli� a
song from Namibia sung a cappella by the sisters. It is an unusual but beautiful ending to a fine
first recording by Leah and Chloe Smith, who have the great responsibility of carrying the tradition
well into the 21st century. -- TD
- Sing Out! THe Folk Song Magazine


"Rising Appalachia: Flipping the Script"



Music CD Release

Rising Appalachia: Flipping the script

City sisters reclaim their mountain traditions

By Mosi Reeves

Published 03.28.2007
http://atlanta.creativeloafing.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=220974
Creative Loafing Atlanta

The March 18 release party for Rising Appalachia's new disc, Scale Down, at Eyedrum was an unusually esoteric experience. A masked girl in roller skates wandered around, handing out Hershey's Kisses. Leah and Chloe Smith and frequent collaborator Forrest Kelly plucked violins, strummed washboards and toyed with weird, made-up instruments. (One looked like a piece of plywood with beer bottles glued on it.) After the set, a pair of trapeze artists performed on a swing, and the Smith sisters did some fire dancing.

"It was very freakish," Leah Smith says of that night. "There were costumes everywhere. There was an edge of art, and an edge of poetry as well as a focus on nonprofits and community involvement. Just standing on stage and looking at that audience, I smiled so much."

You could categorize Rising Appalachia as a pair of eccentric neofolkies. But doing so would leave out the jazz, bluegrass, Afro-Caribbean and even hip-hop forms the Smith sisters explore on Scale Down. At the very least, Scale Down is an expression of their urbane yet traditionally Southern personalities.

"I think Appalachian culture has been misrepresented as this very ignorant and uneducated culture," continues Leah, referring to cinematic potboilers such as Deliverance. "It's where the African slave community escaped and was able to do a lot of their music. Appalachian music is the music that was brought over from Africa and the music that was brought over from the Scotch and Irish immigrants."

The Smith sisters themselves were born and raised in Little Five Points. Their parents, however, are traditional Appalachian musicians who often took the girls to bluegrass and country music festivals around the Southeast. Years later, the Smith sisters are buskers themselves, releasing two CDs in two years – a self-titled disc in December 2005 and Scale Down this month. They use their income to launch international tours, and will head to Slovenia, Italy and Ireland this spring.

"Last June, we moved out of our apartment here in Atlanta. We figured we needed to save all of our pennies. We've been staying with friends and family and touring as much as we can," Leah says. "We don't make a lot of money, but we don't have a lot of bills. So it's a nice kind of living."
©1996-2006 Creative Loafing Media - All Rights Reserved - the Creative Loafing. Atlanta


"Rising Appalachia. Paste Magazine's Band of the week"


Writer: Mary Richardson ,
photo by Chad Hess
2007-03-12
Hometown: Atlanta, Ga./Asheville, N.C.
Fun Fact: The group lives on the road in a biodiesel-fueled bus.
Why It's Worth Watching: The harmonious singing and instrumentation between sisters Leah and Chloe Smith paired with old-time lyrics feel like a step back, then forward.
For Fans Of: Gillian Welch, Ani Difranco, The Be Good Tanyas

Rising Appalachia stands for everything that tends to get swallowed up in a slick and shiny society. It’s the rise of a past lifestyle that is still rooted to the land. Drive up to one of the group's shows in a fancy car, and you’ll want to leave on foot. And that’s the goal. By resurrecting and reinventing their parents’ nostalgic old folk and mountain music, sisters Leah and Chloe Smith pave the way back to lost simplicities and social responsibility.

“We eventually want to have a whole section [of the music] dedicated to alternative fuels and political activism and human rights,� Leah says.

But as focused as the young women have become, they’d never planned to be an official group. They didn’t even have a name when they recorded their first album a little more than a year ago, which was done as a Christmas present for friends.

“The reception to [the first] album was really strong," Leah recalls. "People wanted us to perform all the time. It just kind of took over. It’s been a blessing because we were all very scattered and it’s like we’ve been guided.�

As activists stumbling onto such a captivated audience, the only choice was to keep going and use the music as both a channel and a platform. “This is such a huge tool," Leah says. "If we go ahead and work hard on our music, then our politics come back and we fill them in.�

Rising Appalachia just wrapped up a second album, Scale Down, which will be out on March 18. It builds on the first, but this time only half the songs are traditional covers. The six original tracks, while remaining steeped in the sounds of banjo, fiddle, jaw harp, washboard, empty bottles, spoons and myriad other folk instruments, are also heavily influenced by political hip-hop, spoken word, vintage jazz and roots music. Percussionist Forrest Kelly brings additional influences into the fold, such as fire spinning, beatbox and junk percussion from the thriving indie-folk scene of his hometown, Asheville, N.C. Storytelling is also becoming a bigger part of the band's live performances.

While the group wants to remain open to evolution and new influences, Chloe says that its very important to her and her sister to remain rooted with an underground aesthetic. Currently, the trio lives on the road in a biodiesel-fueled bus, which Leah feels is important to staying in touch with the objective. “We’re essentially using the road to figure out where we’re going," she says. "It’s a little intense right now, but I have to believe we can reach some people.�

[After March 18, you can purchase Scale Down at Rising Appalachia's official website.]
- Paste Magazine


"NPR. All Songs Considered. Open Mic"

Members of the progressive Appalachian
band, Rising Appalachia


Open Mic
Rising Appalachia: 'Say Darlin' Say'

Open Mic, October 31, 2006 · Before the days of O Brother Where Art Thou
and Cold Mountain, sisters Leah and Chloe Smith, of the band Rising
Appalachia, grew up in what they call "the bossom of the Southern
Appalachian music renaissance." Their fiddlin' mother and folk-sculpting
father harvested their love for traditional Appalachian music, and now, with
banjo, fiddle and harmonies in hand, they record their own takes of old tunes.
Their father used to sing "Say Darlin' Say," a track from their self-titled debut
CD, as a lullaby when he put the sisters to bed.
Calling their music "Progressive Appalachian Groove," Rising Appalachia
sometimes add the jaw harp, trumpet, djembe or spoons to the usual banjo and
fiddle in their tunes. "We came from hip-hop to hick-rock and love every
minute of it," says Leah. The young women met the newest member of the
band, Forrest Kelly, during their travels through the hills of Asheville, N.C.
Forrest lays his unique drumming and subtle rhythms over songs.
Collectively, the members have traveled and lived in Guatemala, Mexico,
Cuba, Puerto Rico, Holland, Spain, Alaska, Hawaii, Vancouver and across the
United States. They use Appalachian tradition to connect to other cultures, they say. Currently touring throughout
Europe, the band will return and tour the United States in March.
- National Public Radio


"Rising Appalachia. Paste Magazine's Band of the week"


Writer: Mary Richardson ,
photo by Chad Hess
2007-03-12
Hometown: Atlanta, Ga./Asheville, N.C.
Fun Fact: The group lives on the road in a biodiesel-fueled bus.
Why It's Worth Watching: The harmonious singing and instrumentation between sisters Leah and Chloe Smith paired with old-time lyrics feel like a step back, then forward.
For Fans Of: Gillian Welch, Ani Difranco, The Be Good Tanyas

Rising Appalachia stands for everything that tends to get swallowed up in a slick and shiny society. It’s the rise of a past lifestyle that is still rooted to the land. Drive up to one of the group's shows in a fancy car, and you’ll want to leave on foot. And that’s the goal. By resurrecting and reinventing their parents’ nostalgic old folk and mountain music, sisters Leah and Chloe Smith pave the way back to lost simplicities and social responsibility.

“We eventually want to have a whole section [of the music] dedicated to alternative fuels and political activism and human rights,� Leah says.

But as focused as the young women have become, they’d never planned to be an official group. They didn’t even have a name when they recorded their first album a little more than a year ago, which was done as a Christmas present for friends.

“The reception to [the first] album was really strong," Leah recalls. "People wanted us to perform all the time. It just kind of took over. It’s been a blessing because we were all very scattered and it’s like we’ve been guided.�

As activists stumbling onto such a captivated audience, the only choice was to keep going and use the music as both a channel and a platform. “This is such a huge tool," Leah says. "If we go ahead and work hard on our music, then our politics come back and we fill them in.�

Rising Appalachia just wrapped up a second album, Scale Down, which will be out on March 18. It builds on the first, but this time only half the songs are traditional covers. The six original tracks, while remaining steeped in the sounds of banjo, fiddle, jaw harp, washboard, empty bottles, spoons and myriad other folk instruments, are also heavily influenced by political hip-hop, spoken word, vintage jazz and roots music. Percussionist Forrest Kelly brings additional influences into the fold, such as fire spinning, beatbox and junk percussion from the thriving indie-folk scene of his hometown, Asheville, N.C. Storytelling is also becoming a bigger part of the band's live performances.

While the group wants to remain open to evolution and new influences, Chloe says that its very important to her and her sister to remain rooted with an underground aesthetic. Currently, the trio lives on the road in a biodiesel-fueled bus, which Leah feels is important to staying in touch with the objective. “We’re essentially using the road to figure out where we’re going," she says. "It’s a little intense right now, but I have to believe we can reach some people.�

[After March 18, you can purchase Scale Down at Rising Appalachia's official website.]
- Paste Magazine


"Galway Advertiser-Planet Sound"

( transcription of print & web text of July 19, 2007 review in Ireland’s Galway Advertiser )

Rising Appalachia
Scale Down ( Unwound Records )

RISING APPALACHIA are Atlanta
sisters Leah & Chloe Smith. Like
Devendra Banhart, Joanna Newsome,
and Meg Baird, they follow a decidedly
individual path informed by the spirit
of 1960’s folk-rock.

Scale Down marries sparse folk,
Blues, jazz, and Gregorian chant, to
vocal styles informed by hip hop and
pop as much as folk. Backed by an
array of unusual instruments, this is
thankfully a world away from both dour
purism and much of the over-produced
modern folk.

The 1960’s influence looms large,
But the sisters have used the era’s
pioneering spirit to create an imaginative,
at times daring, album. Further proof that
the most creative folk music is arguably
coming out of America right now.

© 2007
Kernan Andrews - Arts Editor
Galway Advertiser -The Week ( A & E section ) Planet of Sound
July 19, 2007

- Arts Editor Kernan Andrews


"Galway Advertiser-Planet Sound"

( transcription of print & web text of July 19, 2007 review in Ireland’s Galway Advertiser )

Rising Appalachia
Scale Down ( Unwound Records )

RISING APPALACHIA are Atlanta
sisters Leah & Chloe Smith. Like
Devendra Banhart, Joanna Newsome,
and Meg Baird, they follow a decidedly
individual path informed by the spirit
of 1960’s folk-rock.

Scale Down marries sparse folk,
Blues, jazz, and Gregorian chant, to
vocal styles informed by hip hop and
pop as much as folk. Backed by an
array of unusual instruments, this is
thankfully a world away from both dour
purism and much of the over-produced
modern folk.

The 1960’s influence looms large,
But the sisters have used the era’s
pioneering spirit to create an imaginative,
at times daring, album. Further proof that
the most creative folk music is arguably
coming out of America right now.

© 2007
Kernan Andrews - Arts Editor
Galway Advertiser -The Week ( A & E section ) Planet of Sound
July 19, 2007

- Arts Editor Kernan Andrews


Discography

Rising Appalachia.
Leah and Chloe. self released. 2005.

Rising Appalachia.
Scale Down. Unwound Records. 2007

RISE ( Rising Appalachia)
Evolutions in Sound: LIVE
2008.

Rising Appalachia
The Sails of Self
2010.

Rising Appalachia
Filthy Dirty South
2012

Rising Appalachia and the Human Experience
Soul Visions
2013

All albums are available for sale online at www.cdbaby.com, bandcamp, i-tunes, and select in-store locations.

Photos

Bio

Sisters Leah Song and Chloe Smith tear into sound with sensual prowess as stages ignite revolutions and words light up soul fires... listen to their beautiful sound for poetic harmonies, soul singing, spoken word rallies, banjos, fiddles, many beats of drums, kalimbas, washboard rants, bass and groove, and community building through SOUND… With an array of incredible collaborations they are joined by everything from jazz trumpet, to beatboxing, poets to ballads, banjo to bassdrum- their style redefines performance... Using sound as a tool to spark a cultural revolution and birth a new movement, come join them as they create soul sounds for us all....

Having toured over 20,000 miles across the United States and graced many stages around the world, Rising Appalachia’s vision and sound is quickly proving to be contagious to everyone it touches. They have toured heavily both nationally and internationally boasting events all across the board but including: Joshua Tree Music Fest, Envision Festival, Burning Man, Rootwire, Naropa University, the Kennedy Center in Washington DC, National Public Radio All Songs Considered, The School of Americas Vigil, Nunez Arts Festival New Orleans, Emory University Schwartz Center, The Floyd Festival, The Beacon Theater NYC, The Lake Eden Arts Festival, Radio Popular Italy, Guerilla Radio Amsterdam, The Edinburgh Fringe Festival, The Highlander Center 75th Reunion, Urkult Sweden, and this year their line up includes several new markets including Lightening in a Bottle, Symbiosis, and the Ozara festival in Hungary...

They have self-produced 5 albums, one full length documentary DVD, a new collaborative release with The Human Experience, and more coming on the daily...

"Music is the tool with which we wield political prowess. Melody for the Roots of each of us...spreading song and sound around the globe. Music has become our script for vision… not just for aural pleasure, not just for hobby-but now as a means to connect and create in ways that we aren't taught by mainstream culture...we are building community and tackling social injustice through melody- making the stage reach out with octopus arms to gather a great family. It is taking its own personality, carrying us all along the journey down the damp and strange alley ways and cryptic coded pathways... to poetic observations, social change, lyrical messages, political rage, symphonic coercing, ferocious bantering, bicycles and train tracks, primal will, fresh air intoxicants, harmony and alliteration, noise and something sweeter than words can ever touch. " Leah Song.

Rising Appalachia has been voted “Green Album of the Year” by the Huffington Post and Atlanta's Best Folk Act by the Creative Loafing, and have been written up in Paste Magazine, The New York Times, The Performer Magazine, Dirty Linen, Sing Out, Anti-Gravity, Maverick and more. Their tours have taken them across Europe, through the Caribbean, into Central America, into the Indian subcontinent, and across the United States making sacred sounds and elaborate stages wherever they go. They are creatively committed to keeping their work accessible at the local street level as well as expanding to larger audiences abroad, and have continued to maintain autonomy by self- managing, recording, producing and creating, and directing their work. They are greatly honored to do the work that they do.
bless.